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Preservation and Public Archaeology on Carleton Island, New York Douglas J. Pippin State University of New York, College at Oswego
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Doug Pippin

May 25, 2015

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"Preservation and Public Archaeology at Carleton Island, NY"
Douglas J. Pippin
SUNY Oswego
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Page 1: Doug Pippin

Preservation and Public Archaeology on Carleton Island, New York

Douglas J. PippinState University of New York, College at Oswego

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Plan of Carleton Island (1810)

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Extant Features of Fort Haldimand

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A soldier of the 84th Regiment of Foot

(1779)

An 84th regiment button from Fort

Haldimand

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Encampment of the Loyalists at Johnstownby James Peachey

Collection of Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa

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HMS Seneca, HMS Ontario, and HMS Haldimand in North Bay, Carleton Island

by Peter Rindlisbacher, with permission, from Legend of the Lake, 1997

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The Popular Perception of Fort Haldimand

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For more than half a century, the traveler on the River St. Lawrence by way of the American Channel has not failed to notice a group of stone chimneys, standing on a bluff at the head of Carleton Island.

J. H. Durham, 1889

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A portion of the Carleton Island“Escape Tunnel”

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Turn of the century tourists posing on, and in front of, a chimney from Fort Haldimand

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Bay of Fort Carleton (undated, c. 1890’s) by A. C. McIntyre

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Bay of Fort Carleton (undated, c. 1890’s) by A. C. McIntyre

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Historic Images of Fort Haldimand

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Historic Images of Fort Haldimand

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Historic Images of Fort Haldimand

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Public Participation in the Archaeology of Fort Haldimand

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Tracking the spread of vegetation withinFort Haldimand

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Efforts of the Thousand Islands Land Trust (TILT) in preserving Fort Haldimand

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Efforts of the Thousand Islands Land Trust (TILT) in preserving Fort Haldimand

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Efforts of the Thousand Islands Land Trust (TILT) in preserving Fort Haldimand

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A poem written by Judith Pearson, one of the student participants in the Fort Haldimand public archaeology program.

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The Archaeological investigation of Fort Haldimand

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The Archaeological investigation of Fort Haldimand

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The Archaeological investigation of Fort Haldimand

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The Archaeological investigation of Fort Haldimand

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“Anti-Looting” at Fort Haldimand

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Thanks to our Volunteers from:

Thousand Islands Land TrustNYSAA, Thousand Islands Chapter

NYSAA, Beauchamp Chapter Residents of Cape Vincent and Clayton, NYSyracuse University, Anthropology Dept.

SUNY Oswego, Anthropology Dept.

Acknowledgements:

Library and Archives CanadaNew York State Museum

Rochester Museum and Science CenterChesapeake Environmental, Inc.