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When Harold F. Pape moved to Gregory, Texas, in 1927, he quickly
became fascinated by the wealth of Native American artifacts along
the nearby shoreline of Corpus Christi Bay and what is now called
Port Bay, a southern arm of the larger Copano Bay. A lifelong
natural history enthusiast and collector, Pape met and married
Lucile H. Tunnell, a widow with three young sons. Before long, John
W. Tunnell, Lucile's oldest son, was accompanying Pape on his field
studies in surrounding areas and the wider Texas Coastal Bend.
Working in the days before much of the development that now covers
the region, Pape and Tunnell studied more than two hundred sites
throughout the Coastal Bend, making meticulous logs, maps, and
notes of their discoveries. John W. (Wes) Tunnell Jr. and Jace
Tunnell have organized and documented their family collection and
present it, along with brief biographies of the two collectors, as
a survey of the state of knowledge in the late 1920s and 1930s, as
well as a tribute to these two important early researchers and
their body of work.
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