About

Preserving East Texas’ native and natural heritage.

The Caddo Mounds State Historic Site Friends Association is a 501(c) (3) non-profit organization that operates under a Memorandum of Agreement with the Texas Historical Commission.  The Friends provide support for the operations, maintenance, and educational programs of the Caddo Mounds State Historic Site


The Friends Association’s primary purpose is to aid in increasing public awareness and knowledge of the various historic and natural resources associated with the Caddo Mounds site.  The Friends also aid in perpetuating the memory and history of the Caddo people as they relate to the culture, historical events, and early history of Texas.

The Friends have long been active in supporting the historic site’s outreach and educational programs including the annual Caddo Cultural Day event where members of the Caddo Nation from Oklahoma perform traditional Caddo dances and where other traditional Caddo lifeway activities are demonstrated.

Members of the Friends Association assist with educational programs such as leading interpretive talks and guided hikes of the Site’s grounds as well as acting as museum Docents with school groups and the public. 

In 2014, the Friends begin raising the funds to build an authentic Caddo grass thatched house.  The Friends contracted with Phil Cross, a Caddo Elder out of Oklahoma, who had the knowledge and skills to design and supervise the building of a traditional Caddo grass house.  During the summer of 2016, the Friends Association built a Caddo grass thatched house and stocked it with Caddo made and other household goods as a way to provide an authentic experience for visitors and to use as a functional space for the Site’s expanded educational programs. The grass house and the Caddo Mounds museum were destroyed in 2019 by a tornado, and rebuilt, under the leadership of members of the Caddo Nation, in 2022.


Learn more about Caddo Mounds SHS


Conservation

Learn about efforts to restore and protect the native ecosystems at Caddo Mounds SHS.
Learn about this important heritage site through an interactive tour, led by members of the Caddo Nation.

Koo Hoot Kiwat (Caddo Grass House)

Check out the Emmy Award winning “Koo-Hoot Kiwat: The Caddo Grass House” to learn more about Caddo Mounds State Historic Site and see the process that combines both traditional and modern techniques

Be a part of our community!

Join below to be added to our email list. We’ll let you know when opportunities to contribute are coming up.

Meet the Officers

For more information, email info@friendsofcaddomounds.org or call 936-858-3218.

President

Jackie Angerbauer

Vice President

TBD

Treasurer

Victor Galan

Caddo Nation Representative

Lauren Haupt

Lauren Toho-Murrow Haupt is a citizen of the Caddo Nation of Oklahoma and a descendant of the Creek and Seminole Nations. She is a professional anthropologist and is currently pursuing
her Ph.D. in Native American Studies at the University of New Mexico. Her research is rooted in Tribal sovereignty and Indigenous resource management through community-engaged research and cultural revitalization throughout ancestral Caddo homelands. Lauren’s work at Caddo Mounds centers around developing culturally-responsive policies for equitable
approaches to collaboration between Native Nations, state agencies, and federal agencies.

Secretary

Madeleine Ross

Membership Coordinator

Priscilla Coulter