67 research outputs found
Memory In Black And White: Race, Commemoration, And The Post-Bellum Landscape
Interview with Dr. Paul A. Shackel by Leah Wood Jewett Paul A. Shackel is a professor and Director of the Center for Heritage Resource Studies, Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland. He is the author of Personal Discipline and Material Culture, Culture Chan...
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Local Identity, National Memory, and Heritage Tourism: Creating a Sense of Place with Archaeology
Excavations at 178 Prince George's Street, the Back Area of the Brice House, 18AP38, Annapolis, Maryland
During the spring of 1986, two weeks of archaeological excavations were performed behind 178 Prince George Street, Annapolis, Maryland. This area is considered to be the back area of the Brice House, 18AP38. A brick and stone foundations was recovered. Data from its builder's trench dates this feature to the early first half of the 18th-century, predating by several
decades the construction of the Brice House. The structure was probably a stable that may have been incorporated, and rebuilt by Brice
Continuity and Change on an Urban Houselot: Archaeological Excavation at the 22 West Street Backlot (18AP51) of the Annapolis National Historic District, Anne Arundel County, Maryland
Intensive archaeological investigation was undertaken on an urban backlot in Annapolis, Maryland. Fieldwork was conducted on behalf of Historic Annapolis Foundation for the property's owners, King and Cornwall, Inc. Supplemental documentary research, an evaluation of existing conditions on the property, and below-ground excavation of a 35 X 70 ft. urban backlot were conducted. While the project was not a Section 106 compliance effort, the field methods and rationale for the site's investigation are comparable to those of standard Phase II site evaluations. Historical documentation attested to the fact that the 22 West Street Backlot, located
along the western most edge of the Historic District of Annapolis, Maryland, had seen
development and occupation since the first quarter of the eighteenth century. A substantial brick
structure was known to have occupied the property in a series of altered forms for much of that
period. This structure served a variety of purposes over time: a private residence in the
eighteenth century, a boarding house in the nineteenth century (known as the National Hotel),
a duplex in the early twentieth century, half of which remained in use until the structure was
entirely razed in the 1970s after destruction by fire.
Recovery and analysis of site formation processes (i.e., both cultural and natural
transformations of the buried remains) indicated that sections of the site were disturbed to a
depth of six feet. In contrast to what initially seemed a poor prognosis for site integrity, other
areas of the backlot revealed numerous intact historical features and deposits. Structural remains
from the dwelling and its associated outbuildings, additions, and attendant trash deposits were
recovered.
What was initiated as a program of limited testing evolved into a larger-scale undertaking
that made use of largely hand-excavated units in conjunction with machine-assisted stripping of
areas demonstrated to contain from four to six-foot deep sterile layers of fill. The current
investigations provided a window into a portion of the city and period in its history not
documented archaeologically. Moreover, this project provided valuable insight into the
archaeology of the homelot within a lightly industrialized, urban context. Evidence was
recovered of shifts in the layout and arrangement of the houselot as well as changing relations
between individuals and the workplace--all within an urban context--an issue defined elsewhere
in the archaeological literature as a significant one.
No further investigations are recommended for the site, however, further analysis and
interpretation of materials recovered are ongoing. In the event that the site were to undergo
development, monitoring of any construction activity is recommended
Excavations at the State House Inn Site, 18AP42, 15 State Circle, Annapolis, Maryland
During the spring of 1985, archaeological excavations were conducted at the State House Inn, 18AP42, 15 State Circle, Annapolis, Maryland. Work was conducted by "Archaeology in Annapolis," a cooperative project between Historic Annapolis, Inc. and the University of Maryland, College Park. This site is located within zone seven of the Maryland Archaeological Research Units (Figures 1, 2 & 3). A two-week program of testing in March, 1985 was carried out in the yard on State Circle. On the basis of positive results from this testing, six more weeks of excavations were carried out. This report summarizes the results of both phases of the excavations. Excavations were directed by Joseph W. Hopkins III, with the assistance of Donald Creveling
and Paul Shackel. These excavations were part of a larger investigation of the Baroque town plan of Annapolis, laid out by Governor Francis Nicholson in 1695. This plan served as a framework around which the town grew over the next three centuries. Available historic records do not adequately document the development of the plan to its present form. The excavation program was a first step in a program to recover information about the gradual change of the city plan
An Archaeological Survey of the Site of the Lattimer Massacre, Lattimer, PA
The Lattimer Massacre occurred in September of 1897 in the anthracite coal region of
Pennsylvania. It has been described as the bloodiest massacre of the nineteenth century. In
this event, a company-sponsored sheriff and a posse of local businessmen shot into a crowd
of striking Eastern European mine laborers, resulting in the deaths of at least nineteen. A
survey was initiated by the Department of Anthropology of the University of Maryland as
part of a broader research program examining labor and immigration heritage of the
Anthracite Region of Northeast Pennsylvania. The site was surveyed on three dates in the
fall of 2010, November 13 and 14 and December 4, 2010. Members of BRAVO conducted
systematic and random metal detecting surveys of three areas. At the conclusion of the
survey and subsequent analysis some of the initial goals for the project were satisfactorily
completed, while others remain elusive. No cartridges dating to the massacre were found.
The location of the initial engagement was identified by a cluster of three bullets from the
period of the massacre or earlier. A fourth bullet was identified roughly where the right
side of the line of deputies was situated
2009 Phase II Archaeological Investigations in the Riversdale (18PR390) Garden, Prince George’s County, MD
In the fall of 2009, archaeologists and students from the University of Maryland’s Center
for Heritage Resource Studies, in conjunction with the Archaeology Program, Maryland
National Capital Parks and Planning Commission, conducted phase II archaeological
testing of a portion of the garden at the Federal-period Riversdale Mansion (18PR390).
The goal of the excavation was to evaluate the impact of ongoing erosion on
archaeological resources in the project area. Excavators dug a total of 4 units measuring
five-foot square and another half-unit measuring 2.5-feet by five-feet. They recovered
4280 objects ranging in date from the early 19th century through the twentieth century.
They also unearthed the remains of a large garden wall erected around 1805 as well as the
foundation of a brick structure built before 1830. This report details the project activities,
and recommends that M-NCCP continue to monitor the effects of erosion on these
resources. It also suggests future research questions, should additional excavations prove
necessary
African Americans and Appomattox Manor Within the Structured Landscape of the Eppes Plantation
The Civil War brought about many changes in Virginian society, including the area
around City Point, Virginia. These changes greatly effected the manner in which plantation
owners managed their farms. Plantation owners had to find new ways of obtaining and
exploiting their labor, and protecting their resources. The goal of this report is to explore those
changes between the years 1851 and 1872 on the Eppes' plantations. I examine how Dr. Eppes
structured his landscape to aid in controlling his productive resources, and the relationship he
held with African-Americans. Part of exploring that relationship will be examining the living
conditions of African-Americans on the Eppes' plantations as slaves and freedmen laborers.
Dr. Eppes' home, Appomattox Manor, and its grounds now make up the City Point Unit
of the Petersburg National Battlefield. This report will place the City Point Unit into its larger
historic context. Though the unit is best known as the location of General Grant's headquarters
during the Siege of Petersburg, its history is far more extensive. In this report, I place City Point
and Appomattox Manor in the plantation context which surrounded them before and after the
war. It will show how the Civil War was not an isolated event, but was effected by and affected
the social world around it
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