Research Notes
Research Notes
Research Notes
Ernest J. H. Mackay
and the Penn Museum
I
by gregory l.
n 2008, i published an article the Field Director.
in Expedition on Penn’s first This is a well known
possehl
professor of Sanskrit, W. story for those of
Norman Brown (1892–1975), us interested in the
and his engagement with history of archaeol-
the archaeology of ancient India. ogy, especially in the
Brown was an institution builder Subcontinent.
and had founded the School of Indic Mackay is best
and Iranian Studies. He wanted to known for his exca-
establish an American School of vations at Mohenjo-
Ernest J. H. Mackay
Archaeology in British India, formed along the lines of those daro, the great Harappan city
in Rome and Athens. Brown also wanted to begin a pro- of burnt brick, occupied between
gram of excavation in India, but Indian law did not permit ca. 2500 and 1900 BC in the midst of the
foreign archaeological mis- Indus Valley of Pakistan. In 1936–37, Mackay
sions to work there. When published two volumes describing his excavations. Brown had
the Ancient Monuments visited Mohenjo-daro in 1928 and met Mackay there, so they
Preservation Act of 1904 were known to one another prior to the Chanhu-daro project.
was amended in 1932 to Brown was a close colleague of Horace H. F. Jayne, Director
allow “outsiders” to exca- of the Penn Museum during the Great Depression. When I was
vate, Brown put in an appli- researching the story of the Chanhu-daro excavations, I came
cation, which was eventually across correspondence between Jayne and Mackay written as
approved. Brown selected early as 1930. Jayne invoked Brown’s name and expressed a
the Harappan site of desire, on the part of the Museum, to conduct archaeologi-
Chanhu-daro as the cal excavations in British India and sought Mackay’s advice.
place to work and In this exchange, Mackay was a warm, informative partner.
hired Ernest J. He noted that the antiquities laws of India would not permit
H. Mackay as foreign excavation, but suggested that this might change in the
near future, as it actually did.
Alessandro Pezzati, the Museum’s Archivist, knew that
I was interested in Brown, Mackay, and Chanhu-daro.
Sometime back he brought my attention to the fact that
Gregory L. Possehl
www.penn.museum/expedition 41
necessary for him to remain on the works as he was rendering is also stated by Miss Woodley to have formed the impression
no useful service. He was merely hindering and not forwarding that I wish to usurp his authority and that I am keeping things
the work and I do not feel that the Expedition should go on secret from him.” This was clearly not a happy threesome.
spending this amount of money for no return. I reminded Mackay, at Miss Woodley’s suggestion, offered Gordon his
him that he had already been notified that his services were resignation, and Mackay’s time as a member of the Museum’s
no longer necessary in February
and thus the three months
notice usual in the Museum
would expire at the end of May.”
“Since his arrival here he
has supervised the making by
Salameh of a few photographs
which are not up to standard,
also made out cards with half the
necessary information omitted.
Other than this he simply stands
with a cane and a pipe looking at
the men working. He has asked
for no advice as to the work nor
made any report of what he
does. If more ample notes have
been made he has never handed
them into the office.”
Given Mackay’s later accomplishments, especially at
Kish, Mohenjo-daro, and Chanhu-daro, Fisher’s remarks
are odd, quite out of sync. Mackay was a man of great
energy who seems to have loved his work. While he
probably made his share of small mistakes, his reports on
his excavations do not emerge from sloppy field work,
nor are they noted for errors and inaccuracies. The reso-
lution of Fisher’s impressions of Mackay’s work with
Mackay’s later record may lie elsewhere. And there is a
clue in Mackay’s letter to Gordon.
Mackay felt that Miss Woodley had come between
him and Dr. Fisher and that he “…discusses the mat-
ter with Miss Woodley in my absence. She advises him
and then myself on every point…” The situation was
worsened by the fact that Mackay made the mistake
of misreading a scale and Miss Woodley told him that
this was something “…I should have naturally discov-
ered myself…” There is more, but I simply cannot fail
to mention that Mackay told Gordon that “Dr. Fisher
Pe nn Mus e um
Top, Dr. Clarence S. Fisher and a workman make a final clearing of a grave and pick up the beads of a necklace in their original order. Dendera, Egypt,
1916. UPM Image #38942 Bottom, portrait of Clarence Stanley Fisher (1876–1941), ca. 1920s–1930s. Photograph by Phillips, 1507 Walnut Street,
Philadelphia. UPM Image #140198
w w w . p e n n . m u s e u m / e x p e d it i o n 43