Posts Tagged ‘tannehill’

Evidence Grows of Location of Kitchen at Slave Quarters

Monday, July 19th, 2010

UAB Archaeology Field School

UAB Archaeology Field School

Eager to search for additional evidence of the kitchen at the Slave Quarters at Tannehill Ironworks Historical State Park, field school participants line up to start digging.  The crew split its time between the Quarters at Tannehill and the Gorgas Home at Brierfield Ironworks Historical State Parks, unearthing important new evidence about both sites.  The new units at the Quarters yielded fragments of additional iron cooking vessels and large folk pottery storage vessels which support the hypothesis that a kitchen once stood here. 

 

Ceramic tobacco pipe.

Ceramic tobacco pipe.

One of the more interesting artifacts found during the dig was this well preserved smoking pipe that doubtless provided its slave owner moments of pleasure during the arduous wartime years while the occupants of the Quarters made pig iron for the Confederacy.

Unusual Dutch Oven Lid Found at Tannehill.

Thursday, April 9th, 2009
New discovery is clue to type of cookware made during the Civil War
The partially ledgible inscription on this dutch oven lid reads "No. 3 Bisquit"

The partially legible inscription on this dutch oven lid reads "No. 3 Bisquit"

Over the years, archaeological digs at Tannehill have uncovered much cast iron cookware ranging from small fragments of rims, handles and feet to nearly complete lids and bodies. We know from a few historical documents that iron cooking implements were cast here, but these documents don’t tell what specific patterns were made.
This piece may have been a “reject,” or miss cast item.
The underside of the lid is very thick, about three times thicker and much heavier than usual.

The underside of the lid is very thick, about three times thicker and much heavier than usual.

The underside of the lid is very thick, about three times thicker and much heavier than usual. The jagged edges and seam across the middle of the underside of the lid suggest that this piece was either cast improperly or never finished. This might indicate that the piece was actually made here rather than brought in from somewhere else. If so, we now have a pattern that we can compare to many cookware fragments that our digs have uncovered in order to determine if these otherwise unidentifiable items were made at the iron works during the Civil War.

Side view of the dutch oven lid.

Side view of the dutch oven lid.

AAS Dig Rescheduled/New Rendevous Point Named

Monday, March 30th, 2009

The AAS Volunteer day has been rescheduled for this Saturday 4 April 2009. The 8:00AM meeting time is the same, but the place where we will assemble before moving to the dig site has been changed. Below is an up dated park map showing the new rendevous point. For a map to the park please see the 10 March 2009 blog post.  If you plan to be here contact Steve Meredith or email me at jackbergstresser@aol.com so that we will know how much gear to have ready. For more information see the new Alabama Archaeological Society web page: http://www.aas.mspanos.com/index.shtml Mary Spanos has done a fantastic job!

Updated Map/ New Rendevous Point

After you cross the bridge at the Grist Mill, drive another three hundred meters then turn right and go another 250 meters across a bridge over a dry wash and up a rise to the overflow parking area to the rendevous point.

After you cross the bridge at the Grist Mill, drive another 300 meters then turn right and go another 250 meters across a bridge over a dry wash and up a rise to the overflow parking area to the rendevous point.

One reason we rescheduled the dig

Every morning that it rained last week, the ford at the Grist Mill, here visible only as a line of white water, became impassable.

Everytime it rained last week the ford at the Grist Mill, visible here only as a line of whitewater, became impassable.

A good reason to test the Mill Pond Site

Chert is abundant in the vicinity of the Mill Pond Site.

Chert is abundant in the vicinity of the Mill Pond Site.

The Mill Pond Site
The Mill Pond Site is located on beautiful little a bend in Mill Creek. Last week, with the creek as high as I have ever seen it in my three years at the park, the site was still a comfortable eight to ten feet above the water level.

The Mill Pond Site is located on a beautiful little a bend in Mill Creek. Last week, with the creek as high as I have ever seen it in my three years at the park, the site was still a comfortable eight to ten feet above the water level.

Be Careful!
It's back.

It's back.

Late  at night when you’re sleeping, poision ivy comes a creeping……….

Civil War Iron Forge Confirmed.

Monday, March 23rd, 2009
Beth McCown's discovery last week turns out to be a gungion that was once attached to a water wheel shaft. One of four tabs that secured the gungion to the wodden shaft is still attached. The scar along the top edge remains from one of the tabs that was broken off.

Anna McCown's discovery last week turns out to be a gudgeon that was once attached to a water wheel shaft. One of four wings that secured the gudgeon to the wooden shaft is still attached. The scar along the top edge remains from one of the wings that was broken off.

The one day long archaeological investigation of the suspected Civil War Williams and Owens iron forge removed all doubt that this was the site of the short-lived ironworking operation. In addition to the gudgeon, we confirmed that a stone cluster along the banks of Roupes creek was once an intact stone wall, probably a water wheel pit.  Back away from the creek, about 200 yards, two large stone piles proved to be fire place bases. We are grateful to the Gilmore family for permission to investigate this important site which is located on their private property.

Stone wall is probably a remnant of water wheel pit.

Mallory Messersmith guards her find.

Mallory guards her find. Mallory Messersmith excavated a shallow trench along the down stream side of the cluster of stones that we have long suspected to be part of a wall. The trench confirmed our expectations revealing a stone wall that extended back into the creek bank.

A close up view of the buried stone wall.
Buried stone wall.

Buried stone wall.

The wall is probably a remnant of the pit that housed the water wheel that drove the shaft that powered the iron forge hammer.

Shovel Testing the Stone Piles
The crew dug five shovel tests at the site of the two stone piles discovered earlier in the week. Machine cut iron nails, whiteware fragments and several pieces of glass suggest that these piles were the foundations of chimneys for at least one house. Scattered brick fragments in the vicinity suggest that they were constructed of brick.  Near by, the crew spotted the suspected remains of a spring house. Further away, an addition stone pile may be remnants of another domestic structure.

The crew dug five shovel tests at the site of the two stone piles discovered earlier in the week. Machine cut iron nails, whiteware fragments and several pieces of glass suggest that these piles were the foundations of chimneys for at least one house. Scattered brick fragments in the vicinity suggest that they were constructed of brick. Near by, the crew spotted the suspected remains of a spring house. Further away, an additional stone pile may be remnants of another domestic structure.

Video of Shovel Test
Kalee and Kelly hike home on the Iron Haul Road.

Kalee and Kelly hike back from the dig along the iron haul road.

Volunteer Orientation, 2008-2009 Season

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

Introduction

This fall, winter and spring we will conduct a series of weekend volunteer digs at the Slave Quarters Site at Tannehill Ironworks Historical State Park. We have a list of enthusiastic volunteers and should be able to accomplish a great deal.  Not everyone will be able to attend every dig weekend. If you can just make one, we will be happy to see you! If you haven’t signed up to volunteer but want to, email Dr. Bergstresser at jackbergstresser@aol.com. We will send out an email notice to all our volunteers at least a week before each dig weekend.

If you have no archaeology experience, don’t worry! If you don’t mind hard work and getting dirty, we’ll teach you how to dig and keep up with the paperwork. Most of the units we will be excavating are very simple with no complicated stratigraphy or subtle features.  They will provide a great learning experience.  For units with features or other complications, we have more experienced diggers to do the job. The more weekends you can attend, the more you can learn. By next spring you could become a first class digro, a real field animal.

Work will start each morning at 9:00 and run until we get ready to call it a day. If you need to leave early, don’t worry.  We will assemble at the Museum at the Park and go to the site as a group.  Once you learn your way around, you can show up at the dig site on your own.

We have all the tools and equipment that will be needed.  You need to bring gloves, bug spray,  something to kneel on, sturdy clothes, and lunch. We’ll have water, drinks and snacks.

If you don’t want to bring a lunch, we can always send out a runner to pick up some burgers from Top Dawg, the best restaurant  in Green Pond, Alabama, not far from the park.

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Map to the Park

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Plan of Attack for the Volunteer Dig

We will be doing most of our digging near House 1 in the vicinity of a trash pile that we discovered this  summer.  We named the units in this area the Fork Units after Crew Chief Jessica Brown discovered a fork and a small mid-19th century ceramic fragment eroding out of a small patch of dark stained soil that had been exposed by recent rains. One of the exciting finds from these units was a shell casing from a 52 caliber Spencer repeating rifle like those carried by the Union cavalry raiders who freed the Tannehill slaves when they swept through the ironworks on 31 March 1865.  There are a few photos of our work in these units in an earlier blog post.

Two facts make me want to return to this area and complete the units that we did not finish during the summer.  First, we recovered numerous animal bone fragments from the suspected trash pile.  Secondly, we  recovered what I would consider to be a relatively large number of cast iron cookware fragments in units just to the southwest of the Fork Units.

House 1 and the nearby Fork Units.

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The most notable of these cast iron cookware fragments was a large piece of a pot lid as shown below.

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There are many potential explanations for the large counts of bone fragments and cast iron cookware pieces but one that interests me is the possibility that there was a kitchen nearby.  Our findings at House 2, at the other end of the Quarters, suggest that it was occupied by single males. House 1 on the other hand was probably occupied by a family with a woman present. Is it possible that this woman was a cook for the single males? And, did these men take their meals in a dinning hall and kitchen that was located near her home?

We may never be able to answer these two questions but its worth a try. I look forward to meeting everyone.  Keep an eye out for emails about dig dates.

Dr Hick.

This house in the Quarters was different.

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

We hoped to find differences between this year’s house and the one we studied last year. Our hopes were answered.  We learned a lot. No family lived in this house. It may have been a log cabin instead of a frame house. It burned, but at a different time than the house we studied last year. These and other findings are beginning to give us a much better understanding of the lives of the slaves who lived in the Quarters during it’s brief life span between 1858 and the spring  of 1865.

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The field crew from the Alabama Museum of Natural History’s 30th Summer Field Expedition worked hard in the summer heat.

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As usual, everything dug from the 1-meter square excavation units was sifted through 1/4-inch screen.

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Wizardess of the laser…..

Where to dig next? Since the excavation units were so shallow, never exceeding much more than 10 centimeters, they could usually be finished within one day.  The survey team worked constantly to keep new units staked out and ready.  Here co-crew chief Jes Brown and Dr. Bergstresser decide where to put the next group of squares. Jes was quick and accurate on the total station. She made the complex task of precisely shooting in the corners of each square look easy.

Both houses burned, but at different times. What does this mean? A yellowish brown material holds the answer to this question. It is clay that was dug nearby and used as chinking to hold together the stone for the fireplace and chimney. As soon as the structures were abandoned the relatively soft clay began to “melt” and the chimney collapsed into a jumble of clay and rock. If the structure burned before the chimney “melted,” the clay would bury the ash and charcoal.  If the structure burned after the chimney had “melted,” the ash and charcoal would be on top, covering the clay. We were surprised by what we found.

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an excavation unit at House 1

House 1 burned first and then the chimney melted. The image above shows the clay forming a cap over the burn layer.  In this unit most of the clay cap has been removed to expose the underlying burn layer. In the top of the image, a portion of the cap has been left in place. It has been cut cleanly to show the yellowish-brown chinking resting on top of the gray burn layer. This suggests that the house may have been burned very soon after it was abandoned, perhaps on the same day in the spring of 1865 when Union cavalry raiders destroyed the blast furnaces. Did the Yankees do it? At this stage, our evidence is still inconclusive but we hope that further analysis of our findings will bring us closer to the answer.

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an excavation unit at House 2.

The chimney collapsed first, before House 2 burned. The image above shows the yellowish-brown chimney “melt” in the top of the picture with the gray burn layer at bottom. The edge of the melt is the base of the collapsed chimney mound .  The burned material has washed off the mound and come to rest at its base, a clear indicator that the chimney collapsed into a mound before the structure burned.

We believe that House 2 was occupied by male slaves, bachelors who were fed at a central dining facility. We think that the occupants of this structure were fed somewhere else because there was virtually no evidence of food preparation and consumption present. We have yet to find animal bone and only one or two pieces of tableware were found in the units within the “footprint” of the structure.  This contrasts strikingly to House 1 where a substantial number of tableware fragments were found along with hundreds of animal bones, forks, and fragments of a cooking pot and hanger. At the same time we found no indications of the presence of women or children. A thimble and a marble found at House 1 suggests the possible presence of both women and children. No such items were found at House 2.

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At House 2 we found fragments of several pipes…………

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……and bottles.

No evidence of food preparation and consumption at House 2 but plenty of evidence of pipe smoking and substances stored in bottles. We’ll have to think on these finding for a while.

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good luck Anna, keep smiling, Jack

one final note: what is this?

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This unknown item, like the Confederate belt buckle from last year, was found on the last day of the dig. Jes found it. Like the buckle, it is not exactly what would one expect to find in the Quarters but it was there, buried under several centimeters of chimney melt at House 2. It is a machine tooled brass object with a triangular hole cut in its base. It looks like something that came off of a piece of equipment, perhaps a small part vital to the functioning of some important machine at the iron works. If so, its presence in the Quarters might indicate an act of sabotage, a symbolic statement by one slave in the constant war of dominance and resistance that marked the antebellum southern world of slave and master, a world that was fast coming to an end during the brief few years that the Quarters were in existence.  It is also a reminder of the larger, more important questions we are dealing with on this site. We want to thank the participants of Summer Expedition 30 of the Alabama Museum of Natural History whose hard work in the hot sun made possible this next step in our investigation.

Did the Yankees burn the Slave Quarters?

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

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Laura Dehmer, a history intern from the University of Montevallo, discovered the burned floor sill to her right against rocks. Since it was against the downhill side of the chimney pile and buried under clay chinking that fell away from the chimney, it survived. Other evidence that the house had burned was probably washed away over the years by sheet erosion. The question is, did the Yankees burn the house, or did it burn some time later? This is one of the important questions we hope to answer in June.