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Archaeology of Colonial Pensacola (Florida Museum of Natural History: Ripley P. Bullen Series) Hardcover – June 24, 1999
"Dr. Bense and her colleagues are resurrecting a lost community, the colonial predecessor of modern Pensacola, from the long-neglected archaeological remnants and archival documents of Spanish and British colonists."--Gregory A. Waselkov, University of South Alabama
"The wonderful rich history of Pensacola and West Florida has been kept under wraps much too long. Five outstanding historians and archaeologists present a vivid record of the life and times of Colonial Pensacola and its environs. It is a great history both for the professional and the general reader."--Samuel Proctor, Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus, University of Florida
Beneath the modern city of Pensacola and its surrounding waters, the colonial past is abundantly preserved. This is the first book to examine those archaeological riches.
Offering a new perspective on the city that anchored European settlement on the Gulf Coast, this collection provides a major contribution to the archaeology and history of Florida and adjoining states, especially during the Late Colonial period (1750-1821), when Pensacola moved through Spanish, then British, then Spanish occupation.
With its description of the exciting nautical heritage of Pensacola--including details of spectacular underwater finds--the book contains the first new information about colonial Pensacola available in decades. In addition, it discusses the role of Creek Indians in the British and Second Spanish periods and their importance in the emergence of the Seminole and Miccosukee Indians. It also describes the Pensacola community involvement in archaeological issues, an aspect of this research that has received national recognition.
Contents
1. Introduction, by Judith A. Bense
2. Pensacola, 1686 to 1821, by William S. Coker
3. Indians in West Florida in the Colonial and Territorial Periods, by Jane E. Dysart
4. Colonial Maritime Resources in Pensacola, by Roger C. Smith
5. Archaeology of Late Colonial Pensacola, by Judith A. Bense
6. Historical and Archaeological Context and Comparisons, by Judith A. Bense
7. Public Interpretation and Presentation of Colonial Historical Archaeology in Pensacola, by Thomas Muir, Jr.
Judith A. Bense, professor of archaeology at the University of West Florida, Pensacola, is the author of <i>Archaeology of the Southeastern United States: Paleoindian to World War II</i>, as well as articles in Journal of American Archaeology and <i>Encyclopedia of North American Archaeology</i>.
- Print length312 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity Press of Florida
- Publication dateJune 24, 1999
- Dimensions6.75 x 1.5 x 9.5 inches
- ISBN-100813016614
- ISBN-13978-0813016610
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Product details
- Publisher : University Press of Florida; 1st edition (June 24, 1999)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 312 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0813016614
- ISBN-13 : 978-0813016610
- Item Weight : 11.7 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.75 x 1.5 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,581,958 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #9,936 in Archaeology (Books)
- #17,306 in Native American History (Books)
- #100,731 in U.S. State & Local History
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Dr. Judith Bense received her PhD in Terrestrial Archaeology at Washington State University, while doing her undergraduate and Master's work in Florida (Archaeology Institute of University of Western Florida official website, [...] facstaff/). She is currently professor of archaeology and anthropology at the University of Western Florida (UWF). In 1980, Bense started an anthropology-archaeology department at UWF for certain reasons: "the area's untouched resources" (p. xv) and the fact that she would be "the area's first archaeologist in residence" (p. xv). She built a neophyte archaeology program in to one of the best archaeological institutes in the nation, in a matter of a few short years. Bense's true accomplishment was that the city of Pensacola "pioneered the melding of public interest (and support) with archaeological and historical research. The Pensacola model, which has received national awards and acclamation, has inspired similar projects through the United States" (p. xv).
While Bense writes some of this book, the majority is written by her own former students; those who majored in archaeology. As all of the archaeological sites in Pensacola were excavated by students at UWF, these students are just as much experts on this subject as Bense, herself. As a full fledged archaeologist, Bense's own writing in this volume is incredibly accessible, as is the writing of her students. Though the descriptions of their discoveries are extensive, never is it dry. The accessibility fused with the abundance of raw research data found in the appendixes, makes it for an archaeologist well worth the [...]; however for the casual history reader out of the price range. As it is, the volume is absolutely indispensable when studying the history of colonial Pensacola, due to the fact that is one of only a handful written on the subject.
In contrast to Bense's balance of documents and archaeology, the only other full-length book on colonial Pensacola entitled, Santa Maria de Galve, A Story of Survival, by Virginia Parks, deals almost exclusively with documents. In A Story of Survival, Parks, however, does use some data presented in Bense's volume. It is not an exaggeration to state that Judith Bense owns the expertise on the archaeology of Pensacola.
There is no debate that the documented history of Pensacola must be studied across the disciplines to include, for certain, archeology. It is definite that Judith Bense and the UWF archaeology program have answered many questions plaguing Pensacola's history and the data has been wrapped up in Archaeology of Colonial Pensacola in a very accessible, cross-discipline book.
Teresa Pangle
December 2006
