Cornelia Horsford
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Cornelia Conway Felton Horsford (1861–1944) was an American
archaeologist Archaeology or archeology is the study of human activity through the recovery and analysis of material culture. The archaeological record consists of Artifact (archaeology), artifacts, architecture, biofact (archaeology), biofacts or ecofacts, ...
and writer whose work focused on the Norse settlement of
Vinland Vinland, Vineland, or Winland () was an area of coastal North America explored by Vikings. Leif Erikson landed there around 1000 AD, nearly five centuries before the voyages of Christopher Columbus and John Cabot. The name appears in the V ...
and other possible traces of early Norse exploration and settlement of North America, especially in Massachusetts. Her work was largely a development of earlier researches carried out by her father,
Eben Norton Horsford Eben Norton Horsford (July 27, 1818 – January 1, 1893) was an American scientist who taught agricultural chemistry in the Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard from 1847 to 1863. Later he was known for his reformulation of baking powder, his i ...
.


Biography

Cornelia "Nellie" Conway Felton Horsford was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on September 25, 1861. Her father was the American chemist and amateur archaeologist Eben Norton Horsford, and her mother was his second wife, Phoebe Dayton Gardiner (the sister of his first wife, Mary L'Hommedieu Gardiner). Horsford's home was the historic
Sylvester Manor Sylvester Manor is a historic manor on Shelter Island in Suffolk County, New York, USA. History The land, spanning 8,000 acres on Shelter Island, was acquired by English-born colonist Nathaniel Sylvester in the 17th century. Sylvester and his b ...
, and she was educated at private schools in Cambridge and Boston. Eben Horsford spent the fortune he had made by reformulating
baking powder Baking powder is a dry chemical leavening agent, a mixture of a carbonate or bicarbonate and a weak acid. The base and acid are prevented from reacting prematurely by the inclusion of a buffer such as cornstarch. Baking powder is used to increas ...
on attempting to prove that the Icelandic explorer
Leif Erikson Leif Erikson, also known as Leif the Lucky (), was a Norsemen, Norse explorer who is thought to have been the first European to set foot on continental Americas, America, approximately half a millennium before Christopher Columbus. According ...
had settled somewhere along the
Charles River The Charles River (Massachusett language, Massachusett: ), sometimes called the River Charles or simply the Charles, is an river in eastern Massachusetts. It flows northeast from Hopkinton, Massachusetts, Hopkinton to Boston along a highly me ...
. Before he died in 1893, he asked his daughter to carry on his work, and she continued excavations he had begun in an area of Cambridge known as Gerry's Landing, where she turned up the remains of a large house that she believed had belonged to Erikson's successor
Thorfinn Karlsefni Thorfinn Karlsefni Thórdarson was an Icelandic explorer. Around the year 1010, he followed Leif Eriksson's route to Vinland in a short-lived attempt to establish a permanent settlement there with his wife Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir and their f ...
. She gave her first presentation on this subject at a meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is a United States–based international nonprofit with the stated mission of promoting cooperation among scientists, defending scientific freedom, encouraging scientific responsib ...
(AAAS) in 1898, a year after she was made a Fellow of the society. She also spent time editing and publishing her father's writings, especially the short manuscript ''Leif's House in Vinland'', which was issued in book form paired with Horsford's own essay "Graves of the North Men". Horsford organized several overseas archaeological expeditions, including one to Iceland (1895) and several to the Britain (1895, 1896, and 1897). Later in her career, she turned to looking for ruins of Norse settlements in North America similar to those already known in Iceland and Greenland. Her publications on the subject of Norse explorers in North America ranged from two books to articles in nonspecialist magazines such as ''Popular Science Monthly'' and ''National Geographic''. Like other writers on the subject of Norse explorations in North America, she sometimes drew far-fetched conclusions from the scanty available evidence, concluding, for example, that the
Huron Huron may refer to: Native American ethnography * Huron people, who have been called Wyandotte, Wyandot, Wendat and Quendat * Huron language, an Iroquoian language * Huron-Wendat Nation, or Huron-Wendat First Nation, or Nation Huronne-Wendat * N ...
and
Iroquois The Iroquois ( ), also known as the Five Nations, and later as the Six Nations from 1722 onwards; alternatively referred to by the Endonym and exonym, endonym Haudenosaunee ( ; ) are an Iroquoian languages, Iroquoian-speaking Confederation#Ind ...
peoples were descended in part from Norse settlers. Due to a continuing lack of substantive artefacts, the theory that the Norse explorers had settled along the Charles River went from controversial to unsustainable in Horsford's own lifetime, and serious scholars interested in the subject looked elsewhere in North America for such traces. Horsford was a member of various antiquarian societies such as the Icelandic Antiquarian Society and the Colonial Dames of Massachusetts. She was active in the AAAS for two decades and served on its General Committee in 1905–07. Some of Horsford's correspondence is in the archives of the
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (; RPI) is a private university, private research university in Troy, New York, United States. It is the oldest technological university in the English-speaking world and the Western Hemisphere. It was establishe ...
Library and in the Franz Boas collection of the
American Philosophical Society The American Philosophical Society (APS) is an American scholarly organization and learned society founded in 1743 in Philadelphia that promotes knowledge in the humanities and natural sciences through research, professional meetings, publicat ...
in Philadelphia. Other papers, including artworks, are held by Fales Library and Special Collections at New York University.


Selected publications


Books

*''Dwellings of the Saga Time in Iceland, Greenland, and Vineland'' (Washington, DC: Judd & Detweiler Printers, 1898) *''An Inscribed Stone'' (Cambridge, MA: J. Wilson & Son, 1895)


Articles

*"Graves of the North Men" (1893) *"Vinland and its Ruins: Some of the Evidence that Northmen were in Massachusetts in Pre-Columbian Days" (1899)


Notes and references


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Horsford, Cornelia 1861 births 1941 deaths 19th-century American archaeologists 19th-century American women academics 19th-century American academics 20th-century American archaeologists Writers from Cambridge, Massachusetts American women archaeologists 19th-century American women writers 20th-century American women writers