From 1929 to 1933, Kelly taught as an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the
University of Illinois. While there he also worked on the
Cahokia Mound site, the center of the Mississippian culture that influenced much of North America through the Ohio and Mississippi waterways and trade routes. He was let go from his position at the university due to the
Great Depression. Kelly was hired in 1933 by the
Smithsonian Institution as director of excavations at the
Macon Plateau Site near
Macon, Georgia, on the
Ocmulgee River. This was being explored as a part of the Federal relief archaeological program, which provided jobs to workers to help excavate the sites. The Smithsonian assigned
James A. Ford as an assistant to Kelly. While at Macon Plateau, Kelly was in charge of between 700 and 1000
Works Progress Administration laborers. On December 23, 1936, the
National Park Service formally designated the Macon Plateau site as
Ocmulgee National Monument. The same year Kelly was hired by the National Park Service as Superintendent of the Ocmulgee National Monument. (When the
National Register of Historic Places was later established in the 1970s, this monument was added to it.) In 1939 Kelly was promoted to chief archaeologist of the National Park Service, and served at NPS headquarters in Washington, D.C. In 1941 he was selected as superintendent of the
Custom House National Monument in
Salem, Massachusetts. In 1943 Kelly returned to his former job as superintendent at
Ocmulgee National Monument in Macon. In September 1947 he was invited by the
University of Georgia to start a Department of Anthropology there and started full-time at the university. Kelly served as founding Chairman of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Georgia from 1947 until 1963. He continued to serve as a professor there until 1969. Kelly’s archaeological work in Georgia include the
Etowah Mound and Village site,
Lamar Mounds, the
Lake Douglas Mound, the Oliver and Walter F. George River Basin surveys, the
Estatoe Mound, the
Chauga Mound, and the
Bell Field Mound, among others. Kelly and his wife, Rowana, had four daughters together: Sheila, Joanna, Patricia, and Cora Lewis. ==References==