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Dive into the research topics where Steven D. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven D. Smith.


Historical Archaeology | 2003

GPS, GIS and the Civil War Battlefield Landscape: A South Carolina Low Country Example

Steven D. Smith; Christopher Ohm Clement; Stephen R. Wise

The results of Global Positioning System (GPS) mapping and Geographic Information System (GIS) analysis of Civil War earthworks in Beaufort and Jasper counties, South Carolina, are presented. Most earthworks were part of a defensive system built by Confederate forces over the course of the war to protect the Charleston to Savannah railroad, which itself was part of a vital supply line allowing rapid transport of men and materiel throughout the Confederacy. For most of the war, Union forces were deployed at Port Royal Sound less than 40 km from the railroad. The Confederates met this threat through fixed defenses at strategic locations combined with rapid movement of troops by rail. This strategy and these tactics are understandable within the geographic context provided by GPS/GIS technology and a military context provided by a detailed campaign history.


Journal of Field Archaeology | 2017

Ackia and Ogoula Tchetoka: Defining Two Battlefields of the 1736 French and Chickasaw War in Southeastern North America

Charles R. Cobb; Steven D. Smith; James B. Legg; Brad R. Lieb; Chester B. DePratter

ABSTRACT Investigations into the location of two battles related to the Chickasaw and French Wars of the 1700s in Mississippi, USA, show the value of a multi-pronged strategy for identifying and delineating military sites. We used metal detecting, shovel test pits, surface collections, local informant interviews, historical maps, LiDAR-based topography, and air photographs to locate Ogoula Tchetoka and Ackia, two Chickasaw towns where French forces were defeated in 1736. Despite the ambiguity introduced by overlapping domestic occupations and other complicating factors, the weight of our complementary approaches demonstrates that Ogoula Tchetoka and surrounding battle features have been modestly impacted by modern developments, whereas Ackia has been largely obliterated by the construction of a residential neighborhood. Our ability to identify major landscape features related to the military history of these sites contributes to our understanding of the tactics and consequences of warfare between European powers and Native Americans in the Colonial era.


The Journal of American History | 2000

The Southern Colonial Backcountry: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Frontier Communities

David Crass; Steven D. Smith; Martha Zierden; Richard D. Brooks


Archive | 1989

The Best Ever Occupied...: Archaeological Investigations of a Civil War Encampment on Folly Island, South Carolina

James B. Legg; Steven D. Smith


This Digital Resource was created from scans of the Print Resource | 2003

Made in the Timber: A Settlement History of the Fort Leonard Wood Region

Steven D. Smith


Archive | 2003

Archaeology, History, and Predictive Modeling: Research at Fort Polk, 1972-2002

David G. Anderson; Steven D. Smith


Remembrance Archaeology and Death | 1997

Folly Island: An African-American Union Brigade Cemetery in South Carolina

Steven D. Smith; Ted A. Rathbun


International Journal of Historical Archaeology | 2018

An Appraisal of the Indigenous Acquisition of Contact-Era European Metal Objects in Southeastern North America

James B. Legg; Dennis B. Blanton; Charles R. Cobb; Steven D. Smith; Brad R. Lieb; Edmond A. Boudreaux


Archive | 2011

Defining the Williamson's Plantation: Huck's Defeat Battlefield

Michael Scoggins; Steven D. Smith; Tamara S. Wilson


Archive | 2009

The Archaeology of the Camden Battlefield: History, Private Collections, and Field Investigations

Steven D. Smith; James B. Legg; Tamara S. Wilson

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James B. Legg

University of South Carolina

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Tamara S. Wilson

University of South Carolina

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Jonathan Leader

University of South Carolina

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Charles R. Cobb

Florida Museum of Natural History

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Michael Scoggins

University of South Carolina

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Chester B. DePratter

University of South Carolina

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Christopher F. Amer

University of South Carolina

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David Crass

University of Arkansas at Little Rock

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