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Posts by admin

13 posts

A Marker for the Fort Gower Resolves

This archive preserves a richly illustrated presentation given by Dr. Jim Glanville to the Smyth County Genealogical Society. In it, Glanville re-centers the American Indian story of Southwest Virginia—especially Holstonia—through archeological, linguistic, and cultural evidence, asserting that the earliest identifiable peoples of the region were Yuchi-speaking tribes.

The Civil War Skirmish at Pearisburg

This archive preserves a richly illustrated presentation given by Dr. Jim Glanville to the Smyth County Genealogical Society. In it, Glanville re-centers the American Indian story of Southwest Virginia—especially Holstonia—through archeological, linguistic, and cultural evidence, asserting that the earliest identifiable peoples of the region were Yuchi-speaking tribes.

Glanville’s Holstonia: A Comprehensive Prehistory and Archaeological Synthesis

This archive preserves a richly illustrated presentation given by Dr. Jim Glanville to the Smyth County Genealogical Society. In it, Glanville re-centers the American Indian story of Southwest Virginia—especially Holstonia—through archeological, linguistic, and cultural evidence, asserting that the earliest identifiable peoples of the region were Yuchi-speaking tribes.

Chief Lee Vest Interview Series: Oral History of the Remnant Yuchi Nation

This archive preserves a richly illustrated presentation given by Dr. Jim Glanville to the Smyth County Genealogical Society. In it, Glanville re-centers the American Indian story of Southwest Virginia—especially Holstonia—through archeological, linguistic, and cultural evidence, asserting that the earliest identifiable peoples of the region were Yuchi-speaking tribes.

Yuchi Voices Beneath the Earth: The Archeology and Untold History of Southwest Virginia

This archive preserves a richly illustrated presentation given by Dr. Jim Glanville to the Smyth County Genealogical Society. In it, Glanville re-centers the American Indian story of Southwest Virginia—especially Holstonia—through archeological, linguistic, and cultural evidence, asserting that the earliest identifiable peoples of the region were Yuchi-speaking tribes.

William Preston & the Virginia Land Grab: Colonial Surveying & Legacy

This landmark article uncovers the pivotal role of surveyor William Preston in orchestrating one of the most expansive land claims in colonial Virginia. Dr. Glanville connects Preston’s surveying empire with the broader system of elite land speculation—linking genealogical power, economic control, and political privilege across Appalachia. From headrights to treasury rights, this archive lays bare the colonial land mechanisms that shaped modern Virginia.

Mississippians in Smyth and Washington VA Counties: The Evidence

This presentation offers compelling photographic and historical evidence that Mississippian-era American Indian cultures were deeply rooted in Smyth and Washington Counties, Virginia. Dr. Glanville, an independent scholar and adopted Yuchi Indian, assembled rare archival photographs and personal research to reveal a forgotten Indigenous presence—often overlooked by mainstream archeology.