This time last year we discussed the William Fredrick Veigh
collection: some of what the collection contained and its’ importance. A year
has passed, we have processed last year’s Fort Hunter collection and we
continue to process the Veigh collection. As was mentioned last year, “Fred
Veigh (December 29, 1949-January 25, 2016) was a prolific archaeological
collector and surveyor, and an active member of the Society for Pennsylvania
Archaeology (SPA) for most of his adult life. His collection is vast in both
the volume of artifacts as well as in documentation”. With the immensity of his collection in mind, and after months of extensive
organization of the collection, artifacts and maps the Section of Archaeology
lab has now been able to fully process, identify and update several known and
new sites with many, many more to come.
Trays of artifacts
being processed on rack.
Veigh artifacts
being labeled.
Currently, we are a little over one third of the way through
the processing of this very large donation. To date we have a total of 93, 669
artifacts processed and inventoried and will likely be over one hundred thousand before
the end of next week.
Veigh artifacts
bagged and ready for inventory.
Example of
inventory.
With the use of Mr. Veigh’s topographic maps, where he
recorded known sites and his other collection locations, and his detailed
labels on both artifacts and boxes we have thus far been able to process and
identify 229 known and new sites. These are primarily from Somerset county, but
also from Adams, Allegheny, Bedford, Butler, Cambria, Clearfield, Clinton, Erie, Fayette, Franklin, Greene, Huntingdon, Indiana, Lehigh, and Venango Counties.
Volunteer helping
to record and organize collection locations from Mr. Veigh’s topographic maps.
In conjunction with
the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) and our wonderful, hard-working
intern Andrew we have been able to update 172 sites and add 57 new sites to the
Cultural Resources Geographic Information System (CRGIS). One hundred and ten
of these site updates and 49 of these new sites are concentrated in Somerset
county as Mr. Veigh focused much of his collecting in this county as well as
Washington and Westmoreland counties, which have not yet been processed.
Example of form
used for updating and adding sites in CRGIS.
Our intern, Andrew
entering new sites in CRGIS.
Thanks to Mr. Veigh’s diligent recording methods and
persistent collecting throughout his life we have been able to increase not
only the number of identified sites in many western Pennsylvania counties, but
also add to the information already known of many others. As has been mentioned
in previous blogs, artifacts are important to understanding the lives of past
peoples, but having provenience, or locational, information for these artifacts
provides the context needed to build a better picture of how these past peoples
were living their daily lives and how the artifacts we find fit into that.
Thanks to Mr. Veigh we have that provenience information which can help us
better understand Pennsylvania’s Past while preserving it for the future. We
thank Mr. Veigh and all of those who have dedicated their lives to preserving
our heritage and have collected, documented and donated their collections in
order to help us expand our knowledge base to better understand Pennsylvania’s
past and provide additional resources for analysis and research.
Don’t forget the Section of Archaeology will be holding
programs in the State Museum of Pennsylvania’s Nature Lab at 11:30 am on
Thursday August 8th and 15th.
Also, look for us in other
upcoming events at Kipona August 31st – September 2nd in
downtown Harrisburg and our excavations at Fort Hunter Mansion and Park
September 9th – October 4th.
For more information, visit PAarchaeology.state.pa.us or the Hall of Anthropology and Archaeology at The State Museum of Pennsylvania .
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