Elizabeth,
I will not be attending the SHA meetings and do not have anything to
contribute to your session. However, you might fine my article "Ode to a
Lunch Bowl: The Atlantic Lunch as an interface between St, Mary's County
Maryland and Washington D.C." to be of interest. It was published in
*Northeast
Historical Archaeology, *Vol. 13, pages 2-8. It records how a couple of
merchants originally from rural St. Mary's County became outposts for people
from the county when they visited Washington D.C. A hotel ware bowl marked
"Atlantic Lunch" recovered from a site in St. Mary's City led to finding
about this urban-rural connection.
Peace,
George L. Miller
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 3:37 PM, Elizabeth Hoag-Stewart <[log in to unmask]>wrote:
> Hello All!
>
> I realize this is late notice, but I wanted to put it out for
> consideration...
>
> My colleague Emily Weglian and I would like to put together a session for
> the
> upcoming SHA meeting in January 2011 in Austin, TX (the deadline for
> submissions
> is fast approaching). We want to explore various aspects of historical
> neighborhood archaeology. We have been doing work on our college campus,
> Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland, investigating the changing urban
> neighborhood from the 1860s to 1960s (when our campus was built). We
> envision
> this session to cover a wide variety of topics, from results of the
> archaeology
> itself to working with students, volunteers, community members, collective
> community histories, historical outlines of community development and
> change,
> etc. If you have interest, or would like more information, please contact
> me
> off-list, and we will go from there.
>
>
> Our tentative title is: Neighborhood Archaeologies: Digging in our own
> backyards.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Elizabeth Hoag, RPA
> Adjunct Faculty
> Anthropology
> Cuyahoga Community College
> Cleveland OH
>
>
>
>
|