Morris, Ann Axtell, 1900-1945

Source Citation

Ann Axtell Morris; archaeologist, author, and artist; Died at her home in Boulder, Colorado, on April 1, 1945; Graduated from Smith College; studied in France with the American School of Prehistoric Research; married Earl H. Morris in 1923; collaborated with him in his work for Carnegie Institution of Washington in the Maya and Southwestern fields; At Chichen Itza she excavated the Temple of the Xtoloc Centote and copied the many important wall-paintings in the Temple of the Warriors; joint author with Earl Morris and Jean Charlot of the report on Temple of Xtoloc Centote; Recorded and studied pictographs and cave-paintings in Southwest, amassing a large and valuable archive of photographs, drawings, and water-colors; Wrote two successful books, "Digging in the Southwest" and "Digging in Yucatan" which have done much to acquaint the general reader with the methods and aims of archaeology.

Citations

Date: 1900-02-09 (Birth) - 1945-04-01 (Death)

BiogHist

Relation: alumnusOrAlumnaOf American school of prehistoric research

Relation: alumnusOrAlumnaOf Smith College.

Place: Boulder

Source Citation

Ann Axtell Morris; associated with National Parks: Aztec Ruins National Monument, Canyon de Chelly National Monument, Mesa Verde National Park; Archaeologist in the American Southwest and Mesoamerica; place of birth: Omaha, Nebraska; date of birth: February 9, 1900; date of death: 1945; archaeologist, artist, and author; Graduated from Smith College; married Earl Halstead Morris in 1923; During the 1920’s and 1930’s, Ann and Earl worked together during extensive multi-year excavations throughout the American Southwest and in Mexico, including 5 seasons at Chichen Itza, Yucatan in partnership with the Carnegie Institution of Washington; Ann spent much of her time recording and painting architecture, petroglyphs and pictographs, landscapes, and expedition work; Many of her recording methods are still in use today by modern archaeologists, as they provide context within the sites history and represent the importance of color at a time when archaeologists were using black and white photography; wrote 2 books about her experiences as an archaeologist and the significance of her findings, “Digging the Yucatan” and “Digging in the Southwest;" two daughters, Elizabeth Ann and Sarah Lane; Elizabeth studied Anthropology at the University of Arizona, and following in her parents footsteps, became an Archaeologist and Professor at Colorado State University.

Citations

Date: 1900-02-09 (Birth) - 1945-04-01 (Death)

BiogHist

Place: Omaha

Unknown Source

Citations

Name Entry: Morris, Ann Axtell, 1900-1945

Found Data: [ { "contributor": "VIAF", "form": "authorizedForm" }, { "contributor": "LC", "form": "authorizedForm" } ]
Note: Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest