
R. Grant Gilmore III
Director, Historic Preservation and Community Planning Program | Addlestone Chair in Historic Preservation
During my twenty-five years of professional archaeological teaching and excavation experience I have worked in the United States, United Kingdom and sites across the Caribbean dating from the present to the Medieval (in Europe) and Contact Period (in the Americas). I specialize in 17th- and 18th-century archaeology and heritage management. With I co-founded and currently direct our urban design graduate program, .
After completing my B.A. and M.A. at the I worked for several years with the . During this period I took a Comparative Colonial Archaeology Class taught by , and that expanded my research vision well beyond to include much of the . My fieldwork with Prof. Norman Barka introduced me to the island of . The island became the focus of my doctoral research at the where I examined the African Diaspora in the Atlantic World. The IoA is considered the top archaeology department in the United Kingdom.
In addition to co-editing the with , I am the author of several book chapters, articles and monographs in professional and public journals and magazines. I established (in 2004) and Directed the until I left St Eustatius in 2011. At SECAR, I taught hundreds of professional, student and avocational volunteers in courses on artifacts, excavation techniques and historical archaeology and building recording and preservation. Through my appointment in the , I taught graduate courses in as well as undergraduates in the field.
Education
PhD University College London, Institute of Archaeology
M.A. College of William and Mary in Virginia, Anthropology/Historic Archaeology
B.A. College of William and Mary in Virginia, History and Government
International Fellow at Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies at Monticello
Research Interests
My research interests include slavery and its impacts on societies, the origins of Capitalism within colonial economies, religious sites, vernacular architecture, heritage management, historic preservation and public archaeology.
- Committee for the Study of Slavery in ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø
- Committee for Commemoration and Landscapes
- Development Chair and Board of Trustees
- US national committee for UNESCO’s International Committee on Monuments and Sites
- Program Committee, International African American Museum
- Expert Member of ICOMOS International Scientific Committee for Archaeological Heritage Management (ICAHM)
- Center for Historic Landscapes at the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø.
Courses Taught
- Introduction to Historic Preservation
- Researching Historic Properties
- How Its Made
- Vernacular Architecture and Material Culture
- History of American Interiors
- Senior Seminar
- Study Abroad Programs in Scotland, England, Japan and Cuba.
Publications
Selected Publications
Gilmore, R. G. (2019) “The Congo Free Black Village and Burial Ground on St Eustatius” In T. Ahlman (Ed.) . Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.
Alhman, T., R. G. Gilmore, J. Ferguson, B. Heath, and G. Schroedl (2019) “Examining inter- and intra- island Afro-Caribbean ware trade networks in the Lesser Antilles” In T. Ahlman (Ed.) .
Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.
Gilmore, R. G. with B. Reid (Eds.) (2014). . Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
Gilmore, R. G. and L. Nelson (2015). “The Dutch West Indies Company Headquarters on St Eustatius”. In C. Hofman and J. Haviser (Eds.) In , Sidestone Press: Oxford.
Gilmore, R. G. (2013). “St. Eustatius--The Nexus for Colonial Caribbean Capitalism”. In The inaugural volume for series Multidisciplinary Perspectives in Archaeological Heritage Management, New York: Springerlink for ICOMOS and ICAHM.