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Center For Heritage Resource Studies, Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland |
Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana |
Click Here for information on the new 2008 New Philadelphia Field School
FIELDSCHOOL IN ARCHAEOLOGY AND LABORATORY TECHNIQUES
Sponsored by the National Science Foundation
Research Experiences for Undergraduates Program
Click here for Application in Word format
Click here to read the NSF-REU proposal
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Field Manual (download in word format) |
The New Philadelphia
story is both compelling and unique.
Many studies in historical
archaeology that concentrate on African-American issues have focused on
plantation life and the pre-emancipation era. The history of New Philadelphia is
very different. It is a chronicle of racial uplift and centering on the success
of an African-American family and their ability to survive and prosper in a
racist society. In 1836, Frank McWorter, an African American who was born into
slavery and later purchased his own freedom, acquired 42 acres of land in the
sparsely populated area of Pike County, Illinois, situated in the rolling hills
bounded by the Illinois and Mississippi rivers. He founded and platted a town,
subdivided the property, and sold lots. McWorter used the revenues from his
entrepreneurial efforts to purchase the freedom of sixteen family members, with
a total expenditure of $14,000 – a remarkable achievement. Families of African American and European heritage moved to the town and
created a multi-racial community. New Philadelphia likely served as a
stopping place for the “Underground railroad” as enslaved African Americans fled northward
escaping the oppression of southern plantations. The history
of New Philadelphia serves as a rare example of a multi-racial early farming
community on the nation’s Midwestern frontier (Walker 1983).
The town's population reached its peak of about 170 people after the Civil War, a size
comparable to many Pike County communities today. However, by the end of the
century racial and corporate politics of America’s gilded age resulted in the
death knell for the settlement: regional transportation investors routed a new
railroad line to pass several miles to the north of the town. Many of New
Philadelphia’s residents eventually moved away and, by the early 20th
century, only a few families remained (Walker 1983).
This NSF-REU sites program will help enhance undergraduate education in scientific methods and analyses in an ongoing long-term project at New Philadelphia. The primary goals of the project are to:
1) Understand the town’s founding and development as a multi-racial integrated town;
2) Explore and contrast dietary patterns between different households of different ethnic backgrounds by examining faunal and botanical remains;
3) Reconstruct the townscape and town lot uses of different households from different ethnic backgrounds using botanical data and archaeological landscape features;
4) Elucidate the different consumer choices residents of different ethnic backgrounds made in a frontier situation and understand how household choices changed with the increased connection to distant markets and changing perceptions of racialization within the society.
The excavation and analysis of artifacts and archaeobiology data will provide students with a hands-on learning experience and mentoring process for students in an interdisciplinary setting. Ultimately, these different data sets will be integrated and the students will gain an understanding of the importance of scientific interdisciplinary research as they examine the growth and development of the town. This research will elucidate how individual members and families of this integrated community made choices to create their immediate environment, diet, agricultural practices, social affiliation, and consumer choices.
Archaeological and Research Setting
New Philadelphia in Pike County, Illinois is situated between the Illinois and Mississippi rivers. Today, most of the original 42 acres have been returned to agricultural use. Only a few scattered house foundations are visible in the plowed fields.
This
archaeology project serves as an excellent opportunity for students to
participate in many aspects of a scientific research program. Students will be
divided into teams and they will work collaboratively on an assigned town lot in
New Philadelphia. Prior to excavations, each student will draw from the broader
research goals of this project to create an individual and focused research
design to be addressed in the course of their field school experience. The
field school instructors will teach students about the different archaeological
theories used to formulate such research designs, and the methods, sampling, and
excavation strategies used in archeology to explore those questions.
Each team will be responsible for helping to develop a research design, retrieving archaeological data (material culture and archaeobiology data), cleaning and cataloging the materials, data entry, and analyzing artifacts and archaeobiological materials from one town lot. Student teams will work closely in a mentorship situation with Illinois State Museum, Research and Collection Center (ISM-RCC), University of Illinois (UI) and University of Maryland (UM) staff in order to acquire the necessary skills to perform scientific research. Each student will “specialize” in one form of analysis and they will report on their findings at the end of the summer session. This information will allow students to work as a team to reconstruct the landscape and lifeways of residents of this historic town.
Evening lectures will be presented and the group will take several field trips to local historic sites and museums during the ten-week course.
Week 1:
Orientation at ISM followed by fieldwork at the New Philadelphia site. Students will help conduct a geophysical survey of specific lots at the New Philadelphia site. Students will participate in this remote sensing project.
Students will work in teams of three and each team will excavate within a specific town lot. This work will be based on historical research and the results of the geophysical survey. Students will excavate according to standard archaeological techniques.
Students will be involved in the processing of archaeological information. They will learn how to identify and catalog artifacts, faunal material, seeds and pollen and how to create an associated research catalog and database to be used in analyzing the significance of the evidence we have uncovered. This work will be performed in the ISM-RCC.
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"I am very glad that we were able to experience the lab work. Most field schools have the students do the fieldwork and that’s it. It was nice to see our part of this project through." - student in 2004 fieldschool |
At the end of the course student teams will make a presentation of their results. Field school staff and members of the community interested in this archaeology project will be invited to a half-day symposium to listen to and discuss the results presented by each team member. The presentation will allow for the dissemination of new information as well as group assessment and constructive critique of the work of each field school participant and the overall project. With the help of field school instructors, this presentation will introduce students to the skill of public speaking and it will help provide them the techniques for communicating scientific results to a public audience. After this presentation and discussion, student teams will assess evaluations and create a strategy on how to best present this work to other audiences. They can also provide their assessments of the priorities that should be placed on the various research goals to be pursued in ongoing historical and archaeological investigations at the New Philadelphia site.
Project Location, Facilities and Student Stipends
All students are required to be in Pike County on May 23th
and the instructions will begin on May 24th. New Philadelphia is about 75 miles
west of Springfield, Illinois, and 25 miles east of Hannibal, Missouri. There
is no mass transportation to the immediate area. The closest town is Barry,
Illinois (population 1400) where students will stay at the Kinderhook Lodge. Lodging and meals will be
provided during weeks 1-5 while staying in Pike County and students will be
transported to the site every day. During the weekends students are free to
travel and explore the region when fieldtrips are not scheduled. (The Kinderhook
Lodge is located between the towns of Kinderhook and Barry on Rt. 106).
During weeks 6-10 students will move to the dormitories in Springfield, Illinois and work at the ISM-RCC. This facility provides a state-of-the-art environment and it has vast collections and high quality research laboratories and offices for anthropology, botany, geology, and zoology. During the weekends students are free to travel and explore the region.
Students receive a $300 per week stipend paid on a bi-weekly basis.
Recommended Items for Field Season
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During the Laboratory Session at Illinois State Museum students will be housed in the University of Illinois, Springfield dorms.
Students will need to bring:
Towel
Bedding, including sheets, blankets, pillow
(Bedding will be provided during the field session, but not the laboratory session)
Dr. James Davis
Dr. Michael L. Hargrave
Ms. Charlotte King
Dr. Bonnie W. Styles
Dr. Michael D. Wiant
Dr. Erich K. Schroeder
Dr. Eric C. Grimm
Dr. Jessica M. Theodor
Dr. Robert E. Warren
Ms. Dawn E. Cobb
Ms. Marjorie B. Schroeder
Ms. Claire Fuller Martin
Mr. J. Terry Ransom
Dr. Abdul Alkalimat (Gerald Arthur McWorter)
Dr. Anna Agbe-Davies
New Philadelphia Archaeological Research Project
Center for Heritage Resource Studies