The Middle Tennessee State
University
First Presbyterian Church
Archaeological
Project
June 2-July 3, 2003

The 2003 First Presbyterian Church Archaeological Project
was a cooperative archaeological research project jointly sponsored by
the
Department of Sociology and
Anthropology at Middle Tennessee State University, the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage
Area, and the
City of
Murfreesboro, Department of Parks and Recreation. The field project
began on June 2 and was completed on July 2, 2003.
This web page is temporily off-line. Please check back for
updates.
An on-line exhibit catalog of the temporary exhibit "Two Centuries of
Hallowed
Ground: The Story of Murfreesborough as Told in the Old City
Cemetery" is also available [Temporarily off-line].
The primary objectives of the project were:
- To locate and investigate the archaeological remains of the original First Presbyterian Church (ca. A.D. 1820-1865), a building of great significance in the history of Murfreesboro, Rutherford County, and the State of Tennessee;
- To provide university students with training in the methods and techniques of professional field and laboratory archaeology;
- Through public tours, to highlight the significance of the Old City Cemetery and First Presbyterian Church site in local, state, and national history;
- To emphasize to the interested public the value of archaeological research on relatively recent historical sites;
- To gather sufficient detailed information to nominate this city-owned property to the National Register of Historic Places; and
- To assist the city in developing interpretive signage and exhibits related to the property.