Background
She was born in South Salem, Ohio, to Joseph Van Deman and his second wife, Martha Millspaugh. She was the youngest of six children, including two boys by her father"s first marriage.
anthropologist archaeologist art historian university professor
She was born in South Salem, Ohio, to Joseph Van Deman and his second wife, Martha Millspaugh. She was the youngest of six children, including two boys by her father"s first marriage.
After teaching Latin at Wellesley College and the Bryn Mawr School in Baltimore, Maryland, she received a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Chicago in 1898.
She earned an Bachelor of Arts (1891) and Master of Arts (1892) from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. She then taught Latin at Mount Holyoke College (1898–1901) and Latin and classical archaeology at Goucher College (1903-1906). From 1906 to 1910 she lived in Rome as a Carnegie Institution fellow, and from 1910 to 1925 she was an associate of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, District of Columbia Between 1925 and 1930 she taught Roman archaeology at the University of Michigan.
Her life"s work centered around the analysis of building materials to establish a chronology of construction on ancient sites.
In 1907, while attending a lecture in the Atrium Vestae in Rome, Van Deman noticed that the bricks blocking up a doorway differed from those of the structure itself and showed that such differences in building materials provided a key to the chronology of ancient structures. The Carnegie Institution published her preliminary findings in The Atrium Vestae (1909).
Van Deman extended her research to other kinds of concrete and brick construction and published "Methods of Determining the Date of Roman Concrete Monuments" in The American Journal of Archaeology. Her basic methodology, with few modifications, became standard procedure in Roman archaeology.
Van Deman"s major work, written after she retired and settled in Rome, was The Building of the Roman Aqueducts (1934).
She died in Rome, Italy, on May 3, 1937. At the time of her death, Van Deman was at work on a monograph-length study of Roman construction. Her work was completed and published by Marion Elizabeth Blake (1882–1961).