Lincolnville Archaeology
The Lincolnville School House Museum sits on a hill overlooking
Ducktrap Harbor and West Penobscot Bay, an area rich in Native American
archaeology.
Archaeology
is an important part of maintaining a connection with our past, and the School
House Museum is doing its part to ensure that connection survives.
Through
an ongoing effort by Harbour Mitchell, III, a local archaeologist, the School
House Museum maintains a diverse collection of Native American artifacts recovered
by local residents along Ducktrap Harbor and elsewhere within the region. It also
serves as the repository for numerous archaeological collections of Native American
pottery, rare and unusual stone tools, and other materials Mr. Mitchell has recovered
in his professional efforts in the field. The Museums collections represent
the period from European settlement of the bay to at least 5000 years ago.
As part of their commitment to educate the public to Lincolnvilles
rich Native American history, Mr. Mitchell and the School House Museum exhibit
numerous pieces drawn from the museums collections. Not limited to sitting
under glass, these collections are also utilized in classroom instruction whenever
the opportunity presents itself.
VIEW SOME OF THE
PIECES HERE!!!
For more information about Lincolnvilles prehistory,
e-mail Mr. Mitchell at
,
or write him at 144 Mountain Street, Camden, Maine, 04843.
And, for those
interested in learning more about archaeology in Maine and the region, try these
sites: www.abbemuseum.org; www.ume.maine.edu/~anthrop
; www.usm.maine.edu/~gany/ ; www.umaine.edu/hudsonmuseum
; www.acadia.net/arc/ ; www.neai.org
; www.mos.org ; www.nhas.org