This book was created as part of a multi-year historic archeological project sponsored by the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) and under the direction of Dr. Scott Pletka and Jon Budd. The project was initiated because of federal and state laws that require consideration of cultural resources that may be impacted by development. The project involved archival research, oral history, and archeological investigations at a site called the Ransom and Sarah Williams farmstead in southern Travis County, Texas. An African American family occupied the farmstead beginning in 1871, and perhaps earlier, through about 1905. This book is a collection of oral histories gathered through interviews with people who grew up in the rural vicinity of ...
Quarterly publication of the Texas Historical Commission containing articles about historic sites, e...
The East Texas Archeological Society (ETAS) was formed in Tyler, Texas, on June 26, 1956. The last r...
The Slave Narrative Collection from the WPA Federal Writers’ Project, housed at the Library of Congr...
In conjunction with the proposed construction of the southwest segment of State Highway 45 in southe...
Archaeology of the Black and African Diaspora contributes greatly to the heritigization of Black lif...
A descendant of African-American settlers takes on the task of locating these often-forgotten places...
My dissertation illuminates three important issues central to the field of Texas Indian history. Fir...
Often lost behind the mythic veneer of Texas history is the fact that the eastern one-third of the s...
Prior to 2009, South Texas was essentially an archaeological tabula rasa, largely unknown in the aca...
The Adjutant General’s Department of Texas contracted with the Center for Archaeological Studies, Te...
While the end of slavery in America was a huge step to provide equality to all, the livelihood of fo...
This article will chronicle how those professionals called archivist, charged with collecting, prese...
A search for unmarked graves in the state-owned right of way and underneath the pavement of State Hi...
During previous surveys of the Choke Canyon Reservoir area in Live Oak and McMullen Counties, Texas,...
The CHAPS Program sponsored a research trip to Georgia and Alabama in August of 2022 to search for t...
Quarterly publication of the Texas Historical Commission containing articles about historic sites, e...
The East Texas Archeological Society (ETAS) was formed in Tyler, Texas, on June 26, 1956. The last r...
The Slave Narrative Collection from the WPA Federal Writers’ Project, housed at the Library of Congr...
In conjunction with the proposed construction of the southwest segment of State Highway 45 in southe...
Archaeology of the Black and African Diaspora contributes greatly to the heritigization of Black lif...
A descendant of African-American settlers takes on the task of locating these often-forgotten places...
My dissertation illuminates three important issues central to the field of Texas Indian history. Fir...
Often lost behind the mythic veneer of Texas history is the fact that the eastern one-third of the s...
Prior to 2009, South Texas was essentially an archaeological tabula rasa, largely unknown in the aca...
The Adjutant General’s Department of Texas contracted with the Center for Archaeological Studies, Te...
While the end of slavery in America was a huge step to provide equality to all, the livelihood of fo...
This article will chronicle how those professionals called archivist, charged with collecting, prese...
A search for unmarked graves in the state-owned right of way and underneath the pavement of State Hi...
During previous surveys of the Choke Canyon Reservoir area in Live Oak and McMullen Counties, Texas,...
The CHAPS Program sponsored a research trip to Georgia and Alabama in August of 2022 to search for t...
Quarterly publication of the Texas Historical Commission containing articles about historic sites, e...
The East Texas Archeological Society (ETAS) was formed in Tyler, Texas, on June 26, 1956. The last r...
The Slave Narrative Collection from the WPA Federal Writers’ Project, housed at the Library of Congr...