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Archaeology in Newfoundland and
Labrador 1997
Edited by K. Nelmes
Archaeology at Ferryland,
Newfoundland, 1997
Matthew Carter, Barry Gaulton and James A. Tuck
The 1997 season at Ferryland was perhaps the
most productive and exciting of the six seasons of archaeology in the
current field program. Despite what can only be described as completely
miserable fall weather, that brought fieldwork almost to a halt, the
results of the 1997 research are more than satisfying and the promise of
things to come in 1998 even more so.
Excavation concentrated in
two major areas, called Areas F and G. Each produced evidence of
occupation or utilization during the first half of the seventeenth
century. Excavations at each area are described briefly below.
AREA G
Excavation at Area G was
begun late in the 1996 season and was greatly expanded during 1997.
Additional portions of a cobble pavement of unknown function were exposed
at the eastern end of Area F. The pavement appears to date from the late
seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. It appears not to be a roadway
for it is with an identical pavement of similar date at the western edge
of Area C (the waterfront premises), and is therefore not a road or path
but some sort of large exterior pavement that served some undetermined
function. The careful stonework does not suggest a platform for drying
fish; such structures have been revealed elsewhere at Ferryland and are
inevitably of much rougher construction.
Limited excavations beneath
this stone pavement, largely in areas where the cobbles had been disturbed
or removed, revealed an occupation layer that dates from the first half of
the seventeenth century. It consists of a thin (up to about 10 cm) layer
of dark, organic soil and what appear to be portions of a concentration of
disintegrated brick. Artifacts contained within this layer included
tobacco pipes characteristic of the first half of the seventeenth century,
case bottles and ceramics also characteristic of that time, and iron
nails. Between this occupation layer and the overlying cobble pavement is
a layer of beach sand and gravel, up to 40 cm thick. It was clearly
deposited there as a single episode, probably to level and raise the
earlier occupation surface.
Below the seventeenth-century
occupation surface was a thick (up to 60 cm or more) layer of rock and
soil fill, clearly put there to reclaim land, along the south edge of The
Pool, a process mentioned by Captain Edward Wynne, the Colony of Avalon's
first governor, in a letter to George Calvert in 1622. This fill was
deposited on what appears to have been either a beach very close to the
edge of The Pool or a part of the intertidal zone. Contained in the
natural sand and gravel beach below the fill were iron nails and nail
fragments and ceramics including a fragment of a vessel with a rouletted,
check-stamped vertical applied bead of clay identical to cooking pots
recovered in some numbers from the Basque whaling stations that operated
at Red Bay, Labrador that were in use during much of the sixteenth
century.
Additional evidence of the
ambitious land reclamation project of the early settlers at the Colony of
Avalon came from a second excavation at Area G, this one a short distance
west of the earlier excavation. In this area the cobblestone pavement was
not present. Instead a recent tilth zone was underlain by a layer of clay
and rock fill, the lower portions of which contained significant numbers
of roof slates and fragments. Although the presence of a slate-roofed
structure somewhere in the vicinity of the excavations was suspected, no
evidence of any structure was found in the 18 square metres excavated
during 1997. A distinct occupation layer was revealed below this fill
layer, but no real evidence of what sort of activities might have taken
place there was recovered. Artifacts date from the first half of the
seventeenth century and there is no reason to believe that the two
occupation layers found at Area G are not contemporaneous. Artifacts
include iron nails, which again suggest the presence of some sort of a
structure, as well as coarse earthenwares, stonewares, tobacco pipes and
fragments of glass bottles. The ceramics are consistent with a date in the
first half of the seventeenth century, but were not produced exclusively
during the early 1600s. Tobacco pipes, on the other hand, all have bowl
forms (and sizes) and stem bore diameters typical of that period. Bottles
are all of the square case bottle variety; no fragments of shaft-and-globe
or onion bottles, that first appear at about mid-century, were recovered.
Also at Area G, additional
evidence of the seawall that once bordered the southern edge of The Pool
was revealed by excavation at the rare times when the tide fell low enough
to permit access. In 1996 the seawall segment at Area C was followed
westward to the point where it made a "jog" toward the
northwest. In 1997 a complimentary "jog" that resulted in the
seawall resuming an east-west course was revealed. We were able to follow
that portion of several metres to the west where work was halted by water
too deep to permit the wall to be followed further.
Although excavations at Area
G are very much in their preliminary stages, a considerable area remains
to be explored. Complete excavation of the area was made possible by the
purchase of most of the area by the Colony of Avalon Foundation.
Additional excavation is planned during the 1998 field season.
AREA F
The major excavation of 1997
occurred at Area F, first explored in 1996. The results of the past
season's work there provided some surprises in the form of both
architectural features and artifacts.
Area F is located at the
eastern edge of the present settlement on the south shore of The Pool, on
land formerly privately owned by a local family. In 1995 the Department of
Tourism, Culture and Recreation purchased the property to permit
excavation to take place at what seemed to be a potentially key area in
understanding the Colony of Avalon and its successors. As it turns out,
this potential was greater that any of us suspected when the property was
purchased.
Excavation at Area F took
place in two main areas, one east of the standing house and one to the
west––the only two areas where space permitted any significant amount
of work to be undertaken.
East of the house, work in
1996 had revealed late seventeenth-century deposits in association with
burned timbers that were interpreted as the remains of a frame structure
that was burned late in that century or early in the eighteenth century.
Remains of a cobble pavement, interpreted as part of the central street
that ran through the Colony of Avalon were also revealed.
In 1997 the late
seventeenth-century deposits were removed and excavation proceeded beneath
them. Layers of refuse and fill produced artifacts of all
sorts––ceramics, tobacco pipes, bottle glass and so forth––in
their proper stratigraphic and chronological positions, but no evidence of
any recognizable features associated with these materials was apparent.
Only when an area measuring about eight by fourteen metres was excavated
to sterile subsoil, in places close to two metres below the present
surface, did the significance of the deposit become apparent. What the
excavations had revealed was unmistakable evidence of a large defensive
ditch, some six metres wide and more than a metre deep in its central
portion. The ditch runs north-south and clearly comprises part of the
defences of the eastern boundary of the Colony of Avalon. To the north the
ditch apparently runs beneath the present road and probably along what was
then the eastern margin of The Pool. Barry Gaulton (1997:62) suggested as
much in his thesis on the structures at the waterfront at Area C. To the
south the ditch almost certainly extends up the hillside and is connected
with a large and obvious earthwork, almost certainly a bastion on the
southeast corner of the defences of Avalon.
Inside the ditch (i.e. to the
west) remnants of an earthen rampart are clearly visible in the south
profile. The remaining portion is about a metre above the edge of the
ditch. Since, however, much of the fill in the ditch and to the west of
the rampart is the same rock and subsoil as the rampart itself, we might
suppose that the original rampart was somewhat higher than the remaining
evidence indicates. No trace of post holes or post molds was found in the
rampart. If the posts reported by Captain Wynne in 1622 were set atop the
rampart, then erosion has reduced the earthen mound by at least the depth
of the posts.
The ditch and rampart
correspond exactly with the eastern end of the cobblestone street that
appears to have run east-west through the Colony of Avalon. Much of the
street is beneath the present paved road, but the west end, thirteen feet
wide, was exposed in 1995 and the east end, of exactly the same width,
during 1996. A small rectangular platform of cobbles projects eastward
from the end of the road, slightly to the south of the centre of the road.
Rocks piled roughly on either side of this small platform suggest that
this marked the east entrance to the colony that permitted access to and
from The Downs, where agriculture, husbandry, wood cutting and so forth
were probably carried out.
Leading from the end of the
road eastward across the ditch, remains of a wooden bridge were
discovered. They consist of three bridge sills, squared timbers originally
measuring about four by five inches and 11' 6" long with rectangular
mortises cut through the timbers near each end and in the centre. The
mortises must have held vertical timbers which supported longitudinal
timbers that spanned the ditch. A portion of a row of large spikes found
at the western end of the bridge near the gate once secured transverse
planking that formed the surface of the bridge. There is no evidence that
any portion of the bridge was designed to move (i.e. as in a drawbridge).
The bridge itself was situated slightly off centre in relation to the
road. The south edge of the bridge extended from the south edge of the
cobble street while the north edge extended from the north side of the
small cobble platform that we regard as the location of the gate. It may
be that there was some sort of gatehouse located on the north side of the
bridge and a few posts and post molds are located in this area,
unfortunately disturbed by the excavation of an outflow from a septic tank
dug earlier in this century.
The fill of the ditch
contained large numbers of artifacts, especially around the bridge, from
which trash was apparently thrown into the ditch. They include tobacco
pipes, ceramics and case bottle glass that all indicate a date for the
beginning of the filling of the ditch during the first half of the
seventeenth century. It seems almost certain that these surprisingly
massive defensive structures formed part of the original defences of the
Colony of Avalon and were most likely built during the early 1620s under
the direction of Captain Edward Wynne, a man with some considerable
military experience.
The refuse in the ditch also
provided some surprises in the form of preserved organic material in a
water-saturated deposit north of the bridge. Fragments of shoes, staves
from casks, wooden pegs and other fragments of cut wood, branches and
twigs became both more numerous and better preserved as excavations
proceeded northward where the ditch becomes deeper. The remaining portion
of the ditch, now unfortunately covered by the present paved road,
promises to reveal an unusual collection of preserved organic objects from
the early seventeenth century.
Some objects from the ditch
also suggest that the east end of the settlement was the location of the
residences of persons of relatively high status. Notable among these are a
gold-plated brass spur and a minute gold sequin or stud with seven circles
of twisted wire soldered to the surface and a tiny hole still clearly
apparent in the centre. Tin-glazed earthenware fragments and stoneware
Bellarmine bottle fragments, both generally accepted as representative of
high-status occupation of an area, reinforce the notion that the
"upper class" residences were located at the eastern end of the
settlement, something we predicted at the time that the forge was
discovered at the western end of Captain Wynne's "prettie streete."
Excavations in 1996 and again
in 1997 were successful in following the cobble road westward through a
series of one-metre square test pits in the narrow piece of land between
the house on the above-mentioned purchased land and the present paved
road. The south edge of the pavement was followed for a distance of about
ten metres, where it disappears beneath the existing paved road at a depth
of about 1.2 metres below the ground surface. At almost exactly this point
a cobble pavement extending southward from the road was discovered.
Efforts to reveal the extent of this pavement, and to determine its
purpose, were hampered (if that is the right word) by the presence of an
incredibly rich midden deposit overlying the cobbles. Intensely black and
up to 30 cm thick, the midden contained a concentration of artifacts
unlike anything encountered at Ferryland and, we suspect, at most other
seventeenth-century sites in North America. Literally thousands of iron
nails of all sizes from small examples, almost tacks, to large spikes
suggest the presence of a collapsed wood frame structure somewhere close
by.
In the final weeks of the
season a row of spikes was discovered embedded in the almost completely
decomposed remains of a large wooden timber. The spikes lie horizontally
in the ground about 15-20 cm apart, with their heads to the north. A
possible explanation is that the decomposed wood represents the sill of a
frame structure and that the spikes fastened the lower ends of vertical
board siding. Almost exactly three metres of this feature were exposed
before excavations were brought to a halt. The east end of the timber
shows every sign of continuing beneath the house, while the western
portion stops abruptly at a rough stone wall (most likely a footing) built
atop the cobbles. One portion of the cobble pavement stops almost at the
timber we interpret as a sill, suggesting that the pavement and wooden
structure may be contemporaneous. To the west of the end of the sill,
which is tentatively interpreted as the corner of the structure, the
cobble pavement extends southward to the limit of the 1997 excavations. A
carefully constructed drain formed of long cobbles forming a depression in
the pavement leads northward from what we interpret as the west end of the
frame structure. The basal portion of this drain is formed from two rows
of red bricks.
If the description of this
complex of features seems confusing, it accurately reflects our
understanding of them at the close of the 1997 season. A possible
interpretation, and one that probably should be viewed with more than a
modicum of caution, is as follows.
The cobblestone street,
running from east to west through the settlement is that built under
Captain Wynne's direction in the early years of the Colony of Avalon. It
is this feature that he referred to as a "prettie streete". The
cobble pavement leading south from the street is somehow related to a wood
frame structure that stood south of the street. We have exposed about
three metres of a sill of this structure and, very likely, the northwest
corner of the building. Some of the cobbles end near the sill while
another portion continues southward along what might be the west side of
the structure. A carefully made drain may have been designed to carry
water from the hill south of the structure to lower ground (and ultimately
The Pool). If our own experience with run-off from this hill is any
indication, frequent flooding may have posed a considerable problem for
the residents of whatever structure stood there.
Sometime later in the
seventeenth century a low stone footing was built on top of the cobble
pavement, parallel to, and just east of, the brick-lined drain. Its
dimensions, relation to the original structure, and purpose remain
unknown. To the east of this footing, a rich midden accumulated during the
early to mid-seventeenth century. Objects from the midden confirm the
impression given by objects from the defensive ditch that these
excavations are revealing the upper class residential area of Avalon and
the succeeding Pool Plantation.
Two iron spurs, one still
bearing traces of silver plating, were recovered. Neither these nor the
gold-plated example from the ditch necessarily indicate the presence of
horsemen at Avalon. Spurs were, during the first half of the seventeenth
century, part of a gentleman's costume. They probably indicate more about
the status of the occupants of this area than they do their possible
equestrian pursuits. Ceramics also indicate an area of high status
occupation. Coarse earthenwares typical to most of the Ferryland site are
present, but tin-glazed ceramics were far more common in this area than in
any other. In fact, a rough calculation indicates that about 80% of all
the tin-glazed ceramics from Ferryland come from the ten squares excavated
in this area. Stoneware, specifically "Bellarmine" bottles are
also usually taken as evidence of status.
Perhaps most striking among
the ceramic assemblage is the presence of Portuguese terra sigillata
ware. According to Jan Baart (1992) this extremely fine orange earthenware
was a sort of speciality item produced at Estremoz, Portugal in imitation
of Roman ceramics. It was apparently manufactured during both the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Often incised with floral and
curvilinear designs, sometimes infilled with a white slip, terra
sigillata ceramics are both distinctive and striking. Many of the
finer pieces appear not to have been functional, but were very clearly
markers of status. Fragments have been found throughout the eastern end of
the Ferryland site, with a large number from the excavations just
described. The unusual vessel forms, with a variety of bases, necks,
spouts and handles, make it difficult to assess the number of vessels
represented in the Ferryland collection but as many as ten or a dozen
would not be surprising. One vessel from the Area F midden bears a
three-dimensional moulded face about 4 cm high that compares very closely
to an example on an elaborate jar illustrated by Baart (1992:277).
Other objects that indicate a
high-status occupation include a small silver straight pin and a silver
thimble, both from the latter part of the seventeenth century suggesting
that the east end of Avalon remained the location of high status
dwelling(s) during most of the century.
Who these people might have
been remains a matter of speculation, but it is certainly tempting to
suggest that the 1997 excavations are very close to the Mansion House,
where both the Calvert and Kirke families dwelt during their tenures at
Avalon and the Pool Plantation. Whether this is the case awaits further
excavation and some major logistical moves, for much of the site lies
beneath an existing house, the present paved road and the Downs, or
Lighthouse Road.
REFERENCES CITED
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Baart, Jan
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1992
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"Terra
sigillata from Estremoz, Portugal," in Everyday and
Exotic Pottery from Europe c. 650-1900, D. Gaimster and M.
Redknap, eds., pp. 273-277. Oxbow Books, Oxford.
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Gaulton, Barry
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1997
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"Seventeenth-Century
Stone Construction at Ferryland, Newfoundland, Area C."
Unpublished Master of Arts thesis, Department of Anthropology,
Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's.
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