Paul.,
There's quite a bit available from my NPS office in Lincoln related to
Springfield, Illinois, and other MIdwestern cities in which NPS manages
presidential homes, national historic sites, and the like. You can get a
list of available publications on our website
http://www.cr.nps.gov/mwac/index.htm. There are also others no longer in
print, and I can compile some bibliographic info when I return to the
office later next month.
Vergil
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Vergil E. Noble, PhD, RPA, Archeologist
Midwest Archeological Center, National Park Service
Robert V. Denney Federal Building, Room 474
100 Centennial Mall North, Lincoln, NE 68508-3873
Phone: 402.437.5392x108 Fax: 402.437.5098
office email address: [log in to unmask]
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Paul Mullins
<pmullins@STANFOR To: [log in to unmask]
D.EDU> cc: (bcc: Vergil Noble/MWAC/NPS)
Sent by: Subject: urban Midwestern historical archaeology studies
HISTORICAL
ARCHAEOLOGY
<[log in to unmask]
>
01/27/2006 08:38
AM PST
Please respond to
HISTORICAL
ARCHAEOLOGY
Folks;
I am assembling a paper on urban historical archaeology in the Midwest and
would like some help finding CRM studies and lightly published,
unpublished, or in-progress papers, theses, or dissertations. The issue of
what defines the "Midwest" is relatively flexible in my mind,
conservatively
including the Old Northwest territories (i.e., the full range of what
became
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin, as well as the eastern
half of Minnesota), but in some minds it includes the space from Pittsburgh
to the Dakotas south into Upland Kentucky. Given the relative paucity of
material, I'm inclined to define this expansively rather than narrowly.
Likewise, I can see defining urbanity relatively broadly as well.
I have work represented like Jane Baxter in Chicago, Tim Baumann in St.
Louis, Paul Shackel and Chris Finnell in New Philadelphia, and Mike
Nassaney in Battle Creek, but there must be some more fine CRM studies in
particular that are momentarily escaping me. If you might know of some
work that is in the grey literature or otherwise not widely published--and
please feel free to self-promote--please pass on a citation and ideally a
portion of the piece or some way I can get to it without a trip to every
SHPO archive in the region. You can reply to me off-list, and I can always
post the full list of citations later if folks have any interest.
Thanks,
Paul
Paul Mullins
Visiting Associate Professor
Cultural and Social Anthropology
Bldg. 110
Stanford University
Stanford CA 94305
http://www.iupui.edu/~anthpm/home.html
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