Juniata College Archaeology

Juniata College Archaeology This page showcases Juniata College courses and projects that relate to archaeology and historic preservation.

Follow to keep up with the projects of the Cultural Resource Institute at Juniata College!

Truth.
05/29/2026

Truth.

America’s national parks protect more than landscapes; they also preserve the stories, cultures, and physical evidence of the people who came before us.

Archeologists in the National Park Service help safeguard prehistoric and historic sites, guide responsible excavation, support accurate interpretation for visitors, and advise partner agencies on how to avoid damage to important cultural resources during construction and development projects.

But many of these essential staff have been pushed out as the National Park Service’s permanent workforce continues to shrink.

That loss weakens the Park Service’s ability to protect archeological and historical resources and to help visitors understand why these places matter.

When parks lose archeologists, they lose expertise that cannot easily be replaced.

Tell Congress to stop further National Park Service staffing cuts and protect the rangers who help preserve our shared history. 👉 https://mstr.app/9494f0ed-d8e6-4b41-93fe-e32e3fc5679c

Artwork by Madigan Creative Co.

This past week, Juniata College Archaeology students (present and past) assisted with Pennsylvania’s inaugural statewide...
05/24/2026

This past week, Juniata College Archaeology students (present and past) assisted with Pennsylvania’s inaugural statewide training program sponsored by the Pennsylvania Archaeological Council and the Society for Pennsylvania Archaeology!

05/16/2026

Carlisle once hosted a complex of workshops and storehouses for the Revolutionary War effort.

04/17/2026

📍 Save the Date: Friday, April 17 @ Noon! 🕛

Discover the hidden history of Fort Ligonier with Dr. Jonathan Burns of Juniata College. From artifacts to architecture, come hear about the latest discoveries at this historic landmark.

See you at the Huntingdon County Library! 📚✨

04/12/2026
That was fun!
04/08/2026

That was fun!

02/05/2026

Also now erased at the President's House/Slavery Memorial is the interpretative signage documenting the public’s successful insistence on, and involvement with, the 2007 excavation. That public involvement was a unique exploration in community history and national heritage–and important, it exemplified and demonstrated the importance of engaged citizenship in our Democracy.

Specifically, ATAC and other community stakeholders used their freedom of assembly, freedom of the press, and freedom of speech rights to protest their suppressed history and employed their rights of the freedom to petition to direct action by their elected officials. By demanding a say in what was to be done at the site, these activists deployed rights codified in the Constitution, a document debated and signed in nearby Independence Hall, and its amendments—rights denied to their metaphorical, and in many cases, actual ancestors. In doing so, these engaged citizens moved the U.S. government and helped transform the nation’s historical narrative–the history we tell ourselves about ourselves.

With the removal of the signage referencing the public involvement, visitors are no longer aware that they are standing in the exact spot where the first electorate would come to see their first elected president, and that they are only standing at this spot today because a concerned group of citizens used their rights to make the government address the fact that the national story presented at Independence Park left their history out.

The President’s House Site is proving to be as important for racial negotiations about contemporary America as it is about the past. The excavations would not have occurred if it weren’t for the public outcry, and the public’s response to the resulting archeological findings, in turn, reshaped the proposed design of the commemoration that ultimately rose on the site to include the house ruins. Now, both the site’s 1790’s history, and its role in shaping 21st century American history faces erasure through Trump’s ‘Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History’ order-- which echos Project 2025’s goals of promoting a celebratory national narrative that erases uncomfortable historical truths.

The connection between past and present resonates unusually strongly at the President’s House Site because of its location within Independence National Historical Park, a place that functions as a veritable shrine to American democracy. the President’s House Site clearly demonstrates the vital role that archeology, Independence Park, and the City of Philadelphia have to play in exploring the nation’s past racial landscape and addressing race and heritage concerns in contemporary America. Community actions today again exemplify and demonstrate the importance of engaged citizenship in our Democracy.

Photo: 2007 Closing ceremony at the end of the excavation.

The archaeological report prepared for the National Park Service and The City of Philadelphia includes the public engagement at the site as a topic. The report is available to download or read for FREE on the Philadelphia Archaeological Forum’s Webpage at https://bit.ly/PresidentsHouseArcheologyReportPAF

Phil.
02/02/2026

Phil.

Punxsutawney Phil is part of a tradition with roots that extend back thousands of years

Building construction on campus;)
02/01/2026

Building construction on campus;)

Library under construction on the campus of Juniata College in Huntingdon in 1907.

This is how you learn...
01/31/2026

This is how you learn...

🧱 Workshop Alert! 🧱

Learn by doing—on a real historic barn foundation. Join Master Craftsman David Gibney for a two-day, hands-on masonry repointing workshop designed for beginners and emerging tradespeople alike. Limited to just 15 participants, this is an opportunity to gain practical skills, master traditional techniques, and earn apprenticeship credit.

Dates: April 10-11, 2026

Time: 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM each day

Location: 6129 Butterfly Lane, Frederick, MD 21703

Sign up at the link in bio.

Address

1700 Moore Street
Huntingdon, PA
16652

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Juniata College Archaeology posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The University

Send a message to Juniata College Archaeology:

Share