Archaeology was inherantly snobbish.
The classic two examples were Howard Carter, who was always treated as 'not one of us' by gentlemen archaeologists such as the inept Davies, and the French Gaston Maspero, who sent him on the most boring tasks he could find, reserving 'plum' concessions for hiss upper middle class friends; and 2) Frenchman Pierre Montet, who was sent to the Delta to dig because he didn't 'fit in' with the 'Luxor set' of the late 1930s.
They were miffed, though, when he discovered the incredible gold-filled tomb complex at San-el-Hager (Tanis) and finds which rivalled that of Tutankhamun's tomb, but were eclipsed by the sm
all matter of WWII.