Clarence Bloomfield Moore (January 14, 1852 – March 24, 1936), more commonly known as C.B. Moore, was an American archaeologist and writer. He studied and excavated Native American sites in the Southeastern United States.
Clarence Bloomfield Moore | |
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Born | Clarence Bloomfield Moore January 14, 1852 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Died | March 14, 1936 St. Petersburg, Florida, U.S. | (aged 84)
Education | Harvard University |
Occupation | Archaeologist |
Early life and education
editClarence Bloomfield Moore was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on January 14, 1852.[1] His mother Clara Jessup Moore (1824-1899) was an American philanthropist and writer[2] and his father Bloomfield Haines Moore (1819–1878) was a businessman who founded the Jessup & Moore Paper Company in Wilmington, Delaware.[3][4] Moore was a middle child and only son for Clara and Bloomfield, his sisters names were Ella Carlton Moore and Lilian Augusta Stuart Moore. Furthermore, Moore remained unmarried and had no children.[5]
After earning his degree in Bachelor of Arts at Harvard University in 1873, Moore traveled to Europe and Central America; he traveled to Peru, crossed the Andes, and went down the Amazon River in 1876, and made a trip around the world, particularly in Asia in 1878–79, before returning home to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania when his father died in 1878 and became president of the Jessup & Moore Paper Company.[6]
Early career
editAs the president of Jessup & Moore Paper Company, Moore ran the company for the next ten years accumulating massive wealth for the majority of the 1880s. However, Moore was eager to travel and explore in the field of archaeology and turned over company management to others.[7] Between the 1880s and 1890s, Moore's vision in both eyes would begin to deteriorate after an injury during a game of tennis in his left eye, and his right eye naturally but slowly experienced the loss of vision, limiting Moore to travel, write, and engage in photography.
Over the next twenty years (1890s-1910s), Moore began a long journey of excavating in many Native archeological sites, which amounted to eight hundred and fifty sites in America, in nearly all Southern states; Florida, Georgia, Arkansas, Missouri, and Louisiana.[8][9]From his family fortune and sponsorship from Academy of Natural Sciences, Moore would travel to these sites with his crew mostly by water, in his steamboat named Gopher of Philadelphia.[8] or through the boat, The Alligator.[10] Moore documented his field excavations and travels from 1892 to 1918; there are forty-five notebooks with some located at Cornell University Library.[11] Nineteen of his publications were published and sponsored by the Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.[8]
Travel to Florida and Georgia coasts
editFrom 1891 to 1895, Moore would set up his homebase at Palatka, Florida and start his excavations of Native shell mounds at St. Johns and Ocklawaha River.[10] Between 1896 to 1897, Moore traveled to Ossabaw Island, Georgia where he "dug at nine aboriginal burial mounds and several “shell middens” (i.e. heaps of food remains [mostly oyster shell], pottery, and other household trash)."[11]
Mounds were most often destroyed, as was the custom in early archaeology. Moore frequently evaded paying the owners of the land on which the mounds were located by advertising himself as a leveler of mounds that would free the site to be use for agricultural purpose. [citation needed]
Legacy and death
editArtifacts from the mounds were held as a collection to the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia until George Gustav Heye, the founder of Museum of American Indian and collector of Native American artifacts, transferred Moore's collection, which later became part of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.[8]
Moore was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1895.[12] However, he frequently communicated through correspondence as it was difficult for Moore to attend the meetings due to long distance.[6] Additionally, Moore was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1897.[13]
On March 24, 1936, in St. Petersburg, Florida, Moore died at the age of seventy-seven after enduring many years of chronic illness.[8]
The Clarence B. Moore House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.[14]
In 1990, the Lower Mississippi Valley Survey of Harvard University, in conjunction with the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, created the C.B. Moore Award for Excellence in Southeastern Archaeology by a Young Scholar.[15] However, this award was renamed in October of 2021 to the "SEAC Rising Scholar Award" as a recognition the problematic nature of Moore's work on burial mounds and his treatment of American Indian ancestor's remains.[15]
Original publications
edit- Certain Aboriginal Mounds of the Coast of South Carolina, 1898.
- Certain Aboriginal Mounds of the Georgia Coast, 1903.
- Antiquities of the Ouachita Valley, 1909.
- Antiquities of the St. Francis, White, and Black Rivers, Arkansas, 1910.
- Sheet-copper from the Mounds is Not Necessarily of European Origin, 1903.
- Aboriginal Urn-burial in the United States, 1904.
- A Burial Mound of Florida, 1892.
Publication collections
edit- The East Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Jeffrey Mitchem, ed. University of Alabama Press, 1999.
- The Georgia and South Carolina Coastal Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Lewis Larson, ed. University of Alabama Press, 1998.
- The Louisiana and Arkansas Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Richard Weinstein, David H. Kelley, and Joe W Saunders, ed. University of Alabama Press, 2004.
- The Lower Mississippi Valley Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Dan Morse and Phyllis Morse, ed. University of Alabama Press, 1998.
- The Moundville Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Vernon Knight, ed. University of Alabama Press, 1996.
- The Northwest Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. David S. Brose and Nancy Marie White, ed. University of Alabama Press, 1999
- The Southern and Central Alabama Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Craig Sheldon, Jr, ed. University of Alabama Press, 2001.
- The Tennessee, Green, and Lower Ohio River Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Richard Polhemus, ed. University of Alabama Press, 2002.
- West and Central Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. Jeffrey Mitchem, ed. University of Alabama Press, 1999.
Related archival collections
editReference
edit- ^ "Clarence Bloomfield Moore (1852–1936)". Encyclopedia of Arkansas.
- ^ Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). A woman of the century; fourteen hundred-seventy biographical sketches accompanied by portraits of leading American women in all walks of life. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Buffalo, N.Y., Moulton.
- ^ "Jessup & Moore". www.holtermann.se.
- ^ "Jessup & Moore". Hagley. September 27, 2017.
- ^ "Clara's and Bloomfield's children". www.holtermann.se.
- ^ a b Brigham, Clarence Saunders (April 1936). "Clarence Bloomfield Moore Obituary" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society. 46: 13–14.
- ^ The Jackson County Historical Association (January 2018). "Clarence Bloomfield Moore and The Gopher in Jackson County" (PDF). The Jackson County Chronicles. pp. 6–8.
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: CS1 maint: year (link) - ^ a b c d e Cooper, Steven R. (2013). "Clarence Bloomfield Moore A Man with a Lust for Exploration, Artifacts and a Legacy". Central States Archaeological Journal. 60 (3): 118–125. ISSN 0008-9559.
- ^ "Philadelphia and the Development of Americanist Archaeology". University of Alabama Press.
- ^ a b Cerrato, C. L. 1996 C. B. Moore on the Ocklawaha River: No Place for a Gopher. Florida Anthropologist 49:262-266.
- ^ a b Pearson, Charles E. n.d. “Clarence Bloomfield Moore’s Archaeological Expedition on Ossabaw Island, Georgia, 1896-1897.”
- ^ American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
- ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ a b "SEAC Rising Scholar Award – Southeastern Archaeological Conference".