Curriculum Vitae Glen H Doran
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Tallahassee, Florida. 19
Kerce, Red (Benjamin L.), 1911-1964. Vine covered column ruins of Verdura plantation - Tallahassee, Florida. 19--. Black & white photoprint. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/44417 59 Vitruvio International journal of Architecture Technology and Sustainability Volume 2 Is 1 Plantation Houses of North Florida Eduardo Robles 1 1 Florida A&M University, School of Architecture and EngineeringTechnology ABSTRACT The concept of Plantation conjures an image that identifies the North Florida / South Georgia region of the U. S. Leon County attracted many cotton planters from Georgia, Virginia, Maryland, North and South Carolina in the 1820’s to the 1850’s. Up to the beginning of the Civil War, Leon County was the 5th largest producer of cotton counting all counties from Florida and Georgia. The Civil War brought the plantation culture to a standstill. The plantations transformed the environment based on their need for open fields in which to cultivate different crops, or raise a variety of animals with the help of slaves. From the 1900’s many plantations abandoned their land to nature producing a deep change in the local landscape. Today plantations are not used as much for planting crops but more for hunting or as tree farms. The hunting plantations do not grow crops but provide good conditions for the hunting of animals and birds. Other plantations were torn apart, sold and now are part of the Tallahassee urban fabric. In other words, they disappeared. The transformation of the plantations has been slow and steady, and has become the image of the area, even the region. -
Old Salem Conference Examines Women and Southern Gardens "Set out with My Own Hand 608 Splendi D Blossoming Bulbs
Bulletin of th e Magnolia grandiflora Southern Garden The Laurel Tree of Carolina Catesby's Natural History, 1743 History Societ y Old Salem Conference Examines Women and Southern Gardens "Set out with my own hand 608 splendi d blossoming bulbs . " (1864 Quote from Catherine Devereux Edmondston ) By Kenneth M. McFarland T o paraphrase opening remarks by garden historia n Valencia Libby of Temple University, the multifaceted role of wome n in shaping the souther n landscape (and landscape s elsewhere as well) ha s frequently been unsung, to say the least, and the subject of blatant prejudice in more cases than a few. Speakers at the 1995 "Restoring Souther n Gardens and Landscapes" conference attempted to redress these and othe r interpretive shortcomings as they scrutinized "The Influence of Women on th e Southern Landscape." Well over one hundre d participants gathered at Old 's Amateur Cultivator's Guide t o "Gardening." Washburn and Co . Continued on page 2 . the Flower and Kitchen Garden, Boston, 1869 . Page 2 Calenda r Page 10 Book Review: Gardens of Historic Charleston Page 11 In Print Page 12 Call for SGHS Board Nomination s 1 May 9th-10th, 1996 . Gillette Calendar Symposium, Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden , March 23rd, 1996. "Telling Her Story: 1800 Lakeside Ave., Richmond, VA Expanding the Past of Georgia's Wome n 23228-4700; (804) 262-9887, fax Through Historic Places." Sponsored by the (804) 262-9934. Historic Preservation Division of the Georgia . Fourteenth-annual Department of Natural Resources, Agnes Scott May 10th-12th, 1996 meeting of the Southern Garden History Society College, the Georgia Humanities Council, and t AT&T University. -
Archaeological Assessment of Sites 44PY7, 44PY43, 44PY152 At
ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF SITES 44PY7, 44PY43, AND 44PY152 AT LEESVILLE LAKE PITTSYLVANIA COUN1Y, VIRGINIA ~ OTHER PALEOINDIAN CLUSTERS LEESVILLE LAKE SITES Prepared for Virginia Department of Historic Resources December 1994 ~ The College Of . .• :<( WILLIAM&MARY ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF SITES 44PY7, 44PY43, AND 44PY152 AT LEESVILLE LAKE PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY, VIRGINIA Submitted to: Virginia Department of Historic Resources 221 Governor Street Richmond, Virginia 23219 Submitted by: William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research Department of Anthropology The College of William and Mary Williamsburg, Virginia 23187 Project Directors Dennis B. Blanton .)onald W. Linebaugh Authors Dennis B. Blanton William Childress Jonathan Danz Leslie Mitchell Joseph Schuldenrein Jesse Zinn December 16, 1994 ABSTRACT Sites 44PY7, 44PY43, and 44PY152 on the southern shore of Leesville Lake in Pittsylvania County were subjected to archaeological evaluation. Sites 44PY7 and 44PY152 were confirmed to contain Early ArchaicIPaleoindian horizons buried beneath 1.5 to 1.8 m of alluvium. Geoarchaeological analyses and a series of radiocarbon dates make the 44PY152 deposits among the best-documented early Holocene contexts in the region. Portions of these components have been lost to erosion, but each retains significant research potential. Site 44PY43 is a remnant of a Late Woodland village. Trenching failed to locate a palisade line, but numerous post features and possible pits were identified. This site also retains potential for recovering significant information on Late Woodland settlement in this section of the Roanoke River valley. Project results are discussed in the context of prevailing settlementlsubsistencemodels fbr the region. REPORT CONTRIBUTORS Authors: Dennis B. Blanton William Childress Jonathan Danz Leslie Mitchell Joseph Schuldenrein Jesse Zinn Graphics and Report Production Editors: Donald W. -
Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 33, Issue 1
Florida Historical Quarterly Volume 33 Issue 1 Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol 33, Article 1 Issue 1 1954 Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 33, Issue 1 Florida Historical Society [email protected] Find similar works at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq University of Central Florida Libraries http://library.ucf.edu This Full Issue is brought to you for free and open access by STARS. It has been accepted for inclusion in Florida Historical Quarterly by an authorized editor of STARS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Society, Florida Historical (1954) "Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 33, Issue 1," Florida Historical Quarterly: Vol. 33 : Iss. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq/vol33/iss1/1 Society: Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 33, Issue 1 The FLORIDA HISTORICAL QUARTERLY Volume XXXIII July 1954 -April 1955 Published by the FLORIDA HISTORICAL SOCIETY Published by STARS, 1954 1 Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 33 [1954], Iss. 1, Art. 1 CONTENTS OF VOLUME XXXIII ARTICLES AND AUTHORS Asi-Yaholo or Osceola: Mark F. Boyd; 249 Boyd, Mark F.: Asi-Yaholo or Osceola; 249 Case of Some Inhabitants of East Florida, 1767-1785: Barbara Gorely Teller; 97 Coe, Charles H.: Parentage of Osceola; 202 Covington, James W.: Cuban Bloodhounds and the Seminoles; 111 Cuban Bloodhounds and the Seminoles: James W. Covington; 111 Disappearance of the Head of Osceola: May McNeer Ward; 193 Doherty, Herbert J., Jr.: The Governorship of Andrew Jackson; 3 Florida and the British Investor, 1880-1914: Alfred P. Tischendorf; 120 Florida Executive Council: An Experiment in Civil War Administration: William C. -
Southern Garden History Plant Lists
Southern Plant Lists Southern Garden History Society A Joint Project With The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation September 2000 1 INTRODUCTION Plants are the major component of any garden, and it is paramount to understanding the history of gardens and gardening to know the history of plants. For those interested in the garden history of the American south, the provenance of plants in our gardens is a continuing challenge. A number of years ago the Southern Garden History Society set out to create a ‘southern plant list’ featuring the dates of introduction of plants into horticulture in the South. This proved to be a daunting task, as the date of introduction of a plant into gardens along the eastern seaboard of the Middle Atlantic States was different than the date of introduction along the Gulf Coast, or the Southern Highlands. To complicate maters, a plant native to the Mississippi River valley might be brought in to a New Orleans gardens many years before it found its way into a Virginia garden. A more logical project seemed to be to assemble a broad array plant lists, with lists from each geographic region and across the spectrum of time. The project’s purpose is to bring together in one place a base of information, a data base, if you will, that will allow those interested in old gardens to determine the plants available and popular in the different regions at certain times. This manual is the fruition of a joint undertaking between the Southern Garden History Society and the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. In choosing lists to be included, I have been rather ruthless in expecting that the lists be specific to a place and a time. -
The Early Gardens of Goodwood in Tallahassee, Florida in 1830, Aspiring Planter and Amateur Botanist Hardy Croom Arrived in What Is Now Leon
Meggan McCarthy PhD Application Writing Sample Nature and Power on the Antebellum Southern Plantation: The Early Gardens of Goodwood in Tallahassee, Florida In 1830, aspiring planter and amateur botanist Hardy Croom arrived in what is now Leon County, Florida. Croom came following his desire to join Florida’s burgeoning plantation economy. He purchased 2,400 acres from the Lafayette Land Grant holdings in 1834 along with his brother and began construction on his home in 1837.1 While he did not live to see the completion of his plantation estate, Croom certainly left a legacy in the state of Florida.2 Hardy’s brother Bryan continued in his stead and completed what is now known as Goodwood Plantation in 1839 (figs. 1-2).3 Hardy left behind the discovery and taxonomy of two notable flora: the Croomia pauciflora and the Torreya taxifolia (figs. 3a-3b).4 The subject of this paper is the antebellum gardens at Goodwood Plantation. Formal garden spaces were not uncommon on Southern plantations, as I will demonstrate later. However, the pre-Civil War landscape at Goodwood is no longer extant. What remains today are the gardens of the early twentieth century owners of the estate. This paper draws on antebellum landscape design to synthesize a concept of ordered space reflecting the antebellum principles of controlling nature. Little information remains pertaining to the appearance of the garden spaces during the time of the Croom brothers (1834-1857) or Arvah Hopkins (1858-1890), who owned 1 Walli Beall, The Seasons of Goodwood (Tallahassee: Goodwood Museum, n.d), 7. -
Steatite on the Juniata: Early Pottery at the Sunny Side Site (36BD267), Central Pennsylvania
University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Anthropology Faculty Publications Anthropology 2011 Steatite on the Juniata: Early Pottery at the Sunny Side Site (36BD267), Central Pennsylvania Douglas H. Macdonald University of Montana - Missoula, [email protected] Eric P. Scuoteguazza GAI Consultants, Inc. David L. Cremeens GAI Consultants, Inc. Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/anthro_pubs Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Macdonald, Douglas H.; Scuoteguazza, Eric P.; and Cremeens, David L., "Steatite on the Juniata: Early Pottery at the Sunny Side Site (36BD267), Central Pennsylvania" (2011). Anthropology Faculty Publications. 9. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/anthro_pubs/9 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Anthropology at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Anthropology Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STEATITE ON THE JUNIATA: EARLY POTTERY AT THE SUNNY SIDE SITE (36BD267), CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA DOUGLAS H. MACDONALD THE UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA ERIC P. SCUOTEGUAZZA DAVID L. CREMEENS GAI CONSULTANTS, INC., PITTSBURGH, PA ABSTRACT Archaeological excavations recovered early steatite-tempered pottery at the Sunny Side site (36BD267), Bedford County, Pennsylvania. The Sunny Side site is on a floodplain/terrace of Yellow Creek near its confluence with the Raystown Branch of the Juniata River. A 70-cm-wide hearth was excavated along with associated Selden Island steatite-tempered pottery and lithic debris at a depth of 94 cm below ground surface in a buried Ab horizon. -
Florida's Dissenters Rebels and Runaways: 1 J Territorial Days to Emancipation
FLORIDA'S DISSENTERS REBELS AND RUNAWAYS: 1 J TERRITORIAL DAYS TO EMANCIPATION BY LARRY EUGENE RIVERS A THESIS SUBMIr£ED FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF LONDON (GOLDSMITHS COLLEGE) (DEPARTMENT OF HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL STUDIES) 2001 1 ABSTRACT This thesis examines slave resistance in Florida from the territorial period to emancipation. Florida bond servants manifested varying degrees of resistance. Much like other enslaved blacks throughout the South, the way slaves reacted to Florida's peculiar institution depended on their overall personality, size of the plantation or farm, and treatment by owners and managers (ie. overseers, stewards, foremen, and slave drivers). Enslaved blacks' behavior could range from mild daily dissidence to individual or collective violence against their masters, other whites, and occasionally fellow bond servants. Running away became the most frequent form of conservative resistance employed by bond servants to demonstrate their disenchantment with the day-to-day realities of slavery. The introduction explains the overall purpose and focus of this study. Specifically, it covers Florida slave resistance from 1821 to 1865. Chapter 2 One explores the daily for.ms of slave dissidence that ranged from feigning illness to stealing food and other materials from the farms and plantations of Florida. Chapters Two through Four consider the various reasons slaves absconded including, but not limited to, their treatment, family and kinfo1k concerns, and demands of the work routine. Chapter Five analyzes the most extreme form of slave resistance--physical violence. This type of resistance, either individual or collective, was a frequent result of bondservants' frustration and anger with the Florida slave regime. -
Current Northeast Paleoethnobotany II the UNIVERSITY of the STATE of NEW YORK
Current Northeast Paleoethnobotany II THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK Regents of The University ROBERT M. BENNETT, Chancellor, B.A., M.S. Tonawanda MERRYL H. TISCH, Vice Chancellor, B.A., M.A. Ed.D. New York SAUL B. COHEN, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. New Rochelle JAMES C. DAWSON, A.A., B.A., M.S., Ph.D. Peru ANTHONY S. BOTTAR, B.A., J.D. Syracuse GERALDINE D. CHAPEY, B.A., M.A., Ed.D. Belle Harbor ARNOLD B. GARDNER, B.A., LL.B. Buffalo HARRY PHILLIPS, 3rd, B.A., M.S.F.S. Hartsdale JOSEPH E. BOWMAN,JR., B.A., M.L.S., M.A., M.Ed., Ed.D. Albany JAMES R. TALLON,JR., B.A., M.A. Binghamton MILTON L. COFIELD, B.S., M.B.A., Ph.D. Rochester ROGER B. TILLES, B.A., J.D. Great Neck KAREN BROOKS HOPKINS, B.A., M.F.A. Brooklyn CHARLES R. BENDIT,B.A. ........................................................................ NewYork BETTY A. ROSA, B.A., M.S. in Ed., M.S. in Ed., M.Ed., Ed.D. Bronx LESTER W. YOUNG JR., B.S., M.S., Ed.D. Oakland Gardens President of The University and Commissioner of Education RICHARD P. MILLS Deputy Commissioner for Cultural Education JEFFREY W. CANNELL Director of the New York State Museum CLIFFORD A. SIEGFRIED Director, Research and Collections Division JOHN P. HART The State Education Department does not discriminate on the basis of age, color, religion, creed, disability, marital status, veteran status, national ori- gin, race, gender, genetic predisposition or carrier status, or sexual orientation in its educational programs, services and activities. -
Tallahassee, Florida 2009
Table of contents Welcome to Tallahassee ................................................... 2 A Note from the 2009 Program Committee .....................3 Conference Information ...................................................4 Location Accommodations Registration Cancellations Transportation and Directions About Tallahassee Child Care Commitment to Sustainability Questions Conference at a Glance .................................................... 6 Field Trips ........................................................................ 8 ASEH Travel Grant Recipients ........................................9 Special Events ................................................................10 Opening Reception Breakfasts Lunch Banquet and ASEH President’s Address Plenary Address ASEH Fundraiser for Environmental Justice Graduate Student Reception Workshops EH Editorial Board Meeting Poster Session ASEH Business Meeting ASEH Awards Banquet and Keynote Address Exhibits Poster Presentations ....................................................... 12 Conference Program ...................................................... 14 Wednesday, February 25 Thursday, February 26 Paradise Lost, Friday, February 27 Saturday, February 28 Found, and ASEH Committees .........................................................34 Index .............................................................................. 36 Constructed: Exhibitors and Book Announcements ............................38 Conceptualizing Registration Form Map of Conference Sites (Doubletree -
The Civilian Conservation Corps, the Florida Park Service, and The
Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2008 Florida Crackers and Yankee Tourists: The Civilian Conservation Corps, the Florida Park Service and the Emergence of Modern Florida Tourism David J. Nelson Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES FLORIDA CRACKERS AND YANKEE TOURISTS: THE CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS, THE FLORIDA PARK SERVICE AND THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN FLORIDA TOURISM By DAVID J. NELSON A Dissertation submitted to the Department of History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Degree Awarded: Spring Semester, 2008 Copyright © 2008 David J. Nelson All Rights Reserved The members of the Committee approve the dissertation of David J. Nelson defended on March 26, 2008. ______________________________ Elna C. Green Professor Directing Dissertation ______________________________ Jonathan Leib Outside Committee Member ______________________________ Jennifer Koslow Committee Member ______________________________ Frederick Davis Committee Member The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee members. ii This dissertation is dedicated to: David E. Nelson, Sr. (6 February 1923 – 14 January 2008) who inspired me to look at the past; And Carter Cole Nelson (born 17 April 2006) who inspires me to look towards the future. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First and foremost, I want to express in writing how grateful I am to the members of my doctoral committee: Dr. Jennifer Koslow, Dr. Jonathan Leib, Dr. Frederick Davis, as well as two former members, Dr. Albrecht Koschnik and Dr. Valerie Conner. And I especially want to express my immense gratitude to my major professor, Dr. -
Federal Register / Vol. 48, No. 41 / Tuesday, March 1, 1983 / Notices 8621
Federal Register / Vol. 48, No. 41 / Tuesday, March 1, 1983 / Notices 8621 UNITED STATES INFORMATION 2. The authority to redelegate the VETERANS ADMINISTRATION AGENCY authority granted herein together with the power of further redelegation. Voluntary Service National Advisory [Delegation Order No. 83-6] Texts of all such advertisements, Committee; Renewal notices, and proposals shall be This is to give notice in accordance Delegation of Authority; To the submitted to the Office of General Associate Director for Management with the Federal Advisory Committee Counsel for review and approval prior Act (Pub. L. 92-463) of October 6,1972, Pursuant to the authority vested in me to publication. that the Veterans Administration as Director of the United States Notwithstanding any other provision Voluntary Service National Advisory Information Agency by Reorganization of this Order, the Director may at any Committee has been renewed by the Plan No. 2 of 1977, section 303 of Pub. L. time exercise any function or authority Administrator of Veterans Affairs for a 97-241, and section 302 of title 5, United delegated herein. two-year period beginning February 7, States Code, there is hereby delegated This Order is effective as of February 1983 through February 7,1985. 8,1983. to the Associate Director for Dated: February 15,1983. Management the following described Dated: February 16,1983. By direction of the Administrator. authority: Charles Z. Wick, Rosa Maria Fontanez, 1. The authority vested in the Director Director, United States Information Agency. by section 3702 of title 44, United States Committee Management Officer. [FR Doc. 83-5171 Filed 2-28-83; 8:45 am] Code, to authorize the publication of [FR Doc.