Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition 1886-1894 (original) (raw)

In 1879, Frank Hamilton Cushing, a leading Smithsonian ethnologist, was asked by the Bureau of American Ethnology to join a collecting expedition that traveled to the Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico. Here Cushing became convinced that a long-term stay was necessary to conduct his research using pioneering anthropological methodologies of participant-observer and the uniqueness of the "Zuni idea" of culture (Haskell, 1993, p. 10). The Hemenway Expedition to the Southwest was conceived in the summer of 1886, after Cushing sent an appeal to Mrs. Mary Hemenway of Boston. Mary Hemenway was an outstanding philanthropist who passionately supported historic preservation in Boston, many and varied educational efforts, and "a perspective from which to cope with the rapid changes of a new urban and industrial order (ibid, pp.5-6)."

Cushing's enthusiasm and his concept that "archaeology is simply ethnology carried back into prehistoric times" (ibid, p.14) persuaded Hemenway that this would be an expedition worth backing to the tune of an initial investment of $100,000.

The Hemenway Expedition focused on the ethnological, the anthropological, the historical, and the archaeological. The Expedition arrived in New Mexico in December 1886, went to Arizona to excavate in January of 1887, and returned to Zuni in June 1888. During that time Cushing and the other expedition members (Cushing's wife Emily Magill, his sister-in-law and artist Margaret Magill, anthropologist Dr. Herman F.C. ten Kate, historian Dr. Adolf Bandelier, topographer and field manager Charles Garlick, general secretary and draftsman Frederick Webb Hodge, and comparative anatomist Dr. J.L. Wortman) excavated eleven sites, including thirty-four compounds at Los Muertos while conducting ethnographic research among the local populations.

In May of 1889 Jesse Walter Fewkes, a classmate of Mary's son Augustus, was appointed supervisor of digging, and soon took over the expedition due to Cushing's failing health. In 1891 Fewkes moved the expedition to Hopi. The Hemenway Expedition continued until 1894 when Mary Hemenway died at age 74.

Mary Hemenway's son Augustus funded another expedition to Arizona in 1913-14. This expedition was archaeological in nature. Hemenway hired Charles Clark Willoughby and R.G. Fuller to explore various Chinlee Valley sites including Mesa Verde and Tseonitsosi Canon.

From the description of Hemenway Expedition records, 1886-1914. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 223040830

Archival Resources

Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition (1886-1894). Hemenway Expedition records, 1886-1914. Harvard University, Tozzer Library
referencedIn Culin, Stewart, 1858-1929. Culin Archival Collection Series 6: Cushing collection 1881-1900, n.d. Brooklyn Museum Libraries & Archives
creatorOf Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition papers, 1886-1896. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.
referencedIn Hodge, Frederick Webb, 1864-1956. Frederick Webb Hodge papers, 1888-1931. Cornell University Library
referencedIn My Adventures in Zuni: Typescript, 18-- Fray Angélico Chávez History Library, New Mexico History Museum.
referencedIn Frederick Webb Hodge papers, 1888-1931. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.
referencedIn Bandelier, Adolph Francis Alphonse, 1840-1914. [Letter from A.F. Bandelier to Mrs. Mary Hemenway, November 28th, 1889]. Harvard University, Tozzer Library
referencedIn Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900. Frank Hamilton Cushing Manuscript Collection papers, 1879- 1900 / Frank H. Cushing. Southwest Museum, Braun Research Library
referencedIn Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900. Letter books of Frank Hamilton Cushing, 1886-1896. Cornell University Library

Bibliographic and Digital Archival Resources

Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Bandelier, Adolph Francis Alphonse, 1840-1914. person
associatedWith Baxter, Sylvester, 1850-1927 person
associatedWith Culin, Stewart, 1858-1929. person
associatedWith Cushing, Emily. person
associatedWith Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900. person
associatedWith Dewey, Mary E. person
associatedWith Fewkes, Jesse Walter, 1850-1930. person
associatedWith Frederick Webb, Hodge 1864-1956. person
associatedWith Fuller, Robert Gorham. person
associatedWith Garlick, Charles. person
associatedWith Geological Survey (U.S.). corporateBody
associatedWith Harvard University. corporateBody
associatedWith Hemenway, Augustus. person
associatedWith Hemenway, Mary, 1820-1894. person
associatedWith Hodge, Frederick Webb, 1864-1956. person
associatedWith Huntington Free Library. corporateBody
associatedWith International Congress of Americanists (7th : 1888 : Berlin, Germany) corporateBody
associatedWith Kate, Herman F. C. ten (Herman Frederik Carel), 1858-1931. person
associatedWith Keam, Thomas V. person
associatedWith Kreamer, J. M. person
associatedWith Madrid. Exposición histórico americana (1892) corporateBody
associatedWith Magill, Margaret. person
associatedWith Magill, Margaret. person
associatedWith Matthews, Washington, 1843-1905 person
associatedWith Old South Church (Boston, Mass.) corporateBody
associatedWith Papago Tribe of Arizona. corporateBody
associatedWith Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology. corporateBody
associatedWith Pepper, William, 1843-1898 person
associatedWith Smithsonian Institution. corporateBody
associatedWith Smithsonian Institution.Bureau of American Ethnology. corporateBody
associatedWith Stephen, Alexander MacGregor, d. 1894. person
associatedWith United States. corporateBody
associatedWith Whiteside, W. person
associatedWith Willoughby, Charles Clark, 1857-1943. person
associatedWith Wortman, Jacob L. person
associatedWith Wortman, Jacob Lawson. person