John Nass, Jr. Editor, President Mon-Yough Chapter #3 and
Judy Durista, Treasurer, Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology
As mentioned in the previous issue of the Journal, this instalment answers the question why do these awards exist and why they are named for individual? To help answer these two questions, Judy Durista has graciously agreed to discuss the Frances Dorrance Award and why it was created to acknowledge her legacy. I in turn will tackle the Mason and Witthoft Awards.
In 1926 he accepted a curator position with the University Museum, the
University of Pennsylvania. While at Penn, John conducted extensive
archaeological research in Mexico and South America, especially Peru (Means
2023; Kidder and Satterthwaite 1968). In 1928/29, together with Frances
Dorrance and other like mined individuals, they founded the Society for
Pennsylvania Archaeology. John served as its first president (1929-1930).
John was highly respected by students and his colleagues at Penn. He was a member of numerous professional societies, local, state, national, and foreign, and at one time or another was an officer in most of the, including the presidency of the Society for American Archaeology. In the 1940s, he was the editor of the American Anthropologist (Schwartz 2017). He retired from that position in 1958, but continued to stay active at the museum and in local organizations (Kidder and Satterthwaite 1968; Schwartz 2017). When the officers of the SPA created an award to recognize a professional archaeologist and her/his career as an educator and contributor to the vitality of the society, naming the award for J. Alden Mason was an easy choice.
Starting in 1948, John worked at the Pennsylvania State Museum in
Harrisburg as chief curator and state anthropologist, a post he held until
1966. During this same period, John also served as the state archaeologist for
Pennsylvania, as well as serving as the president of the SPA in 1962.
The Frances
Dorrance Award is given to the Chapter of the SPA that has recorded the most new sites with
the Pennsylvania Archaeology Site Survey at the State Museum, Harrisburg, PA,
for each calendar year. While the description is simple and straightforward, the woman it is named for was anything but. For her time,
1877 to 1973, Miss Dorrance’s accomplishments produced significant milestones
and for a woman of her time, she was quite remarkable.
She was a descendent of one of the oldest and distinguished families of the Wyoming Valley and of Col. George Dorrance who died during the Battle of Wyoming during the American Revolutionary War.
She distinguished herself throughout her lifetime with this partial list of accomplishments:
· Graduate of Vassar College
Class of 1900, Phi Beta Kappa
· Graduate in Library
Sciences, New York School of Library Sciences, Albany
· Noted Scholar at the University of Berlin, Columbia University and the Marine Biological Laboratory in Massachusetts
· Library positions at
Trenton, NJ, Osterhout Library in Wilkes-Barre, PA
· Director of the Wyoming
Historical Society (1922)
Head librarian of the Hoyt Library (1938-1952)
· Head of the Wilkes College
Library circulation department
· Member and Secretary of the
Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission
· Served on boards of the
Pennsylvania Folklore Society, Back Mountain Library, and others
· Made local historic preservation and archaeology her life’s work through the programs she helped create under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s administration to put academics to work during the Depression.
· Named a Distinguished
Daughter of Pennsylvania
The Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology came into being by way of her efforts and collaboration with others who realized that Native American presence in Pennsylvania was being lost without note or history with site destruction amid development and settlement progress. She initiated the Indian Survey sending out 13,000 survey letters to all factions of the public from her position as executive director of the Luzerne County Historical Society. This was the first statewide archaeological survey in Pennsylvania.
The Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology
came into being by way of her efforts and collaboration with others who
realized that Native American presence in Pennsylvania was being lost without
note or history with site destruction amid development and settlement progress.
She initiated the Indian Survey sending out 13,000 survey letters to all
factions of the public from her position as executive director of the Luzerne
County Historical Society. This was the first statewide archaeological survey
in Pennsylvania. In March 1924 the survey was sent to museums,
historical
Above: Frances Dorrance with her J. Alden Mason Award from the Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology, awarded in 1970.
societies, the boy scouts, and local authorities throughout Eastern Pennsylvania. The purpose was to research written records of Native Americans, preserve and arrange collections for future generations, and to make an initial effort to preserve the surviving remains of Native Americans and scientifically organize and study them.
In 1926, the Indian Survey expanded to include western Pennsylvania, and became the first statewide survey in Pennsylvania. (Note the partners in Volume 1 of the Pennsylvania Archaeologist). In 1927 Miss Dorrance asked the state government to form an archaeological commission. That didn’t happen. Instead, she was appointed to the State Historic Commission (PHC)(now PHMC), which formed an archaeology committee to complete the survey.
Over 1,900 sites were documented across the state (see below).
The start of the Pennsylvanian Archaeological Site Survey (PASS) came into being as a solution to the massive job of compiling and maintaining the data from the survey. Frances Dorrance, along with J. Alden Mason, organized the Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology to keep the survey going into the future. The SPA chapter #11 is named after Frances Dorrance. J. Alden Mason served as the Society’s first President with Frances Dorrance as Secretary. She later served as SPA President in 1934-1935.
The information about Frances Dorrance came from a number of sources including, Frances Dorrance’s obituary and Wyoming Historical and Geological Society which has become the Luzerne County Historical Society as well as the PHMC blogs and online reporting and ,of course, early issues of the Pennsylvania Archaeologist. The names on the SPA awards and scholarships were real people who devoted their lives to the mission of the SPA giving their time and talents to a purpose outside of themselves and were immortalized with their names on awards that outlived them. We need to remind ourselves that they were people like us and perhaps be inspired.
Cotter
JL. John Gerard Witthoft 1921–1993. American Antiquity.
1996;61(2):279-284. doi:10.1017/S0002731600051908
2023 Start the Presses? John Alden Mason as Mesoamericanist and a Reluctant New Deal Archaeologist in the 1930s. In Sins of Our Ancestors (and of Ourselves): Confronting Archaeological Legacies, edited by April Beisaw, David E. Witt, Katie Kirakosian, and Ryan Wheeler, pp. 81-91. Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association: Volume 34, Issue 1. American Anthropological Association.
No comments:
Post a Comment