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    MTSU archaeology students unearthing history of one of Nashville’s first post-Civil War Black neighborhoods

    Tribune StaffBy Tribune StaffFebruary 6, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Students in the Introduction to Archaeology at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, Tenn., are getting hands-on with history through ongoing research each semester with the Bass Street Community Archaeology Project at Fort Negley Park in Nashville, Tenn. Digging together at the site in October 2024 are, front from left, Rhiannon Nourse and Lexi Guza, and back, from left, community volunteers Katharine Bogen and Madeline Laderoute, and students Jackson Edwards and Michael Sutherland. (MTSU photo by James Cessna)
    Students in the Introduction to Archaeology at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, Tenn., are getting hands-on with history through ongoing research each semester with the Bass Street Community Archaeology Project at Fort Negley Park in Nashville, Tenn. Digging together at the site in October 2024 are, front from left, Rhiannon Nourse and Lexi Guza, and back, from left, community volunteers Katharine Bogen and Madeline Laderoute, and students Jackson Edwards and Michael Sutherland. (MTSU photo by James Cessna)
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    MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee State University archaeology students are getting hands-on with history through ongoing research at the site of one of Nashville’s first post-Civil War Black neighborhoods.

    Led by Department of Sociology and Anthropology professor Andrew Wyatt, the Bass Street Community Archaeology Project provides experiential learning in the basics of fieldwork for students while preserving an important part of Black history.

    “What we are doing here is very unique in archaeology,” said Wyatt, who has been taking students in his Introduction to Archaeology course to work with upper-level students and MTSU alumni at the site over the past seven years. “Many projects focusing on Black history concentrate on the period of enslavement, but we are looking at the history of Black Nashville from the period of Reconstruction, through to the Civil Rights era.”

    Bass Street is located at the foot of Fort Negley, a Union Army stronghold built by hundreds of enslaved and freed Black people during the Civil War. Once the war ended, the area developed into a thriving Black community that was demolished and residents forced to relocate to make way for Interstates 65 and 40

    In 2017, Vanderbilt University professor and digital archivist Angela Sutton began the Fort Negley Descendants Project to trace family histories of those who built the Civil War fortress. Around the same time, Wyatt was searching for a project for his students. At the suggestion of MTSU Geoscience Department faculty member Zada Law, Wyatt connected with Sutton and the Bass Street Community Archaeology Project was born

    Anthropology major Taylor Tims said the project has been beneficial on multiple levels, from a preservation standpoint as well as an experience for her career pathway

    “It isn’t often that hands-on experience like that can be implemented in a class, but having even one day of fieldwork helps prepare students for future opportunities should they choose to go into archaeology as a career,” said Tims, a teaching assistant who has been working with Wyatt and the students for several semesters. “It also provides opportunities to examine the artifacts found with practices taught during lectures, which is very helpful for the learning process.

    Over the years, students have unearthed a variety of items, from dinnerware and household items to construction supplies like bricks, window glass and nails, Wyatt said. You can also see foundations of some of the most important structures

    During the fall semester’s excavation, “there was also a great deal of melted down metal pieces, and perhaps one of the most interesting discoveries, at least according to the students, was a single flip flop,” said Tims, explaining that it was likely left from one of the homeless encampments that frequented the area in recent years. “People tend to associate archaeology with people who lived long ago, but a site like Fort Negley still has connections and importance for people in the present day. I find that to be very compelling, and for me, it makes the work we do even more important.”

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    Tribune Staff

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