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Nails,tacks, and hinges: the archaeology of Camp Monticello,a World War II prisoner of war camp
Authors:Jodi A Barnes
Institution:1. Arkansas Archeological Survey, University of Arkansas, Monticello, AR, USAjabarnes@uark.edu
Abstract:ABSTRACT

“Provost Marshall General does not concur in the construction of outdoor dance floors at Monticello Internment Camp … Outdoor dance floors would be of no use at an internment camp,” the brigadier general responded to the chief of engineers in 1943. Camp Monticello, located in southeast Arkansas, was an Italian prisoner of war camp constructed according to a set of standardized building plans. Despite the brigadier general’s insistence that Camp Monticello “conform as far as possible to the standard plan,” archaeological research that combines archival research with a metal detector survey shows that the plans were influenced by local politics, access to materials, environmental conditions, and the everyday activities of the prisoners of war.
Keywords:World War II  historical archaeology  Arkansas  internment  prisoners of war
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