Showing posts with label preserving history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preserving history. Show all posts

Thursday, November 23

The History of Appalachian English: Why We Talk Differently

http://appalachianmagazine.com/2017/11/23/the-history-of-appalachian-english-why-we-talk-differently/

Friday, September 22

Neighbors Say Lawn Jockey Is Racist - Owner Tells Them What It Really Means

http://www.allthatsnews.com/articles/society/neighbors-say-lawn-jockey-racist-owner-tells-them-what-it-really-means?fb=nw

Friday, September 8

330 Years of Unknown History: The Oldest Road in America Finally Surfaces

http://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-places-americas/330-years-unknown-history-oldest-road-america-finally-surfaces-004265?utm_content=buffer9c7b8&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Sunday, February 19

30 Bizarre Photos That Show The Real Wild West

http://otherbuzz.com/photos-of-the-real-wild-west/?utm_source=revcontent-mobile&utm_medium=native&utm_campaign=OtherBuzz_StrangeWildWestPhotos_Dec12_mobile&utm_content_id=1510144&utm_boost_id=201195&utm_targeting=history,%20facts%20and%20science&utm_widget_id=9770

Retired carpenter provides plausible solution to 3000 year old architectural mystery

http://m.thevintagenews.com/2017/01/14/a-retired-carpenter-has-provided-a-plausible-solution-to-a-3000-year-old-architectural-mystery/

Saturday, February 18

30 Vintage Photos Of Grocery Stores That Are Beyond Fascinating

http://m.ranker.com/list/photos-of-grocery-stores-then-and-now/kellen-perry?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=post&utm_campaign=photos-of-grocery-stores-then-and-now

Forensics Reconstruct The Face Of A Man Brutally Murdered 1,400 Year Ago

http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/forensics-reconstruct-the-face-of-a-man-brutally-murdered-1400-year-ago/

Thursday, July 14

New evidence that humans settled in southeastern US far earlier than previously believed

http://ns.umich.edu/new/releases/23896-new-evidence-that-humans-settled-in-southeastern-us-far-earlier-than-previously-believed

Tuesday, July 12

Tartaria Tablets

http://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-places-europe/do-tartaria-tablets-contain-evidence-earliest-known-writing-system-002103?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=postplanner&utm_source=facebook.com

Friday, February 26

The Melungeons

http://www.pbs.org/weta/finding-your-roots/your-stories/a-mystery-people-the-melungeons/

Saturday, February 13

ETSU Archaeology team finds early Cherokee presnce in NE TN

http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/Education/2016/02/12/ETSU-archaeological-team-uncovers-new-information-about-early-Cherokee-presence.html






ETSU

1 / 2 Jay Franklin, along with his students and other volunteers from around the world, spent several weeks in December and January excavating the area in Washington County. The work was funded through a grant from the Cherokee Preservation Foundation.


ETSU 

ETSU archaeological team uncovers new information about early Cherokee presence

CONTRIBUTED TO THE PRESS • UPDATED FEB 12, 2016 AT 4:40 PM

Along a 12-acre stretch of the Nolichucky River, East Tennessee State University archaeologist Dr. Jay Franklin believes he has uncovered a new chapter — a new chapter in the history of Cherokee Indians, their early presence in Northeast Tennessee and their strong influence with the outside world.

Franklin, along with his students and other volunteers from around the world, spent several weeks in December and January excavating the area in Washington County. The work was funded through a grant from the Cherokee Preservation Foundation.

“Based on earlier discoveries of Qualla, a type of Cherokee pottery, we knew that Cherokee Indians had been present in this region, but what we now know is that they had towns here much earlier than previously believed,” said Franklin, a professor in Sociology and Anthropology at ETSU.

Franklin and his team uncovered part of a large village and excavated a portion of a winter house. He now believes the Cherokees were in the Northeast Tennessee region between 1450 and 1650.

He describes the pottery found as “extraordinary.”

“We also found European glass trade beads and sea shell beads, which is significant because it indicates that trading was taking place far afield with the outside world,” Franklin added. “This was an important place for the Overhill Cherokee Indians and much of their identity was formed here.”

Eleven of the students who joined Franklin for the project were enrolled in a winter sessions course at ETSU and will be developing presentations about the find to be shared with the Cherokee community. Volunteers and archaeologists from Chicago, Massachusetts and British Columbia traveled to Johnson City to be part of the excavation as well.

Many artifact samples have already been sent for processing and will eventually be housed at the ETSU Valleybrook Archaeological Education and Curation Center, which was established in 2014 through a grant from the Tennessee Department of Transportation.

Franklin plans to spend the next two years reviewing the findings and framing specific questions for future excavations. He and a group of his students will present information about the project at an upcoming national meeting in Florida.

“We knew there were historic Cherokee towns that existed in Western North Carolina and in the valley of upstate South Carolina and in Georgia,” Franklin said. “Now we know there were groups of towns in Northeast Tennessee as well.

Monday, January 11

The Iceman’s Stomach Bug Helps Scientists Map Ancient Human Migration

http://www.history.com/news/the-icemans-stomach-bug-helps-scientists-map-ancient-human-migration?cmpid=Social_FBPAGE_HISTORY_20160111_327898271&linkId=20276258

Friday, December 18

7 Historical Treasures Discovered by Accident

http://www.history.com/news/history-lists/7-historical-treasures-discovered-by-accident?cmpid=Social_FBPAGE_HISTORY_20151218_309672178&linkId=19707728

Monday, December 14

Fact, fiction and ghost stories: Johnson City's history holds a variety of secrets

http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/History/2015/12/13/Fact-fiction-and-ghost-stories-Johnson-City-is-home-to-a-living-breathing-history.html?ci=stream&lp=2&p=1

Wednesday, December 9

'Mystery' diary illuminates Civil War-era life in Tennessee

http://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2015/12/08/mystery-diary-illuminates-civil-war-era-life-tennessee/76579092/

Saturday, November 28

The Scots-Irish in the Southern United States: An Overview

http://www.archives.com/experts/garstka-katharine/the-scots-irish-in-the-southern-united-states-an-overview.html

Thursday, November 26

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