Indigenous Medicinal Plants
Indigenous people learned how to use plants to heal many physical and spiritual ailments.
Listen to Stands Among Elk (Meherrin Nation) and Vickie Jeffries (Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation) tell us about how their peoples use plants and fruits like acorns, sumac, cedar, and strawberries to cure everything from dandruff to cholera.
What plants are you most familiar with? Are there any medicinal uses for this plant that you know of?
Indigenous Land Relationships in the Carolinas
An Interactive Audio Tour created by Quinn Smith through the Equity Through Stories Program
This tour features 12 short audio recordings of Indigenous people telling their own stories connected to their relationship with the land.
< GO TO THE PREVIOUS RECORDING
Jump to another point in the tour:
- We Are Here
- A Living Land Acknowledgement
- Common Misconceptions
- What is Nature?
- The Meherrin’s Medicines
- The Four Sacred Herbs
- Pine Needle Art: Vickie’s Story
- Who Owns Seeds?
- Birdsongs
- Listen to the World Speak
- Indigenous Fire Practices
- How to Support Indigenous Peoples
- The Story of the White Corn
- Why the Leaves Change Color
- The Story of the Three Sisters
- Growing up in Hillsborough, 1940s
- Rethinking Traditional Plants
About Quinn Smith, Jr.

Quinn is a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation, majoring in public policy with a documentary studies certificate. As a documentarian, Quinn strives to challenge our misconceptions of Indigenous people by documenting a long-silenced, shared humanity.
What drew Quinn to the Equity through Stories Program was the ability to uplift Indigenous truths and to forge reciprocal relationships with Indigenous people throughout the Carolinas. Quinn does this by interviewing Indigenous people about their relationships with the land and weaving their stories into audio documentaries to be exhibited at the Blomquist Garden of Native Plants. He also initiates seed-sharing and other reciprocal ventures between Indigenous peoples and Blomquist Gardens. Quinn hopes that his work will help to re-educate Duke Garden’s 500,000+ annual visitors and to create a healing space for Indigenous people.