Illinois (State / Territory) (Geographic Keyword)
1,476-1,500 (6,552 Records)
Correspondence from Scott Air Force Base to State Historic Preservation Office concerning the demolition of Building P-42, Swimming Pool House, on Scott Air Force Base. Scott Air Force Base states that they feel there will be an adverse effect on the Historic District.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning a New Underground Gas Line Crossing (1993)
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office concerning a new underground gas line crossing. State Historic Preservation Office determined no significant historic, architectural or archaeological resources are located within the proposed project area.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning Demolition of Building 48 (2009)
Correspondence from State Historic Preservation Office to Scott Air Force Base stating they cannot concur with the proposed demolition of Building 48, and request additional information. The document also contains a Condition Code for Building 48 from 1997.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning Demolition of Building 53, Scott Air Force Base (1998)
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning Demolition of Building 53 on Scott Air Force Base.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning Eligibility of Building 7 for the National Register of Historic Places (1990)
The original 1978 nomination of Building 7 for the National Register of Historic Places and subsequent correspondence concerning changes to the building and whether or not that nomination still applies.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning National Register of Historic Places Status of Facility 5026 at Scott Air Force Base (2011)
Correspondence from Scott Air Force Base to State Historic Preservation Office concerning the National Register of Historic Places status of Facility 5026. A previous letter dated May 26, 2011, stated that Facility 5026 was eligible for National Register of Historic Places listing, but Scott Air Force Base believes that not all of the necessary information to evaluate the structure was provided.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning Rehabilitation of General Officer Quarters No. 200 (1993)
Correspondence between Scott Air Force Base and State Historic Preservation Office concerning the rehabilitation of General Officer Quarters No. 200. State Historic Preservation Office determined no adverse effect.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning Review of Draft Final National Register of Historic Places Evaluation at Scott Air Force Base, St. Clair County, Illinois (2011)
Correspondence from Scott Air Force Base to State Historic Preservation Office regarding the Draft Final National Register of Historic Places Evaluation Report, which surveyed forty-nine buildings constructed between 1927 and 1964 and two pioneer-era cemeteries located on Scott Air Force Base. Of these, Scott Air Force Base has submitted three buildings and both cemeteries for eligibility concurrence for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning the Archaeological Assessment of Scott Air Force Base, St. Clair County, Illinois (1993)
Correspondence from the Illinois State Historic Preservation Office to Scott Air Force Base concerning the Archaeological Assessment of Scott Air Force Base.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning the Archaeological Impact for Fire Training Area Project at Scott Air Force Base (1993)
Correspondence between Scott Air Force Base and the Illinois State Historic Preservation Office concerning the Archaeological Impact for Fire Training Area project. State Historic Preservation Office determined no significant historic, architectural or archaeological resources are located within the proposed project area.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning the Draft Inventory of Cold War Properties at Scott Air Force Base (1995)
Correspondence from State Historic Preservation Office to Scott Air Force Base concerning the Draft Inventory of Cold War Properties.
Correspondence with State Historic Preservation Office Concerning Window Replacement in Building 433 (Hangar 1) (2005)
Correspondence between Scott Air Force Base and State Historic Preservation Office concerning window and door replacement in Building 433 (Hangar 1). State Historic Preservation Office determined no adverse effect.
Corrosion Monitoring and Preservation in Situ of Large Iron Artifacts at the Queen Anne’s Revenge Shipwreck site (2016)
At North Carolina state archaeological site 31CR314 (Queen Anne’s Revenge), the overall conservation management strategy is full excavation and recovery of all artifacts. Preservation and protection of artifacts in situ is, however, needed as long as they remain on site. Research on in situ monitoring and preservation of large iron artifacts (cannon and anchors) began in 2008. With funding provided by a Mini North Carolina Sea Grant further data was collected in 2012-2013 for eight cannon and...
Cosmic Context, Emancipated Persons, Germantown Parsonage (2020)
This is a poster submission presented at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. A 1767 slave-owning Calvinist minister’s cellar in Germantown NY holds a fireplace with punctate figures in its wooden frame: sailboat, smoking pipe, and BaKongo cosmogram. Beneath the adjacent hearthstones, amidst rubble fill, student excavators plotted clusters of symbolic objects: quartz crystals, blue glass beads, buttons, a shale pebble etched with two ‘X’ marks. The symbolically...
Cosmic Order and Change in Pre-columbian Eastern North America (2006)
The authors attempt to understand pan-continental cultural relationships as well as explain how cosmologies developed through time in the eastern Woodlands and Great Plains of North America. To do this, the authors deal with both the overall traditions of entire populations or time periods and specific, local expressions of these overall traditions.
Cosmology in the New World
This project consists of articles written by members of Santa Fe Institute’s cosmology research group. Overall, the goal of this group is to understand the larger relationships between cosmology and society through a theoretically open-ended, comparative examination of the ancient American Southwest, Southeast, and Mesoamerica.
Cosmopolitanism In South Carolina: Examining John Drayton’s Country Estate (2018)
New research at Drayton Hall is shifting decades-old interpretation of how the house and land were used by John Drayton in the mid- to late- 18th century. The previous narrative was of an agricultural lifestyle on a southern plantation, but the material culture and historical evidence indicates that Drayton Hall was built and used as an English country estate to display wealth and position to those visiting the property. This paper analyzes the artifacts recovered from the South Flanker well to...
Cottage Clusters and Community Engagement: Collaborative Investigations of Multiscalar Social Relations in 19th Century Clachans, Co. Mayo, Ireland (2016)
Human experiences are inscribed in the landscape. Indeed, the built environment has been so strongly modified by human agency that the resulting landscape is a synthesis of natural and cultural elements. Cottage clusters, known as clachans, were critical components of the landscape in the west of Ireland prior to the Great Famine. Yet this site type has been almost completely ignored in historical, archaeological, and architectural studies of the region. As a Fulbright US Scholar, I am engaged...
Cottages for the Proletariat: Life and Labor on Blue Row in the Graniteville Textile Mill Village, 1845-1870 (2013)
In 1845 industrialist William Gregg incorporated the Graniteville Manufacturing Company. Located in Edgefield District’s Horse Creek Valley, Gregg’s model community centered on a textile mill built of local blue granite. The mill grounds contained extensive lawn gardens, trimmed gravel sidewalks, and spouting water fountains. The community included two churches, academy, hotel, stores, boarding-houses, and cottages. All buildings were constructed from local pine in the Gothic Revival style....
Cotton to the Doorstep: Gardening and Food Storage in the Early 20th-Century Southeast (2016)
Early 20th-century southeastern farmers with the means to do so diversified and adopted the materials and methods of farm modernization. Poorer families grew cash crops almost exclusively, detrimental to their garden spaces and their wellbeing. Archaeologists have measured modernization, in part, through the presence of glass storageware. However, the act of storing gardened and gathered foods did not necessarily require modern materials or methods. Materials changed through time, but in many...
Counter-Archaeology: Blending Critical Race Theory and Community-Based Participatory Research (2015)
Exploring connections between critical race theory (CRT) and community-based participatory research (CBPR), the methodology outlined in this paper examines how archaeology can be both transformative and empowering through its involvement in civic engagement, critical pedagogy, and social activism. The paper examines various ways in which CRT can broaden our conception of materiality, accountability, inclusion, and collaboration through an analysis of systemic inequality and its varied effects on...
Course description. In Experimental Archeology 499-E: A sampling (1972)
This resource is a citation record only, the Center for Digital Antiquity does not have a copy of this document. The information in this record has been migrated into tDAR from the EXARC Bibliography, originally compiled by Roeland Paardekooper, and updated. Most of these records consist of a document citation and other metadata but do not have the documents themselves uploaded. If you have a digital copy of the document and would like to have it curated in tDAR, please contact us using the...
Covert Cooking: Food Acquisition, Preparation and Consumption outside of the Granada Relocation Center Mess Halls (2018)
Historic archaeology is uniquely positioned to provide a fuller understanding of the Japanese diaspora in the United States, and also allows the recordation of methods employed by nearly 120,000 forcibly relocated Japanese Americans to modify and adapt to their newfound surroundings. Using archaeological survey, excavation, oral history data and historic documents, research at the Granada Relocation Center, in southeast Colorado, has provided insight to identity maintenance strategies. Recent...
Crack Method: Community, Mutual Aid, and Appropriation in Washington D.C.’s Homeless Encampments (2020)
This is an abstract from the session entitled "Historical Archaeology of Capitalism’s Cracks" , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. Using a methodology developed within Capitalism’s cracks I weave together the past, present and future realties of Washington D.C.’s street homeless communities. The mutual aid developed within these communities has proven to reproduce alternative social relations. Appropriating, rather then consuming, the waste spaces and...
Craft Manual of North American Footwear (1969)
This resource is a citation record only, the Center for Digital Antiquity does not have a copy of this document. The information in this record has been migrated into tDAR from the EXARC Bibliography, originally compiled by Roeland Paardekooper, and updated. Most of these records consist of a document citation and other metadata but do not have the documents themselves uploaded. If you have a digital copy of the document and would like to have it curated in tDAR, please contact us using the...