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Work conducted by the Center for Archaeological Studies, under contract with the Wilson Pottery Foundation and sponsored by the foundation with a grant from the Texas Historical Commission, was undertaken in 2007-2009 to document and conserve the remains of the Wilson-Durham-Chandler site and to protect the location of important socioeconomic transitions following the Civil War. Today, these material remains along with other significant locations in Seguin, including the other Wilson pottery sites, the Capote community church, cemetery, and schoolhouse, and the Wilson Pottery Museum (currently under construction/rennovation) all function to link members of modern society with important people and events from the past. In this way, this project has sought to fulfill archaeological goals of documentation and conservation, but also to perform a social role for archaeology in providing and protecting material remains of the past so that people today can use them to understand their origins, contemplate this country's history, and shape present-day social identity. |
Pictured above: members of the Wilson Pottery Foundation ceremonially throwing the first shovels of dirt onto the beehive kiln to begin the work of conservation.
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