In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Acknowledgments Since I started with this project, as part of the UMass Boston team in 1997, I have been amazingly fortunate to participate within a number of different intellectual communities—all of them encouraging, supporting , and critiquing my thinking and writing on Sylvester Manor. The first and most constant of these people have been those of the Fiske Center for Archaeological Research at UMass, who have put much time and love into the project. Steve Mrozowski, the director of the center and the PI for the Sylvester Manor project, poured a tremendous amount of time and energy into the planning, running and intellectual shaping of the project and it never would have gone anywhere without his leadership . Under his guidance, and with a generous donation from Mrs. Alice Fiske, the Andrew Fiske Memorial Center for Archaeological Research was established, and the Center to this day fosters great interdisciplinary research. Steve has been very generous, by allowing me to pursue this project as a dissertation and a book, and I would not be where I am without the opportunities he has provided me. I thank him also for his critical reading of this manuscript. David Landon, Heather Trigg, and Dennis Piechota have all been steadfast friends, collaborators, and levelheaded thinkers in this process, and I hope their intellectual influence is evident in this book, along with the data they generously shared. Their warmth and quiet support have helped me more than they likely know, and they have been role models to me. With Steve, David, and Heather as PIs, this project was also supported for four years by the National Science Foundation, Grant Nos. 0243593 and 0552484. xiv / acknowledgments The fieldwork at Sylvester Manor was accomplished through UMass Boston field schools in archaeology between 1999 and 2006, and I thank the countless students who gave up part of their summer to work with us. I was supported by a Fiske Center Pre-dissertation Fellowship one summer, and given work space and access to the collection for which the Center is responsible over the 2006-2007 academic year. A number of fellow students and colleagues shared the data they generated with their research, for which I am grateful: Sarah Sportman, Craig Cipolla, Ryan Kennedy, and Amy Foutch (with David Landon) for faunal analysis ; Jack Gary for small finds and for the use of some of his photographs; Eric Proebsting (with Dennis Piechota) for micromorphology; and Sue Jacobucci (with Heather Trigg) for botanical. Craig Cipolla and Steve Silliman have provided inspiring different perspectives with their own work, and I have been grateful for the opportunities over the years to discuss those with them. Other UMass friends have contributed in various ways, especially Melody Henkel and her photographic eye, but also John Steinberg, Anne Hancock, Kate Lommen, Lee Priddy, Paolo DiGregorio , Dave Brown, and so many others. An earlier synthesis of work to date, to which many of these folks contributed, was published as a special issue of Northeast Historical Archaeology in 2007; Steve Mrozowski was coeditor with me on that, and David Landon was the general editor. On Shelter Island, the project was pushed into being in part by the persistence and enthusiasm of Mac Griswold. She has been there throughout , has provided an encyclopedic knowledge of the documentary and architectural resources, and most recently has been a sympathetic and supportive voice as we both have brought our own writings on Sylvester Manor to fruition. Mac was instrumental in getting the astounding archive of historical materials out of the Manor’s leaky vault and into the protective care of the libraries of New York University. The people of the Shelter Island Historical Society, especially Louise Green and Beverlea Walz, contributed greatly to the project overall. Special thanks—the kind of which I can never give enough—go to the people of the Manor itself. Mrs. Alice Fiske, seemingly delighted when we showed up once a year to put new holes into her lawn right outside her front door, opened her home and heart to us. Gunnar Wissemann and Rose Wissemann have been constant presences and institutional memories of the Manor, even since Mrs. Fiske passed away and the place has begun, once again, to undergo rapid change. The family members of Alice and Andrew Fiske who have supported the project and continue to support the preservation and increasing openness of the estate deserve great thanks, especially [3.134.104.173] Project MUSE (2024-04-19 19:06 GMT) acknowledgments / xv the current proprietor...

Share