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The historical dendroarchaeology of the Green Hotel,Cave Spring,Georgia, U.S.A.
Institution:1. Department of Materials Engineering, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva 8410501, Israel;2. Faculty of Engineering, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv 6997801, Israel;3. Leon Recanati Institute for Maritime Studies, University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel;4. Israel Antiquities Authority, POB 180, Atlit 3030000, Israel;5. Zinman Institute of Archaeology, University of Haifa, POB 180 Atlit 3030000, Israel
Abstract:The lands including Cave Spring and most of northwest Georgia were held by the Cherokee until Cherokee removal in 1838. In 2010, a two-story pine structure that was encased inside the Green Hotel in downtown Cave Spring, Georgia, was revealed during renovation. Local Cave Spring historians insist the log structure was built by Avery Vann in 1810, making it a Cherokee structure. However, the Gold Lottery maps of 1832 show no structure on lot 871, which today contains the Green Hotel. A construction date also cannot be verified by historical documents, maps, or artifacts discovered around the Green Hotel. The purpose of this research was to determine the construction date of the Green Hotel log structure. Archaeological dating of the window glass thickness of the hotel gave dates of 1810 or 1823. However, the dendroarchaeological dating of the wood indicates cutting dates during the late spring/early summer of 1839. This would indicate that the log structure inside the Green Hotel was not built by Avery Vann or any Cherokee, but by later Euro-American settlers.
Keywords:Dendroarchaeology  Cave Spring  Cherokee  Green Hotel  Avery Vann
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