This Land is Our Land

This Land is Our Land

It seems, for the second time in my life, the words of the President are becoming irrelevant to the national discourse. The first was after the bombing of Cambodia and the Kent State Massacre. Then, Nixon’s words came to mean very little until he was ultimately forced from office. Now President Trump tweets and tweets from the…

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Black Lives Matter: The Witness of a White Man

Black Lives Matter: The Witness of a White Man

This past weekend, I had the rare opportunity to visit the Smokey Mountains in North Carolina with my adult son, Sam.  It was idyllic.  We walked mountain trails, watched birds, rested on sunny rocks beside tumbling water, and took lots of photographs.  Some photos I’ve shared on FaceBook, others I wanted to share more today.  However, the murders of…

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Colonoware Posters

Colonoware Posters

Corey Ames Heyward and Jon Bernard Marcoux of the College of Charleston, SC have created two informative posters on Colonoware designed for a general audience. The posters were originally used for the February, 2020 International Gullah Geechee and African Diaspora Conference at Coastal Carolina University, Conway, South Carolina. The posters may be viewed at the…

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A Near Death Experience?

A Near Death Experience?

4/25/2020 My first summer (1969) at Town Creek Indian Mound in North Carolina was an exciting beginning of responsibility for me as an archaeologist.  We had completed the UNC Cherokee Project the year before; and my mentor, Dr. Joffre Coe, had promoted me from crew member, to field director, with an unexpected new responsibility:  Before our crew…

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Gaston Site, Roanoke River, NC

Gaston Site, Roanoke River, NC

4/2020: Stanley South, my mentor in historical archaeology, at work at the Gaston Site, Roanoke River, northeastern NC.  Stan wrote his master’s thesis at UNC-Chapel Hill on this prehistoric project. Archaeologist Lewis Binford helped Stan in the field and ended up writing his dissertation at University of Michigan on another aspect of the project—Nottoway and Meherrin…

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Easter Lilies, 2020

Easter Lilies, 2020

Posted April 7, 2020. Good News: This year wild Atamasco lilies are more abundant and widespread along Cedar Creek than anytime in more than 45 years of my walking these woods. I suppose our wet winter and several floods are responsible for this explosion of beauty. Nevertheless, we’ve had wet years and floods before, but…

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Toward the Arctic Circle

Toward the Arctic Circle

Posted April 5, 2020 This is a piece I posted on Face Book, December 14, 2016, a little more than four years ago. I hope it may bring a little smile to your face: As of today, I have been living 75 years, and this is a good time for telling a story.               When I…

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John Wesley and the Calf

John Wesley and the Calf

Posted April 3, 2020 With dark, cowlicked hair and big brown eyes, Charles Wesley Watkins was a lively 5 ½ year old, almost six.  I was a little beyond seven, and we were fast friends.                John Wesley specialized in talking, especially in telling colorful stories of how he would avoid catastrophic events.  The tale I remember most…

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The past cannot change. History is not the past, rather it is our account of the past. With new facts, perceptions, and understandings, history changes.

God is With Us

God is With Us

Posted March 26, 2020. This post is by Mac Brown, my close friend for more than thirty years: Rev. Chris Denny’s sermon title on Sunday March 22 was God Is With Us. He challenged us to think about when we last had “seen” God.  I may not have “seen” God but I felt his presence on the preceding…

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