Ouachita Chapter to celebrate Arkansas Archeology Month
March is Arkansas Archeology Month, and there are events across the state to encourage public interest in Arkansas’ long archeological record and appreciation for historic preservation, according to a news release from the Ouachita Chapter of the Arkansas Archeological Society.
The Ouachita Chapter will celebrate archeology with a special presentation by Beverly Watkins on “Historic Salt Works in Arkansas, 1819-1865” at its next meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the board room of the Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences, and the Arts, 200 Whittington. The event is free and open to the public.
“This talk takes a whirlwind tour of historic salt works, some known and some not yet located. It also looks in detail at several small commercial salt works that operated in Arkansas to meet the needs of nearby communities,” the release said.
Watkins earned a Bachelor of Music Education from Henderson State College in 1968 and went on to earn a Master of Arts in 1975 and a Ph.D. in 1985, both in American History and both from Auburn University.
She worked for the Arkansas Archeological Survey for 14 years as a volunteer, as the Station assistant/lab manager at the Southern Arkansas University research station, and as the historian for the Sponsored Research Program in Fayetteville. She also worked as archivist for the National Archives Great Lakes Region in Chicago.
Watkins finished her working life as a United Methodist minister, having received a Masters of Divinity in 2000 from Memphis Theological Seminary. Now retired, she is pursuing several historic research projects just for fun, including the salt works project.
Ouachita Chapter members installed a temporary exhibit at Mid-America Science Museum, 500 Mid America Blvd., for the month of March. It features artifacts from the Garland County area and information about local history and the science of archeology, the release said.