Orange County NC Website
~~ <br />Structures Committee, which is currently involved in restoring the Bennehan House to its <br />historic ca. 1850 context. <br />Ms. ]oy also has experience producing environmental documents. She has received training <br />from the General Services Administration (GSA) for Federal Project and Historic <br />Preservation, from the Federal Highway Administration in Project Development and <br />Environmental Documentation. Her experience includes contributions for Cultural Resources <br />in the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) Reservoir Operation System (ROS) Environmental <br />Impact Statement (EIS). <br />Warren Carruth will serve as Field Supervisor far this project. Mr. Carruth has 20 years <br />' archaeological experience working in the Southeast, as well as experience in Central <br />America and the Middle East. He received his B.S. in Anthropology from the University of <br />Southern Mississippi. Mr. Carruth .has worked on countless projects. involving .cultural <br />resource surveys, site testing and evaluation, data recovery, and construction monitoring. <br />He performed the duties of Field Supervisor for many of these projects. He has conducted <br />historical research for many projects and has a special interest in African-American studies <br />and Civil War era sites. Mr. Carruth received a M.A. in History from the University of South <br />Alabama, His Master.'s thesis, "The Trials of Viola Edwards: A Window into the 1920s," was <br />prompted by the interesting and controversial history of an African-American woman, who <br />lived on property that was being investigated by archaeological testing. <br />Amy Carruth received a B.S. in Geography with a minor in Anthropology from the <br />University of South Alabama. She has 20 years experience working in the Southeast <br />performing cultural resource surveys, site testing and evaluation, and data recovery. For a <br />number of years she worked in university. settings conducting research based projects under <br />grants received from the National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for the <br />Humanities. She completed course work in Atlanta, Georgia, through Sterling Ledet & <br />Associates, Inc. for FreeHand graphics training. Ms. Carruth composes most of the graphics <br />for survey reports, in addition to research, writing, and editing. She is primarily interested <br />in Contact Period and Colonial sites, but has recorded and mapped many Piedmont <br />farmsteads and houses. These include the Laws homestead at the Little River Regional Park <br />and Natural Area in Durham and Orange counties, numerous farmsteads in Cleveland <br />County, North Carolina, along with structural remnants in Wake and Franklin counties. in <br />North Carolina. In addition to North Carolina Piedmont farmsteads, she has recorded many <br />in the South Carolina Piedmont and the Appalachian Summit Region in North Carolina. <br />Andrew Hill received his B.A. in Anthropology from the University of North Carolina and <br />has participated in numerous terrestrial archaeological surveys and data recoveries in his <br />three years at Legacy. His Phase I survey experience includes work in Maryland, North <br />Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, California, and Virginia. His Phase. II and Phase III <br />experience includes projects in Worcester County, Maryland and Wake, Stanly, Cherokee, <br />Orange, Pitt, and Macon counties in North .Carolina. Mr. Hill's interests include both historic <br />and prehistoric lifeways, as well as historic trading paths and the dissemination of cultural <br />traditions through time. He would admit preference to the Archaic period throughout the <br />Southeast and the Woodland Period within North Carolina. Mr. Hill has experience with <br />several GPS systems (Legacy is currently using a Trimble GeoExplorer CE series handheld) <br />for data recovery and mapping on (ArcView 8.1) GIS. <br />,aced iti2oberts obtained a B.A: in Anthropology from East Carolina University.. He has <br />participated in many types of archaeological Phase I surveys. in North Carolina, South <br />Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Tennessee. In these states he has helped to record <br />numerous nineteenth- and twentieth-century homesteads, farmsteads, and: mill sites, as <br />s <br />