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Date: | Tue, 7 May 1996 15:15:49 -0400 |
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Chris,
Mark Branstner and I co-chaired a session on the lumber industry in the Upper
Great Lakes region at the most recent SHA conference - we are in the process
of publishing the session in the Michigan Archaeologist (hopefully by late
fall or early winter). The number of lumber camps in the Great Lakes region
that have been formally tested is small (compared to other site types) and
most of the data is in CRM reports. I have included a short list of published
references which relate to Great Lakes region lumber camps.
Franzen, John G.
1992 Northern Michigan Logging Camps: Material Culture and Worker Adaptation
on the Industrial Frontier. Historical Archaeology 26(2):74-98.
1995 Comfort for Man or Beast: Alcohol and Medicine Use in Northern Michigan
Logging Camps, Ca. 1880-1940. The Wisconsin Archaeologist 76(3-4):294-337.
Karamanski, Theodore J.
1985 Logging, History, and the National Forests: A Case Study of Cultural
Resource Management. The Public Historian 7(2):26-40.
1989 Deep Woods Frontier: A History of Logging in Northern Michigan. Wayne
State University Press, Detroit, Michigan.
Rohe, Randall E.
1985 Archaeology - A Key to the Great Lakes Lumber Era. The Wisconsin
Archaeologist 66(4):359-384.
1985 Settlement Patterns of Logging Camps in the Great Lakes Region. Journal
of Cultural Geography 6(1):79-107.
1986 The Evolution of the Great Lakes Logging Camp, 1830-1930. Journal of
Forest History 30(1):17-28.
Good Luck
Sean Dunham
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