Consists of the professional papers of Emil Walter Haury (1904 – 1992), prominent archaeologist, instructor, and advocate for protection of antiquities and the environment. Haury was best known for his influential work on the prehistory of the American Southwest, especially Hohokam culture.
Collection Number:
MS 3
Language:
Materials are in English
Repository:
Arizona State Museum
University of Arizona
Arizona State Museum Library and Archives
PO Box 210026
Tucson, AZ 85721-0026
Phone: 520-621-4695
Email: larc@email.arizona.edu
URL: http://www.statemuseum.arizona.edu/
Biographical Note
Emil Walter Haury was born in Newton, Kansas, on May 2, 1904. When he was only twenty-one, Haury was introduced to archaeology by Byron Cummings on a National Geographic Expedition to Cuicuilco, Mexico. On his return, he studied tree-ring dating with A. E. Douglass at the University of Arizona and was employed by the Gila Pueblo Archaeological Foundation. Transferring to Harvard, Haury took courses from physical anthropologist Earnest Albert Hooton (1887-1954), Mayanist Alfred M. Tozzer (1877-1954), sociologist W. Lloyd Warner (1898-1970), and anthropologist Roland Burrage Dixon (1875-1934). Haury received his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1934 with a dissertation based on a reconsideration of the Hemenway expedition’s work at Los Muertos in central Arizona. This was published by the Peabody Museum under the title The Archaeology of the Salt River Valley, Arizona: A Study of the Interrelations of Two Ethnic Groups (1945).
Haury married Hulda Penner in 1928. They had two sons, Loren Richard and Allan Gene. Although Haury was busy in his long career as a professor at the University of Arizona and director of the Arizona State Museum, he remained actively involved in field archaeology throughout his career. He lead excavations at Forestdale Valley, Point of Pines, Ventana Cave, and Snaketown as well as other sites pivotal for the formulation of a cohesive view of regional prehistory. Several of these sites were focused on training students for field work. He published many articles and books of continued influence today including The Hohokam: Desert Farmers and Craftsmen (1976).
After his retirement in 1964 Haury increased his involvement in organizations with national impact such as the National Park Service Advisory Board, the National Academy of Sciences, and the National Council on the Humanities. As a recipient of the Viking Fund Medal, fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, and several prestigious archaeology awards, Haury was recognized during and after his life as one of the most influential scholars in his field.
Haury died in Tucson on December 5, 1992. The Emil W. Haury Graduate Fellowship Fund continues his work to support the training of new archaeologists and the expansion of new knowledge about Southwest cultures.
Scope and Content Note
The professional papers of Emil W. Haury consist primarily of his correspondence, his research, publication, organization files, and records of field work in Colombia, Mexico, and the American Southwest. These papers span the 1920s to early 2000s, with the bulk dating from Haury’s college years to his death in 1992. Of special note are Haury’s extensive correspondence files with many noted figures in twentieth century archaeology and anthropology. His field notes and research files from sites in the Southwest are detailed and well-organized and are important adjuncts to other collections at ASM. Among these are important Hohokam and Mogollon culture sites excavated while he was employed at the Gila Pueblo Archaeological Foundation and at the University of Arizona.
Arrangement
Five series have been created to organize the papers.
This collection contains the class records of some of EWH’s students including their grades. Access to these materials is restricted in accordance with student confidentiality law, but may be granted under special circumstances at the discretion of the Archivist.
Access to specific information about the nature and location of archaeological resources may be restricted pursuant to the United States Archaeological Resources Protection Act of 1979 (ARPA) and Arizona Revised Statues, Title 39-125. ARPA includes a specific exemption from the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requirements for information about the nature and location of archaeological resources (16 U.S. Code 470hh: Confidentiality of information concerning the nature and location of archaeological resources).
Copyright
Copyright to the papers of Emil Walter Haury is held by the Arizona Board of Regents and is administered by the Arizona State Museum.
For permission to reproduce images including photographs in this collection please consult the ASM staff.
The Arizona State Museum may not own copyright to all parts of this collection. It is the responsibility of the user to obtain permission to publish from the owner of the copyright (the institution, the creator of the record, the author or his/her transferees, heirs, legates, or literary executors). The user agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Arizona Board of Regents for the University of Arizona, Arizona State Museum, its officers, employees, and agents from and against all claims made by any person asserting that he or she is an owner of copyright.
Photographs related to these archives are housed with the Arizona State Museum Photographic Collection. Contact the ASM Curator of Photographic Collections for more information.
Materials in the Haury Papers were donated over a period of approximately ten years. Accession numbers associated with this collection include: ASM ACC 86-84 and ASM ACC 94-120.
Credit Line
Emil W. Haury Papers (MS 3). Arizona State Museum Library and Archives.
Other Finding Aids
The complete, detailed, folder-level finding aid for this collection is 57 pages in length. It is available upon request from the Arizona State Museum Library and Archives.
These materials are composed of documents relating to the youth, education, and professional career of EWH. Of special interest is documentation of Haury’s student years at Bethel College, the University of Arizona, and Harvard University. In addition, diaries kept by Emil and Hulda Haury, although not a complete record of every year, provide information about daily activities including important archaeological field work, meetings with colleagues, and writing projects. Haury’s categorized collection of cartoons from published sources provide insight into his sense of humor and interest in anthropological topics in American culture. Also included are Haury’s obituaries and other posthumous materials. Photographic portraits of Haury have been transferred to the ASM Photography Collection. Very little material in this series relates to EWH’s family or personal life apart from his professional pursuits.
For additional biographical information, the researcher should also consult the incomplete, unpublished autobiographical manuscript created by EWH in the late 1970s. This is found in Series 4: Writings.
box
folder
1
1
Report cards, first through eighth grades, 1910-1919
1
2
Childhood ephemera, 1910-1918
1
3
Report cards from summer German Bible School, 1910-1917
1
4
Bethel College: Transcripts, correspondence, and publications. (see also Series 2: Correspondence for additional Bethel College materials)
1
5
“Diary of Emil Haury, vol. I” January to April 1919
1
6
[diary of Emil Haury] vol. II, April to December 1919
1
7
Hand-drawn map (copy) of early trips in the American Southwest. Original is reproduced in a “family album illuminated by Haury” Journal of the Southwest, volume 46, number 1 (spring 2004)
1
8
Scrapbook pages containing clippings from newspapers such as the Wichita Eagle, Mennonite Weekly Review, and Arizona Repuiblic, ca. 1928-1938. Subject matter covers Southwest archaeology and EWH’s activities. EXTREMELY FRAGILE (Original album covers are not present.)
1
9
EWH’s University of Arizona academic transcripts and course lists from ca. 1925-1937
1
10
“Proposed tree-ring dissertation”: manuscripts, research material, and correspondence, 1930-1940
1
11
“Proposed tree-ring dissertation”: tree-ring plots, manuscripts, and research materials, 1930s
1
12
United States Civil Service rating for EWH, 1930
1
13
EWH’s academic grades from Harvard University, 1932 and 1933; 1934 graduation program booklet
1
14
United States Civil Service Security Investigation for Sensitive Position, ca. 1940
1
15
United States Navy, Army, and War Department correspondence, 1943
1
16
Hulda Haury letter no. 1 to family, September 1949, en route to Bogota, Colombia, during EWH’s sabbatical year while he worked on Cultura Chibcha
1
17
Hulda Haury letter no. 2 to family, 15 October 1949, Bogota, Colombia
1
18
Hulda Haury letter no. 3 to family, 25 October 1949, Bogota, Colombia
1
19
Hulda Haury letter no. 4 to family, 19 November 1949, Bogota, Colombia
1
20
Hulda Haury letter no. 2 to family, 25 November 1949, [Bogota, Colombia]
1
21
EWH letter to the “Atlatl”, University of Arizona anthropology student newspaper, undated, but written while on 1949-1950 sabbatical
1
22
Hulda Haury letter no. 6 to family, 4 December 1949, Bogota, Colombia
1
23
Hulda Haury letter no. 7 to family, 28 December 1949
1
24
Hulda Haury letter no. 8 to family, 16 January 1950
1
25
Hulda Haury letter no. 9 to family, 4 February 1950, Bogota, Colombia
1
26
Hulda Haury letter no. 10 to family, February 28 to March 3 [1950]
1
27
Hulda Haury letter no. 11 to family, 29 March 1950
1
28
Hulda Haury letter written at Point of Pines, summer 1951 (15 pages)
1
29
Hulda Haury journal of “Trip to Copenhagen, 1956
1
30
Haury family correspondence and research
1
31
Penner family, miscellaneous
1
32
Hulda Esther Penner Haury (1904-1987): notes on her terminal illness and trips with EWH for the National Park Service
1
33
Agnese Nelms Haury (1923-2014), miscellaneous
1
34
Wedding announcement for EWH and Agnese Nelms Lindley, 6 July 1990
1
35
Biographical sketch of EWH by unknown author, 1958
1
36
Biographical sketch of EWH by a student Jeanne Uttech, 1979
1
37
EWH television and radio appearances, 1976-1987
1
38
“Emil W. Haury – the movie,” 1988
1
39
Humorous verse including Christmas lyrics 1980 and poem from Point of Pines Field School
1
40
“List of publications in the private library of Dr Emil W. Haury, January 1989.” Includes appraisal and correspondence.
box
folder
2
1
Chronologies of EWH’s life, personal data sheets, bio notes, trip itineraries, etc.
2
2
Bibliographies of EWH’s publications
2
3
“Misspellings of Haury name.” Consists of dozens of cut-out address labels.
2
4
Telephone numbers and names, ca. 1960s. Pages from small book of phone numbers
2
5
Honorary degrees, 1950s
2
6
Awards, honors, and certificates, 1938-1986
2
7
Awards and related correspondence, 1956-1991
2
8
Awards: Conservation Service Citation, 1976
2
9
Alfred Vincent Kidder Award, 1977
2
10
Southwestern Anthropological Association Award, 1982
2
11
“Appointments, federal” 1962-1972
2
12
“Record of Lectures”: 1938-1961. Compiled by EWH
2
13
Professional listings in Who’s Who and other sources
2
14
Membership cards, miscellaneous
2
15
Sigma XI
2
16
“The 23rd Psalm,” contributed by students at Forestdale Field School, 1939
2
17
German newspaper’s 1941 article about EWH titled “Südwest der U.S. schon vor 7000 Jahren bewohnt.”
2
18
“The Saga of EWH” green ink drawings by Barton Wright, 1952
2
19
“Og and Gog, Magog and Plog” verse by Raymond H. Thompson, 1978
2
20
“To Emil Walter Haury, long-time trustee: a modernized version of how the cat was belled,” by Raymond H. Thompson, 1978
box
0
Newspaper clippings with stories related to EWH’s career, 1920s to 1990s
box
3
Small, undated address book.
3
Undated list of students at Point of Pines Field School, 1946-1958, in Hulda’s handwriting.
3
Cover: “A Line a Day.” Inside: “Diary of Hulda E. (Penner) Haury, Purchased in Tucson, July 26, 1927.” Pages record events on each day for the years, 1927-1931.
3
Cover: “The Scribble-in Book.” Inside: “This book was purchased at Woolworth’s in Boston (the one on Washington St.) on Jan. 21, 1933, for the big sum of 10 cents. The notes for the first 20 days were copied from the original, which had been written on the backs of the 1932 calendar sheets.” Records events from January 1, 1933 to July10, 1937.
3
Diary from trips to Hawai’i, Fiji, Tonga, New Zealand and Australia (November 14, 1977 to January 7, 1978)
3
Journal of trip from New Zealand to Tucson, Dec. 14, 1977 to Jan. 7, 1978. Pages torn from a pad of paper.
3
Diary for the year 1979. ASM ACC #AT-91-39 Daily annotations in a commercial engagement calendar.
3
Diary for the year 1980. Daily annotations in a commercial engagement calendar.
3
Diary for the year 1981. Daily annotations in a commercial engagement calendar.
3
Diary for the year 1982. Daily annotations in a commercial engagement calendar.
3
Diary for the year 1983. Daily annotations in a commercial engagement calendar.
box
4
Biographical, continued: Box 2 of the Hulda Haury diaries: Diaries for the years 1960, 1962 to 1978. Daily annotations in commercial engagement calendars. Accessioned as ASM ACC.# 91-75.
box
5
Biographical, continued: EWH’s personal diaries, engagement calendars, and oral history
5
Diaries and engagement calendars, 1968 to 1992.
5
Engagement calendars, 1969, 1971, 1972
5
Birthday celebrations, 1984 and 1991: lists of attendees and letters. (ASM ACC. #91-41)
5
Edited and unedited versions of a transcript of the oral history interview with EWH by archaeologists Richard Lange, Alan Ferg, and John Hohmann on 17 February 1983. Subjects discussed include Sierra Ancha surveys, history of Gila Pueblo Archaeological Foundation, Mrs. Healy, Turkey Cave, dendrochronology, Salado complex, Foreman Hanna, Grenville Goodwin, and many more topics. Includes a bibliography of sources mentioned in the interview. Original reel-to-reel tapes and cassette duplicate tapes are housed with the ASM Sound Recordings. (ASM ACC#94-120 and ASM ACC#94-59-1).
box
6
Biographical materials, continued: EWH’s files of university course notes and papers, exams, sketches, and materials related to his student days at the University of Arizona and Harvard. Includes grades and comments professors gave him in some instances.
6
1
“Problems in physiography-geology,” February – March 1927, Professor Davis
6
2
“Geology of North America,” September 1927
6
3
“Introduction to anthropology,” miscellaneous publications, 1927-1938
6
4
“Stratigraphy and advanced paleo. Geology,” February – April 1928
6
5
“American archaeology,” September 1928 – January 1929
6
6
“Tree-ring course,” February – May 1930
6
7
‘Tree-ring Interpretation,” examination book, May 23, 1930
6
8
“Tree-ring course,” notes, 1930
6
9
“Tree-ring course,” including skeleton plots
6
10
“Africa,” professors Hooton, Seligman, Dixon
6
11
“Physical anthropology,” 1931-1932
6
12
“Physical anthropology,” 1931-1932
6
13
“Field methods 15 (audit),” September – December 1931, professors Tozzer and Dixon
6
14
“Introduction to anthropology,” September - October 1931, Professor Tozzer
6
15
“Anthropology 10: Mexico,” September-December 1931, Professor Tozzer
6
16
“Anthropology 10,” papers written by EWH, October-December 1931
6
17
“European archaeology,” October-December 1931, Professor Hooton (part 1 of 2)
6
18
“European archaeology,” October-December 1931, Professor Hooton (part 2 of 2)
6
19
“Anthropology 16: Primitive religion,” 1932
6
20
“Anthropology 16: Culture and environment,” February – May 1932
This box contains ledger books in which EWS recorded grades for his students in 1937-1965, 1973-1977. THIS BOX IS CLOSED TO RESEARCH BECAUSE IT CONTAINS NAMES AND CONFIDENTIAL STUDENT INFORMATION.
box
11
5 x 8 inch index cards in accordion folder labeled: “Anthropology – introductory course. Nathalie Ferris Sampson, Department of Anthropology, Columbia University, New York, NY (Brooklyn College).” It appears that this information has been crossed out. Therefore, it is not known whether the contents were in fact the property of Nathalie F. S. Woodbury, or if EWH was re-using her accordion file for his own index cards. Original order has been preserved.
box
12
5 x 8 inch index cards with EWH’s teaching outlines and syllabi, class notes, and bibliographies, 1930s to 1970s Typed and handwritten. The original order of these cards has been lost, but it is still possible to find dates, class titles, and themes. Some of the notes appear to relate to Snaketown and to J. O. Brew.
box
13
5 x 8 inch index cards with EWH’s teaching outlines and syllabi, class notes, and bibliographies, 1930s to 1970s Typed and handwritten. The original order of these cards has been lost, but it is still possible to find dates, class titles, and themes.
box
14
“Stack of cards of varying sizes ranging from 3 x 5 inches to 5 x 8 inches representing the notes used by EWH in public lectures.” [This was item #80 on the inventory of memorabilia (1980).]
box
15-19
Index cards for names, addresses, and connections.
This useful tool was possibly maintained by EWH’s secretary for practical purposes. It can also serve as an index to the correspondence files, although it is incomplete. Some of EWH’s long-time secretaries included Frances T. Slutes, Vearl Galbraith, Harriet Martin, Ida Edwards, and Carol Gifford. It should be noted that EWH held his office staff in high regard. Found in his papers was this poem by Stephen Schlitzer:
She revises her boss’s dictation,
Correcting the phrases that faltered,
She changes the tense without losing the sense,
And he’s never aware it’s been altered,
For she keeps just enough of his pet words
To make certain her secret is hid,
And he’s dazzled and dazed, and completely amazed
At the wonderful job which he did.
box
20
Files created by EWH to hold his collection of cartoons from a variety of magazines and newspapers from the 1930s to the 1980s. They are arranged in subject categories reflecting his interest in cultural expressions of anthropological themes. Some cartoons were contributed by friends and include their handwritten comments or annotations.
On examination of his papers, it is clear that EWH considered correspondence to be a valued means of communication and ultimately an important tool for documenting history. He began seriously saving letters starting in the 1930s, donated some over the years to various archival repositories, and devised organizational schemes to keep track of the letters he retained. Interestingly, however, he did not establish a central file to segregate correspondence from other types of documents, but instead mixed it with other papers. For this reason, the researcher must consult various parts of the Haury Papers in search of letters from family, friends, and colleagues.
The files that EWH designated “personal papers” contained folders arranged alphabetically by the name of the correspondent or by subject areas of particular interest, for example “canals” and “beans.” Because he created a hybrid system to contain both letters and subject files, he sometimes added a pencil annotation in the upper right corner of the document advising his secretary where he wanted her to file the item. The researcher is cautioned to look for letters from particular correspondents under subjects as well as alphabetically by their surnames or corporate names. Sometimes the alphabetic arrangement is idiosyncratic, but it is EWH’s own system. Individuals who do not have a file under their name can be found in the grouped miscellaneous files.
Of special note are the letters to colleagues. These communications, sometimes spanning as many as fifty years, chart career trajectories, shifting funding sources, professional differences of opinion, the growth of theory and methodology, and especially witness the years of mutual support and encouragement. Shortly after arrival at ASM, Haury’s personal papers were described in an inventory prepared by ASM staff. A copy of this exhaustive list of every correspondent is found in the first box of letters. It differs from the finding aid in including names that were eventually absorbed into the grouped miscellaneous files created to save space.
Quantity: 55 manuscript boxes.
box
folder
22
1
Complete inventory of correspondence in the Personal Papers of EWH
22
2
Miscellaneous early correspondence [set aside by EWH], 1939 - 1949
22
2A
Miscellaneous early correspondence [set aside by EWH], 1950s – 1970s
22
3
Miscellaneous, Ab to Al
22
4
American, miscellaneous
22
5
Miscellaneous, Anderson to archaeozoology
22
6
Miscellaneous, Arm to Aye
22
7
Ad Hoc Committee in Anthropology, Harvard University, 1954
22
8
Adams, E. Charles and Jenny, 1979-1988
22
9
Adams, Karen. “A review of ancient tobacco (nicotiana) use in the prehistoric southwestern United States,” 1990
22
10
Adams, William, 1980-1992
22
11
Adovasio, J. M., 1972-1980
22
12
Advisory Committee on Promotion and Tenure, University of Arizona: guidelines and memos, 1971-1972
22
13
Allen, Norton and Ethel, 1971-1984
22
14
Alumni Association Board, University of Arizona, 1965-1970
22
15
Ambler, J. Richard, 1976-1988
box
folder
23
1
American Anthropologist, 1953-1954
23
2
American Antiquity, 1963-1992
23
3
American Association of University Professors, 1947-1956
23
4
American Civil Liberties Union, Indian Civil Rights Committee, 1945-1960
23
5
Amsden, Charles, 1931-1939
23
6
Annual Round Table Conference, Sociedad Mexicana de Antropologia, Mexico City, August – September 1943, with daily diary of the conference, note cards, and typed minutes.
23
7
Antevs, Ernst and Ada, 1937-1969
23
8
Anthropology Search Committee, University of Arizona, 1981
23
9
Antone, Cecil F. 1978-1984
23
10
Apache [San Carlos] Tribal Council, 1975-1979
23
11
Aravaipa Canyon Natural Area, 1974-1975
23
12
Archaeological Institute of America, 1963-1965
23
13
Archaeological stratigraphy, notes and illustrations, n.d.
Center for Preservation of Historic Western Properties, 1973
31
2
Ceramic Conference, 1968-1971
31
3
Ceramic Conference, 1973
31
4
Chang, Kwang-Chih, 1960-1992
31
5
Chapman, Kenneth, 1932-1941
31
6
“Chichilticali,” by EWH, 1983, and “Discovering Coronado’s Country” by Stewart L. Udall, 1983, with correspondence, photographs, and draft manuscripts.
31
7
Clark, J. Desmond, 1960-1961
31
8
Classifications
31
9
Colbert, Edwin, 1970-1989
31
10
Collier, Donald, 1936-1963
31
11
Colombian correspondence, A to C, 1950s-1980s
31
12
Colombian correspondence, D to R, 1950s to 1980s
31
13
Colombian correspondence: United Fruit Company
31
14
Colombian correspondence: miscellaneous
31
15
Colorado River Survey, 1945-1946
31
16
Colorado River trip, September 15-21, 1976
31
17
Dolton, Captain J. Ferrell, 1980-1981
box
folder
32
1
Colton, Harold S. H., 1935-1964
32
2
“Supplementary keys for Colton and Hargrave,” 1937
32
3
Comas, Juan, 1947-1955
32
4
Committee for the Recovery of Archaeological Remains (CRAR). Note the contents of these files has been removed and transferred to MS 37 CRAR Records (ASM ACC. #86-84)
32
7
Committee on Public Archaeology (COPA), 1979
32
8
“Comparative Trait List,” by Schroeder (?), 1940
32
9
Conference board of Associated Research Councils, 1950-1962
32
10
Conference on Archaeological Identification, 1957
32
11
Congratulations to EWH
32
12
Copernicus Committee, 1973-1976
32
13
Corbett, John, 1954-1975
32
14
Cordova House, 1972-1974
32
15
Corn
32
16
Coronado
32
17
Cosgrove, Harriet and Burt, 1931-1967
32
18
Cosulich, Bernice, 1939-1951
box
folder
33
1
Cotton, 1936-1989
33
2
Crabtree, Don, 1967-1979
33
3
Cressman, Luther L., 1967-1979
33
4
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado, 1989-1992
33
5
Crown, Patricia 1987-1991
33
6
Cummings, Byron, 1931-1947 [ASM ACC. #86-84] See also Series 1 and Series 4 for Cuilcuilco materials
Founded in 1743, and considered the first learned society in the United States, membership is by nomination only. The Society promotes scholarly research in the sciences and humanities though meetings, publications, outreach, museum and library, and grants. Past members have included Linus Pauling and Margaret Mead. EWH was elected to membership in April 1969.
box
folder
78
2
History of the Society
78
3
Miscellaneous meeting programs and pamphlets, 1968-1993. (Includes mention of EWH’s lecture on “Early Farmers in the American Desert” in 1968.)
The Amerind Foundation was created in 1937 by William Shirley Fulton (1880-1964) as a private, non-profit archaeological research institution incorporated in the state of Connecticut, but situated in the Texas Canyon area southeast of Tucson. EWH was appointed to the Board of Directors in 1982. His papers included one record carton of Board files from 1982-1992. They included financial reports, annual reports, correspondence, NSF applications, clippings, board agendas and other related materials.
Disposition: Transferred to the Amerind Foundation, Dragoon, Arizona in 2018.
EWH was the Chair of the Anthropology Department at the University of Arizona from 1937 until 1964. The bulk of his official files are contained in the Records of the Anthropology Department (MS 45). Files in the Haury Papers consist of select correspondence transferred to ASM by William Longacre, later chair of the department.
Quantity: 3 manuscript boxes
box
folder
79
1
Accounting - Arizona
79
2
Associated - Audirac
79
3
Backman - Bascom
79
4
Beatty - Birdsell
79
5
Bishop - Boyden
79
6
Bradley – Butler
79
7
Caldwell - Carruth
79
8
Case - Cotter
79
9
Coulter - Cunningham
79
10
Damon - Desert
79
11
Désy - Dyblie
79
12
Eckert - Farmer
79
13
Farrar – Flowing
box
folder
80
1
Fly - Furr
80
2
Gaalaas - Gerwitz
80
3
Getzwiller - Gunther
80
4
Haile - Henson
80
5
Hepburn - Human
80
6
Ingstad - Jones
80
7
Kabotie - Kurath
80
8
Laidlaw - Lumpkin
80
9
McBlair – McIver
80
10
McKale - MacRoberts
80
11
Malde - Mekeel
80
12
Melhus - Moate
80
13
Moberg - Myers
80
14
Nasby – Roy
box
folder
81
1
Saint - Withers
81
2
History of the Anthropology Department: background research materials
EWH was the director of the Arizona State Museum at the University of Arizona from 1938 until 1964. The bulk of his official papers and letters are found in the institutional records of the Museum (RG 1).
box
folder
83
1
University of Arizona official documents, notices of appointment, etc., 1937-1949
83
2
University of Arizona official documents, notices of appointment, etc., 1950-1969
83
3
University of Arizona official documents, notices of appointment, etc., 1970-1980
83
4
University of Arizona sabbatical, 1964-1965 [see additional sabbatical related materials in Series 1, 2 and 4]
83
5
Arizona State Museum ephemera
83
6
Deeds of gift and correspondence for papers, slides, and other materials donated by EWH to the Arizona State Museum and the Anthropology Department, 1977 to 1992
83
7
“Committee V,” 1974
83
8
ASM affairs, 1970-1974
83
9
ASM affairs, 1976-1977
83
10
ASM affairs, 1980
83
11
Employee newsletter, 1986-1988
83
12
EWH, “Reflections on the Arizona State Museum: 1925 and ensuing years,” 1989
In 1952, the Bureau of Ethnic Research was launched within the Anthropology Department at the University of Arizona. After years of data collection, concerns were raised by the Human Subjects Protection Program at the University of Arizona and the records were closed to research. This was necessary in order to address issues of ownership, potential inappropriate disclosure of confidential health information, and adherence to HIPAA regulations. Consequently, records relating to EWH’s role in the BER in the 1950s through 1970s are currently unavailable.
Disposition: Removed and housed with restricted files in closed storage.
In response to research and publication needs, ASM created an artificial collection to bring together the historic records of CRAR from the papers of J. O. Brew, Richard D. Daugherty, Emil W. Haury, Charles R. McGimsey, and Raymond H. Thompson. These are collectively described in the finding aid for MS 37. EWH’s donation in 1986 (ASM ACC. # 86-84) included about 8 linear inches of CRAR records dating from his appointment as a member in 1957. The inventory of these papers is included with EWH’s papers, but the actual records have been moved to MS 37.
Disposition: Removed and transferred to MS 37
The Emil W. Haury Graduate Fellowship Fund (also known as the Education Fund, Education Fund for Archaeology, or simply the Haury Fund) was established in the 1970s. His second wife, Agnese Nelms Lindley Haury, later established a program through her Lindley Foundation to support Ph.D. students in the University of Arizona Anthropology Program. Records of the Lindley Foundation that had been filed with EWH’s papers have been transferred into the records of the Lindley Foundation (MS 33). Quantity: 1 manuscript box.
box
folder
84
1
Awards made, 1979-1982
84
4
History of the Education Fund for Archaeology
84
5
List of contributors, 1977
84
6
Correspondence, 1975-1976
84
7
Correspondence, 1977
84
8
Correspondence, 1978-1979
84
9
Correspondence, 1981-1986
84
10
Correspondence, 1987-1992
84
11
Correspondence, 1991
84
12
Correspondence, 1992-1993
84
13
Correspondence and records of the Department of Anthropology Diamond Jubilee celebration and donations to the Haury Fellowship, 1990-1993
84
14
Recommendations for Action from Ad Hoc Committee to Assess the Haury Fund, 2002
The Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art, founded in 1927, was a private, non-profit corporation with Harold S. Colton as its president. After land for building was donated in 1928, the Museum of Northern Arizona was built and began operations. EWH served on its board from 1939 into the 1980s and then remained involved as an emeritus member.
Disposition: EWH’s ten manuscript boxes of Board records, 1939-1992, were removed and transferred to the Museum of Northern Arizona archives in 2018.
EWH was elected to membership in the NAS/NRC in 1956 and served until the 1990s. He was the first University of Arizona faculty member to be elected. This private, nonprofit organization provides science-based advice to the government on critical issues affecting the nation. Haury held various positions including chairman of the Division of Anthropology and Psychology. After his death, NAS published a biographical memoir on EWH with contributions by Ray Thompson, C. Vance Haynes, and J. Jefferson Reid (1997).
From NAS website: “To encourage reviewers to express their views freely, the review comments are treated as confidential documents …. reviewers are asked to return or destroy the draft manuscript and to refrain from disclosing their comments or the contents of the draft.” Because of this policy, ASM staff has removed all applications, reviews, comments, and drafts from EWH’s files.
Quantity: 5 manuscript boxes.
box
folder
85
1
National Academy of Sciences: general correspondence, 1974-1976
85
2
National Academy of Sciences: general correspondence, 1977-1990
85
3
National Academy of Sciences: centennial, 1963
85
4
Governing Board: minutes, October 1960
85
5
Governing Board: minutes, December 1960
box
folder
86
1
Governing Board: minutes, February 1961
86
2
Governing Board: minutes, June 1961
86
3
Governing Board: minutes, December 1961
86
4
Governing Board: minutes, 1962
box
folder
87
1
Government Relations Committee, 1961-1962
87
2
Pleistocene fossils, 1961-1966
87
3
National Research Council, correspondence, 1951-1973
87
4
National Research Council, correspondence, 1963-1964
On September 29, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed the National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities Act into law. The act called for the creation of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) as separate, independent agencies. The Washington Post called the creation of the endowments "a momentous step." EWH was appointed to the Advisory Committee on Humanistic Museums in 1966.
Quantity: 2 manuscript boxes.
box
folder
90
1
General correspondence, 1966-1974
90
2
Hearings and legislation, 1966-1971
90
3
Legislation, 1965-1967
90
4
Agenda and minutes (1st, 2nd and 3rd meetings), 1966
90
5
Agenda and minutes (4th meeting), 1966
90
6
Agenda and minutes (5th meeting), 1967 (part 1 of 2)
90
7
Agenda and minutes (5th meeting), 1967 (part 2 of 2)
90
8
Miscellaneous correspondence, 1978-1981
90
9
Fellowship program, other grant agencies, 1966-1972
box
folder
91
1
Newspaper clippings
91
2
Agenda and minutes (6th meeting), 1967
91
3
Agenda and minutes (7th meeting), 1967
91
4
Advisory Committee on Humanistic Museums, 1966
91
5
Advisory Committee on Humanistic Museums, 1966-1970
The Advisory Board on matters relating to the National Park Service, an agency of the United States Department of the Interior, was first authorized in 1935 under the Historic Sites, Buildings and Antiquities Act and given the task of advising the director. EWH was officially appointed to the Advisory Board by Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall in 1964, the same year he retired from the Arizona State Museum and University of Arizona Department of Anthropology. Over subsequent years, EWH was a member of several committees including the Cultural Conservation Advisory Committee, the Southwest Regional Committee, and the Publications Committee. He served as the chair from 1968 to 1970, and was later a Council Member and then on the SW Regional Committee after it was initiated in the late 1970s.
EWH’s maintained his NPS files in two distinct groups. Among his “Personal Papers” (ASM ACC. #86-84) were three boxes (out of 24 record cartons in the accession) of National Park Service Advisory Board records. These active files consist mostly of correspondence and are described below as part of the MS 3 finding aid. The bulk of Haury’s NPS files (13 record cartons), however, are ordinary business records of the Board. They were grouped separately by EWH and received at ASM as a separate accession (ASM LA #84-1). The later files were removed and transferred to the Western Archaeological Conservation Center in 2018. A complete inventory with information about individual folders is available to researchers.
EWH’s files on National Park Service Advisory Board activities are not protected. They are open to research and may be requested under the FOIA federal freedom of information law that allows for the full or partial disclosure of previously unreleased information and documents controlled by the United States government.
The National Park Service Advisory Board records include extensive personal correspondence with members of the Board and with prominent individuals, senators, congressmen, and others associated with conservation and environmental groups. Clippings, reports, and minutes of the board meetings, and photographs are also included. Of special note is the extensive correspondence with Frank Elmer Masland, Jr. (1895-1994), a businessman and environmental advocate who was also a member of the Advisory Board.
Disposition: 13 record cartons of general Park Service publications and reports were removed and transferred to the Western Archaeological Archives Center, Tucson, in 2018.
Quantity: 9 manuscript boxes.
box
folder
92
1
1960s
92
2
1960s
92
3
1970s
92
4
1970s
92
5
1972-1976
92
6
1977-1979
92
7
1979
92
8
1980s
box
folder
93
1
1980s
93
2
1980s
93
3
1980s
93
4
“Collected correspondence,” selectively set aside by EWH
93
5
Advisory Board Handbook, 1968
93
6
Background materials
93
7
Administrative policies
93
8
Surplus property, 1964-1968
93
9
News releases
93
10
“Fun,” including jokes, notes, and historical anecdotes
box
folder
94
1
Directors: Dickenson, Russell E.
94
2
Directors: Everhardt, Gary
94
3
Directors: Hartzog, George B., Jr.
94
4
Directors: Walker, Ronald H.
94
5
Directors: Whalen, William J.
94
6
Other people: Andrus, Cecil D.
94
7
Other people: Kleppe, Thomas S.
94
8
Other people: Rogers, C. B. Morton
94
9
Other people: Reed, Nathaniel Pryor
94
10
Other people: Watt, James G.
94
11
Committees: Cultural Conservation Advisory Committee, 1979-1980
Committees: Special Committee on Historic Preservation, 1966-1967
95
4
Committees; Task Force Review of Park Interpretation, 1971-1972
95
5
Field trips: travel guidelines, invoices, correspondence, 1964-1971
95
6
Field trips: Alaska, 1965
95
7
Field trips: Caribbean, 1966
95
8
Field trips: Canyonlands, 1967-1968
95
9
Field trips: Cascades, Redwoods, 1968
95
10
Field trips: Southwest, February 1970
box
folder
96
1
Field trips: Big Sur, 1970
96
2
Field trips: Yosemite, 1971
96
3
Field trips: Southwest, summer 1971
96
4
Field trips: Alaska and Canada, 1972
96
5
Field trips: Santa Fe, 1974-1976
96
6
Field trips: Sulphur, Oklahoma, 1975
96
7
Field trips: Teton, Yellowstone, Glacier, 1976
96
8
Field trips: New Orleans, 1976
96
9
Field trips: Big Bend, 1976
96
10
Places: Alibetes Flint Quarry, 1963-1964
96
11
Places: Chaco Canyon National Monument, 1974
96
12
Places: Casa Grande National Monument, 1965-1985
96
13
Places: Coronado’s Trails, n.d.
96
14
Places: Grand Canyon, 1960s to 1970s
96
15
Places: Horace M. Albright Training Center, Grand Canyon, 1965-1974
96
16
Places: Katmai National Monument, 1960s to 1970s
box
folder
97
1
Places: Mesa Verde, 1962-1985
97
2
Places: Tombstone Historic District, 1969
97
3
Southwest Regional Office, minutes: 1974
97
4
Southwest Regional Office, 1974-1978
97
5
Southwest Regional Office, minutes: 1975
97
6
Southwest Regional Office, minutes: 1976
97
7
Southwest Regional Office, minutes: 1977
97
8
Southwest Regional Office, minutes: 1978
97
9
Southwest Regional Office, 1978-1985
box
folder
98
1
Rocky Mountain Regional Office, 1981-1985
98
2
Midwest Regional Advisory Committee, 1975
98
3
Western Regional Advisory Committee, 1974-1986
98
4
Proposals for parks, monuments, landmarks, 1964-1979
98
5
Proposals for parks, monuments, landmarks, 1966-1978
98
6
Reports on parks and monuments, 1967-1971
98
7
Vandalism of archaeological sites (35mm slides), 1977
98
8
National Park Service official signage
98
9
National Parks Association, 1964-1969
98
10
“Perking up the nation’s parks,” by Nathaniel M. McKitterick, n.d.
98
11
Advisory Board on National Parks, 62nd meeting, April 1970, Washington, D. C.: agenda and correspondence [during this meeting EWH was elected Chairman].
98
12
Revised Indian Assistance Guidelines, Division of External Archaeological Programs, Western Archaeological Center, National Park Service, February 1978
98
Masland correspondence, 1960-1981: Frank Elmer Masland, Jr. (1895-1994) was a prominent industrialist, owner of a carpet factory in Pennsylvania, conservationist, explorer, author, philanthropist, and member of the NPS Advisory Committee. See description
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1950 "to promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare; to secure the national defense...." NSF leadership includes a 24-member National Science Board (NSB) of eminent individuals that meets six times a year. NSF's task is to identify and support fundamental research and education in all the non-medical fields of science and engineering. In some fields, such as the social sciences (including anthropology and archaeology), the NSF is the major source of federal backing. Haury served on several advisory panels, reviewed grant applications, and himself received at least two NSF grants, Snaketown (1964) and the Lindenmeier Site (1967). Note: all confidential, privileged documents relating to grant proposals and reviews have been removed from EWH’s files.
box
folder
100
8
Advisory Panel for Anthropology, 1956-1957
100
9
Advisory Panel for anthropology, 1958-1962
100
10
General correspondence, 1958-1963
box
folder
101
1
Office of Institutional Programs: summaries, 1962-1963
101
2
Office of Institutional Programs: annual report, 1962
101
3
Institutional Science Development Program: 1963-1978
Seminar “Cultural stability and instability,” 1955: correspondence
102
9
Seminar “Cultural stability and instability,” 1955: notes and miscellaneous
102
10
Seminar “Cultural stability and instability,” 1955: transcript of conversation among participants EWH, Robert L. Rands, Albert C. Spaulding, Walter W. Taylor, Raymond H.Thompson, and Robert Wauchope.
102
11
1978 Symposium on “Current issues in Hohokam prehistory”: correspondence
102
12
1978 Symposium on “Current issues in Hohokam prehistory”: papers
This nonprofit organization was created in 1938 “to aid and promote the educational and scientific activities of the National Park Service.” The organization, based in Globe, Arizona, was incorporated in 1943. When Haury was its board chairman in 1971 it was described as “a publishing and distribution organization serving visitor understanding in many national park areas.” In 1969, the name changed from Southwestern Monuments Association to Southwest Parks and Monuments Association. In 2002, the name changed to the Western National Parks Association.
EWH’s files include annual reports, correspondence, by-laws, non-profit corporation, meeting agendas, and related paperwork. They overlap with the collection in the University of Arizona Library Special Collections (MS 463), with the exception of some early files.
EWH was both a recipient of grants from the Wenner-Gren Foundation and a member of the Viking Fund Award Committee. His own first award came in 1948 to aid publication on his “Report on the Excavation of Ventana Cave.”
box
folder
109
1
Correspondence and other papers related to EWH’s successful grant applications, 1948-1965
109
2
Viking Fund Award Committee, 1946-1960
109
3
Viking Fund Award Committee, 1955-1971
109
4
Viking Fund Award Committee, 1969-1972
109
5
Wenner-Gren Foundation, correspondence, 1950-1959
109
6
Wenner-Gren Foundation, correspondence, 1959-1960
109
7
Wenner-Gren Foundation, correspondence, 1961-1969
109
8
Wenner-Gren Foundation, correspondence, 1971-1977
109
9
Wenner-Gren Foundation, international symposium, 1955
Copy of Haury’s original with his label “Haury Papers (not in print).”
110
2
Paper #1: “Did Pleistocene man live in North America? [undated student paper]
110
3
Paper #2: “A further study of ornaments.” [undated student paper for Archaeology 210a with notes and illustrations including photographs of clay beads]
110
4
Paper #3: “Hopi basketry” [undated student paper illustrated with photographs, watercolor and ink drawings, and a map]
110
5
Paper #4: “The ornaments of Casa Grande” [undated student paper illustrated with photographs, watercolor and ink drawings.]
110
6
Paper #5: “The River Nile and its bearing on the ancient cultures of Egypt” [undated student paper with ink illustrations by EWH and comments by professor with initials “T.T.W.”]
110
7
Paper #6: “Prehistoric irrigation and irrigation systems in Arizona” [student paper with note from EWH “this was written as a class assignment in 1926-27.” Includes photographs and ink drawings by EWH.]
110
8
Paper #7: “Pueblo sites of the Tucson region” [student paper dated 1927. Includes photographs and ink drawings by EWH.]
110
9
Paper #8: “A report on excavations at the Rye Creek Ruin, December 1930.” [typed manuscript with photographs] NOTE: this report was based on the Rye Creek field notes from 1930. See Oversize Box 133.
110
10
Paper #9: “Maya textile weaves as illustrated by the fabrics recovered from the sacred cenote at Chichen Itza.” Class paper for Dr. Tozzer, 1932. Photocopy of 18 page typescript with illustrations. Also includes 11 page original typescript, correspondence
110
11
Paper #10: “The Mogollon Culture of Southwestern New Mexico.” Read before AAAS, Santa Fe, 1934
110
12
Paper #11: “The Relationships of the Hohokam Culture,” paper read … June 1937
110
13
Paper #12: “The Hohokam: River and Desert People of Ancient Arizona.” 23 page typescript, undated
110
14
Paper #13: “Tribute to Andrew Ellicot Douglass.” Read at the AAAS annual meeting, Tucson, Arizona, May 2, 1967
Miscellaneous notes, drafts, outlines, chronologies, and lists
111
2
Miscellaneous notes on cards and small pieces of paper
111
3
Diary for trip to Cuicuilco, Mexico, summer 1925. Includes two small notebooks and a typed transcription of their contents. See also Oversize Box 134 for an album containing letters from Byron Cummings, original photographs, clippings, and ephemera assembled by EWH to document his Cuicuilco trip, June to August 1925. Album is item #77 on the Memorabilia inventory and is a companion to the trip diary listed as item #82.
111
4
“Diary of prehistoric canal survey in the Gila Valley vicinity of Florence, Arizona, June 4 – 12, 1926
111
5
“Cenote lodges 10 miles below Camp Verde, November 1926.”
111
6
Canals research, 1922 – 1969. Includes maps by Hemenway Expedition, Turney, Krotser, Midvale, and Hayden as well as Jim Ayres’ report on the Sacaton grid patterns, 1969.
Frank H. Cushing and Los Muertos research notes and sketches, undated
112
2
“Cushing paper”: research notes, photocopies, transcriptions of letters, notes about Southwest Museum collections, and clippings, 1970s to 1980s
112
3
“Cushing paper”: correspondence with Everette Lee DeGolyer about Cushing’s autobiography, 1946. Includes photocopy of the manuscript with Cushing’s handwritten comments.
Cushing turquoise frog: research materials collected from various sources [ASM ACC. #89-95]
112
6
Cushing turquoise frog: photographs and notes [ASM ACC. #89-95]
112
7
Proof prints of text figures by Elmer A. Rising for EWH’s publication in the Peabody Papers
112
8
Modern contact prints from original negatives made on the Hemenway Expedition. Photographer is not identified but could have been Cushing, Percy Yates, or E. H. Husher (working for I. W. Taber of San Francisco). EWH comments in his book that “most of the photographic plates have deteriorated to the point of uselessness” and goes on to reproduce ten photographs among the 90 plates in his book.
112
9
Galley proofs with corrections for EWH’s publication in the Peabody Papers, 1945
“Architectural developments shown in a southern Arizona pit house village,” 1927.
9 page typescript with pencil corrections. Includes photograph and floorplans. Note by EWH: “Excavations on this site were conducted under the direct supervision of Dr. Byron Cummings…in the fall of 1927. It was the writer’s privilege to take part in the investigation and to make a study of the habitations….” [ASM ACC. #94-120]
113
2
“Diary of summer trip to northern Arizona, July 13 – August 26, 1927.” 33 pages,
handwritten in small notebook. Published in Journal of the Southwest, volume 46, number 1 (spring 2004).
113
3
“Diary of summer trip to northern Arizona, July 13 – August 26, 1927.” Typescript of
original notebook pages and digital file on disk.
113
4
“Lukachukai” research notes, 1927 - 1936: Includes information on Vandal Cave and
other sites and a composition book titled “Notes of summer trip to Northern Arizona, July 13, 1927.” Contains pencil field notes and sketches of floor plans, site maps, and artifacts. Last pages are a catalogue of burials. An early page was used for testing watercolors. Also includes research notes, rough drafts, and photographs.
113
5
Vandal Cave folder, 1927-1936: “Report of the University of Arizona Archaeological
Expedition into Northeastern Arizona July 13 to August 26, 1927.” Typed manuscript over 50 pages in length with original pasted-in photographs. Also includes copy of Kiva volume 1, number 6 (February 1936) where part of this manuscript was published.
113
6
“Catalogue of beam specimens, Whipple Ruin,” June - August 1929. Handwritten pages
from notebook containing information on Pinedale (Cheney Ruins), Whipple Ruin (Showlow, Arizona), and “Notes on charcoal examined by Douglass.”
113
7
Room plans and drawings related to Whipple Ruin and excavation near Showlow, n.d.
113
8
“Catalogue of archaeological material collected by N. G. S. [National Geographic
Society] 1929 Beam Expedition at Whipple Ruin, Showlow, Arizona. E. W. Haury in charge.”
EWH’s copies of his publications from the 1920s to the 1930s
114
2
Rye Creek Ruin, 1930. “Daily notes of excavations at Rye Creek Ruin, October 27 –
November 19, 1930.” Small notebook with typed entries that include burials, room plans and stratigraphic tests.
114
3
“A cultural resources overview of the Rye Creek Geographic Study area….” By David A.
Gregory (1996). Reproduces some of the entries in EWH’s 1930 notebook.
114
4
Tree-ring dates and site sheets for Ariz. C:1 and Ariz. C:2, October 1930
114
5
Laboratory of Anthropology conference on “Lincoln Black-on-Red” in October 1931.
Includes report and group portrait of conference attendees outside the Laboratory of Anthropology building.
114
6
McEuen Cave, 1934 field trip. Comments collected by EWH on June 3, 1984 at a lunch
with Max Ayres and Carleton Wilder.
114
7
“Program for proposed work at Cuicuilco,” 1936-1959. Includes correspondence and
research notes.
114
8
“Sierra Ancha ‘Mine’, March 8, 1936.” Handwritten entries on small notebook pages
114
9
“Ahtonez Canyon, May 4, 1936.” Handwritten entries on small notebook pages
114
10
Double Adobe profile, Whitewater Draw, 1937. Photograph and pencil sketch
114
11
“Sonora, La Playa, December 28, 1938.” Sketches on pages from small notebook
114
12
“La Playa shell.” Three pages of handwritten notes and typescript. Undated.
114
13
Notebook: University Ruin and other excavations including Double Adobe, Green Cattle
Company, E. F. Lehner Ranch, Naco Elephant Station, and Sulphur Springs Valley, 1948-1954. [Originally part of the inventory of memorabilia from 1980]
114
14
Painted Cave, Ariz. E:7:2, correspondence, map, and notes, 1939-1940
114
15
“Primitive agriculture in the Southwest,” 1942. “Submitted to Pres. Atkinson to be
incorporated in his talk May 28, 1942, in Mexico City.”
114
16
Notebook: “Burial in Cienega,” April 1, 1943 and “Old Tucson Presidio,” December 9,
1954
114
17
Tree-ring dates, 1944 [?]. “Summary of dating work on 1941 tree-ring collections…and
first survey of 1944 collections from the Bluff site.” Typed manuscript and handwritten notes.
114
18
“The Antiquity of Man in the Southwest,” 1945. 32 page typescript. “Presidential address
for Sigma Xi, May 4, 1945.”
114
19
“Culture history of the Forestdale Valley, trial reconstruction, evolution of architecture,”
(1945)
114
20
Painted Cave: handwritten rough draft of manuscript, [1945?]. Book was published in
1945 by the Amerind Foundation 18 years after initial excavations were completed.
114
21
“Painted Cave, northeastern Arizona,” by EWH, 1944. Typescript with penciled
corrections.
Note that an associated scrapbook for the trip which includes drawings, photographs, ephemera, and correspondence is housed in Oversize Materials Box 134. The album is item #76 from the Memorabilia inventory and is a companion to the diary listed below. See also letters written by Hulda Haury while the family was in Colombia (Biographical series).
box
folder
117
Folder 1
Notebook: list of expenses on Colombian trip, 1949-1950. [Item #91 on inventory of memorabilia, 1980]
117
Folder 2
Three-ring binder: pages of diary recording trip to Bogota, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, September 1, 1949 to June 1, 1950. [Item #81 on inventory of memorabilia, 1980]
117
Folder 3
Original three-ring binder for Colombia diary
117
Folder 4
Notebook: Chibcha field notes, November 1949 – February 1950. Includes pencil notes and sketches.
117
Folder 5
Chibcha bibliography and chronology
117
Folder 6
Chibcha site plans and pottery analysis
117
Folder 7
“Archaeological studies in the Bogota Sabana, Colombia,” by EWH and Julio Cesar Cubillos, 1953. Typescript English version with plates.
See also Oversize Box 133 for illustrations used in the publication.
box
folder
118
1
Original typescript, 1948. Part 1 of 4. Note: this draft was labeled “copy 1” by EWH.
118
2
Original typescript, 1948. Part 2 of 4
118
3
Original typescript, 1948. Part 3 of 4
118
4
Original typescript, 1948. Part 4 of 4
118
5
“Working copy, rough.” Handwritten. Part 1 of 3
box
folder
119
1
“Working copy, rough.” Handwritten. Part 2 of 3
119
2
“Working copy, rough.” Handwritten. Part 3 of 3
119
3
“Second copy,” pages 1-163
119
4
“Second copy,” pages 164-393
119
5
“Second copy,” pages 394-549
119
6
“Complete set of page proofs.” [discarded]
box
folder
120
1
“Second copy,” pages 550-754
120
2
“Second copy,” pages 755-894
120
3
Typed manuscript for the Ventana Cave index
120
4
Original black and white potographs by the United States Army Aircorp and Tad Nichols
120
5
Page proofs for captions to illustrations
120
6
“Present day fauna & flora in vicinity of Ventana Cave, Arizona,” compiled by students of zooarchaeology lab, fall 1975, and revised plant list 1980.
“Cuicuilco in retrospect, originally prepared in 1959. Rewritten and submitted for Kiva consideration, January 1976. Thus ended a study begun in April 1922 and continued, with one interruption, for an aggregate of 22 months.” Three typed manuscripts with corrections and correspondence.
121
2
Notebooks (2): Trip to Europe to attend Wenner-Gren conference and other meetings, 1960. [Item #83 on memorabilia inventory, 1980.)
121
3
Notebook: Trips to Mexico and Guatemala, 1962 and 1966. [Item #84 on memorabilia inventory, 1980.]
121
4
Notebook: Trips to Alaska, Tetons, and Yellowstone in 1964 and 1976. [Item #85 on memorabilia inventory, 1980.]
121
5
Notebook: Canyonlands trip in September 1968, Sierra Ancha in May 1970. [Item #93A on memorabilia inventory, 1980.]
121
6
Lindenmeier site, Colorado: correspondence and field notes from Edwin Wilmsen, Smithsonian Institution, 1967
121
7
Lindenmeier site, Colorado: EWH’s proposal to the National Science Foundation for “Re-examination and analysis of the cultural and chronological data from the Lindenmeier site, Colorado,” 1966. Also includes correspondence
121
8
“The Sierra Ancha cliff ruins,” (May 21, 1970). Part 1 of 3
121
9
“The Sierra Ancha cliff ruins,” (May 21, 1970). Part 2 of 3
121
10
“The Sierra Ancha cliff ruins,” (May 21, 1970). Part 3 of 3, extra photographs
121
11
Notebook: Trips to Alaska in 1971 and 1972. [Item #86 on memorabilia inventory, 1980.]
121
12
Hodges Ruin: “Concluding thoughts” by EWH for Isabel Kelly’s University of Arizona Anthropology Paper #37 “Hodges Ruin: A Hohokam community in the Tucson Basin,” July 1975.
“Tucson: From pithouse to skyscraper,” research for the Tucson Heritage Foundation, 1973-1985. Includes correspondence, research notes and maps, Tucson chronology, rough drafts, and ephemera.
122
2
“Elephant bones and amateurs (Arizona Safari),” copy of 5 page typescript, 6 January 1976
122
3
“Early man seminar – Naco – Double Adobe – Early Man Field Trip”: transcript of tape recorded lecture or speech by EWH, undated, but accompanied by memo dated October 1976. Also, three audiotape cassettes.
122
4
EWH’s personal copies of publications from the 1950s through 1970s
“On the discovery of Ventana Cave,” for book by Marc and Marnie Gaede, 1976.
123
2
Foreword and concluding remarks for E. B. Sayles’ Cochise culture book, 1976
123
3
Canyon Creek Ruin, December 1976. Archaeological tree-ring date reports and computer print-out of “logistical curve fitted … to log cutting at Canyon Creek Pueblo 1300-1346.”
123
4
“A note on early goals of the Arizona State Museum,” 9 page typescript, 25 May 1979. Later published in Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series, no. 128 (1980).
123
5
Foreword to Isabel Kelly’s Colima publication, 5 September 1979
123
6
“In search of the ancient ones” by E. B. Sayles,but written by EWH. “Submitted to Pat Shelton, UA Press, September 20, 1979.” Typescript, notes, obituary for Sayles, and correspondence.
123
7
“Pottery glaze project, Robert O’Haire,” 1980. Related to EWH’s “Age of lead glaze decorated pottery in the Southwest” (1932).
123
8
“Prehistory: Hohokam” by EWH and George J. Gummerman, January – February 1981. 7 page typescript and notes.
123
9
“Burial of A. V. and M. A. Kidder’s ashes at Pecos National Monument, October 21, 1981.” 4 page typescript with notes, 14 January 1982. [ASM ACC. #82-14]
123
10
Matty Canyon Archaeological Project (Ariz. EE:2:30): correspondence, notes, progress proposal and reports, and photographs of site and artifacts, 1982-1989
123
11
“Reflections: Fifty years of Southwestern Archaeology” published in American Antiquity 50 (2) (1985). Includes correspondence, 29 page typescript from July 1984, notes, and mailing list.
123
12
Epilogue for Pecos book published by the Southwest Parks and Monuments Association. Includes correspondence, rough drafts, and Pecos manuscripts by Richard Woodbury and Alden Hayes, 1985
123
13
“Comments on [American Association for the Advancement of Science] symposium papers,” December 5, 1985. Rough draft with corrections.
123
14
“Harold Sterling Gladwin, 1883-1983” obituary by EWH and J. Jefferson Reid published in The Kiva, volume 50, no. 4 (1985). Rough draft and notes
123
15
“Haury anthology” published as Emil W. Haury’s prehistory of the American Southwest edited by J. Jefferson Reid and David E. Doyel (1986): includes correspondence, outlines, chapters by other authors, and miscellaneous
123
16
“Haury anthology” published as Emil W. Haury’s prehistory of the American Southwest: “Fifty years as a Southwest archaeologist” by EWH. 16 page typescript, March 22, 1984.
123
17
“Haury anthology” published as Emil W. Haury’s prehistory of the American Southwest: “Thoughts after sixty years as a Southwestern archaeologist,” by EWH. 37 page typescript, December 21, 1983
123
18
Emil W. Haury’s prehistory of the American Southwest: reviews 1986
123
19
“Reflections on the Arizona State Museum: 1925 and ensuing years” by EWH. 42 page typescript with and without corrections, 1989-1990. Published in slightly edited form in Journal of the Southwest, volume 46, number 1, spring 2004.
123
20
“Discovering the Hohokam/ Portrait of the Hohokam, text by EWH, photographs by Helga Teiwes.” Undated typescript with photographs for unpublished book.
123
21
“Outline for Hohokam booklet,” notes, miscellaneous texts, [1967]
Correspondence and outline for the publisher, 1987
126
2
“The Significance of Emil Haury’s Los Muertos Report,” by David R. Wilcox. 53 pages plus illustrations. Copy of typed, undated manuscript.
126
3
“Wherefore a Harvard Ph. D.?” by Emil W. Haury. 36 page draft typescript with pencil corrections, 25 October 1984. Published in “A Hemenway portfolio: Voices and views from the Hemenway Archaeological Expedition, 1886-1889,” eds. C. M. Hinsley and D. R. Wilcox. Journal of the Southwest 37(4):710-33.
126
4
“Wherefore a Harvard Ph. D.?” by Emil W. Haury. 36 page “first copy draft” typescript with ink corrections, [?] December 1984
126
5
“Wherefore a Harvard Ph. D.?” by Emil W. Haury. 27 page uncorrected typescript, 7 December 1984
126
6
“Wherefore a Harvard Ph. D.?” by Emil W. Haury. 27 page typescript with pencil corrections, 7 December 1984/ 1985
126
7
“Wherefore a Harvard Ph. D.?” by Emil W. Haury. 27 page copy of typescript with corrections, 7 December 1984/ 1985
Note: see also Series 3 for information about the Burridge D. Butler Field School Fund used to help pay costs of the Point of Pines field school.
box
folder
127
9
Point of Pines history, research materials: 1946 lease from San Carlos Apache and audio cassettes of EWH reminiscences about the field school, recorded by Loren Haury around the campfire at Point of Pines on 5 May 1979 without his father’s knowledge. No transcript.
127
10
Correspondence, 1989.
127
11
Point of Pines history: outline, preface, acknowledgments, November 17, 1989
127
12
Point of Pines history: draft typescript of foreword by Richard B. Woodbury, 12/31/1987
127
13
Point of Pines history: “vignettes” by Wilma Kaemlein, 1956
127
14
Point of Pines history: typescript of 2nd draft, part 1, July 1986
127
15
Point of Pines history: typescript of 2nd draft, part 2, July 1986
127
16
Point of Pines history: typescript, annotated working copy, pages 1-95
127
17
Point of Pines history: typescript, annotated working copy, pages 96-187
The bulk of these materials relate to EWH’s 1962 excavation of Snaketown, his 1965 overview article in Kiva, and his 1976 book The Hohokam: Desert farmers and craftsmen, excavations at Snaketown, 1964-1965. For documentation of the Gila Pueblo Foundation’s 1934-1935 excavations of Snaketown, see MS 15. See also Oversize Box 133 for illustrations used in publication.
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129
1
Permits to excavate: copies of the 1934 and 1964 documents from the Gila River Indian Community and the United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs
129
2
National Science Foundation research proposal for an “Archaeological Restudy of Snaketown” submitted in January 1964.
129
3
“National Park Service legislation”: correspondence with Senator Barry Goldwater, Representative Morris Udall, and others regarding the proposal to establish Hohokam-Pima National Monument at Snaketown, 1965 – 1972
129
4
Southwest Archeological Center correspondence, 1967
129
5
“Snaketown Archeological site, Arizona: a study of alternatives,” National Park Service,
129
6
Canal crust analysis, 1969
129
7
“Master plan”: documents related to the establishment of the Hohokam Pima National Monument, 1972-1980
129
8
Proposed Hohokam-Pima National Monument, National Park Service overview, 1987
129
9
National Park Service correspondence, 1973
129
10
“Hohokam Pima National Monument,” 1975-1989
129
11
“Pima Hohokam National Monument, 1975-1982
129
12
Western Archaeological Center, National Park Service, cultural resource study, 1980-1981
129
13
Faunal material inventories for Snaketown Ariz. U: 13:1 (copies) 1968-1982
129
14
“Hohokam, desert farmers & craftsmen, Snaketown, 1964-1965,” correcetions to manuscript, June 19, 1978
129
15
Illustrations and charts for publication (photographic copies)
129
16
Original pen and ink illustration used in Medallion paper #25 “Excavations at Snaketown, Material Culture” by Gladwin, Sayles, and EWH, 1937
129
17
“Pictures to use on visits to Snaketown,” black and white photographs with typed captions on the verso explaining excavations
129
18
Greeting card signed by Snaketown staff at end of project, 1965. Anthropology students’ “certificate” of appreciation for EWH, 1964.
This heavily revised and corrected document began as a transcript of audiotapes from an interview/monologue Haury did at the suggestion of J. Jefferson Reid. Yellow typed pages were added later by Haury. Handwritten annotations suggest input from multiple sources. Portions of this manuscript were used in publications by Haury and Reid.
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130
1
“A personal view,” by Emil W. Haury. “First draft taken from tapes.” Copy of typescript with corrections. 30 May 1978. 57 pages.
130
2
“Emil Walter Haury: a personal view,” by Emil Haury. Draft #4. Copy of typescript, 102 pages. 30 May 1978/13 September 1979.
130
3
“Emil Walter Haury: a personal view,” by Emil Haury. Draft #4. Original typescript heavily annotated by EWH. 13 September 1979. Part 1 of 3.
130
4
“Emil Walter Haury: a personal view,” by Emil Haury. Draft #4. Original typescript heavily annotated by EWH. 13 September 1979. Part 2 of 3.
130
5
“Emil Walter Haury: a personal view,” by Emil Haury. Draft #4. Original typescript heavily annotated by EWH. 13 September 1979. Part 3 of 3.
130
6
“Emil Walter Haury: a personal view,” by Emil Haury. Draft #5 [final]. Original typescript with corrections. 26 November 1979. Part 1 of 2, pages 133 +.
130
7
“Emil Walter Haury: a personal view,” by Emil Haury. Draft #5. Original typescript with corrections. 26 November 1979. Part 2 of 2, pages 134-261.
Note that these publications arrived at ASM as part of ASM ACC. #94-120.
box
132
The Canyon Creek Ruin and the cliff dwellings of the Sierra Ancha. Medallion Papers no. XIV by Emil W. Haury. Privately printed, Gila Pueblo, 1934. [With seven pages of handwritten notes by EWH.]
132
Emil W. Haury’s prehistory of the American Southwest. Edited by J. Jefferson Reid and David E. Doyel. University of Arizona Press, 1986.
132
Excavations at Snaketown: Material culture by Harold S. Gladwin, Emil W. Haury, et al. Medallion Papers no. XXV. Privately printed, Gila Pueblo, December 1937.
132
Excavations at Snaketown III: Revisions by Harold S. Gladwin. Medallion Papers no. XXX. Privately printed, Gila Pueblo, June 1942.
132
Excavations at Snaketown IV: Reviews and conclusions by Harold Sterling Gladwin. Medallion Papers no. XXXVIII. Privately printed, Gila Pueblo, June 1948.
132
For the Dean: essays in anthropology in honor of Byron Cummings on his eighty-ninth birthday, September 20, 1950. Published by the Hohokam Museums Association and the Southwestern Monuments Association, 1950.
132
Hohokam: Desert farmers & craftsmen: Snaketown, 1964-1965 by Emil W. Haury. University of Arizona Press, 1976. [Two copies, one with corrections and changes, and the other as published.]
132
Mogollon culture in the Forestdale Valley East-Central Arizona by Emil W. Haury. University of Arizona Press, 1985.
132
Starkweather Ruin, a Mogollon-Pueblo site in the Upper Gila area of New Mexico, and affiliative aspects of the Mogollon culture by Paul H. Nesbitt. Logan Museum Publications in Anthropology, Beloit college, 1938. [With annotations by EWH.]
132
The Stratigraphy and archaeology of Ventana Cave Arizona by Emil W. Haury and contributors. University of Arizona Press, 1950.
“Cox & Cox, Pima San Pedro River Watershed Case,” legal documents, summons, interrogatories, etc. involving the Gila River Indian Community plaintiff and the American Smelting and Refining Company, et al. defendants, 1978.
Oversize box 133
2
“Cox & Cox, Pima San Pedro River Watershed Case,” correspondence, 1978
Oversize box 133
3
Newspaper clippings: “Clippings through the years regarding EWH” [item #70 in memorabilia acquisition]
Oversize box 133
4
Newspaper clippings: “Clippings through the years regarding EWH” – early years. [item #70 in memorabilia acquisition]
Oversize box 133
5
Newspaper clippings: photocopies
Oversize box 133
6
Newspaper clippings: originals
Oversize box 133
7
Newspaper clippings: originals
Oversize box 133
8
National Geographic Society: Alaska trips to Mt. McKinley, Dead Horse, Kotzebue, Fort Yukon and other locations, 1964-1972. Includes oversize group photograph and map
Oversize box 133
9
Snaketown, Los Muertos, and Ventana Cave: oversize illustrations including original pen & ink drawings of perishables
Oversize box 133
10
Illustrations for EWH’s Mogollon culture book, 1985. Consists of photographs of artifacts and site features mounted on cardboard.
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folder
Oversize Box 134
Cuicuilco album: Album containing letters from Byron Cummings, original photographs, clippings, and ephemera assembled by EWH to document his June to August 1925 trip to Cuicuilco, Mexico. Album is item #77 on the Memorabilia inventory and is a companion
Oversize Box 134
Chibcha album: Scrapbook for the 1949-1950 trip to Colombia and Ecuador which includes drawings, photographs, ephemera, and correspondence. The album is item #76 from the Memorabilia inventory and is a companion to the Chibcha diary. *FRAGILE*
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Oversize Box 135
Memorabilia: certificates, diplomas, awards. Inventory available inside box. Memorabilia from the 1980 donation, assigned ASM ACC. #1984-84. Transferred to archives in 2018. See original, detailed inventory inside boxes.
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folder
Oversize Box 136
Memorabilia: wood plaques, awards, etc. Inventory available inside the box. Memorabilia from the 1980 donation, assigned ASM ACC. #1984-84. Transferred to archives in 2018. See original, detailed inventory inside boxes.
box
folder
Oversize Box 137
Memorabilia: certificates, awards, etc. Includes LP sound recording of 1957 commencement where Haury received an Alumni Achievement Award. Inventory available inside the box. Memorabilia from the 1980 donation, assigned ASM ACC. #1984-84. Transferred to archives in 2018. See original, detailed inventory inside boxes.