Mississippi (State / Territory) (Geographic Keyword)

5,976-6,000 (8,223 Records)

Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL037 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Scrap materials and tools for to create new, larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL038 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Archivists holding constructed larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL039 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Archivists folding larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL040 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Archivists applying glue to larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL041 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Glue applied to larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL042 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Glue partially spread on larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL043 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Archivist spreading glue on larger archival box with Elmer®'s glue in the foreground.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL044 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Glue spread out on larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL045 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Close-up view of paper packages being used as weight to compress box side with glue and clothespins to help glue to adhere to box material.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL046 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Wider view of paper packages being used as weight to compress box side with glue in foreground and clothespins to help glue to adhere to box material.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL047 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Archivists using materials to create corner reinforcements for new, larger archival box.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL048 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Paper packages being used as weight to compress box side with glue with one side finished front view and clothespins to help glue to adhere to box material.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL049 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Angled view of paper packages being used as weight to compress box side with glue with one side finished and clothespins to help glue to adhere to box material.


Pickensville Alabama Store Ledger, 1841, Archival Photograph, AVCPL050 (2011)
IMAGE Veterans Curation Program.

Constructed lid for larger archival box held together temporarily with clothespins.


The Pickett’s Mill Farmstead: An Archaeology of the Inarticulate Whites (2019)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Kong Cheong.

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2019: General Sessions" session, at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Archaeologists often use both archaeological data and historical records to assist in their reconstruction of the past. However, historical records are usually written by a small portion of the population and this written history is usually about themselves and not a representation of the whole. The inarticulate Whites are a group of European descent people...


Picking Up Olive The Pieces: An Analysis On 16th Century Olive Jar From The Tristán De Luna Site (2020)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Emily L DeSanto. Caroline A Peacock.

This is an abstract from the session entitled "Plus Ultra: An examination of current research in Spanish Colonial/Iberian Underwater and Terrestrial Archaeology in the Western Hemisphere." , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. In Spanish colonial sites, olive jars stand out among other ceramic types as important chronological markers due to their abundance and previously observed changes in form over three centuries. This plays a large role in identifying the...


Picking up the Pieces: Interpretation and reconstruction of USS Westfield from fragmentary Archaeological evidence (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Justin A Parkoff.

USS Westfield was the flagship of the West Gulf Blockading Squadron during the American Civil War. Originally a New York ferry, Westfield was purchased by the U.S. Navy in 1861 and converted into an armored gunboat. On January 1, 1863 Westfield was destroyed by her captain during the Battle of Galveston to avoid capture. In 2009, the remaining wreckage, consisting of a disarticulated artifact debris field, was recovered from the Texas City Channel in advance of a dredging project. The remaining...


Picturing a Storied Past: On Narrative and Photography at a Castroville, TX Archaeological Site (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Jesse Pagels.

Often associated with the documentary record and prized for their historical relevance, photographs can be an invaluable instrument found within any historical archaeologist's toolkit. They help to illuminate and corroborate the material cultural remains we find within the archaeological record as they present to us their dramas through images frozen in time. It is in this phenomenon of storytelling that this paper puts much of its focus as it explores the use of historical photographs as an...


PIDBA (Paleoindian Database of the Americas): Long term Collaborative Research at International Scales (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only David Anderson. David Echeverry. D. Shane Miller. Stephen Yerka.

Compiling and making accessible primary archaeological data from multiple sources and across large areas is one of the grand challenges facing archaeology in the twenty-first century. The Paleoindian Database of the Americas (PIDBA) has been operating for over 25 years to make Paleoindian data openly accessible online to all interested parties. Data from more than 100 scholars, including locational data on over 30,000 projectile points, has been made available in digital form that has been...


A Piece of Salted Snakehead and Its Implications for the Nineteenth-Century Chinese Diaspora Fish Trade (2019)
DOCUMENT Citation Only J Ryan Kennedy. Leland Rogers.

This is an abstract from the "One of a Kind: Approaching the Singular Artifact and the Archaeological Imagination" session, at the 2019 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. Archaeologists have traditionally relied upon large datasets to investigate historical fishing industries, the distribution of fish products, and the effect of fishing on the environment. Such studies make critical contributions to understandings of past fisheries; however, not all fish stories require...


Piecing Together History: Conservation of a Wool Coat from USS Monitor (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Elsa Sangouard.

On December 31st 1862, during the USS Monitor’s final hours, the ironclad’s crew discarded many personal items in its gun turret in preparation to crossing the deck and hopefully reach rescue boats. Recovered with the turret in 2002 through a joint effort between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the US Navy, these personal belongings are being conserved by a team of specialists within the Batten Conservation Complex at The Mariners’ Museum and Park (TMMP) in Newport...


The Pied Piper in Boston: A Zooarchaeological Analysis of Rats at the Unity Court Tenements (2019)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Liz M. Quinlan.

This is an abstract from the "Zooarchaeology, Faunal, and Foodways Studies" session, at the 2019 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. The 2016-17 excavations at Boston’s former Unity Court Tenements yielded an incredibly rich assemblage of 19th-century artifacts. These tenements, in operation 1830-1880, served the ever-growing and changing community of Boston’s North End, and it was expected that their excavation would uncover the complex material culture of those living...


A  Piedmont Plantation (2013)
DOCUMENT Citation Only J. Hope Smith.

In Virginia, the majority of excavataions at early eighteenth-century plantations have been concentrated in the Tidewater region. Recently, however, more archaeologists are turning their focus inland toward the Piedmont. Established in 1723 by President James Madison's grandparents, Ambrose and Frances, Mount Pleasant is one of these early Piedmont plantations. For much of its occupation it  was managed by a woman; Ambrose Madison died shortly after moving to Mount Pleasant, leaving his wife in...


The Pig Ankle Tonk Retrospective (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Michael B. Godzinski.

The corner of Franklin and Customhouse in New Orleans was a lively place in the early decades of the twentieth century, but this was nothing new.  The little commercial district had been bustling at least since after the civil war.  This section of town was home to immigrants for decades prior to the official opening of the "tenderloin". The well known "honkey tonk" that would become the Pig Ankle had been the long-time home to Julia Gigoux, a French immigrant who ran a coffee house there for...


Pilgrim’s Progress: Neighborhood redevelopment and the historical landscape of "America’s Hometown" (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only j. Eric Deetz.

By the end of the nineteenth century Plymouth Massachusetts had become a typical New England Town with an active industrial base and a vibrant waterfront.  With the decline of the textile industry Plymouth re branded itself by highlighting its unique history. This was achieved not only by highlighting the Pilgrim story but also by the removal of many aspects of its 19th century landscape. This paper addresses the changes made in the mid-twentieth century through neighborhood redevelopment.