Category Archives: Mount St. Mary’s University

Dinosaurs in Emmitsburg

Dinosaurs began to be recognized by paleontologists as the creatures that they were in the early 1800s.  In 1895, the Provincial Annals included a note about the local community and the scientific field of paleontology: 

“These few days past the men have been removing two large slabs from Avenue side walk.  One is destined for the Johns Hopkins’s University, the other for our own cabinet.  Prof. Mitchell of the Mountain [Mount St. Mary’s University] is the one who is securing these singular geological specimens.  They have long been objects of the Sisters’ curiosity & comment as they promenade up and down the Avenue in summer evening recreation.  They bear the impression of many feet of different kinds & sizes, pre-historic creatures that lived O many & many age ago!  The Professor’s interest in our quarry from where these slabs were taken led him.  His opinion is that all this land round about ages & ages ago formed an estuary, the mountains were its shores.”

The slabs documented by Dr. James A. Mitchell were the first dinosaur prints from Maryland to be announced in a scientific publication.

In the spirit of this time period, the cabinet referred to was a “cabinet of curiosities,” sort of a predecessor to a modern-day museum exhibit.  It was housed in the Burlando Building of St. Joseph’s Academy, the school thatthe Daughters operated.  Later, it was on display, in a deep historical anachronism, in the Stone House on campus where the community had begun in 1809. 

Dr. Mitchell made sketches of the slabs.  Then the slabs went missing.

In 1990, a group of maintenance workers discovered a slab in a crate with fossilized footprints in an old barn on campus.  The search was sparked by Dr. Peter Kranz, who was tracking Mitchell’s work from 100 years before.  In 1998, the slab was put on permanent display in the Maryland Science Center.  Before it was moved from Emmitsburg to Baltimore, the Sisters and employees in Emmitsburg could see it for themselves, privately and up close. 

The Maryland Science Center performed their own analysis on the footprints, identifying them as coming from:

“several dinosaurs who walked across it during the Triassic period, 210 million years ago.  Scientists are not certain exactly which type of dinosaur made the tracks….They were small, plant-eating dinosaurs, about the size of a turkey.  They were ornithischian dinosaurs, and had hip skeletons somewhat like that of birds [This time period in the 1990s is when the theory of dinosaur to bird evolution started to receive wide acceptance].  They usually walked on two legs (‘bi-pedal’), but occasionally dropped down to walk on four legs part of the time.”

Theorized sketches of the dinosaurs created by the Maryland Science Center

With the level of excitement of such a find, it was natural to assume that the same tracks that Mitchell and the Sisters set eyes on in the 1890s had been rediscovered.  However, based on his sketches, this is not the same slab, but an entirely different set of fossilized dinosaur tracks.  It appears the slab once sent to Johns Hopkins has been lost as well.

The discovery and transfer of the fossils were widely covered in the local media, and they went on display at the Maryland Science Center in the aftermath of the first two Jurassic Park films. They remain on display now in the “Dinosaur Mysteries” exhibit.

Sister Betty Ann McNeil overseeing the shipment of the slab out of Emmitsburg
Fossilized footprints on display at Maryland Science Center (Courtesy MD Science Center)

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Filed under Emmitsburg, Exhibits, James Mitchell, Ph.D., Mount St. Mary's University

A Mount Alumni’s Blessed Donation

by Nathaniel Lee Rush Bentz

I have been an intern here for the Fall 2019 semester and I have discovered one of—if not the—most fascinating artifacts I have processed so far. This artifact is a large, metal crucifix with its very own metal plaque stating, “This crucifix was blessed by Pope Paul VI and donated to Providence Hospital [located in Washington, D.C.] by Monsignor Hugh Phillips September 14, 1975.” Having the responsibility to handle and process such an artifact is unbelievable. The weight of the situation is both physical and figurative because this piece is entirely made from brass and copper, making it very heavy, and the fact that a Pope blessed it—let alone interacted with it—makes this processing a rare opportunity for myself.

The donor, Monsignor High Phillips, is an important figure to this artifact in a different respect; he has a strong affiliation to Mount St. Mary’s University, at which I am a Senior student. Monsignor Phillips was a student at the grade school located on the Mount’s campus.  He spent his high school, college, and seminary years on campus and eventually becoming the school’s President—back when Mount St. Mary’s University was titled Mount St. Mary’s College—from 1967 to 1971. Before his presidency, he was a leading figure in maintaining Mount Saint Mary’s famous Grotto of Lourdes as its Director between the years 1958 and 2001. This honor of processing an artifact from a fellow member of the Mount community is astounding, especially given his accomplishments. What was fascinating with regards to Monsignor Phillips’ life is that he was born in the very same Washington, D.C. Providence Hospital that was gifted his donation of this blessed crucifix.

Having a fellow member of the Mount involved with the history of this artifact is one honor, but knowing that this very artifact is affiliated with a Pope as well is another amazing honor. I am not a very religious person, but I can recognize the authority, responsibilities, and image the Pope has to Catholics around the world, especially at Mount Saint Mary’s University. Moreover, getting the opportunity to interact with a blessed artifact is, what I would consider, a unique opportunity of the Daughters’ archive.

Besides the history behind the crucifix, physically speaking, this crucifix breaks norms compared to the other artifacts I have processed in the previous months of this fall semester. The dimensions of this piece deny it to be placed in its own box (for the time being), and it is incredibly heavy. To be extra careful, I find it safer and easier to transport the crucifix and the plaque by cart than carrying it by hand. The length of this crucifix is also large in comparison to other processed artifacts, standing at a height of two-and-a-half feet! The sheer size of this artifact makes a grand statement on its own, which makes this piece even more fascinating. My captivation goes for the crucifix’s aesthetic as well. It is beautifully crafted, likely out of brass and copper, on both the cross and the representation of Christ.

To read further about Monsignor Hugh Phillips, click the link below…

http://www.emmitsburg.net/grotto/father_jack/2004/phillips.htm

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Filed under Artifacts, Monsignor Hugh Phillips, Mount St. Mary's University, Providence Hospital