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Presented By: Kelsey Museum of Archaeology

Flash Talk | From the Motor City to the Mediterranean: Travels of a Truck, a Sedan, and an Inquisitive Photographer, 1924–1926

Lauren E. Talalay, Curator Emerita

A 1920s sedan loaded atop a makeshift ferry consisting of fishing boats connected by ropes and planks. To the left stands a worker from the University of Michigan expedition and three Tunisian men. A 1920s sedan loaded atop a makeshift ferry consisting of fishing boats connected by ropes and planks. To the left stands a worker from the University of Michigan expedition and three Tunisian men.
A 1920s sedan loaded atop a makeshift ferry consisting of fishing boats connected by ropes and planks. To the left stands a worker from the University of Michigan expedition and three Tunisian men.
From 1924 to 1926, teams from the University of Michigan ventured into the Mediterranean, Near East, and North Africa to undertake pioneering archaeological projects. Essential participants in these adventures were two Detroit-made “dig” cars—a Graham Brothers truck and a Dodge sedan, both donated by the Dodge Brothers Company. Each carried hundreds of pounds of equipment, personnel, and supplies, all while navigating miles of uncharted deserts, perilous mountain passes, and remote locations devoid of anything resembling a road.

The official photographer for the campaigns, as well as the man who drove and maintained the vehicles, was George R. Swain. A longtime high school teacher and principal, an inveterate explorer, and an avid writer, Swain was hired to document the archaeological discoveries. He became equally intrigued, however, by the modern world around him, writing insightful letters home to his family about the people and places he encountered and taking hundreds of ethnographic images. By framing the “seeable” (Swain’s photographs) with the “sayable” (his writings), this Flash Talk invites us to contemplate the poetry and poverty of life in distant and storied locations of the 1920s. Together, they explore places rarely seen by the outside world during a decade of seminal social change after the Great War.

Kelsey Museum Flash Talks are 15-minute Zoom lectures by Kelsey curators, staff members, researchers, graduate students, and guests talking about their recent research or current projects. Each presentation is followed by 15 minutes of Q&A. Flash Talks are free and open to all visitors.

To register for this Flash Talk, fill out the form at https://forms.gle/JqiTuZbMkq1fZb1U9. Zoom log-in information will be provided upon registration. Please sign up by 9:30 AM the day of the event to ensure you receive a confirmation email containing the access code.
A 1920s sedan loaded atop a makeshift ferry consisting of fishing boats connected by ropes and planks. To the left stands a worker from the University of Michigan expedition and three Tunisian men. A 1920s sedan loaded atop a makeshift ferry consisting of fishing boats connected by ropes and planks. To the left stands a worker from the University of Michigan expedition and three Tunisian men.
A 1920s sedan loaded atop a makeshift ferry consisting of fishing boats connected by ropes and planks. To the left stands a worker from the University of Michigan expedition and three Tunisian men.

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 Livestream
October 16, 2024 (Wednesday) 12:00pm
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