Skip to main content
UMD College of Behavorial & Social Sciences UMD College of Behavorial & Social Sciences
MENU

Topbar Menu

  • About Us
  • People
  • Undergraduate
    • Prospective Students
      • Why Major In Anthropology At UMD?
      • Why Major In Anthropology At UMD?
      • What do UMD Anthropology Majors do?
      • What do UMD Anthropology Graduates do?
      • How to become an Anthropology Major?
    • Current Students
      • Advising
      • Academic Opportunities
      • Internships and Career Development
      • Community and Support
  • Graduate
    • Graduate Studies
    • Graduate Studies
    • PhD Program
    • MAA Program
    • MPS CHRM
    • MAA/MHP Dual Degree
    • Certificate Programs
    • Graduate Student Resources
    • Funding Options
  • Research
    • Health
    • Health
    • Heritage
    • Environment
    • Genetics & Evolution
Search

Main navigation

  • Undergraduate
    • Prospective Students
      • Why Major In Anthropology At UMD?
      • What do UMD Anthropology Majors do?
      • What do UMD Anthropology Graduates do?
      • How to become an Anthropology Major?
    • Current Students
      • Advising
      • Academic Opportunities
      • Internships and Career Development
      • Community and Support
  • Graduate
    • Graduate Studies
    • PhD Program
    • MAA Program
    • MPS CHRM
    • MAA/MHP Dual Degree
    • Certificate Programs
    • Funding Options
    • Graduate Student Resources
  • Research
    • Health
    • Heritage
    • Environment
    • Genetics & Evolution
  • About Us
  • Diversity and Inclusion
  • People

Search our site:

Archaeology in Annapolis

Breadcrumb

  • Home
  • Featured Content
  • Archaeology In Annapolis
AiA 648

The Archaeology in Annapolis (AiA) field school, directed by Dr. Mark P. Leone, Stefan Woehlke, Tracy Jenkins, and Patricia Markert, looked at two sites this summer. 

Throughout the six weeks, students learned how to excavate a site, to document what they find, and how to interpret the meaning in artifacts, sites, and landscapes. The first three weeks were spent at a post-Emancipation black tenant farm located on the property of the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) in Edgewater, MD.  Sarah Janesko, who completed her M.A.A. internship at SERC in the public archaeology program, contributed to the project there. The site afforded the group an opportunity to work with the Smithsonian and its long-term research projects on human-environment interactions. The work at the tenant farm looked in part at land use and subsistence patterns and on the changes in the landscape due to human activities as African Americans navigated Jim Crow capitalism on a former plantation. In addition to excavation, AiA was able to include oral history as part of the field school this year. Trish Markert taught workshops in oral history to the students and led them in interviewing two members of the community associated with the tenant farm at SERC. These interviews helped to better interpret the material culture of the site.

For the second half of the field school, AiA moved to Bethel A.M.E. Church in Easton, MD, where the group picked up on investigations that began last summer. This is their fourth year and third site looking at the history of The Hill, a neighborhood that has been home to a free black community since after the American Revolution. Bethel Church, along with Asbury United Methodist Church, have played integral roles in forming and holding together the community over this span of time and the work at Bethel looks at some of the many uses of the church property over the years to fulfill community needs. The larger Hill Community Project is an initiative begun by local activists interested in preserving the historical and social fabric of the community.

For more information about AiA Field Methods in Archaeology, visit: http://www.aia.umd.edu/anth496.html

Published on Thu, 06/25/2015 - 09:08

College of Behavioral & Social Sciences

Department of Anthropology

1111 Woods Hall
4302 Chapel Ln
College Park, MD 20742

Phone: 301-405-1423 
Fax: 301-314-8305

Email: @email 

Links
  • UMD Land Acknowledgement
  • UMD Staff Directory
  • UMD Web Accessibility
  • Alumni
© 2026 College of Behavioral & Social Sciences. All Rights Reserved.
Login