19th century from the northeast ca. 1890. Suffering from illness and depression after losing his leadership position, Cushing published a few partial papers before his sudden death in 1900. His report manuscripts were unpublished. After Cushing's death, the Hodges retained his manuscripts. Several members of the expedition team contributed to
Hemenway Expedition Records, 1886–1914, which was published in 1886. Bandelier published
Copies Made Under A.F. Bandelier, a Member of the Hemenway Expedition, of Ancient Documents Existing in Mexico, Santa Fè, New Mexico, and Other Places in the Southwestern U.S., and
Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition: Contributions to the History of the Southwestern Portion of the United States (1890). Baxter's work,
The Old New world: An account of the explorations of the Hemenway southwestern archæological expedition in 1887–88, under the direction of Frank Hamilton Cushing, was published in 1883. while Fewkess
Note Book on Hemenway Expedition was published in 1891. In 1893, Matthews, Wortman, and
John Shaw Billings published
The Human Bones of the Hemenway Collection in the United States Army Medical Museum at Washington (1893). In 1895, the Hemenway family donated a box containing records and the expedition's artifacts to Harvard’s
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.
20th century The artifacts box remained unopened at the Peabody until the 1930s, when
Alfred Tozzer asked a student,
Emil Haury, to do his dissertation on the contents. Haury’s report, published in 1945, was a
monograph on
La Pueblo de Los Muertos. It provided insight into the ancestral history of the Zuni and the development of the prehistoric
Hohokam culture. Haury did not have access to the expedition's reports and manuscripts housed at the
Southwest Museum in
Los Angeles, and the
Huntington Free Library in
New York City. Haury's monograph included a Foreword by Hodge. He surprisingly belittled the work of the expedition and demonstrated a lack of gratitude to his brother-in-law's memory. By taking Hodge on the expedition, Cushing had enabled him to gain field experience that later helped Hodge obtain a key position in 1905 at the Bureau of American Ethnology (now part of the Smithsonian Institution). The full expedition report was not published for more than 100 years. Cushing's archival records, in the form of partial reports, diaries and field notes, had to be transcribed, researched, and annotated. Between 1991 and 2001, Hinsley, a cultural historian, and Wilcox, an archaeologist, examined the Hemenway records. They published their reports of the expedition in three volumes. ==References==