
Jim Langford –James Langford serves as president of the Coosawattee Foundation, an organization he created in 1987 to promote the conservation of Native American cultural resources and related Indigenous lands. As president of the Society for Georgia Archaeology he worked closely with multiple tribal groups to author two landmark pieces of legislation that protect human remains and culturally significant sites in Georgia. His legislation also created the Georgia Council on American Indian Concerns.

Jim D’Angelo – Jim D’Angelo is a founding member of the Gwinnett Archaeological Research Society in 2005 and of the Fort Daniel Foundation, which was organized in 2009 to preserve the Fort Daniel archaeological site. He was instrumental in getting Gwinnett County to purchase the site in 2012. Jim served as the principal archaeologist at the Fort Daniel site until recently.

Dan Elliott – Dan Elliott has been involved in cultural resource management, academic, and non-profit research in the southeastern United States for over 40 years. He is a strong advocate of presenting archaeological findings to the public. Since 1987, Mr. Elliott has served as Archaeologist for the historic town of Ebenezer, Georgia. His recent research projects in Georgia include Ruff’s Mill Battlefield, Carr’s Fort Battlefield, Fort Hawkins, Kettle Creek Battlefield, Nash Farm Battlefield, Savannah and Sunbury. Since 2000 Mr. Elliott has served as President of The LAMAR Institute, Inc. a nonprofit dedicated to public education and archaeological research.

Jack Wynn – Jack Wynn was a founding member of the Blue Ridge Archaeological Guild, which was established in 2009, and a dedicated member in the Society of Georgia Archaeology. He was also a Forest Archaeologist with the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest for over 20 years, where he directed the Passport in Time, which was a public archaeology program. In this work he particularly worked with elementary and secondary school teachers to increase knowledge of Georgia archaeology while excavating important sites in the National Forests of the state.