Skip to main content
Please allow one business day for order processing.
Close this alert
The Archeology of New Hampshire: Exploring 10,000 Years in the Granite State (UNH Non-Series Title)

The Archeology of New Hampshire: Exploring 10,000 Years in the Granite State (UNH Non-Series Title)

Current price: $32.34
Publication Date: May 31st, 2006
Publisher:
University of New Hampshire Press
ISBN:
9781584655626
Pages:
272

Description

Several states already boast volumes showcasing their archeological history, but not New Hampshire--until now. David R. Starbuck's volume fills that void. Going beyond standard state guides that focus primarily on prehistoric sites, Starbuck also devotes equal time to historic, industrial, and nautical sites. This approach reflects the thinking of most contemporary archeologists who conduct research at a diverse range of sites.

A veteran of thirty years of field research throughout the Granite State, Starbuck revisits some of his own sites, including excavations at the New England Glassworks in Temple, two prehistoric sites on the Merrimack River, the Joseph Hazeltine pottery workshop outside Concord, the Governor Wentworth Estate in Wolfeboro, and his own long-term survey and excavation project at Canterbury Shaker Village. At the same time, though, Starbuck includes the work of other contemporary New Hampshire archeologists, representative sites of "old-timers" whose digs preceded his arrival, and the investigations of avocational diggers.

Starbuck's introduction offers an anecdotal history of archeological research in New Hampshire through the people who shaped it. Part I discusses discoveries that predate white settlement: the Paleo-Indian Period; the Archaic Period; and the Woodland Period. Part II moves from the seventeenth century to the present. Chapters include historical archeology (forts, farms, potters, Shakers); industrial archeology (mills, factories, railroads, dams, and bridges); and nautical archeology (discoveries in the state's lakes and on the seacoast).

In addition to summarizing some of the more interesting finds, Starbuck includes stories about archeologists and the techniques they have used to glean information from the past. Overall, he provides a lively account of what it is like to practice archeology in a small but dynamic New England state.

About the Author

DAVID R. STARBUCK has written five books for UPNE about the archeology of Shaker sites and the excavations of forts along the Hudson River and around Lake George, New York. His most recent books are Rangers and Redcoats on the Hudson: Exploring the Past on Rogers Island (UPNE, 2004) and Neither Plain nor Simple: New Perspectives on the Canterbury Shakers (UPNE, 2004).

Praise for The Archeology of New Hampshire: Exploring 10,000 Years in the Granite State (UNH Non-Series Title)

"Unlike most books on the archaeology of a state, this one covers the archaeology of both Native Americans and European settlement through the 19th century . . . Of great interest not only to archaeologists, historians, and students, but also to the general public. Summing Up: Highly recommended."—CHOICE

"In this personalized encyclopedia of New Hampshire archaeology, Starbuck successfully combines the evolution of archaeological investigation in New Hampshire with the results of expanded fieldwork among the multiple disciplines of archaeology . . . Starbuck places New Hampshire in a clear local and regional context, in terms of time, space, and form. There is something in this eclectic collection for anyone interested in New Hampshire's past."—Donald W. Foster, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology, Phillips Exeter Academy, and past president of the New Hampshire Archeological Society