Virginia (State / Territory) (Geographic Keyword)
3,701-3,725 (9,361 Records)
This is an abstract from the "SAA 2024: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 89th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Past documents describing the principal family residing at Holly Bend, the architecture, commerce, and social networks don’t mention an African-American component. That is until 2015 when identified colonowares were linked with African-American makers at other North Carolina plantations. Additionally, in 2017 ceramic tobacco pipe fragments were examined...
Holly Bend Plantation: Early19th Century Blacksmith Forge and Dependencies (2017)
Robert Davidson built Holly Bend (sometimes called Hollywood in the 20th century) between 1795 and 1800 on 420 acres that his father, Major John Davidson (early settler and Revolutionary War participant from Mecklenburg County), gave him in 1795. The house, which was built in a bend of the Catawba River and is reputed to have been named for the holly trees that grow in great abundance in the area, was completed before Robert married Margaret Osborne on January 1, 1801. Robert Davidson,...
Holy Ground: The 1608 Church and Chancel Excavations at James Fort (2017)
During the 2010 and 2013 field seasons, Jamestown Rediscovery archaeologists excavated the remains of the sites first substantial church (1608 – 1617) and the remains of four individuals buried within the chancel. The dimensions and location of this "pretty chapel" as noted by secretary of the colony William Strachey matched the post-in-ground structure found by Rediscovery archaeologists in 2010. Additionally, the location of the building closely aligns with a cross-like symbol drawn on a ca....
Home Front Households: Patriotism in the Domestic Sphere During WWII (2019)
This is an abstract from the "Exploring the Recent Past" session, at the 2019 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. WWII was a time of significant cultural upheaval in the United States. America’s participation in the war produced substantial changes to gender roles, consumer behavior, advertising, labor, children’s activities, and entertainment, and saw a swell in expressions of nationalism and patriotism. By analyzing a collection of WWII-era artifacts that includes...
Home Ground Advantage: Small Battles and Large Consequences in the Third Seminole War (2020)
This is a poster submission presented at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. The Seminole Wars of the nineteenth century were critically important in establishing the modern Tribal identity of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, and the consequences of the conflict reverberate throughout the community today. Yet relatively little archaeological work has been done to study the small military engagements that characterized the Third Seminole War (1855-1858) in south...
A "Home in the Country:" Material Life at the House of the Good Shepherd Orphanage, Tomkins Cove, New York (2016)
In 2014, the Public Archaeology Laboratory conducted archaeological excavations at the former House of the Good Shepherd orphanage in Tomkins Cove, New York. Over 4,000 domestic and structural artifacts were found at the site, offering glimpses into its nineteenth-century orphanage history as well as its use as a Fresh Air Association summer retreat during the twentieth century. Although small, the nineteenth-century artifact assemblage reflects the life of the orphans who lived there. Current...
Home Space: Mobility and Movement in the Creation of a Working-class Urban Landscape (2020)
This is an abstract from the session entitled "Boxed but not Forgotten Redux or: How I Learned to Stop Digging and Love Old Collections" , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. Historical archaeologists often interpret artifacts through the lens of household and family as the location for the development of practice and identity. Economic uncertainty for working-class households in historic urban contexts, however, meant that some families moved as many as...
Home: Place, Space, Survival, Resistance (2023)
This is an abstract from the "Deepening Archaeology's Engagement with Black Studies" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. In the mid-nineteenth century, Spicy Baxter and siblings were emancipated by their father, George White, a freedman in Madison County, Kentucky. The family moved south, away from their northern Madison County farm to a rugged, isolated, parcel in the south of the county. Here, Spicy and her female siblings lived until the early...
Homeland: An Archaeologist’s View of Yellowstone Country’s Past (2006)
J. Whittaker: Nice personalized illustrated narrative of Montana prehistory. Anzick Clovis site frequently referred to. Lithic archaeology includes projectile point chronology, knapping discussion featuring work of Ray Alt, Bonnichsen. Shoshone legend of how coyote stole knapping knowledge from wolf. Experiments with bow (Alt) and atlatl leave them skeptical of ability to distinguish points by size, and of penetrating ability of atlatl dart. [Stories about effectiveness of bow and arrow, and...
Homestake Aqueduct: Bringing Water to Mines and Mills in the Black Hills (2020)
This is an abstract from the session entitled "Roads, Rivers, Rails and Trails (and more): The Archaeology of Linear Historic Properties" , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. The Homestake Aqueduct (39LA2057) in Lawrence County, South Dakota is a pipeline constructed by the Homestake Mining Company to transfer water from Spearfish Creek to the mines and mills of the Lead-Deadwood area. This predominately subterranean system was likely started in 1879 and...
Homestead-Era (ca. 1887-1942) Subsistence on the Pajarito Plateau, New Mexico (2018)
Beginning in the 1880s, Hispanic- and Euro-American homesteaders expanded onto the Pajarito Plateau in northern New Mexico. While journals and documentary accounts from visitors and descendants provide insight into the everyday livelihood of these farmers and ranchers, few studies have investigated their shared experience based on examination of physical remains. In this zooarchaeological analysis we identify and quantify the animal remains from several homesteader cabin sites at Los Alamos...
Homewood's Lot (18AN871)
Homewood's Lot (18AN871) is located off Whitehall Creek near the Chesapeake Bay in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. Continuously occupied since 1650, Homewood's Lot is one of eight known sites associated with the Puritan town of Providence (1649) (Luckenbach 1995). James Homewood arrived in Providence in 1649 and, in 1650, a parcel of land was laid out for him. James' brother, John Homewood, lived on Homewood's Lot until his death in 1681/82, leaving the land to his wife Sarah and first nephew,...
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Bottle Glass
Artifact distribution map, bottle glass
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Buttons
Artifact distribution map, buttons
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Clothing and Sewing Items
Artifact distribution map, clothing and sewing items
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Cutlery
Artifact distribution map, cutlery
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, North Devon Sgraffito
Artifact distribution map, North Devon sgraffito
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Rhenish Blue and Gray Stoneware
Artifact distribution map, Rhenish blue and gray stoneware
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Table Glass (2004)
Artifact distribution map, table glass
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Terra Cotta Pipes
Artifact distribution map, terra cotta pipes
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Tin-Glazed Earthenware
Artifact distribution map, tin-glazed earthenware
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, White Clay Tobacco Pipes
Artifact distribution map, white clay tobacco pipes
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Artifact Distributions, Window Leads
Artifact distribution map, window leads
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Bottle Seal (2004)
Representative artifacts: Bottle seal
Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Ceramics (2004)
Representative artifacts: Ceramics