Continuing with the theme of notable women of Pennsylvania
Archaeology, we now turn our attention to Louise Welles Murray. A native of
Athens, PA in Bradford county, Mrs. Murray was by all accounts, an exceptional
individual. At age 3 1/2, she entered school and at 18 graduated from Wells
College in Aurora, NY while also attending the Moravian Seminary in Bethlehem,
PA and Mr. Brown’s school in Auburn, NY. She is credited with bringing
attention to the archaeological resources of Bradford County and the town of
Athens, which sits at the confluence of the Susquehanna and Chemung Rivers near
the New York state line in northeastern Pennsylvania. She is also credited with
founding the Tioga Point Museum of which she served as the director until her
death in 1931.
Mrs. Murray was described as an “ardent lover of accuracy” giving
her time freely so that others might share in her knowledge of the area’s early
inhabitants. She was an authority on Pennsylvania history.
Louise Welles Murray
(1854-1831)
Louise Welles Murray’s interest in historical research
appears to have been seeded by the fulfillment of a request made by her mother
that she should publish material relating to some French Refugees and their
Azilum. Louise’s grandfather was Bartholomew Laporte, a French Émigré and one
of the 1794 founders of French Asylum. After
14 years of research, her volume, “The Story of Some French Refugees and their
Azilum” was published in 1903. A second edition was published in 1917 with
additional information gathered by Mrs. Murray.
A selection of early Susquehannock
pottery recovered from the Murray Garden site.
Members of the Susquehanna Archaeological Expedition were
invited by the Murrays to excavate their garden site in 1919. The results of
which she published in two parts in the journal American Anthropologist
(1921) under the title “Aboriginal Sites in and Near ‘Teaoga,’ Now Athens,
Pennsylvania”.
In 1931, shortly before Louise Welles Murray’s death, she
heard Donald Cadzow speak about his excavations at Safe Harbor. Cadzow
encouraged her to apply for a grant to carry out excavations in the area, which
she obtained with the goal of having Cadzow direct archaeological excavations
in Athens. At the time of Louise Welles Murray’s death, she had recently been
elected second vice president for the Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology.
The Spalding Memorial Library
Building which houses the Tioga Point Museum, founded by Louise Welles Murray
Throughout her professional life, Louise Welles Murray
exhibited a thirst for knowledge and a desire to share that knowledge with
those around her. She strongly advocated for record keeping during
archaeological excavations and looked down upon the actions of those who dug
sites with no care for recording artifacts or the locations from which they
were found.
We hope you have enjoyed this edition of Notable Women in
Pennsylvania Archaeology. It is an honor to celebrate the contributions of these
pioneers in the field — Frances
Dorrance, Mary
Butler, Verna
Cowin, Catherine
McCann and Louise Welles Murray. We hope our readers recognize the
significant contributions these women have made in preserving the past. We hope
that you’ll be inspired to read some of their publications and learn more about
our archaeological heritage in Pennsylvania.
A list of online books by Louise Welles Murray can be found
through the library
at the University of Pennsylvania.
References:
The Evening Times [Sayre, Pennsylvania]
1931 Obituary
for Louise Welles Murray. April 23:3. Sayre, Pennsylvania.
Kent, Barry
1984 Susquehanna’s
Indians. The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Harrisburg.
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Murray, Louise Welles
1921 Aboriginal
Sites in and Near “Teaoga,” Now Athens Part I, Pennsylvania. American
Anthropologist, 23(2):183-214
1921 Aboriginal
Sites in and Near “Teaoga,” Now Athens Part II, Pennsylvania. American
Anthropologist, 23(3):268-297
Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology
1931 Louise
Welles Murray. Bulletin of the Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology
2(2):1-3
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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