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Gifts from the Celestial Kingdom - A Shipwrecked Cargo for Gold Rush California (Paperback, New edition)
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Gifts from the Celestial Kingdom - A Shipwrecked Cargo for Gold Rush California (Paperback, New edition)
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In a prior volume-The Voyage of the "Frolic": New England Merchants
and the Opium Trade (Stanford, 1997)-historical archaeologist
Thomas N. Laytontold the story of his excavation of an ancient Pomo
Indian village site in Northern California, where, to his surprise,
he recovered Chinese porcelain potsherds. Tracing those sherds to a
beach on the rugged Mendocino coast, he then followed them out to
the submerged remains of the Frolic, a sailing vessel wrecked in
the summer of 1850 with a rich cargo of Chinese goods bound for
Gold Rush San Francisco. In that volume, Layton used the vessel's
earlier role, transporting opium from Bombay to Canton, as a
vehicle to tell the story of American participation in the opium
trade. Although the Frolic's career as an opium clipper was ended
in 1849 by the introduction of steam vessels, the almost
simultaneous discovery of gold in California suddenly created
enough purchasing power to support direct commerce with China-and
thus a new career for the Frolic. In this sequel volume, Layton has
two objectives. First, he employs the Frolic's ill-fated first, and
final, cargo to San Francisco to tell the broader story of the
beginnings of direct commerce between China and California. Second,
he attempts to explore the potential of contextual archaeology-the
intellectual process of "transporting" artifacts from their resting
places back to the behavioral contexts in which they once
functioned. Layton accomplishes his objectives by describing the
full trajectory of the Frolic's final cargo from four different
perspectives: from that of John Hurd Everett, the California
merchant who assembled the cargo in China; then from the
perspectives of the sailors and Pomo Indians who pillaged the cargo
immediately after the wreck; then through the eyes of
twentieth-century sport divers who plundered it yet again; then,
finally, through Layton's scientific perspective as an
archaeologist. To augment his quest for context, he employs
carefully documented vignettes to fill the interstices between the
facts. Throughout, he discusses his research-replete with visits to
archives and antique shops-and in so doing introduces readers to
the practice of modern historical archaeology.
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