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Historical Archaeology of the Chesapeake

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ISBN-10: 1560982578

ISBN-13: 9781560982579

Edition: 1994

Authors: Paul A. Shackel, Barbara J. Little

List price: $55.00
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Book details

List price: $55.00
Copyright year: 1994
Publisher: Smithsonian Institution Press
Publication date: 3/17/1994
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Size: 9.00" wide x 11.50" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 2.750
Language: English

Paul A. Shackelis Professor and Chair of Anthropology at the University of Maryland. He is the author and editor of many books, includingArchaeology as a Tool of Civic Engagement(with Barbara Little).

Acknowledgments
Contributors' Affiliations
Archaeological Perspectives: An Overview of the Chesapeake Regionp. 1
Early European Settlementp. 17
"Whereby We Shall Enjoy Their Cultivated Places"p. 23
Decorated Clay Tobacco Pipes from the Chesapeake: An African Connectionp. 35
Solid Statements: Architecture, Manufacturing, and Social Change in Seventeenth-Century Viennap. 51
The Country's House Site: An Archaeological Study of a Seventeenth-Century Domestic Landscapep. 65
Town Plans and Everyday Material Culture: An Archaeology of Social Relations in Colonial Maryland's Capital Citiesp. 85
Plantation and Landscape Studiesp. 97
Mount Vernon: Transformation of an Eighteenth-Century Plantation Systemp. 101
The Archaeology of Plantation Slavery in Piedmont Virginia: Context and Processp. 115
"As Is the Gardener, So Is the Garden": The Archaeology of Landscape as Mythp. 131
Eighteenth-Century Lifep. 149
A Comparative Analysis of the New England and Chesapeake Herding Systemsp. 155
"Fashionable Sugar Dishes, Latest Fashion Ware": The Creamware Revolution in the Eighteenth-Century Chesapeakep. 169
"She Was . . . an Example to Her Sex": Possibilities for a Feminist Historical Archaeologyp. 189
Antietam Furnace: A Frontier Ironworks in the Great Valley of Marylandp. 205
The Archaeology of Ideology: Archaeological Work in Annapolis since 1981p. 219
Current Archaeological Perspectives on the Growth and Development of Williamsburgp. 231
Nineteenth-Century Lifep. 247
How Sweet It Was: Alexandria's Sugar Trade and Refining Businessp. 251
Neighborhoods and Household Types in Nineteenth-Century Washington, D.C.: Fannie Hill and Mary McNamara in Hooker's Divisionp. 267
Rural Landscape in the Mid-Nineteenth-Century Chesapeakep. 283
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.