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Date: | Thu, 25 Sep 1997 15:58:37 Z |
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To JR Cohen-
Lea Abbott and New South Associates are completing work on a 19th-20th
century resort and bottling works in VA which may be useful or may
provide some useful references. I will send you a copy of the final
report if I don't run out and if you think it would be useful!! Lea
tested and mapped this site several years ago and he and his
associates presented the results at the 1997 SHA conference. The site
is now owned in part by the Corps of Engineers as part of John H. Kerr
dam and reservoir. The springs are believed to have been "discovered"
by William Byrd during NC - VA boundary survey, and an ordinary
operated here by the turn of the 19th century. A resort and bottling
plant grew out of the early ordinary and operated continuously until
the 1930s or 40s. The place became virtually self-sufficient and the
bottled water was shipped all over the world. The water from the
spring has a high lithia content which may tell you something about
its effects.
There has been some scattered work done on taverns and ordinaries and
perhaps its getting to be time for a symposium on this topic. The
historian Daniel Boorstin has made some interesting observations on
the importance of new west hotels for the evolution of everything from
toilets to air conditioning, and I suspect we can learn something from
earlier and more distant sites as well.
Reply to [log in to unmask] for more.
Richard Kimmel, Archaeologist
Corps of Engineers, Wilmington NC
______________________________ Reply Separator _________________________________
Subject: Mid to Late Eighteenth Century Tavern/Inn
Author: [log in to unmask] at Internet
Date: 9/25/1997 3:10 PM
I am investigating a mid- to late-eighteenth century Tavern/Inn
archaeological site in the Hudson River Valley of New York. I am looking for
references, and current research from similar site types during the same
period. The information does not have to be restricted to the Hudson Valley.
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