Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Kimmer Rowe Gardens, K Rowe Dr Off Thomasville Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida 32309 Record No

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Kimmer Rowe Gardens, K Rowe Dr Off Thomasville Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida 32309 Record No Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Kimmer Rowe Gardens, K Rowe Dr off Thomasville Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida 32309 Record No. 101650309 Project No. 112IG02645 May 25, 2010 TETRA TECH 201 Pine Street ● Suite 1000 ● Orlando, Florida 32801 (407) 839.3955 ● FAX (407) 839.3790 ● www.tetratech.com Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Kimmer Rowe Gardens, K Rowe Dr off Thomasville Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida 32309 Record No. 101650309 Project No. 112IG02645 May 25, 2010 Prepared By: Tetra Tech, Inc. 17885 Von Karman Avenue, Suite 500 Irvine, California 92614 Phone: 949.809.5000 Fax: 949.809.5010 Prepared For: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) As Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165 c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC 7100 W. Commercial Blvd., Suite 101 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33319 TETRA TECH 201 Pine Street ● Suite 1000 ● Orlando, Florida 32801 (407) 839.3955 ● FAX (407) 839.3790 ● www.tetratech.com May 25, 2010 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) As Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165 c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC 7100 W. Commercial Blvd., Suite 101 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33319 Attention: Ms. Lisa Gastelum RE: Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Kimmer Rowe Gardens, K Rowe Dr off Thomasville Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida 32309 Record No. 101650309 Project No. 112IG02645 Dear Ms. Gastelum: Tetra Tech, Inc. (Tetra Tech) is pleased to submit this Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ESA) report to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), as Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165, c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC (Realogy) for the above-referenced property (the Site). Tetra Tech found no recognized environmental conditions (RECs), historical RECs (HRECs), potential environmental concerns (PECs), or business environmental risks (BERs) in connection with the Site. Tetra Tech understands that this ESA is being requested in conjunction with due diligence activities for the Site by the FDIC, as Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165. Tetra Tech recognizes that this report is to be used exclusively by the FDIC, as Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165, CB Richard Ellis, Inc. (CBRE), Realogy, and their affiliates. It is a report upon which the FDIC, as Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165, CBRE, Realogy, and their affiliates can rely. We appreciate the opportunity to provide you with these services. Please do not hesitate to contact us at your convenience, should you have any questions or comments regarding this report or our findings. Sincerely, TETRA TECH, INC. STEPHANIE L. HELBURN, CHMM DAVID R. GIDDENS, P.G. Senior Project Manager Florida Licensed Professional Geologist #1654 Phone: 904.824.0488 Phone: 407.839.3955 ext 227 MATTHEW SHELTON. Quality Assurance Manager Phone: 321.636.6470 ext 1301 TABLE OF CONTENTS TRANSMITTAL LETTER 1.0 SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS .................................................................................. 1 2.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................... 3 2.1 PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF SERVICES .......................................................................... 3 2.2 SIGNIFICANT ASSUMPTIONS, LIMITATIONS AND EXCEPTIONS, SPECIAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS ............................................................................................ 4 2.3 USER RELIANCE ............................................................................................................. 5 3.0 ASSET INFORMATION AND SITE BACKGROUND ................................................................ 6 3.1 ASSET INFORMATION ................................................................................................... 6 3.2 LOCATION AND LEGAL DESCRIPTION ..................................................................... 6 3.3 SITE AND VICINITY GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS ............................................... 6 3.4 OWNER, MANAGER AND OCCUPANTS ..................................................................... 7 3.5 CURRENT PROPERTY USE ............................................................................................ 7 3.6 STRUCTURES, ROADS, AND OTHER SITE IMPROVEMENTS ................................. 7 3.6.1 Exterior Improvements .......................................................................................... 7 3.6.2 Building Description .............................................................................................. 7 3.6.3 Utilities .................................................................................................................. 7 3.7 CURRENT ADJOINING PROPERTY USE ..................................................................... 7 3.8 SUMMARY ........................................................................................................................ 8 4.0 PROPERTY HISTORY ................................................................................................................... 9 4.1 HISTORICAL SITE AND SURROUNDING PROPERTY USE INFORMATION ......... 9 4.1.1 Prior Ownership and Usage ................................................................................... 9 4.1.2 Prior Site and Surrounding Property Use ............................................................... 9 4.2 SUMMARY ..................................................................................................................... 11 5.0 REGULATORY AGENCY FILE REVIEW ................................................................................. 12 5.1 STANDARD ENVIRONMENTAL RECORD SOURCES (EDR) ................................. 12 5.1.1 Federal Regulatory Records ................................................................................. 12 5.1.2 State Regulatory Records ..................................................................................... 12 5.2 ADDITIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL RECORD SOURCES .......................................... 12 5.3 PREVIOUS ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS ................................................. 13 5.4 HISTORICAL ADJOINING PROPERTY USE INFORMATION ................................. 13 5.5 SUMMARY ...................................................................................................................... 13 6.0 SITE INVESTIGATION AND REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS .................. 14 6.1 METHODOLOGY AND LIMITING CONDITIONS ..................................................... 14 6.2 TOPOGRAPHY ................................................................................................................ 14 6.3 GEOLOGY ....................................................................................................................... 14 6.4 SOILS ............................................................................................................................... 14 6.5 HYDROLOGY ................................................................................................................. 14 6.6 DRINKING WATER ....................................................................................................... 15 6.7 HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES OR PETROLEUM PRODUCTS .................................. 15 6.7.1 Hazardous Material Usage ................................................................................... 15 6.7.2 Hazardous Waste Management ........................................................................... 15 6.7.3 Solid Waste Management .................................................................................... 15 TETRA TECH, INC. i RECORD NO. 101650309 PROJECT NO. 112IG02645 6.8 STORM WATER DISCHARGE ...................................................................................... 15 6.9 WASTEWATER DISCHARGE ....................................................................................... 15 6.10 OTHER POTENTIAL RECS OBSERVED ..................................................................... 15 6.11 SUMMARY ...................................................................................................................... 16 7.0 SITE INVESTIGATION AND REVIEW OF SPECIAL RESOURCES ...................................... 17 7.1 ENDANGERED SPECIES ............................................................................................... 17 7.2 WETLANDS .................................................................................................................... 17 7.3 OTHER SPECIAL RESOURCES REVIEW ................................................................... 18 7.4 SUMMARY ...................................................................................................................... 18 8.0 USER PROVIDED INFORMATION ........................................................................................... 19 8.1 SUMMARY OF USER PROVIDED INFORMATION .................................................. 19 8.2 SUMMARY ...................................................................................................................... 19 9.0 INTERVIEWS ............................................................................................................................... 20 9.1 INTERVIEW WITH SITE OWNER ................................................................................ 20 9.2 INTERVIEW WITH SITE MANAGER .......................................................................... 20 9.3 INTERVIEW WITH OCCUPANTS ................................................................................ 20 9.4 INTERVIEW
Recommended publications
  • Tallahassee and Leon County Canopy Roads
    Tallahassee and Leon County Canopy Roads Canopy Roads: Rivers of Green. By Eduardo Robles, Chair Tallahassee and Leon County Canopy Roads Citizens Committee Executive Summary: The Canopy Roads Citizens Committee (CRCC) is entrusted with coordinating the protection, maintenance, and enhancement of the designated Canopy Roads in the City of Tallahassee and Leon County. The CRCC is a joint committee with four members appointed by the City and four members appointed by the County. The Canopy Roads are recognized locally and by many throughout the country as a wonderful cultural and natural resource and the signature of our community. The CRCC’s responsibility is to make recommendations to the City and County Commissions on matters related to Canopy Road preservation. The following items are the CRCC’s key recommendations to further the preservation of the Canopy Road’s experience for generations to come. The recommendations are explained on the following page. The Committee thanks the Commissions for the opportunity to provide these recommendations and looks forward to your response. Key Recommendations: 1. Update the Canopy Roads Management Plan. 2. Develop a Canopy Roads Design Manual. 3. Conduct an evaluation of the Committee development review process. 4. Designate a City Commissioner to act as a liaison to the Committee. Tallahassee and Leon County are known for our beautiful Canopy Roads and they are a big part of our unique and beautiful charm. Huge moss‐draped live oaks, sweet gums, hickory trees and stately pines cast their protective shade over Tallahassee roads, with limbs that meet in a towering canopy to provide cooling shade for the roads and very scenic drives for travelers.
    [Show full text]
  • The Florida Historical Quarterly Volume Xxxvii January-April, 1959 Numbers 3 and 4
    THE FLORIDA HISTORICAL QUARTERLY VOLUME XXXVII JANUARY-APRIL, 1959 NUMBERS 3 AND 4 CONTENTS FOR JANUARY-APRIL, 1959 TRISTAN DE LUNA AND OCHUSE (PENSACOLA BAY), 1559 ................ Charles W. Arnade .... 201 THE FOUNDING OF PENSACOLA- REASONS AND REALITY........................ Albert C. Manucy.... 223 SPANISH PENSACOLA, 1700-1763 .........William B. Griffen .... 242 PENSACOLA IN THE BRITISH PERIOD: SUMMARY AND SIGNIFICANCE............................................. Cecil Johnson.... 2 63 PENSACOLA DURING THE SECOND SPANISH PERIOD.................................................................. L. N. McAlister.... 281 PANTON, LESLIE, AND COMPANY........................... J. A. Brown.... 328 ANTE-BELLUM PENSACOLA: 1821-1860 ................................................... Herbert J. Doherty.. .. 337 PENSACOLA IN THE WAR FOR SOUTHERN INDEPENDENCE..................... Julien C. Yonge.... 357 BATTLE OF SANTA ROSA ISLAND........................... J. L. Larkin .... 372 PENSACOLA IN RETROSPECT: 1870-1890 ................................................................ Occie Clubbs ..... 377 RAILROADS OUT OF PENSACOLA, 1833-1883 .............................................. Charles W. Hildreth .... 397 NEWSPAPERS OF PENSACOLA, 1821-1900 ............................................................ H. G. Davis, Jr.. ... 418 EARLY CHURCHES OF PENSACOLA .........Lelia Abercrombie.. .. 446 CONTRIBUTORS ................................................................................................ 46 3 COPYRIGHT 1959 by the Florida Historical
    [Show full text]
  • SAN LUIS DE TALIMALI Page 1 United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
    NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK NOMINATION NPS Form 10-900 USDI/NPS NRHP Registration Form (Rev. 8-86) OMB No. 1024-0018 SAN LUIS DE TALIMALI Page 1 United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form 1. NAME OF PROPERTY Historic Name: San Luis de Talimali (UPDATED DOCUMENTATION for San Luis de Apalache, designated a National Historic Landmark on October 9, 1960) Other Name/Site Number: San Luis de Apalachee/Mission San Luis (8LE4) 2. LOCATION Street & Number: 2020 West Mission Road Not for publication: N/A City/Town: Tallahassee Vicinity: N/A State: Florida County: Leon Code: 073 Zip Code: 32304 3. CLASSIFICATION Ownership of Property Category of Property Private: _ Building(s): _ Public-Local: _ District: Public-State: X. Site: X. Public-Federal: Structure: _ Object:_ Number of Resources within Property Contributing Noncontributing 13 buildings (7 1930s & 1940s buildings and 6 reconstructions) __ sites _1 structures (parking lot) __ objects 1 14 Total Number of Contributing Resources Previously Listed in the National Register: 1 Name of Related Multiple Property Listing: N/A NFS Form 10-900 USDI/NPS NRHP Registration Form (Rev. 8-86) OMB No. 1024-0018 SAN LUIS DE TALIMALI Page 2 United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form 4. STATE/FEDERAL AGENCY CERTIFICATION As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended, I hereby certify that this __ nomination __ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60.
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Mission Life in 18Th-Century West Florida: 2011 Excavations at San Joseph De Escambe John Worth, Norma J. Harris, Jenn
    Exploring Mission Life in 18th-Century West Florida: 2011 Excavations at San Joseph de Escambe John Worth, Norma J. Harris, Jennifer Melcher, Danielle Dadiego University of West Florida Abstract In 2011, University of West Florida terrestrial field school students participated in a third consecutive year of excavations at Mission San Joseph de Escambe, located north of modern Pensacola between 1741 and 1761. Inhabited by Apalachee Indians and a small number of Franciscan friars and married Spanish soldiers, as well as a Spanish cavalry garrison late in the mission's history, the site's pristine archaeological deposits are gradually revealing details about mission life along this northernmost frontier of 18th-century West Florida. Ongoing block excavations have continued to expose a complex assemblage of architectural features separated by both vertical and horizontal stratigraphy, including several overlapping wall-trench structures capped with what seems to be a clay floor, and a large structure believed to be the cavalry barracks. Artifacts ranging from a predominantly Apalachee ceramic assemblage to an assortment of European trade goods continue to refine our understanding of this important site. Paper presented at the 2012 Conference of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Baltimore, Maryland, January 6, 2012. 1 Colonial mission communities have long been recognized by historians and anthropologists as crucibles of dynamic cultural transformation. Missions were not simply the setting for religious conversion, but in fact represented the primary stage on which two cultures—indigenous and colonizing—confronted each other in the context of daily life over the course of many years, decades, and even generations. Out of this long-term process of missionization were forged new cultural identities that were not simply the replacement of the indigenous culture by the colonizing culture, or some piecemeal blend of the two, but which instead manifested new cultural formations that have been variously described as creole or hybrid cultures.
    [Show full text]
  • Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 2065 Baum Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32317 Record No
    Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 2065 Baum Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32317 Record No. 101650112 Project No. 112IG02645 June 9, 2010 TETRA TECH 201 Pine Street ● Suite 1000 ● Orlando, Florida 32801 (407) 839.3955 ● FAX (407) 839.3790 ● www.tetratech.com Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 2065 Baum Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32317 Record No. 101650112 Project No. 112IG02645 June 9, 2010 Prepared By: Tetra Tech, Inc. 17885 Von Karman Avenue, Suite 500 Irvine, California 92614 Phone: 949.809.5000 Fax: 949.809.5010 Prepared For: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) As Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165 c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC 7100 W. Commercial Blvd, Suite 101 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33319 TETRA TECH 201 Pine Street ● Suite 1000 ● Orlando, Florida 32801 (407) 839.3955 ● FAX (407) 839.3790 ● www.tetratech.com June 9, 2010 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) As Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165 c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC 7100 W. Commercial Blvd, Suite 101 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33319 Attention: Mr. Nick Graziadei RE: Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 2065 Baum Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32317 Record No. 101650112 Project No. 112IG02645 Dear Mr. Graziadei: Tetra Tech, Inc. (Tetra Tech) is pleased to submit this Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ESA) report to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), as Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165, c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC (Realogy), for the above-referenced property (the Site). Tetra Tech found two potential environmental concerns (PECs) associated with this Site and adjoining properties. Tetra Tech identified no recognized environmental conditions (RECs), historical RECs (HRECs), or business environmental risks (BERs) in connection with the Site.
    [Show full text]
  • San Joseph De Escambe: a 18Th-Century Apalachee Mission in the West Florida Borderlands
    San Joseph de Escambe: A 18th-Century Apalachee Mission in the West Florida Borderlands John E. Worth, Norma J. Harris, and Jennifer Melcher University of West Florida Abstract In 2009, documentary evidence and archaeological testing led to the discovery of the archaeological site of Mission San Joseph de Escambe (c1741-1761) along the Escambia River north of Pensacola. Home to Apalachee Indians and resident Spanish friars and soldiers, the mission’s excavated material culture clearly reflects the multi-ethnic nature of this late mission community, and is comparable to contemporaneous assemblages from Presidios Isla de Santa Rosa (1722-1756) and San Miguel (1756-1763). Of particular note is the aboriginal ceramic assemblage, which displays characteristics reflecting the origins of the resident Apalachee as refugees formerly living in Creek Indian territory before 1718. Archaeological excavations conducted by the University of West Florida during the 2009 and 2010 summer field schools have also produced evidence for several undisturbed wall trench structures, including what may be Spanish cavalry barracks constructed in 1760, as well as multiple overlapping structures under a prepared clay cap. Paper presented at the 2011 Conference of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Austin, Texas, January 8, 2011. 1 Between 1698 and 1763, Pensacola Bay was home to three successive Spanish colonial presidios, collectively forming Spanish Florida’s westernmost border with French Louisiana during the period (Dunn 1917; Ford 1939; Manucy 1959; Coker 1999; Clune and Stringfield 2009). Administered and supplied out of Veracruz, Mexico, Presidios Santa María de Galve, Isla de Santa Rosa, and San Miguel de Panzacola were in many ways archetypical borderlands communities, populated by an assortment of individuals of European, African, American Indian, and mixed ancestry, all living in close proximity to other colonial and indigenous communities within a permeable and sometimes-hostile borderlands region.
    [Show full text]
  • Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28, Issue 1
    Florida Historical Quarterly Volume 28 Issue 1 Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol 28, Article 1 Issue 1 1949 Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28, 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 (1949) "Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28, Issue 1," Florida Historical Quarterly: Vol. 28 : Iss. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq/vol28/iss1/1 Society: Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28, Issue 1 Published by STARS, 1949 1 Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28 [1949], Iss. 1, Art. 1 https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq/vol28/iss1/1 2 Society: Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28, Issue 1 The Florida Historical Quarterly Volume XXVIII July, 1949 - April, 1950 PUBLISHED BY THE FLORIDA HISTORICAL SOCIETY ST. AUGUSTINE Published by STARS, 1949 3 Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28 [1949], Iss. 1, Art. 1 https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq/vol28/iss1/1 4 Society: Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 28, Issue 1 CONTENTS OF VOLUME XXVIII ARTICLES AND AUTHORS Archeological Sites ; 216 An Archeologist at Fort Gadsden: John W. Griffin; 254 Bentley, George R.: The Political Activity of the Freedmen’s Bureau in Florida; 28 Boyd, Mark F.: Diego Pena’s Expedition to Apalachee and Apalachi- cola in 1716; 1 A Century of Medicine in Jacksonville and Duval County: Webster Merritt, reviewed ; 156 Clarke, Robert L.
    [Show full text]
  • An Historical and Archaeological Analysis of Fort San Marcos De Apalache, 1639-1821
    FACILITATING TRADE ON THE FLORIDA FRONTIER: AN HISTORICAL AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF FORT SAN MARCOS DE APALACHE, 1639-1821 by Ericha Elizabeth Sappington B.A., Boise State University, 2008 A thesis submitted to the Department of Anthropology College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities The University of West Florida In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts 2018 The thesis of Ericha Elizabeth Sappington is approved: ____________________________________________ _________________ Ramie A. Gougeon, Pd.D., Committee Member Date ____________________________________________ _________________ Erin Stone, Ph.D., Committee Member Date ____________________________________________ _________________ John E. Worth, Ph.D., Committee Chair Date Accepted for the Department/Division: ____________________________________________ _________________ John R. Bratten, Ph.D., Chair Date Accepted for the University: ____________________________________________ _________________ Jaromy Kuhl, Ph.D. Interim Dean, Graduate School Date ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank Dr. John Worth, Dr. Ramie Gougeon, and Dr. Erin Stone for their insight and patience in the thesis writing process and for their continuous support of the ongoing project. I would also like to thank Mark Boyd, Lucy Wenhold, and Doris Olds for their lifelong dedication to the study of a remote Spanish outpost in the borderlands of La Florida . Special thanks to Marie Prentice and Vincent “Chip” Birdsong for their invaluable assistance in the research process. I would also like to thank Caroline D. Carley, Robert L. Sappington, and Taylor McKenzie for their support and encouragement throughout the thesis writing process. Last but not least, I would also like to thank the long forgotten soldiers and residents of San Marcos de Apalache, without whom this project would not have been possible.
    [Show full text]
  • Rediscovering Pensacola's Lost Spanish Missions. Paper Presented
    Rediscovering Pensacola’s Lost Spanish Missions John E. Worth University of West Florida Abstract In 1763, 108 Yamasee and Apalachee Indians accompanied the Spanish evacuees from Pensacola to a new home in Veracruz, and two years later just 47 survivors laid out a new town north of Veracruz called San Carlos de Chachalacas, electing dual mayors representing each ethnicity. These expatriates were the remants of two Pensacola-area missions that had been burned by Creek raids in 1761—San Antonio de Punta Rasa and San Joseph de Escambe. This paper will explore the origins and history of these missions, and the ongoing search for archaeological traces of their existence. Paper presented at the 65th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Charlotte, North Carolina, Nov. 15, 2008. 1 In 1763, Spanish forces withdrew from Presidio San Miguel de Panzacola as part of the terms of the Treaty of Paris ending the Seven Years War (1756-1763) (Gold 1969). Among the 722 evacuees enumerated that summer were 108 ―Christian Indians,‖ including both Yamasee and Apalachee Indians who had been living in a makeshift mission community just outside the fort since their twin mission villages had been burned by Upper Creek Indians in 1761 (Bernet 1763; Escudero et al. 1763; Siebert 1932; Gold 1965, 1969; García de León 1996). Just two years after the evacuation, a new town was laid out for the 47 surviving Pensacola Indian refugees just north of Veracruz, Mexico, called San Carlos de Chachalacas, where the residents elected twin mayors, one Yamasee and one Apalachee, to serve under a single elected governor (Amoscotigui y Bermudo 1765a-e; Amoscotigui y Bermudo and Sánchez de Mora 1765; Palacio y Varros 1765).
    [Show full text]
  • Spanish Frontiers: a Study of Social and Economic Exchange
    SPANISH FRONTIERS: A STUDY OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EXCHANGE NETWORKS PRESENT IN 18TH CENTURY SPANISH MISSIONS by Danielle Lynn Dadiego B.A., University of Southern Maine, 2007 A thesis submitted to the Department of Anthropology College of Arts and Sciences The University of West Florida In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts 2014 The thesis of Danielle Lynn Dadiego is approved: ____________________________________________ _________________ John J. Clune, Ph.D., Committee Member Date ____________________________________________ _________________ Ramie A. Gougeon, Ph.D., Committee Member Date ____________________________________________ _________________ John E. Worth, Ph.D., Committee Chair Date Accepted for the Department/Division: ____________________________________________ _________________ John R. Bratten, Ph.D., Chair Date Accepted for the University: ____________________________________________ _________________ Richard S. Podemski, Ph.D., Dean, Graduate School Date ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to mention financial support from numerous sources including the Pat and Hal Marcus Fellowship in Historical Archaeology, the Archaeology Foundation Research Grant, and the University of West Florida Student Government Association Travel Grant. This project was also supported by a grant from the University of West Florida through the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs. I would also like to thank Frances Montgomery and Sarah E. Price for reviewing and editing my thesis with patience, even with impending deadlines. In addition to my committee members, several people have been especially helpful to me in my research. Dr. Elizabeth Benchley, Director of the Division and Archaeology Institute, provided financial and academic support which made my experience at the University of West Florida very enjoyable and profitable for my professional career. Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Vengeance with Mercy: Changing Traditions and Traditional Practices of Colonial Yamasees
    W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects Summer 2018 Vengeance with Mercy: Changing Traditions and Traditional Practices of Colonial Yamasees Patrick Johnson College of William and Mary - Arts & Sciences, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Recommended Citation Johnson, Patrick, "Vengeance with Mercy: Changing Traditions and Traditional Practices of Colonial Yamasees" (2018). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1530192790. http://dx.doi.org/10.21220/s2-fb04-kn74 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Vengeance with Mercy: Changing Traditions and Traditional Practices of Colonial Yamasees Patrick Lee Johnson Mobile, Alabama M.A., University of West Florida, 2012 B.A., Beloit College, 2008 Dissertation presented to the Graduate Faculty of The College of William & Mary in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Anthropology College of William & Mary May 2018 © Copyright by Patrick L. Johnson 2018 ABSTRACT This dissertation argues that colonial Yamasee communities moved hundreds of miles throughout the present-day Southeastern United States, often to gain influence, and maintained traditions such as names they more closely associated with their ethnicity and authority than ceramics. Self-identification by Yamasees in censuses, speeches, and letters for a century and archaeological evidence from multiple towns allows me to analyze multiple expressions of their identity.
    [Show full text]
  • Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 8163 Tram Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32311 Record No
    Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 8163 Tram Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32311 Record No. 101650088 Project No. 112IG02645 July 14, 2010 TETRA TECH 201 Pine Street ● Suite 1000 ● Orlando, Florida 32801 (407) 839.3955 ● FAX (407) 839.3790 ● www.tetratech.com Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 8163 Tram Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32311 Record No. 101650088 Project No. 112IG02645 July 14, 2010 Prepared By: Tetra Tech, Inc. 17885 Von Karman Avenue, Suite 500 Irvine, California 92614 Phone: 949.809.5000 Fax: 949.809.5010 Prepared For: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) As Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165 c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC 7100 W. Commercial Blvd, Suite 101 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33319 TETRA TECH 201 Pine Street ● Suite 1000 ● Orlando, Florida 32801 (407) 839.3955 ● FAX (407) 839.3790 ● www.tetratech.com July 14, 2010 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) As Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165 c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC 7100 W. Commercial Blvd, Suite 101 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33319 Attention: Ms. Lisa Gastelum RE: Phase I Environmental Site Assessment 8163 Tram Road Leon County, Tallahassee, Florida 32311 Record No. 101650088 Project No. 112IG02645 Dear Ms. Gastelum: Tetra Tech, Inc. (Tetra Tech) is pleased to submit this Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ESA) report to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), as Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank No. 10165, c/o NRT REO Experts, LLC (Realogy), for the above-referenced property (the Site). Tetra Tech found no recognized environmental conditions (RECs), historical RECs (HRECs), or potential environmental concerns (PECs) in connection with the Site.
    [Show full text]