More Than a Pile of Iron Scraps: Understanding The Archaeology of Blacksmith Shops
Author(s): Alexander G. Menaker
Year: 2025
Summary
This is an abstract from the session entitled "At the Intersections of History: Collaborative, Public Archaeology along the Chisholm Trail in Bolivar, Texas", at the 2025 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology.
This paper explores the archaeology of blacksmithing through examining the Tom Cook Blacksmith Shop with excavations yielding more than 25,000 artifacts. Located along the Chisholm Trail and belonging to Tom Cook, an African American freedman, the archaeological assemblage of the blacksmith shop offers insight into life and blacksmithing along the Texas frontier. Once ubiquitous, blacksmiths and their associated archaeological assemblages embody the historical processes of craft and industry. Bridging the craft and archaeology of blacksmithing, this study involves collaboration with professional blacksmiths and stakeholder communities. Building on foundational research and the Tom Cook archaeological assemblage, this research addresses how to archaeologically identify blacksmithing, types of archaeological evidence, layout of a blacksmith shop and the different methods and approaches. An archaeology of blacksmithing offers multiple scales of resolution, from identifying the individual signature of a blacksmith to the range of materials and spheres of activities of broader regional contexts.
Cite this Record
More Than a Pile of Iron Scraps: Understanding The Archaeology of Blacksmith Shops. Alexander G. Menaker. Presented at Society for Historical Archaeology, New Orleans, Louisiana. 2025 ( tDAR id: 508931)
This Resource is Part of the Following Collections
Keywords
General
Blacksmithing
•
craft
•
Industry
Geographic Keywords
Texas, United States
Individual & Institutional Roles
Contact(s): Nicole Haddow