Difference between revisions of "Samuel Kirkland Lothrop"

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'''Samuel Kirkland Lothrop'''
 
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Revision as of 14:41, 20 January 2021

Samuel Kirkland Lothrop

Samuel Kirkland Lothrop
PhD
Lothrop, Samuel Kirkland.jpg
Born 1892
Died 1965
Residence Peabody Museum, Cambridge, Mass., USA
114 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. USA [1921]
Broadway at 155th Street, New York, USA [1931]
1061 Madison Avenue, New York, USA [1933]
Occupation archaeologist
anthropologist
museum work
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
left 1965 deceased*
elected_AI 1921.01.11
societies American Society for American Archaeology




Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1920.12.14 proposed by T.A. Joyce, seconded by H.J.E. Peake
1933.12.12 The following were nominated as Honorary Fellows: Dr Laufer, Dr Lowie, Dr Krause, Prof. Thomas Thomsen, Dr Mollison, Prof. Menghin, Dr Akiro Matsumura, Mr S. Lothrop.
1960 HML Early migration to central and south America Delivered 25th Nov. at Royal Society

1967.10 death noted, says in 1962*

Notes From Elsewhere

Samuel Kirkland Lothrop (1892–1965) was an archaeologist and anthropologist who specialized in Central and South American Studies. His work, Pottery of Costa Rica and Nicaragua (2 vols., 1926), based on his doctoral dissertation in anthropology at Harvard University, is regarded as a pioneering study. Lothrop was a longtime research associate of Harvard's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology and made many contributions based on fieldwork, laboratory analysis, and evaluations of private and public collections that focused on Central and South America. He is known for archaeological excavations in Argentina as well as investigations of the archaeological contexts for the stone spheres of Costa Rica. Lothrop is also known for his research on goldwork and other artifacts from Costa Rica, the Veraguas Province of Panama, and the Sacred Cenote at Chichen Itza, Yucatán, Mexico
Lothrop was descendent of his namesake, prominent Unitarian minister Samuel Kirkland Lothrop.[2] He was born in Milton, Massachusetts on July 6, 1892 to William and Alice Lothrop. His childhood was split between Massachusetts and Puerto Rico. Lothrop’s interest in Latin America may have been sparked in his childhood as a result of his having spent time in Puerto Rico, where his father was a banker with interests in the sugarcane industry
Lothrop began his education at Groton School, a private boarding school in Massachusetts. He entered Harvard UNiversity in 1911, where he completed his undergraduate studies in 1915. The year before he graduated he married Rachel Warren of Boston. After completing his undergraduate studies he began graduate school at Harvard, focusing on anthropology and archaeology.[1] He traveled extensively throughout Central America as a research associate of the Peabody Museum, excavating various areas and studying collections. His travels and excavations were interrupted by the eruption of World War I, where he served in military intelligence.[4] After the war, he returned to his graduate work, eventually earning his Ph.D. with a doctoral dissertation, a version of which was published in 1926 as Pottery of Costa Rica and Nicaragua
Lothrop served was engaged in espionage for the U.S. prior to and during World War I and for the Office of Strategic Services prior to and during World War II. Using anthropologists for gathering intelligence was a common practice of the time. Given their ability to observe cultural practices as well as those useful to strategies of war, not to mention the fact that they could use their careers as a cover for their intelligence gathering, anthropologists are ideal choices for spies.[5] During World War II, he was not excavating once again, because of the time spent working for the military. His position in the military did however give him the opportunity to travel while compositing notes on various sites
After completing his doctorate studies, Lothrop worked field excavations in the Yucatan and Guatemala under the employment of the Carnegie Institution’s Historical Division.[6] His research resulted in the 1924 publishing of the monograph of his mapping of the Mayan Ruin of Tulum. From 1924 until the end of the stock market crash in 1929 Samuel Kirkland Lothrop was employed by the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. It was during 1929 also that he married his second wife, Eleanor Bachman of Philadelphia. His work while he was on staff at the museum was also focused on Latin America and it was during this time that he established a relationship with Fernando Marquez Miranda. It was through this relationship that Lothrop was one of the few foreigners allowed to conduct excavations in Argentine Territory
In the 1930s after the extinguishing of the museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, Lothrop returned to the Peabody Museum staff as field director of the Sitio Conte in Central Panama.[1] Before Lothrop returned to the staff, the Peabody museum purchased a collection of jewelry excavated from a burial ground. After obtaining permission from the government and the landowner the museum excavated the burial grounds during the dry seasons from 1930-1933
In 1943 through a publication of American Antiquity by Doris Stone, Lothrop first encountered the mysterious stone spheres. In 1948 he and his wife met up with Doris Stone and she collaborated with them, setting them up with a place to excavate. The stone spheres are a topic of discussion, concerning how these objects were formed and by whom. Lothrop’s research resulted in the theory that the balls were placed in alignments significant astronomically.[8] During his research Lothrop recorded 186 balls as reported in his 1963 publication, Archaeology of the Diquís Delta.[9] Lothrop determined that the spheres were formed over many centuries, suggesting a cultural practice and continuity over and extended period of time. His conclusions were based on analyzing the pottery types
Samuel Kirkland Lothrop continued to be a contributor to the field up until his death in 1965. As a result of his numerous publications and contributions to the field he was the recipient of numerous honors, medals, and awards. Lothrop was cited by the American Society for American Archaeology in 1960. He also received the Loubat Prize awarded by Columbia University. The Alfred Kidder Vincent Medal given by the Society of American Archaeology. The Royal Anthropological Institute awarded Lothrop the Huxley Memorial Medal


Publications

External Publications

Archaeology of southern Veraguas, Panama, 1950; Atitlan, 1933, etc.

House Publications

Sculptured Fragments from Palenque; BY S. K. Lothrop. JRAI Vol. 59 (Jan. - Jun., 1929)

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material

Peabody: Among the prints of people and events at the museum are portraits of the founder, George Peabody, and former directors, trustees, anthropology faculty members, and benefactors including Ernest Hooton, Roland P. Dixon, Augustus Hemenway, Asa Gray, Samuel K. Lothrop, and Donald C. Scott.