|
Editor’s Note: A media availability
is scheduled for June 19 at 10 a.m. at St. Stephens Park for a behind-the-scenes
tour of the excavation in Washington County. From U.S. Highway 43
South, turn right onto Washington County Road 34 near mile markers
56 and 57. Drive seven-tenths of a mile, and take the right fork.
Go another 5.6 miles from the fork to St. Stephens, and take the
right fork by the First United Methodist Church. The paved road
will become a dirt road for six-tenths of a mile to the park entrance,
then go 1.1 mile to the parking lot. Lunch will be provided. For
questions en route, phone 205/886-0655.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Experts with The University of Alabama’s
Alabama Museum of Natural History
are leading an archaeological expedition on a return trip to the
state’s first territorial capitol, Old St. Stephens in Washington
County. They are digging up new details about the boom town and
how early Alabamians lived.
Known as Museum Expedition, the camp is being held in four sessions,
which began June 8 and will end July 2.
This year’s Expedition team is celebrating the program’s
25th year. For the second consecutive year, researchers are investigating
the remains of Old St. Stephens, now a ghost town. During three
decades, beginning in the 1790s until its decline in the 1820s,
Old St. Stephens was the location of a Spanish fort, an American
fort and Choctaw Indian trading post, and the territorial capitol
of Alabama.
“Much of the site survives in a remarkable state of preservation,”
said Randy Mecredy, education outreach coordinator for the UA Museum,
who is leading the program. Last year’s dig participants assembled
dozens of artifacts, including coins, smoking pipes, utensils, glassware,
musket balls and more than 50 restorable ceramic vessels.
“So much remains unknown about the artifacts,” said
Mecredy. “But the property owners evidently did not live the
poor, deprived, back-water lives that one might expect on the frontier,”
he added. “These preliminary conclusions are just the tip
of what we hope to learn when the project is completed.”
The Museum began this annual field science program with professional
and academic archaeologists in 1979. Originally designed exclusively
for high school students, teachers, and parents, the Museum Expedition
now accepts any history, science, or archaeology enthusiast who
wishes to learn excavation techniques, lab procedures, and artifact
identification. The program remains one of only a few in the country
to provide a hands-on science dig to participants as young as age
14.
“The idea of putting students and adults into the field as
residents of a tent camp has proved a big success,” said Dr.
John Hall, founder of the program and retired director of UA’s
Alabama Museum of Natural History. “They can immerse themselves
in real research projects, directed by leading scientists, doing
complex and exacting field work in challenging conditions.”
The Museum Expedition offers high school students an opportunity
to develop projects for science and social studies fairs, and with
advance arrangements, students may also receive elective high school
credit. Teachers who participate can earn University of Alabama
continuing education units or professional development hours.
For more information, telephone 205/348-7550, e-mail museum.expedition@ua.edu,
or visit the web site at www.amnh.ua.edu.
|