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Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition

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The full expedition report was not published for more than 100 years. Cushing's archival records, in the form of partial reports, diaries and field notes, had to be transcribed, researched, and annotated. Between 1991 and 2001, Hinsley, a cultural historian, and Wilcox, an archaeologist, examined the
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Haury's monograph included a Foreword by Hodge. He surprisingly belittled the work of the expedition and demonstrated a lack of gratitude to his brother-in-law's memory. By taking Hodge on the expedition, Cushing had enabled him to gain field experience that later helped Hodge obtain a key position
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For this purpose she collaborated with Cushing to establish an expedition team with a board of directors to manage the operations. Cushing said that his ambition for the expedition was: “a rock of ages ... the foundation of something good and great for archeology and the sciences of humanity”. The
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Bandelier, Adolph Francis Alphonse; Cushing, Frank Hamilton; Dewey, Mary E.; Fewkes, Jesse Walter; Robert Gorham Fuller; Charles Garlick; Augustus Hemenway; Mary Hemenway; Frederick Webb Hodge; Herman Frederik Carel Kate; Thomas V. Keam; Margaret Magill; Alexander MacGregor Stephen; Jacob Lawson
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Suffering from illness and depression after losing his leadership position, Cushing published a few partial papers before his sudden death in 1900. His report manuscripts were unpublished. After Cushing's death, the Hodges retained his manuscripts.
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Wortman; Charles Clark Willoughby; Old South Church (Boston, Mass.); Smithsonian Institution; Bureau of American Ethnology; United States. Dept. of the Interior; United States. Office of Indian Affairs (1886).
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Copies Made Under A.F. Bandelier, a Member of the Hemenway Expedition, of Ancient Documents Existing in Mexico, Santa Fè, New Mexico, and Other Places in the Southwestern U.S.
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Copies Made Under A.F. Bandelier, a Member of the Hemenway Expedition, of Ancient Documents Existing in Mexico, Santa Fè, New Mexico, and Other Places in the Southwestern U.S.
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Jr., and the board of directors terminated Cushing's services in 1889. He had fallen ill but they also believed that his exploration methods were not systematic.
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The old New world: An account of the explorations of the Hemenway southwestern archæological expedition in 1887–88, under the direction of Frank Hamilton Cushing
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The Old New world: An account of the explorations of the Hemenway southwestern archæological expedition in 1887–88, under the direction of Frank Hamilton Cushing
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When Mary Hemenway died in 1894, the board of directors terminated the expedition. It was then investigating the ethnological culture of the
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Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition: Contributions to the History of the Southwestern Portion of the United States
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Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition: Contributions to the History of the Southwestern Portion of the United States
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Human Bones of the Hemenway Collection in the United States Army Medical Museum: Wash. Matthews, J.L. Wortman, J.S. Billings
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in northwestern New Mexico and his enthusiasm for further investigations. Her ambition was to establish a private museum in
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classmate of August Hemenway Jr., was appointed as the new leader, though he lacked archeological experience.
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Cushing, the expedition's director, brought along his wife, Emily, and her sister, Margaret Magill, as artist.
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In 1895, the Hemenway family donated a box containing records and the expedition's artifacts to Harvard’s
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The Human Bones of the Hemenway Collection in the United States Army Medical Museum at Washington (1893)
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based on archaeological finds, to be known as the Pueblo Museum, for the study of American Indians.
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It provided insight into the ancestral history of the Zuni and the development of the prehistoric
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in 1945. The site had been investigated in detail by the Hemenway Expedition and dated to the
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expedition's agenda was to conduct archaeological and anthropological investigations in
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in 1905 at the Bureau of American Ethnology (now part of the Smithsonian Institution).
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Hemenway records. They published their reports of the expedition in three volumes.
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Husher, E. H. (1995). "The Hemenway Photography of E. H. Husher, 1888–1889".
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was a wealthy widow and philanthropist in New England who was impressed with
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Matthews, Washington; Wortman, Jacob Lawson; Billings, John Shaw (1893).
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The artifacts box remained unopened at the Peabody until the 1930s, when
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Archives, Ancestors, Practices: Archaeology in the Light of Its History
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The expeditionary records held by Cushing were in storage until 1930.
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Camp Cibola (1888), the expedition's headquarters near Zuni
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student, was the first to study these, and he published a
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Travels and Researches in Native North America, 1882–1883
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In the summer of 1888, the expedition moved northeast to
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was published in 1891. In 1893, Matthews, Wortman, and
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Several members of the expedition team contributed to
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The expedition began in December 1886, departing from
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Observers Observed: Essays on Ethnographic Fieldwork
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The expedition excavated hundreds of skulls, mostly
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Archaeological expedition in the American Southwest
820: 443: 201:Charles A. Garlick, a former topographer with the 180:, served as the expedition's secretary-treasurer. 212:, was to preserve any finds of skeletal remains. 858:Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition 454: 452: 174:Sylvester Baxter, journalist and editor of the 29:Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition 461:"The Lost Itinerary of Frank Hamilton Cushing" 492: 490: 488: 486: 484: 482: 459:Hinsley, Curtis M.; Wilcox, David R. (2002). 167:was working as an executive assistant at the 8: 677:(Public domain ed.). J. Wilson and Son. 798:Schlanger, Nathan; Nordbladh, Jarl (2008). 671:Bandelier, Adolph Francis Alphonse (1890). 647:Bandelier, Adolph Francis Alphonse (n.d.). 359:Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 219:took care of the medical needs of the team. 929:History of the Southwestern United States 595: 583: 523: 869: 734:CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( 421: 724: 714: 686:Hemenway Expedition Records, 1886–1914 655: 619: 607: 547: 321:Hemenway Expedition Records, 1886–1914 192:served as the physical anthropologist. 31:occurred between 1886 and 1894 in the 939:Native American history of New Mexico 632:Matthews, Wortman & Billings 1893 338:, was published in 1883. while Fewkes 89:'s anthropological work studying the 7: 766:Kate, Herman Frederik Carel (2004). 559: 535: 827:. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p.  934:Native American history of Arizona 924:Expeditions from the United States 136:Cushing at Zuni, ca. 1881–82., by 14: 208:Dr. Jacob Lawson Wortman, of the 184:Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier 896: 884: 872: 851: 708:Note Book on Hemenway Expedition 344:Note Book on Hemenway Expedition 146: 129: 444:Schlanger & Nordbladh 2008 205:, served as the field manager. 190:Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate 43:, who was replaced in 1889 by 1: 705:Fewkes, Jesse Walter (1891). 467:. University of Arizona Press 819:Stocking, George W. (1983). 311:from the northeast ca. 1890. 960: 919:Archaeological expeditions 694:Baxter, Sylvester (1883). 689:(Public domain ed.). 383:La Pueblo de Los Muertos. 746:Journal of the Southwest 203:U.S. Geographical Survey 399:Huntington Free Library 169:Smithsonian Institution 312: 87:Frank Hamilton Cushing 83:Mary Tileston Hemenway 41:Frank Hamilton Cushing 37:Mary Tileston Hemenway 24: 860:at Wikimedia Commons 572:Bandelier et al. 1886 306: 255:, an ethnologist and 68:Pueblo de Los Muertos 22: 662:: CS1 maint: year ( 278:, from the ruins at 270:Archaeological finds 165:Frederick Webb Hodge 95:Salem, Massachusetts 550:, pp. 527–534. 446:, pp. 37, 38–. 286:, Los Muertos, and 253:Jesse Walter Fewkes 217:Washington Matthews 210:Army Medical Museum 196:Jesse Walter Fewkes 45:Jesse Walter Fewkes 804:. Berghahn Books. 348:John Shaw Billings 313: 307:Hohokam culture's 257:Harvard University 60:Harvard University 33:American Southwest 25: 856:Media related to 373:asked a student, 249:Augustus Hemenway 138:John Karl Hillers 111:Salt River Valley 951: 901: 900: 899: 889: 888: 887: 877: 876: 875: 868: 855: 842: 826: 815: 794: 783: 762: 739: 732: 726: 722: 720: 712: 701: 690: 678: 667: 661: 653: 635: 629: 623: 617: 611: 605: 599: 593: 587: 581: 575: 569: 563: 557: 551: 545: 539: 533: 527: 521: 510: 509: 507: 505: 494: 477: 476: 474: 472: 456: 447: 441: 391:Southwest Museum 341: 186:was a historian. 150: 133: 115:Phoenix, Arizona 959: 958: 954: 953: 952: 950: 949: 948: 909: 908: 907: 897: 895: 885: 883: 873: 871: 863: 849: 839: 818: 812: 797: 786: 780: 765: 742: 733: 723: 713: 704: 693: 681: 670: 654: 646: 643: 638: 630: 626: 618: 614: 606: 602: 594: 590: 582: 578: 570: 566: 558: 554: 546: 542: 534: 530: 522: 513: 503: 501: 496: 495: 480: 470: 468: 458: 457: 450: 442: 423: 419: 387:Hohokam culture 367: 339: 334:Baxter's work, 301: 296: 272: 226: 158: 157: 156: 155: 154: 151: 142: 141: 140: 134: 123: 80: 72:Hohokam culture 35:. 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UNM Press. 771: 770: 764: 760: 756: 752: 748: 747: 741: 737: 730: 718: 710: 709: 703: 699: 698: 692: 688: 687: 680: 676: 675: 669: 665: 659: 652: 651: 645: 644: 640: 633: 628: 625: 621: 616: 613: 609: 604: 601: 597: 592: 589: 585: 584:Bandelier n.d 580: 577: 573: 568: 565: 561: 556: 553: 549: 544: 541: 538:, p. 44. 537: 532: 529: 526:, p. 61. 525: 524:Stocking 1983 520: 518: 516: 512: 499: 493: 491: 489: 487: 485: 483: 479: 466: 462: 455: 453: 449: 445: 440: 438: 436: 434: 432: 430: 428: 426: 422: 416: 414: 410: 406: 404: 403:New York City 400: 396: 392: 388: 384: 380: 376: 372: 371:Alfred Tozzer 364: 362: 360: 355: 353: 349: 345: 337: 332: 330: 326: 322: 317: 310: 305: 298: 293: 291: 290:, near Zuni. 289: 285: 281: 277: 269: 267: 265: 260: 258: 254: 250: 246: 241: 239: 235: 231: 223: 218: 215:Army surgeon 214: 211: 207: 204: 200: 197: 194: 191: 188: 185: 182: 179: 178: 177:Boston Herald 173: 170: 166: 163: 160: 159: 149: 139: 132: 120: 118: 116: 112: 108: 104: 98: 96: 92: 88: 84: 77: 75: 73: 69: 65: 61: 57: 52: 50: 46: 42: 38: 34: 30: 21: 850: 822: 800: 789: 768: 750: 744: 707: 696: 685: 673: 649: 641:Bibliography 627: 615: 603: 591: 579: 567: 555: 543: 531: 502:. 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Boston. 658:cite book 560:Kate 2004 536:Kate 2004 379:monograph 294:Aftermath 288:Halonawan 121:Personnel 64:monograph 51:culture. 759:40169951 331:(1890). 234:New York 109:and the 944:Hohokam 891:History 879:Arizona 865:Portals 465:Excerpt 113:, near 49:Hohokam 835:  808:  776:  757:  327:, and 230:Albion 755:JSTOR 753:(4). 340:' 833:ISBN 806:ISBN 774:ISBN 736:link 729:help 664:link 506:2013 473:2014 264:Hopi 245:Zuni 58:, a 27:The 401:in 393:in 381:on 66:on 915:: 831:. 829:61 751:37 749:. 721:: 719:}} 715:{{ 660:}} 656:{{ 514:^ 481:^ 463:. 451:^ 424:^ 405:. 361:. 354:. 342:s 282:, 266:. 232:, 117:. 105:, 74:. 867:: 841:. 814:. 793:. 782:. 761:. 738:) 731:) 666:) 634:. 622:. 610:. 598:. 586:. 574:. 508:. 475:.

Index


American Southwest
Mary Tileston Hemenway
Frank Hamilton Cushing
Jesse Walter Fewkes
Hohokam
Emil Haury
Harvard University
monograph
Pueblo de Los Muertos
Hohokam culture
Mary Tileston Hemenway
Frank Hamilton Cushing
Zuni Indians
Salem, Massachusetts
Fort Wingate
New Mexico
Salt River Valley
Phoenix, Arizona

John Karl Hillers

Frederick Webb Hodge
Smithsonian Institution
Boston Herald
Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier
Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate
Jesse Walter Fewkes
U.S. Geographical Survey
Army Medical Museum

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