Orange County NC Website
04!09/1999 09:14 9196443002 OR. CN. PLANNING <br />13 <br />Corridor. This will eri~tble Orang® County personnel to integrate the results of this <br />project within their Geographic Information System. <br />Project Poreonnel <br />The project team will consist of three professional archaeologists, Dr. Linda <br />France Stine, Ms. Dest~orah Joy, and Mr. Tom Har9rovo. /11t three have strong <br />research interests in the region. Dr. Stine will be the project leader, with final <br />responsibil'Ity for the work and for~production of the report as a sole proprietor. Siā€¢irs <br />will undertake much of the hi.~tcxic research, work with students on map analysis and <br />production, and will be the primary author and report editor. Dr. Stine has over twenty <br />years arc:i~ae~c7logical experience. varying from posltlon3 in private euftural resource <br />management firms, government environmental and cultural resource review, and <br />university level teaching. Dr. Stine received her B.A. from tfte University of Ncrlt~ <br />Carolina at rha~el Hill in 1978, her M.A. from the College of IMlliam and Mary in <br />1984, and her Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hiil in 1989, all <br />degrees awarded in Anthropology. Stine served as n orew member at Stagviile's <br />Horton Grove complex during archaeological testing in the late 1970s for North <br />Carolina Historic Sites. While a graduate student at UNC-GH Dr. Stine was part of the <br />Slntian Project and worked at the Fredricks site in Hillsborough. She was responsible <br />for investigating transforming regional trade patterns from circa 1640-1740 (Stine <br />1988, 1990). She 810 field directed testing at Ayr Mount Plttntatlon on St. Mary's <br />Road in Hillsborough (Stine and Madry 1988). <br />Mr. Tom Hargrove will direct the field reconnaissance, help with artltact <br />identification, share his vast knowledge of local sources, undertake some of the <br />historic map analysis, and wilt be responsible for some report wri#ing. He will be hired <br />as a field director/rexarcher as a suboontraotor to Dr. Stine. Mr. Hargrove has over <br />twenty years of professional archaeobgiCal experience, including employment by the <br />North Carolina Department yr Cultural Resources, overseeing the firm Archeological <br />Research Consultants (since 1981 }, and consulting work with various government and <br />private entities throughout the southeast. He has extensive experience working in the <br />region (e.g., Hargrove 1 13132, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1985). Mr. Hargrove has his M.A. in <br />Anthropology from George Washington University. He is presently finishing up his <br />Ph.D. studies in Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Ghapel HIII. <br />Deborah Joy will aid in the fieldwork, contribute her knowledge of area sources, <br />and help with the ardfact identification. She will be hired as an independent <br />3uboontractor to Dr. Stine. Ms. Joy has her M.A. in History from Duke University, and <br />over 15 years professional experience in archaeology. Her professional experience <br />includes that of an archaeologist with the North Garolina Department of <br />Transportation, laboratory analysis of cultural material excavated from the Edenton <br />Tea Party S1te and the 1767 Chowan County Court House Site with the North Carolina <br />Department of Cultural Resources, and various non-oomplianee monitoring projects in <br />the Pensacola National Register Historic District in Florida. She also worked in the <br />Study area at the St. Mary's Chapel Cemetery (Joy 1995). <br />Selected students at the Geography Department, University of North Carolina at <br />Greensboro, will produce digital and hard-copy maps of the archaeological resources. <br />5 <br />