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Popular Titles from the University of Alabama Press: |
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A Conquering Spirit by Gregory A. Waselkov |
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Fort Toulouse: The French Outpost at the Alabamas on the Coosa by Daniel H. Thomas with an introduction by Established in 1717 among the Creek Indian towns of central Alabama, Fort Toulouse became the principal French outpost for the deerskin trade. A new introduction to Thomas's classic study brings readers up to date on recent archaeological and historical discoveries. |
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by Gregory A. Waselkov Archaeological excavations since 1989 have uncovered exciting evidence of the original townsite of Mobile, first capital of the Louisiana colony, and remnants of the colony's port on Dauphin Island. |
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The Commerce of Louisiana by N. M. Miller Surrey, Introduction by Gregory A. Waselkov A reprint of the 1916 classic study of French Louisiana's colonial economy. |
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| Popular Titles from the University of Nebraska Press: | ||||||||||||||
Powhatan's Mantle Edited and with an introduction by Gregory A. Waselkov, Considered a classic study of southeastern Indians, Powhatan's Mantle demonstrates how ethnohistory, demography, archaeology, anthropology, and cartography can be brought together in fresh and meaningful ways to illuminate life in the early South. This expanded and updated edition includes new chapters of the calumet ceremony, Creek concepts of race, and Cherokee agriculture. |
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William Bartram on the Southeastern Indians edited and annotated by Gregory A. Waselkov and Kathryn E. Holland Braund William Bartram traveled throughout the American Southeast from 1773 to 1776. He occupies a unique place as an American Enlightenment explorer, naturalist, writer, and artist whose work was widely admired in his time and thereafter. Coleridge, Wordsworth, and other leading romantics found inspiration in his pages. This volume contains all of Bartram's known writings on Native Americans: a new version of "Observations on Creek and Cherokee Indians," first published in 1852, "Some Hints and Observations Concerning the Civilization of the Indians, or Aborigines of America"; and extensive excerpts from Travels, his most famous work. |
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Center for Archaeological Studies Monograph Series: |
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Monograph 1 by Gregory A. Waselkov and Diane E. Silvia
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Monograph 2 by Gregory A. Waselkov, George W. Shorter, Jr., The accidental discovery of a brick-lined well, found during repaving of a street in downtown Mobile, led to emergency excavations and a search of archival records for clues to its identity. This "textbook" case of archaeological sleuthing reveals the history of a well built in 1847 for the city's new market. |
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Monograph 3 by Bonnie L. Gums and George W. Shorter, Jr. Excavations prior to construction of Mobile's new science center uncovered the first Spanish colonial (ca. 1800) domestic structure found in the city's downtown district, as well as a waterfront tavern dating to the 1820s. Among the recovered artifacts are continental Spanish Majolica, possible African colono ware, and historic Creek and Choctaw pottery. Substantial marsh reclamation features were also found along the original Mobile River bluff. |
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Monograph 4 by Bonnie L. Gums Construction of the Calloway-Smith Middle School in downtown Mobile was preceded by archaeological excavations in a neighborhood occupied predominately by African Americans from 1880 until urban renewal. Exploration of house features reconstructs the patterns of life in turn-of-the-century Mobile. |
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by Bonnie L. Gums, Gregory A. Waselkov, and Sarah B. Mattics Fast-paced modern development of Mobile's colonial district raises concerns for preservation of the City's archaeological heritage. Along with a plan for long-term management, this monograph also includes a series of colonial and early federal-period maps and a comprehensive historical bibliography of Mobile. |
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Monograph 6 by George W. Shorter, Jr. The first archaeological investigation of the lower Tombigbee River valley in over half a century reveals the nature of Late Woodland life, ca. AD 800-1100. Studies of pottery, stone tools, and subsistence remains (including corn) offer an up-to-date perspective on a poorly-known segment of Alabama prehistory. |
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Monograph 7 by Gregory A. Waselkov and Bonnie L. Gums Out of print
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Monograph 8 by Bonnie L. Gums Pottery production was the principal industry of Mobile Bay's Eastern Shore communities during the nineteenth century. This thorough survey of the potters, their kiln sites, and their pots tells the little-known story of a European stoneware tradition in the deep South. |
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Monograph 9 by Ann S. Cordell This is a comprehensive technological study of Indian-made pottery recovered from the French colonial site of Old Mobile in Alabama and the Spanish colonial mission site of San Luis de la Talimali in Florida. The focus on paste characteristics, vessel forms, and decorations reveal the presence of traditional Apalachee-style pottery and the introduction of Colono Ware. |
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Monograph 10 by George W. Shorter, Jr. Two summers of Expeditions, a scientific excavation program sponsored by the Alabama Museum of Natural History and the Alabama Historical Commission, revealed building features, including an officer's latrine and bathouse. Artifacts were diverse, including discarded artillery projectiles, medicine bottles, military buttons, and smoking pipes. Also detailed is the construction of the Fort Morgan fortifications and their role in the Battle of Mobile Bay during the Civil War. |
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Monograph 11 by Laurie A. Wilkie and George W. Shorter, Jr. This study follows the Perryman family who were living and working in Mobile in the late 1800s and early 1900s. As a widow in her fifties with a family to support, Lucrecia Perryman became a midwife, and many of the artifacts recovered from her homestead reflect this practice, which was based, in part, on traditional African spiritual, gender, and ethnomedical ideologies. |
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Monograph 12 by Gregory A. Waselkov, Bonnie L. Gums, and James W. Parker A thorough review of the site's archaeological exploration is complemented by a descriptive analysis of recovered artifacts. In the process, the artifacts from Samuel Mims' frontier plantation (1797-1813) are contrasted with the posessions of the fort's 400+ refugees and garrison prior to the battle of August 30, 1813. |
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Monograph 13 by Gregory A. Waselkov and Sarah Mattics Many years ago, colonists sailed from France to settle along the American Gulf coast. On lands now in the states of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana these colonists found thousands of American Indians living in towns along the great rivers of the South. There, among the Indian nations, the French built villages of their own - Mobile, Miloxi, New Orleans, Natchez - in the colony of La Louisiane. One of those colonists was a young man named Antoine-Simon Le Page du Pratz. |
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Foreword by Gregory A. Waselkov and Sarah Mattics
(2011, 48 pages, paperbound; This facsimile of Chaudron's Spelling Book reproduces one of the famous Confederate wallpaper imprints of the American Civil War (1861-1865). The speller was published by Sigmund Heinrich Goetzel, a 36-year-old immigrant from Austria who in 1854 opened a bookstore at 33 Dauphin Street in Mobile, Alabama. He later started Mobile's first circulating library and first publishing house, S. H. Goetzel and Co., in 1857 and soon began producing well-respected books by Madame Octavia Le Vert (Souveniers of Travel), Alexander Meek (Songs and Poems of the South), and General William Walker (The War in Nicaragua). |
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Books from the Society for Historical Archaeology and Available throught the Book Shop |
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by Gregory A. Waselkov This fifth volume of the series, Guides to Historical Archaeological Literature, presents a bibliography on the archaeology of French colonies in North America. |
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French Colonial Archaeology At Old Mobile: Gregory A. Waselkov, Editor This collection of essays documents the ongoing study of the Old Mobile site, French colonial capital of Louisiana from 1702 to 1711, and how it relates to our understanding of the history of the Southeast. |
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Copyright © 2011 by The University of South Alabama
Last Updated:
Wednesday, December 21, 2011 7:21 AM