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Prehistoric Settlements of Coastal Louisiana. William Grant Mcintire Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1954 Prehistoric Settlements of Coastal Louisiana. William Grant Mcintire Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Mcintire, William Grant, "Prehistoric Settlements of Coastal Louisiana." (1954). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 8099. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/8099 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HjEHisroaic smm&ws in coastal Louisiana A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of Geography and Anthropology by William Grant MeIntire B. S., Brigham Young University, 195>G June, X9$k UMI Number: DP69477 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI DP69477 Published by ProQuest LLC (2015). Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code ProQuest: ProQuest LLC. -
Kolomoki Memoirs
Kolomoki Memoirs By Williams H. Sears Edited with a Preface By Mark Williams and Karl T. Steinen University of Georgia and University of West Georgia University of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series Report Number 70 2013 Preface Mark Williams and Karl T. Steinen This document was written by Bill Sears about 1988 at his home in Vero Beach, Florida. He had retired in 1982 after a career teaching anthropology and archaeology at from Florida Atlantic University. He was working on a book of his professional memoirs, intended to summarize the many archaeological sites he had worked on in Georgia and Florida from 1947 until his retirement. He wrote chapters on his 1948 excavation at the Wilbanks site (9CK5) in the Allatoona Reservoir (Sears 1958), on his 1953 excavation at the famous Etowah site (9BR1), and on his 1947-1951 excavations at the Kolomoki site (9ER1) published in four volumes (Sears 1951a, 1951b, 1953, 1956). These three sites constituted the bulk of his archaeological excavations in Georgia. Apparently he never wrote the intended chapters on his archaeological work in Florida, and the book was never completed. Following his death in December of 1996 (see Ruhl and Steinen 1997), his wife Elsie found the three chapters in a box and passed them on to one of us (Steinen). The chapters on Etowah and Wilbanks are being published separately. The document we present here is his unpublished chapter on the Kolomoki site. It provides a fascinating look at the state of archaeology in Georgia 65 years ago and is filled with pointed insights on many people. -
Download BALMNH No 19 1998
.- ~_4 . Is!~¥r~ ~e~ ~~ "" ...... &.4I~""" ... ogtcal Survey m the Mobile-Tensaw Delta BULLETIN ALABAMA MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY The scientific publication of the Alabama Museum of Natural History. Richard L. Mayden, Editor,John C. Hall, Managing Editor. BULLETIN ALABAMA MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY is published by the Alabama Museum of Natural History, a unit of The University of Alabama Museums. The BULLETIN succeeds its predecessor, the MUSEUM PAPERS, which was termi nated in 1961 upon the transfer of the Museum to the University from its parent organization, the Geological Survey of Alabama. The BULLETIN is devoted primarily to scholarship and research concerning the natural history of Alabama and the Southeast. It appears twice yearly in consecu tively numbered issues. Communication concerning manuscripts, style, and editorial policy should be addressed to: Editor, BULLETIN ALABAMA MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, The University of Alabama, Box 870340, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0340; tele phone (205) 348-9742. Prospective authors should examine the Notice to Authors inside the back cover. Orders and requests for general information should be addressed to BULLETIN ALABAMA MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, at the above address. Yearly sub scriptions (two issues) are $15.00 for individuals, $20.00 for corporations and institutions. Numbers may be purchased individually. Payment should accompany orders and subscriptions and checks should be made out to "The University of Alabama." Library exchanges should be handled through: Exchange Librarian, The University of Alabama, Box 870266, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0266. When citing this publication, authors are requested to use the following abbrevia tion: Bull. Alabama Mus. Nat. Hist. ISSN: 0196-1039 Copyright 1998 by The Alabama Museum of Natural History ))~({ •"" __.~ I w)jO{( ALABAMA MUSEUM of Natural History Bulletin 19 June 1, 1998 The Mound Island Project: An Archaeological Survey in the Mobile-Tensaw Delta by Richard S. -
Archeological Assessment: Barataria Unit, Jean Lafitte National Historical
1 D-3'1 ·. > "-'' • ARCHEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT BARA T ARIA UNIT 1..JEAN LAFITTE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK By John Stuart Speaker, Joanna Chase, Carol Poplin, Herschel Franks, and R. Christopher Goodwin Southwest Cultural Resources Center Professional Papers No. 10 e I ARCHEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF THE BARATARIA UNIT, JEAN LAFITTE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK By John Stuart Speaker, Joanna Chase, Carol Poplin, Herschel Franks, and R. Christopher Goodwin Contract No. PX 7530-5-0100 December 12, 1986 Submitted to: southwest Region National Park Service U.S. Department of Interior P.O. Box 728 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504 Submitted by: R. Christopher Goodwin & Associates, Inc. 1306 Burdette St. New Orleans, Louisiana 70118 ABSTRACT This archeological assessment provides an overview of the natural and cultural environment, past and present, within the Barataria unit; it represents a synthesis of the results of previous investigations of the area. The archeological record of the study area is incomplete at present. Al though there have been several cultural resource investigations conducted pr imar i 1 y wi t!}.in the core area, few have offered data necessary to fill the gaps existing in the prehistoric record. It is imperative that existing sites and data be protected from adverse effects; otherwise the research potential that exists in this rich cultural and environmental setting may never be realized. MANAGEMENT SUMMARY This report presents the results of a literature review and archeological assessment of the Barataria Unit of the Jean Lafitte National Historical Park (JLNHP). During this effort, numerous environmental, archeological, and historical sources were utilized. The report identifies and discusses relevant data pert a in ing to the geomorphology, hydrology, ecology, and resource potential for the area. -
Atlanta City Directory, 1859-60
WILLIAMS' ATLANTA DIRECTORY, CITY GUIDE, and Business Mirror. Contains also a List of Post Offices, in thh United States, Corrected up to Date. VOLUME 1. —1859-'60 ATLANTA: M. LYNCH, SUCCESSOR TO WM. KAY, 1859. PREFACE. We present our first issue of the Atlanta Directory with the belief that it will be found as nearly accurate as any book of the kind can possibly be. The growing importance of the City demands that its popula¬ tion and business should be represented in this shape, and the com¬ piler expresses the hope that this volume will be the first of a long series. It depends upon the public spirit of the business men and the pa¬ tronage they extend to the enterprize, to determine whether the publication shall be continued. The publisher begs to extend to the subscribers to the present vol¬ ume, his sincere, thanks for their liberality; also, to G. B. Hay- good, Esq. for the sketch of Atlanta, furnished for this volume CONTENTS. Atlanta, (Sketch of) 10 Alphabetical Arrangement of Names, 35 Banks 25 Benevolent Institutions, 24 Boundaries of Wards, 20 Business Mirror 150 Church Directory, 22 City Government, 21 City Guide 16 County Officers, 32 Fire Department, 23 Index to Advertisements, 7 Insurance Companies and Agencies, - - 27 Masons, - 24 Military 29 Odd Fellows, 24 Post Office 125 Preface 3 Public Buildings, Halls, etc 26 Miscellaneous, .. 31 Newspapers and Periodicals, 28 Street Directory, 15 Temperance, 24 INDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS. AUCTION & COMMISSION, GROCERIES. &C. Barnes W. H. & Co,,... 160 Davis J. C ATTORNEYS AT LAW. 33 LovejoyJ. H 82 Bell & Pittman 98 HAIR WORKER, Haygood Greene B 54 BARBER, Braumuller Mrs. -
Indianmounds
i s s i o n mm o c indian mounds of NortheAst louisiANa A Driving Trail Guide ils Advisory A r t n d A A g e A r e A indian Mounds trail guide prepared by and available from: louisiana division of Archaeology office of cultural development P.o. Box 44247 Baton rouge, lA 70804 (225) 342-8170 Ancient Mounds Herit [email protected] www.crt.state.la.us/archaeology June 2008 Painting by Martin Pate W e l c o m e u s i n g t h i s g u i d e ouisiana has a secret to share with he state of Louisiana has placed markers at 39 Indian you: this state has the oldest earth- mound sites in northeast Louisiana that form the Mounds L en mounds in North America, Trail. This guidebook gives driving instructions to the even older than Stonehenge or the Great T Pyramids. Our rich and diverse environ- markers. The sites are grouped geographically into four segments. ment has lured people who hunt and fish to these hills, bayous, streams, and lakes q Trail Segment 1……..page 3 for thousands of years. As the beauty of q Trail Segment 2……..page 15 our bounty captured the spirits of the first q Trail Segment 3……..page 22 residents here, they began to build earthen q Trail Segment 4……..page 30 mounds to celebrate their bond to this land. The concept spread throughout the Southeast and the Ohio Valley, producing magnifi- cent mounds; but no other state’s mounds surpass the span of time, A large, fold-out map showing all of the trail segments is in the diversity of style, or degree of preservation found here. -
Biennial Report of the North Carolina State Department of Archives and History
THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA THE COLLECTION OF NORTH CAROLINIANA C906 N87h2 V.35 1972/74 UNIVERSITY OF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL I ^^^ 00033953829 ^^^^F FOR USE ONLY IN THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLECTION I Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in 2009 witii funding from Ensuring Democracy tiirougii Digital Access (NC-LSTA) http://www.archive.org/details/biennialreportof197274nort THIRTY-FIFTH BIENNIAL REPORT THE NORTH CAROLINA DIVISION OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY 4 19724974 COVER— Jewelry made from copper taken from the old roof of the State Capitol was handcrafted by Stuart Nye of Asheville. Two of several designs sold by the Division of Archives and History are pictured on the cover. (This photograph by the News and Observer; all others in this report by the Division of Archives and History. ) THIRTY-FIFTH BIENNIAL REPORT OFTHE NORTH CAROLINA DIVISION OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY July 1,1972 through June 30, 1974 Raleigh Division of Archives and History North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources 1974 DIVISION OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL RESOURCES NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL COMMISSION T. Harry Gatton, Chairman, Raleigh Miss Gertrude Sprague Carraway, New Bern Gordon S. Dugger, Chapel Hill Frontis W. Johnston, Davidson J. C. Knowles, Raleigh Hugh T. Lefler, Chapel Hill Edward W. Phifer, Jr., Vice-chairman, Morganton For list and terms of office of members of the North Carolina Histori- cal Commission, see Appendix I, p. 77. : STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA Department of Cultural Resources Raleigh 27611 To His Excellency James E. Holshouser, Jr. Governor of North Carolina Dear Governor Holshouser I have the honor to transmit herewith the Thirty-fifth Biennial Report of the North Carolina Division of Archives and History for the period July 1, 1972, to June 30, 1974. -
Cultural Resources Survey of the Bayou Fountain Channel Enlargement Area, East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana
CULTURAL RESOURCE STUDY Report Number: CEMVN/PD-97/04 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers New Orleans District CULTURAL RESOURCES SURVEY OF THE BAYOU FOUNTAIN CHANNEL ENLARGEMENT AREA, EAST BATON ROUGE PARISH, LOUISIANA Final Report October 1997 COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS, INC. 1260 MAIN STREET BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA 70802 Prepared for: °EC qUALTTJ wz ;ijPI2CT2J25 ■£ U.S. Army Corps of Engineers New Orleans District (Contract No. DACW29-97-D-0017, Delivery Order No. 0001) 19980414 060 EISl'RIJiUTlON STÄTTE Approved for public releases Distribution Unirafted r~ Form Approved REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE OMB No. 0704-0188 % Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, i gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. -Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this '•. collection of information, including suggestions for reducinq this burden, to Washinaton Headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports, 1215 Jefferson : Davis Highway, Suite 1204, Arlington, VA 22202-4302. and to the Office of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project (0704-018S). Washington, DC 20503. 1. AG£NCY"usTÖSrY7i.eave blank)"™ 2. REPORT"~ DATE "*"" "~~"""3. REPORT TYPE — AND DATES COVERED 10 September 1997 Preliminary Final 4. TITLE AND SU3TITLE 5. FUNDING NUMBERS Cultural Resources Survey of the Bayou Fountain Channel Contract Enlargement Area, East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana DACW29-97-D-0017 Delivery Order 01 6. AUTHOR(S) Tom Wells and Dayna Lee 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION KAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER Coastal Environments, Inc. -
9 Archaeological Test Excavations in Tensas Parish, Louisiana
9 Archaeological Test Excavations in Tensas Parish, Louisiana .' I' I ",' ',', .' .'... by Tristram Kidder With Contributions by Gayle]. Fritz Roger T. Saucier and Christopher]. Smith The Center For Archaeology Archaeological Report 2 1993 TULANE UNIVERSITY 1992 Archaeological Test Excavations in Tensas Parish, Louisiana by Tristram R. Kidder Department of Anthropology Tulane University With Contributions By Gayle J. Fritz Christopher J. Smith and Roger T. Saucier project has been financed in part with federal funds from the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, through the Department of Culture, Recreation, and Tourism, Office of Cultural lJevellopmt:~nt, Division of Archaeology. However, the contents and opinions do not necessarily retlect views or policies of the Department of the Interior, nor does the mention of trade names or COInrrlen;la1 products constitute endorsement or recommendation by the Depaltment of the Interior. program received federal financial assistance for identification and protection of historic m·"nl-',·t",,, Under Title VI of the Civil Right'> Act of 1964 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of the U.S. Department of the interior prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national or handicap in its federally assisted programs. If you believe you have been discriminated ag:lin:st in any program, activity or facility described above, or if you desire further infOimation, please to: Office of Equal OppOitunity U.S. Depaltment of the Interior Washington D.C. 20240 July 30, 1993 Centerfor Archaeology Tulane University New Orleans, Louisiana 70118 Abstract The Center For Archaeology undertook a two month-long project of research and National Register testing at three sites in Tensas Parish, Louisiana, during the summer of 1992. -
LIST by County
Oklahoma Cemetery Directory MASTER LIST By County OHCE Genealogy Group Oklahoma County, Oklahoma Oklahoma Cemetery Directory Based on the original compilations of the 77 County Cemetery Indexes , an Oklahoma Centennial Project of Oklahoma Home and Community Education OHCE Oklahoma Cemetery Index es originally completed November 2005 2nd Edition of additions and corrections for publishing March 2008 by Oklahoma OHCE State organization Completion of name change to Oklahoma Cemetery Directory May 2009 by Oklahoma County OHCE Genealogy Group 1st Edition of Oklahoma Cemetery Directory 2010 2nd Edition of Oklahoma Cemetery Directory September 2018 Information may be copied from this book for personal use, but may not be copied for profit. ©2018 OHCE Genealogy Group Oklahoma County, Oklahoma Printed in the United States of America September 2018 Oklahoma Cemetery Directory – Master List - By County Cemetery Twp-Rng-Sec Latitude Longitude Comments County The latitude and longitude coordinates that are underlined are verified at Google Maps. The ones not underlined can’t be guaranteed . Coordinates written like this 352241N mean 35º22'41" North Coordinates written like this 0972241W mean 97º22'41" West Adair Cemetery T15N-R25E-Sec8SE aka Old Adair Cemetery; west Adair of Stilwell Adair, Samuel Cemetery T15-R25E-Sec32 south of Dahlonegah Adair Adair, Squirrel Cemetery T16-R24E-Sec32 west of Stilwell Adair Adair, Walter Gravesite T14N-R25E-Sec6 north of Greasy Adair Ahman Hill Cemetery on private family land south of Stilwell Adair Alberty Cemetery T17N-R26E-Sec9NW 355755N 0943240W Westville Adair Allison Cemetery T15N-R26E-Sec20NE 354602N 0943353W aka Honey Hill Cemetery Adair Asbill -Elms Cemetery on private family land Greasy Adair Baptist Mission Cemetery T18N-R26E-Sec18SW 360207N 0943500W aka Old Baptist Mission Cem, N Adair of Westville Batt, Jack Cemetery T16N-R24E-Sec 36NW west of Stilwell Adair Bean Cemetery T17N-R25E-Sec33 aka Jack Bean Cemetery Adair Beaver Cemetery T14N-R24E-Sec22SW 354036N 0944512W approximate location; aka Adair Hickory Vann Cemetery; Greasy. -
Early Marksville Phases in the Lower Mississippi Valley: a Study of Culture Contact Dynamics
Archaeological Report No. 21 EARLY MARKSVILLE PHASES IN THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY: A STUDY OF CULTURE CONTACT DYNAMICS EDWIN ALAN TOTH MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY In Cooperation with THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI SURVEY, HARVARD UNIVERSITY Jackson 1988 MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY Archaeological Report No. 21 Patricia Kay Galloway Series Editor Elbert R. Hilliard Director The Mississippi Department of Archives and History is in debted to the Lower Mississippi Survey, Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard Uni versity, both for permission to publish this work and for a grant to aid in its publication. LMS LOWER MISSISSIPPI SURVEY This publication is essentially unchanged from the original dissertation prepared by the author in 1977. The editor has adjusted punctuation, removed typographic errors. ex punged stylistic infelicities, and made the manuscript con form to series style. Typeset by Altamese Wash Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 88-620-839 ISBN: 0-938896-54-7 Copyright 1988 Mississippi Department of Archives and History CONTENTS Foreword by Samuel O. Brookes ix Author's Preface. 1977 xv Abstract xvii Introduction 3 Chapter I. Requisite Background Perspectives for a Marksville Synthesis 9 The Geographical Setting 9 History of Marksville Period Archaeology 13 Some Thoughts on Method and Theory 16 Chapter II. The Tchefuncte Base 19 Lake Cormorant Considerations 19 Tchefuncte Culture _ 21 Chapter III. The Hopewellian Intrusion 29 Conical Mounds 29 Ceramic Parallels 42 Hopewellian Status-Related Artifacts 50 Imported Copper Products 51 Local Duplication in Clay 56 Exotic Raw Materials _ 65 The Dynamics of Hopewellian Contact 70 Chapter N. -
Fort Polk and Vernon Parish, 1800-1940
University of South Carolina Scholar Commons Faculty Publications Anthropology, Department of 1999 A Good Home for a Poor Man: Fort Polk and Vernon Parish, 1800-1940 Steven D. Smith University of South Carolina - Columbia, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/anth_facpub Part of the Anthropology Commons Publication Info Published in 1999. This project was funded by the Department of Defense’s Legacy Resource Management Program and administered by the Southeast Archaeological Center of the National Park Service under a cooperative agreement between the National Park Service and the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina. This Book is brought to you by the Anthropology, Department of at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Good Home for a Poor Man Fort Polk and Vernon Parish 1800 – 1940 Steven D. Smith A Good Home for a Poor Man Fort Polk and Vernon Parish 1800–1940 Steven D. Smith 1999 Dedicated to Andrew Jackson “Jack” Hadnot, John Cupit, Erbon Wise, John D. O’Halloran, Don Marler, Mary Cleveland, Ruth and John Guy, Martha Palmer, and others who have wrest from obscurity the history of Vernon Parish. This project was funded by the Department of Defense’s Legacy Resource Management Program and administered by the Southeast Archeological Center of the National Park Service under Cooperative Agreement CA-5000-3-9010, Subagreement CA-5000-4-9020/3, between the National Park Service and the South Carolina Institute of Archaeol- ogy and Anthropology, University of South Carolina.