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dc.contributor.authorBell, Allison
dc.contributor.authorGaylord, Donald
dc.date.accessioned2020-08-10T17:36:35Z
dc.date.available2020-08-10T17:36:35Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11021/34819
dc.description"Washington and Lee University’s back campus is dominated by “The Ruins,” the stone walls of Liberty Hall Academy’s academic and dormitory building. This iconic structure, however, was just one of many in the vicinity. The campus also included a rector’s house, steward’s house, stable, and other features that W&L Archaeology has excavated. Not only was the main academy building integral to a web of structures, but it was also short lived. It stood just for a decade (1793-1803) before it burned and the school moved to its current location. From 1803 until the Civil War, the former Liberty Hall campus was a plantation belonging to Andrew Alexander. Thus for some six decades, it was a landscape inhabited and worked by members of an enslaved labor force. Thousands of artifacts recovered around the “steward’s house” and other structures post-date the academy period and therefore were used, not by Liberty Hall students, but by enslaved people in the Alexander estate. Archaeology, archival sources and memoirs have begun to illuminate their experiences, among the most poignant being indications that enslaved people living in former Academy buildings taught each other to read." (Key Points section from the resource)en_US
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.subjectWashington and Lee Universityen_US
dc.subjectLibery Hall Academyen_US
dc.subjectArchaeologyen_US
dc.subjectSlavesen_US
dc.subjectAlexander, Andrew (1768-1844)en_US
dc.subjectEducation--Study and teachingen_US
dc.titleReturning to View: Using Archaeology and History to Restore Forgotten Stories about the Founders, Enslaved People, and Builders Of the Academies that Became Washington and Lee Universityen_US


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