R Eferences C Ited References Cited

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

R Eferences C Ited References Cited R EFERENCES C ITED REFERENCES CITED A.D. Marble & Company 2003 Phase IA Management Summary of the SR 1 Little Heaven Interchange, Kent County, Delaware. Prepared by Scott Emory. Submitted to Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. 2004 Phase IA Archaeological Survey, SR 1, Little Heaven Grade Separated Intersection, Murderkill Hundred, Kent County, Delaware. Prepared by Scott Emory and David Weinberg. Submitted to Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. 2005a Architectural Survey and Evaluation Report: SR 1 Little Heaven Interchange, South Murderkill Hundred, Kent County, Delaware, Volume I. Prepared by Lauren Archibald, Christine Tate, Barbara Copp, David Weinberg, Scott Emory, Travis Beckwith, and Elizabeth Amisson. Submitted to Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. 2005b Phase IB Archaeological Survey Management Summary, SR 1, Little Heaven Grade Separated Intersection, Murderkill Hundred, Kent County, Delaware. Prepared by Scott Emory. Submitted to Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. 2005c SR 1 Little Heaven Grade Separated Intersection, Draft Environmental Assessment. Submitted to Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. 2008a Phase IB Archaeological Survey Addendum, SR 1, Little Heaven Grade Separated Intersection, Murderkill Hundred, Kent County, Delaware. Prepared by Michael Lenert. Draft report on file at A.D. Marble & Company, Conshohocken, Pennsylvania. 2008b Architectural Survey and Evaluation Report Addendum, SR 1 Little Heaven, Grade Separated Intersection, South Murderkill Hundred, Kent County, Delaware. Prepared by Emma Young. Submitted to Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. 2009 Management Summary, Additional Phase IB Archaeological Survey, S.R. 1 Little Heaven Grade Separated Intersection, Little Heaven, Kent County, Delaware. Prepared by Michael Lenert. Submitted to Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. Alotta, Robert I. 1992 Signposts and Settlers: The History of Place Names in the Middle Atlantic States. Bonus Books, Chicago, Illinois. Bedell, John 2001 Delaware Archaeology and the Revolutionary Eighteenth Century. Historical Archaeology 35(4):83-104. 2002 Historic Context: The Archaeology of Farm and Rural Dwelling Sites in New Castle and Kent Counties, Delaware, 1730-1770 and 1770-1830. Delaware State Historic Preservation Office, Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs, Dover, Delaware. Beers, D.G. 1868 Atlas of the State of Delaware. Pomeroy and Beers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Byles, A.D. 1859 Map of Kent County, Delaware. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Conley, Clara 2004 Aerial photograph of Conley’s Garage, Little Heaven. Personal collection. Cunningham, Kevin W., John W. Martin, and Joann L. Calvert 1980 A Preliminary Cultural Resources Reconnaissance of the Proposed Dualization of U.S. Route 113, Little Heaven to Dover AFB, Kent County, Delaware. DelDOT Archaeology File 13. Custer, Jay F. n.d. Analysis of Archaeological Collections from Three Barkers Landing Complex Sites, Kent County, Delaware. Report No. 3. On file Delaware State Historic Preservation Office, Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs, Dover, Delaware. 1984 Delaware Prehistoric Archaeology. University of Delaware Press, Newark, Delaware. 1989 Prehistoric Cultures of the Delmarva Peninsula: An Archaeological Study. University of Delaware Press, Newark, Delaware. 1994 Stability, Storage and Culture Change in Prehistoric Delaware: The Woodland I Period (3000 B.C.-A.D. 1000). Delaware State Historic Preservation Office, Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs, Dover, Delaware. 1996a Prehistoric Cultures of Eastern Pennsylvania. Anthropological Series No.7, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. 1996b A Management Plan for Delaware’s Prehistoric Resources. Delaware State Historic Preservation Office, Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs, Dover, Delaware. Custer, Jay, John Cavallo, and R. Michael Stewart 1983 Paleoindian Adaptations on the Coastal Plain of Delaware and New Jersey. North American Archaeologist 4:263-276. Custer, Jay F. and Barbara Hsiao-Silber 1995 Final Archaeological Investigations at the Snapp Prehistoric Site (7NC-G-101), State Route 1 Corridor, Chesapeake and Delaware Canal Section, New Castle County, Delaware. Delaware Department of Transportation Archaeology Series No. 122, Dover, Delaware. Custer, Jay and M. Stewart 1990 Environment, Analogy, and Early Paleoindian Economies in Northeastern North America. In Research in Economic Anthropology, Supplement 5. Edited by K. Tankersly and B. Isaac, pp. 303-322. JAI Press, Greenwich, Connecticut. De Cunzo, L.A. and W.P. Catts 1990 Management Plan for Delaware’s Historical Archaeological Resources. University of Delaware Center for Archaeological Research, Newark, Delaware. De Cunzo, L.A. and Ann Marie Garcia 1992 Historic Context: The Archaeology of Agriculture and Rural Life, New Castle and Kent Counties, Delaware, 1830-1940. University of Delaware, Department of Anthropology, Center for Archaeological Research, Newark, Delaware. Delaware State Historic Preservation Office (DESHPO) 2001 Draft: Guidelines for Architectural and Archaeological Surveys in the State of Delaware. Doc# 20-06-01-05-15. DESHPO, Dover, Delaware. Fogelman, Gary 1988 Projectile Point Typology for Pennsylvania and the Northeast. Fogelman Publishing Company, Turbotville, Pennsylvania. Gardner, William 1982 Early and Middle Woodland in the Middle Atlantic: An Overview. In Practicing Environmental Archaeology: Methods and Interpretations, edited by Roger Moeller, pp. 53-86. Occasional Publication No. 3, American Indian Archaeological Institute, Washington, Connecticut. Godden, Geoffrey 1966 An Illustrated Encyclopedia of British Pottery & Porcelain. Crown Publishing, New York, New York. Hoffecker, C.E. 1988 Delaware, The First State. Middle Atlantic Press, Wilmington, Delaware. Jones, Olive, Catherine Sullivan, George L. Miller, E. Ann Smith, Jane E. Harris, and Kevin Lunn 1989 The Parks Canada Glass Glossary for the Description of Containers, Tableware, Closures, and Flat Glass. National Historic Parks and Sites, Canadian Parks Service, Hull, Quebec, Canada. Kellogg, Douglas C. 1993 A Cultural Resources Reconnaissance Planning Study of the Proposed Delaware Route 301 Corridor, New Castle County, Delaware. Delaware Department of Transportation Archaeology Series No. 98. Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. Kent, Barry C. 1989 Susquehanna’s Indians. Anthropological Series No. 6, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. LeeDecker, Charles H. 1992 Cultural Resources Survey of U.S. Route 113, Milford-Georgetown, Sussex County, Delaware, Dover: Delaware Department of Transportation, Dover, Delaware. Lemon, J.T. 1972 The Best Poor Man’s Country: A Geographical Study of Early Southeastern Pennsylvania. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland. Liebeknecht, William, Brian Seidel, and Richard Hunter 1996 Phase I Archaeological Survey Investigation, Soulie Gray Farm, Loci A and G (Sites 7K- F-163A and 7K-F-163G), Murderkill Hundred, Kent County, Delaware. DelDOT Project 92-110-17, DelDOT Archaeological Series No. 12. Lukezic, Craig and Charles Fithian 2008 The Elusive 17th-Century Site in the Lower Delaware Valley. Paper presented at 17th- Century Artifact Workshop. New Castle, Delaware. Martin, John and Daniel Griffith 2008 Searching for Seventeenth-Century Sites. A Paper presented at the Council for Northeast Historical Archaeology. St. Mary’s City, Maryland. Matthews, Earle D., and William Ireland, Jr. 1971 Soil Survey of Kent County, Delaware. United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service (USDA-SCS). U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. Miller, George L. 1980 Classification and Economic Scaling of Nineteenth-Century Ceramics. Historical Archaeology, 14:1-40. Munroe, J.A. 1984 History of Delaware (2nd edition). University of Delaware Press, Newark, Delaware. Noël Hume, Ivor 1969 A Guide to Artifacts of Colonial America. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc, reprinted by University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 2001 If These Pots Could Talk, Collecting 2,000 Years of British Household Pottery. Chipstone Foundation, University Press of New England, Hanover, New Hampshire. Petraglia, Michael D., Susan L. Bupp, Sean P. Fitzell, and Kevin W. Cunningham 2002 Hickory Bluff: Changing Perceptions of Delmarva Archaeology. Delaware Department of Transportation Archaeology Series No. 175. Dover, Delaware. Petraglia, M., D. Knepper, J. Rutherford, P. LaPorta, K. Puseman, J. Schuldenrein, and N. Tuross 1998 The Prehistory of Lums Pond: The Formation of an Archaeological Site in Delaware. Delaware Department of Transportation Archaeology Series No. 155, Dover, Delaware. Reynolds, Hazel Wright 1982 Flower of Caroon Manor: History of Magnolia, Little Heaven, St. Jones Neck , Kitts Hummock. Gateway Press, Inc., Baltimore, Maryland. Scharf, J.T. 1888 History of Delaware, 1609-1888. J.L. Richards and Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Schindler, Bill 2008 Rethinking Middle Woodland Settlement and Subsistence Patterns in the Middle and Lower Delaware Valley. North American Archaeologist 29(1):1-12. Skelly and Loy, Inc. 2008 Barratts Chapel Road Improvements (SR1 to McGinnis Pond Road). South Murderkill Hundred, Kent County, Delaware. Phase II Historic Architectural Resources Survey, Evaluation of National Register of Historic Places Eligibility. Submitted
Recommended publications
  • Preliminary Land Use Service (PLUS)
    Preliminary Land Use Service (PLUS) Application Pre-Update Review Request Municipal Comprehensive Plans Comprehensive Plan Amendments Municipal Ordinances Delaware Office of State Planning Coordination 122 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., South • Dover, DE 19901 • Phone: 302-739-3090 • Fax: 302-739-5661 All sections related to your project must be completed. Incomplete applications could lead to delays in scheduling your review. If you need assistance or clarification, please call the State Planning Office at (302) 739-3090. REQUESTED REVIEW: Check one Comprehensive Plan Pre-Update Review Complete Sections 1 and 3 only Comprehensive Plan or Update Complete Sections 1 and 3 only Comprehensive Plan Amendment Complete Sections 1 and 2 only Municipal Ordinance Review Complete Sections 1 and 2 only Date of most recently certified comprehensive plan: Link to most recently certified comprehensive plan, if available: If a link to the plan is not available, you must submit a copy of your plan with this application for a Pre-Update Review or a Comprehensive Plan Amendment. State of Delaware, Office of State Planning Coordination Effective: March 1, 2018 Page 1 Preliminary Land Use Service (PLUS) Application Pre-Update Review Request Municipal Comprehensive Plans Comprehensive Plan Amendments Municipal Ordinances Delaware Office of State Planning Coordination 122 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., South • Dover, DE 19901 • Phone: 302-739-3090 • Fax: 302-739-5661 SECTION 1: MUNICIPAL INFORMATION Name of Municipality: Address: Contact Person: Phone Number: Fax Number: E-mail Address: Application prepared by: Address: Contact Person: Phone Number: Fax Number: E-mail Address: State of Delaware, Office of State Planning Coordination Effective: March 1, 2018 Page 2 Preliminary Land Use Service (PLUS) Application Pre-Update Review Request Municipal Comprehensive Plans Comprehensive Plan Amendments Municipal Ordinances Delaware Office of State Planning Coordination 122 Martin Luther King Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • Sussex County
    501 ALLOWANCES AND APPROPRIATIONS. Dolls. Ct,. Amount brought forward, 3,3137 58 To Lowder T. Layton, for damages on new road, 15 00 Albert Webster, do do 05 Appropriation for opening and making said road, 20 00 William K. Lockwood, commissioner on road, 2 days, 2 00 Albert Webster, do 3 3 00 T. L. Davis, do 3 3 00 George Jones, do 2 2 00 William Nickerson, do 2 2 00 Alexander Johnson, surveyor, 7 00 John Cox, for damages on road, 50 00 William Slay, do 06 David Marvel, do 06 Martha Day, do 06 Appropriation to open and make said road, 150 00 $3,642 31 March Session. Thomas S. Buckmaster, for overwork under a resolu- tion, 3 89 Isaac L. Crouch, for work on jail, 87 Joshua Nickerson, for work on a bridge, 2 08 S. C. Leatherberry, cryer of the courts, 20 62 Joab Fox, for work on a bridge, 9 87 James Jones, assessor for Duck Creek hundred, 29 38 Nathan Soward, Little Creek " 25 56 William Slaughter, Dover, " 27 56 John Sherwood, Murderkill, " 34 02 John Quillen, Milford, " 26 46 Henry W. Harrington, Mispillion, " 27 00 Dr. Isaac Jump, for medicine for prisoners in jail, 4 50 William Hirons, commissioner on road, 1 00 Thomas Stevenson, justice peace, for fees, 15 35 Alexander J. Taylor, late sheriff, board of prisoners and fees, 352 51 James B. Richardson, coroner, for fees, 17 23 John P. Coombe, justice of the peace, for fees, I 00 George Smith, commissioner oo new road, 1 00 Joho Ha wk ins, for excess of tax, for the years 1848-9, 12 98 John Sherwood, for services dividing school districts, I 00 Am,unt carried forward, $4,356 19 502 ALLOWANCES AND APPROPRIATIONS.
    [Show full text]
  • Laws of the State of Delaware;
    LAWS OF THE. STATE OF DELAWARE PASSED AT A SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY COMMENCED AND HELD AT DOVER, On Tuesday, January 6th, A. D. 1903 AND IN THE YEAR OF THE INDEPENDENCE OF THE UNITED STATES THE ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SEVENTH. VOLUME XXII-PART IL 1903 TILE SENTINEL PRINTING COSIPANY, DOVER.. DEL. LAWS OF DELAWARE. CHAPTER 254. AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION. AN ACT PROPOSING AMENDMENTS TO ARTICLE 9 OF THE CON- STITUTION OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE CONCERNING COR- PORATIONS. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Delaware in General Assembly met (two-thirds of the members elected to each House agreeing): Section i. That the following amendments be and the same are hereby proposed to Article 9 of the Constitution of this State: how is. First. That all of Section 3 of Article 9 of the Constitution ssutoeccik, of this State after the word "Corporation," where it occurs the second time in Section 3, be stricken out. Section 2. That Section 6 of said Article 9 be stricken out and in lieu thereof substitute and adopt the following, viz.: "Section 6. Shares of the capital stock of corporations ere-. ,s:Acioknot.gesci ated under the laws of this State, when owned by persons or State not sub- I e. et to taxation. corporations without this State, shall not be subject to taxation by any law now existing or hereafter to be made." Approved March 17, A. D.1903. 544 LAWS OF DELAWARE. TITLE FIRST. Of the Jurisdiction and Property of the State ; Its Legislation and Laws.
    [Show full text]
  • UCLA SSIFI C ATI ON
    Form No. 10-300 ^ -\0-' W1 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOW TO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS ___________TYPE ALL ENTRIES - COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS___________ ,NAME HISTORIC . .^ il-T^belaware Breakwater and Harbor of Refuge, National Harbor of Refuge AND/OR COMMON Y \k> Delaware Breakwaters and Lewes Harbor (Preferred Name) ________ LOCATION STREETS. NUMBER _NOT FOR PUBLICATION CITY. TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Lewes X VICINITY OF One STATE CODE COUNTY CODE Delaware 10 Sussex 002 UCLA SSIFI c ATI ON CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE —DISTRICT X-PUBLIC X_OCCUPIED _ AGRICULTURE —MUSEUM _BUILDING(S) —PRIVATE —UNOCCUPIED —COMMERCIAL —PARK X_STRUCTURE —BOTH —WORK IN PROGRESS —EDUCATIONAL —PRIVATE RESIDENCE —SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS —OBJECT _IN PROCESS —YES: RESTRICTED —GOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC —BEING CONSIDERED X-YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL -X-TRANSPORTATION —NO —MILITARY —OTHER: Corps of Engineers, U. S. Army STREET & NUMBER Customs House, Second & Chestnut Streets CITY, TOWN STATE Philadelphia VICINITY OF Pennsylvania LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS.ETC. Sussex County Court House STREET & NUMBER The Circle CITY, TOWN STATE Georgetown Delaware REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS TITLE Historic American Engineering Record DATE 1974 X— FEDERAL —STATE —COUNTY —LOCAL DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS Library of Congress CITY, TOWN STATE Washington D,C. DESCRIPTION CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE X—EXCELLENT _DETERIORATED X_UNALTERED X-ORIGINAL SITE _GOOD _RUINS —ALTERED —MOVED DATE_______ _FAIR — UNEXPOSED DESCRIBE THE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL (IF KNOWN) PHYSICAL APPEARANCE The breakwaters at Lewes reflect three stages of construction: the two-part original breakwater, the connection between these two parts, and the outer break­ water.
    [Show full text]
  • Georgia New Deal-Produced Bibliography
    AN INVENTORY OF NEW DEAL PRODUCED WRITINGS This is a list of New Deal-produced writings, arranged alphabetically by state and by title. Some of these writings went to press and were published—and thus may be available at libraries, or from online sellers, or from online repositories like Hathitrust—and some might only be available at archival institutions, especially the Library of Congress’s Federal Writers’ Project collection. Periodically, we’ll be adding more items to this list. The following resources have been utilized to create this inventory: 1. Evanell K. Powell, WPA Writers' Publications: A Complete Bibliographic Checklist and Price Guide of Items, Major and Minor, of the Federal Writers' Project and Program, Palm Beach, FL: 1976. 2. Harvester Microform, in cooperation with the Library of Congress, Archives of the Federal Writers' Project - Series One: Printed and Mimeograph Publications in the Surviving FWP Files, 1933-1943, excluding State Guides, 1987. 3. Federal Works Agency, Work Projects Administration, Catalogue, WPA Writers’ Program Publications, September 1941, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1942, available to view at http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015033686711;view=1up;seq=1 (accessed November 11, 2015). 4. U.S. Senate, The American Guide Series, http://www.senate.gov/reference/resources/pdf/WPAStateGuides.pdf, accessed November 11, 2015. GEORGIA WPA Written Work: Chatham County Map Portfolio, University of Georgia Press, 40 historic maps, 1942. (WPA) Colerain Plantation (appears to be part of a larger article that appeared in the June, 1941 edition of the Georgia Historical quarterly), 1941, 24 pages. (WPA) Savannah River Plantations, by the Savannah Writers’ Project, 1947 [presumably a project begun by the WPA Writers’ Program and finished & published in 1947], 475 pages.
    [Show full text]
  • Defining the Nanticoke Indigenous Cultural Landscape
    Indigenous Cultural Landscapes Study for the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail: Nanticoke River Watershed December 2013 Kristin M. Sullivan, M.A.A. - Co-Principal Investigator Erve Chambers, Ph.D. - Principal Investigator Ennis Barbery, M.A.A. - Research Assistant Prepared under cooperative agreement with The University of Maryland College Park, MD and The National Park Service Chesapeake Bay Annapolis, MD EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Nanticoke River watershed indigenous cultural landscape study area is home to well over 100 sites, landscapes, and waterways meaningful to the history and present-day lives of the Nanticoke people. This report provides background and evidence for the inclusion of many of these locations within a high-probability indigenous cultural landscape boundary—a focus area provided to the National Park Service Chesapeake Bay and the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail Advisory Council for the purposes of future conservation and interpretation as an indigenous cultural landscape, and to satisfy the Identification and Mapping portion of the Chesapeake Watershed Cooperative Ecosystems Studies Unit Cooperative Agreement between the National Park Service and the University of Maryland, College Park. Herein we define indigenous cultural landscapes as areas that reflect “the contexts of the American Indian peoples in the Nanticoke River area and their interaction with the landscape.” The identification of indigenous cultural landscapes “ includes both cultural and natural resources and the wildlife therein associated with historic lifestyle and settlement patterns and exhibiting the cultural or esthetic values of American Indian peoples,” which fall under the purview of the National Park Service and its partner organizations for the purposes of conservation and development of recreation and interpretation (National Park Service 2010:4.22).
    [Show full text]
  • Published Sources
    SECTION IV RESOURCES Published Sources The Hub. Huber Homes, Inc., various dates 1960. The Wall Street Journal 24 August 1955: 1. The American Home 1944. The American Home 1946. House Beautiful October 1959. Centerville Sentinel. 1963 (partial). Centerville News. March 15 to May 24, October 18 to November 15 1962 (partial). 2009. Miami Conservancy District. <http://www.miamiconservancy.org/about/construction.asp>. eFairborn.com. <http://www.efairborn.com/>. "$10 Million Home Project Planned East of Dayton." Dayton Daily News 19 July 1952. 175th Anniversary Committee. Miami Township. Chicago: Arcadia Publishing, 2004. 1961‐, Regional Transportation Committee. "Population." 1961. Airport History. <http://www.flydayton.com/index.php?page=history>. "Al & Marge (column)." Dayton Daily News 19 January 1996: 3C. Albers, Bucky. "Flyers' Home Has Made Some History." Dayton Daily News 26 November 1999. Ames, David L. and Linda Flint McClelland. "National Register Bulletin: Historic Residential Suburbs." 2002. Anspach, Beth. "Family Serves Ice Cream for More than 40 years." Dayton Daily News 28 May 2008. Bell, Trudy E. Images of America: The Great Dayton Flood of 1913. Charleston: Arcadia Publishing, 2008. 353 Berstein, Mark. Grand Eccentrics: Turning the Century‐Dayton and the Inventing of America. Wilmington, Ohio: Orange Frazer Press, 1996. Braun, Mark Edward. "The Neo‐Eclectic Housing Era, 1971‐1985." The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Homes through American History. Ed. Thomas W. Paradis. Westport: Greenwood Press, 2008. Build a House that People Want‐‐The Huber Story. Huber Homes, c. 1974. Busch, Jane C. "Homes in the Suburban Era, 1946‐1970." The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Homes Through American History. Ed. Thomas W. Paradis. Westport: Greenwood, 2008.
    [Show full text]
  • A Digital Media Exploration of the Federal Writers' Project's Folk Song Collecting Expeditions in Depression Era Florida
    University of Central Florida STARS Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2004-2019 2018 A Digital Media Exploration of the Federal Writers' Project's Folk Song Collecting Expeditions in Depression Era Florida Holly Baker University of Central Florida Part of the Public History Commons Find similar works at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd University of Central Florida Libraries http://library.ucf.edu This Masters Thesis (Open Access) is brought to you for free and open access by STARS. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2004-2019 by an authorized administrator of STARS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STARS Citation Baker, Holly, "A Digital Media Exploration of the Federal Writers' Project's Folk Song Collecting Expeditions in Depression Era Florida" (2018). Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2004-2019. 6000. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/6000 A DIGITAL MEDIA EXPLORATION OF THE FEDERAL WRITERS’ PROJECT’S FOLK SONG COLLECTING EXPEDITIONS IN DEPRESSION ERA FLORIDA by HOLLY BAKER B.A. University of Central Florida, 2014 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Department of History in the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Central Florida Orlando, Florida Summer Term 2018 © 2018 Holly Baker ii ABSTRACT This digital thesis project examines the folk song collecting expeditions of the Federal Writers’ Project (FWP) in Florida between 1935 and 1942. The FWP carried out numerous folk music collecting expeditions in Florida through the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Folklorists such as Zora Neale Hurston, Alan Lomax, and Stetson Kennedy led the expeditions and traveled throughout Florida to record blues, “jook” songs, work songs, and traditional music from African American, Cuban, Czech, Greek, Minorcan, Seminole, and Slavic communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Delaware the First State
    Fl64.3 H64 1988 Dt:carolE Hoffecker "T1, •• � ·' .. Dr. Carol E. Hoffecker DELAW\RE, TheFirst State A Delaware Heritage Commission book commemo­ rating the 200th anniversary of the United States Constitution and Delaware's ratification as "The First State." Publication made possible through a grant from The Na­ tional Society of The Colonial Dames of America in the State of Delaware ............. Freedom's First MIDDLE ATLANTIC PRE SS Moorestown, New Jersey DELAWARE, THE FIRST STATE A MIDDLE ATLANTIC PRESS BOOK All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, record­ ing, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. A Delaware Heritage Commission book, commemorating the ratification of the United States Constitution by Delaware, "The First State." Copyright© 1988 by Carol E. Hoffecker Li brary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hoffecker, Carol E. Delaware, the first state. Summary: Examines the history of Delaware, from its first inhabitants and the arrival of European settlers to the effect of modem times on its business and gov­ ernment. 1. Delaware-History-Juvenile literature. [L Delaware-History] !. Delaware Heritage Commission. 11. Title. Fl64.3.I-164 1987 975.1 87-11200 ISBN 0-9705804-0-1 Manufactured in the United Stales of America 7th Printing Middle Atlantic Press 10 Twosome Drive P.O. Box 600 Moorestown, NJ 08057 856-235-4444 Table of Contents Unit One Discovering
    [Show full text]
  • Jeffrey L. Scheib* ONE of the MOST Important Documents to Survive
    A 1688 Census of Kent County, Delaware Jeffrey L. Scheib* NE OF THE MOST important documents to survive from the Oearly colonial history of the state of Delaware is a partial census of Kent County taken late in the spring or sometime in the summer of 1688. The 1688 enumeration was not the earliest census of the Kent County population.' Nevertheless, it was the first census of the region to provide detailed information on the members of each household, listing not only the name of each freeholder in the county but also the names and ages of everyone dwelling in each household. Of importance both historically and genealogically, the census provides a fascinating glimpse of the population of Kent County at a very early period. Introduction The circumstances surrounding the compilation of the 1688 Kent County census remain a mystery. In December of 1682, shortly after he had assumed jurisdiction over the Three Lower Counties of New Castle, Kent, and Sussex, William Penn' issued an order to the justices of the peace in each of the counties: I do also think Fitt that an Exact Catalogue be returned to Me, of the Names of all the People of your County, Masters, Mistresses, Servants, Parents, Children, allso the number of Acres each Free Holder hash, and *Editor's Note: The author is indebted to Rosalind, . Belle; former assistant editor of the Biographical Dictionary of Early Pennsylvania Ligiclaton project. During the course of her research on several Kent Countians who served as representatives in the Pennsylvania Assembly before the year 1 nv, she discovenxi a partial transcript of the Kent County census in the Matilda Spicer Hari Collection at the Genealogical Society cf Pennsylvania.
    [Show full text]
  • Wetlands of Delaware
    SE M3ER 985 U.s. - artm nt of h - n erior S ate of D lawa FiSh and Wildlife Service Department of Natural Resourc and Enviro mental Con ra I WETLANDS OF DELAWARE by Ralph W. Tiner, Jr. Regional Wetland Coordinator Habitat Resources U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Region 5 Newton Corner, MA 02158 SEPTEMBER 1985 Project Officer David L. Hardin Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control Wetlands Section State of Delaware 89 Kings Highway Dover, DE 19903 Cooperative Publication U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Delaware Department of Natural Region 5 Resources and Environmental Habitat Resources Control One Gateway Center Division of Environmental Control Newton Corner, MA 02158 89 Kings Highway Dover, DE 19903 This report should be cited as follows: Tiner, R.W., Jr. 1985. Wetlands of Delaware. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Wetlands Inventory, Newton Corner, MA and Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, Wetlands Section, Dover, DE. Cooperative Publication. 77 pp. Acknowledgements Many individuals have contributed to the successful completion of the wetlands inventory in Delaware and to the preparation of this report. The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, Wetlands Section contributed funds for wetland mapping and database construction and printed this report. David Hardin served as project officer for this work and offered invaluable assistance throughout the project, especially in coor­ dinating technical review of the draft report and during field investigations. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Philadelphia District also provided funds for map production. William Zinni and Anthony Davis performed wetland photo interpretation and quality control of draft maps, and reviewed portions of this report.
    [Show full text]
  • Jum12199q- National Register of Historic Places National Registration Form Register
    NPS Form 10-900 0MB No. 1024-0018 (Rev. 8-86) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service 10 JUM12199Q- NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES NATIONAL REGISTRATION FORM REGISTER 1. Name of Property historic name: THE THOMAS B. COURSEY HOUSE_________________ other name/site number: K-2783__________________________________ 2. Location street & number: RD 1, Box 143 , County Road 388___________________________________ |y /,. not for publication: "^^ city/town: South Murderkill Hundred/ Felton vicinity: X state: DE county: ____Kent_________ code: 001 zip code: 19943 3. Classification Ownership of Property: private______________ Category of Property: buildings____________ Number of Resources within Property: Contributing Noncontributing 1 3 buildings 0 0 sites 0 0 structures 0 0 objects Total Number of contributing resources previously listed in the National Register: 0 Name of related multiple property listing: N/A 4. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1986, as amended, I hereby certify that this X 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. In my opinion, the property X meets ___ does not meet the National Register Criteria. __ See continuation sneet.*«. , /f^ /f\ / /j /i/y># j s _____/(j^£^ _______SHPO Signature of certifyii^/or^icial Date / ' Delaware Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs______________ State or Federal agency and bureau In my opinion, the property ___ meets ___ does not meet the National Register criteria. __ See continuation sheet. Signature of commenting or other official Date State or Federal agency and bureau 5.
    [Show full text]