| Sam
Dellinger
Raiders of the Lost Arkansas
Robert C. Mainfort Jr.
One
man’s quest to save Arkansas’s past
Samuel C. Dellinger (1892–1973) made it his life’s
work to ensure that future Arkansans would remember their
state’s pre-historic past. He gathered nearly eight
thousand prehistoric artifacts in order to keep them from
going to out-of-state museums—including Harvard’s
Peabody, the Field in Chicago, and the Smithsonian Institution—and
private collectors. This collection of prehistoric Native
American artifacts is now recognized as one of the finest
in the country.
Dellinger was professor and chairman of the zoology department
at the University of Arkansas and curator of the university
museum from 1925 to 1960. In 1928 Arkansas voters passed an
act that prohibited teaching evolution in the schools. He
was one of only five faculty members who signed a resolution
calling the antievolution bill unconstitutional. He continued
to teach his anthropology class, and in 1968 the U.S. Supreme
Court declared the law unconstitutional in the case of Epperson
v. Arkansas.
This book grew out of an exhibition about Dellinger’s
life and work that was curated by Bob Mainfort at the Old
State House Museum in Little Rock. The book includes a detailed
biography of Dellinger, as well as a discussion of his work,
an overview of major collecting efforts in Arkansas by out-of-state
institutions, and a history of the University of Arkansas
Museum. Lavishly illustrated with over two hundred images
of artifacts, this book will now permit archaeologists to
see some of the pieces Dellinger’s lifetime of work
saved and preserved.
Robert C, Mainfort Jr. is an archaeologist
with the Arkansas Archeological Survey and professor of anthropology
at the University of Arkansas. He is the author of a number
of books, including Arkansas Archaeology and Ancient
Earthen Enclosures of Eastern North America.
December
8 1/2 x 10 1/2, 229 pages, 219 photographs, index
$39.95 (s) cloth
ISBN 978-1-55728-886-8 | 1-55728-886-0 |