CONTENTS: Johnson, Michael F. Lee Road #2
(44FX2553): A Multi-Component Paleoindian through Potomac Creek, Hornfels
Quarry Base Camp. Vest, Jay Hansford
C. Monacans and Huguenots: Manakin Town
and the Ethnogenisis of the Monacan Nation.
Madden, Michael J. Cartridge
Identification for Small Arms Ammunition.
Abstracts, Archeological Society of Virginia Annual Meeting, October
28-30, 2005, Winchester, Virginia.
Hume served as the chief archaeologist of Colonial Williamsburg
from 1957-1987. He was the author of
more than 20 books and innumerable professional articles. Hume was born in London and studied at
Framlingham and St. Lawrence Colleges.
He served in the British Army during World War II before pursuing a
career in archaeology. He came to
American in 1957 after nearly 10 years on the staff at the Guildhall Museum in
London. Throughout his long career he
established the importance of archaeology in describing the social and economic
life of those who left behind the artifacts uncovered. In America, Hume is credited with discovering
one of the earliest English colonial settlements at Wolstenholme Town. What we know today about the life of the
early British colonies in America is because of Hume's tireless efforts to tell
the story of its' inhabitants.