Archaeology in Newfoundland and
Labrador 1997
Edited by K. NelmesBaccalieu Trail Archaeology
Project, 1997: Excavations at Cupids
William Gilbert
INTRODUCTION
The 1995 and 1996 Field
Seasons
During the summer of 1995 the
Baccalieu Trail Heritage Corporation conducted an eight week
archaeological survey and excavation in the community of Cupids,
Conception Bay, the goal of which was to determine the location and state
of preservation of the Cupers Cove plantation established there in 1610 by
the London and Bristol Company of Merchant Venturers (Gilbert 1996). This
plantation, whose first governor was Bristol merchant and adventurer John
Guy, was the first official colony established in Newfoundland, the first
English colony established in what is now Canada, and one of the first
European colonies established in North America.
A number of documents related
to the plantation, including a diary, a journal and 19 letters, all
written in Newfoundland between 1610 and 1631, have survived and it was to
these that we turned for clues to the site's location before beginning our
survey. From these documents we learned that Cupers Cove had stood 240
paces (or twelve score) from Cupids Pond, near a brook and on the landward
side of the salt water pond that lies at the bottom of Cupids harbour
(Gilbert 1996:68-70). Taken together, these three clues defined an area
measuring roughly 500 metres from east to west at the bottom of Cupids
harbour within the boundaries of which the plantation had once been
located (Figure 1).
At the extreme eastern end of
our survey area the land rises roughly four metres above the low ground to
the west to form a dry level terrace (Figure 2). An
initial examination of this area produced a range of 17th century material
(ceramics, glass, clay pipe fragments, etc) in the soil thrown up by a
tree fall on its western edge. Some of this material, including clay pipe
stem fragments with 9/64 and 8/64 stem diameters, suggested that at least
part of this deposit dated to the first half of the 17th century. Testing
conducted on the terrace itself defined an area measuring roughly 52 x 28
m that contained early to mid-17th century material.
Having defined the area, we
opened and excavated a 1 x 10 m test trench running from north to south
within its boundaries. This trench produced roughly 5000 artifacts, the
majority of which were of 17th century origin. Part of a stone and brick
feature (Feature 1) running diagonally across the trench was also
uncovered. The feature appeared to be a fireplace and analysis of the
material associated with it suggested that it was part of a structure
built sometime prior to 1620, occupied during the first half of the 17th
century and destroyed sometime between 1650 and 1680 (Gilbert 1995;88-94).
Documentary, archaeological and architectural evidence all combined to
suggest that this structure was part of the original Cupers Cove
plantation.
During the summer of 1996 we
returned to Cupids and conducted a further ten weeks of excavation
expanding the original 1 x 10 m trench 1 m to the east and 1 m to the west
and creating a 3 x 10 m excavation unit. This allowed us both to determine
the nature of the feature and its orientation and, by acquiring a larger
sample of artifacts, to date it more accurately (Gilbert 1997).
Our original hypothesis was
greatly strengthened as a result of this work. Feature 1 was indeed a
fireplace, and fragments of the last wood to be burnt there, including
numerous charred spruce and fir needles, were still present in the brick
lined firebox. It was also obvious that this fireplace had once been part
of a wooden structure (Structure 1) which had suffered considerable fire
damage. Extending northeast away from the fireplace were the burnt remains
of a wooden sill and floor boards.
By the end of the 1996 season
roughly 12,000 artifacts had been recovered. An analysis of these
artifacts reinforced earlier speculations that Structure 1 was built prior
to 1620 and occupied during the first half of the 17th century. New
material recovered from the destruction level allowed us to narrow down
the destruction date and indicated that the building was probably
destroyed sometime between about 1650 and 1665. Material recovered from
the post-destruction level showed that the area to the east of Structure 1
had continued to be used during the second half of the 17th century after
the destruction of Structure 1.
|

|
|
Figure 1. The
original survey area as defined by information contained in the
contemporary documents.
|
|

|
|
Figure 2. The
survey area after the low ground to the west had been eliminated.
|
The 1997 Excavation
In 1997 we returned to Cupids
to conduct a further fifteen weeks (30 June - 10 October) of excavation.
Having determined the orientation of Structure 1, our next goal was to
expose as much of the building as possible. To this end, we extended our 3
x 10 m excavation east a further three metres creating a total excavation
area of 6 x 10 m. The 3 x 10 m extension was designated Operation 4. We
reasoned that if Structure 1 measured approximately 7.31 x 3.64 m), then
Operation 4 should encompass most of its remaining area. Later we
discovered that we had both underestimated the size of Structure 1 and
failed to allow for the possibility of other adjoining structures. As a
result, it proved necessary to extend our excavation east for another 5 m
at the north end and 6 m at the south end of Operation 4.
The Structures
When we removed the rubble
from the southern end of Operation 4, we uncovered the remainder of the
fireplace first discovered in 1995. Constructed mainly of stone, it
measures 3.5 m wide (from northwest to southeast) by 1.6 m deep and
contains a brick lined firebox 1.65 m wide and 95 cm deep with a floor of
flat stones. Burnt wood and ash from a fire lit in the western half of the
fireplace some time before the building's destruction were still present
beneath the rubble. As was the case in 1996, thousands of charred
coniferous needles were found in the fire's ashes and an analysis of these
indicates that the last fire kindled there was made mostly of spruce along
with some fir (Mike Deal, personal communication). Since so many needles
have survived, it seems clear that much of the wood used in the fire was
green and the fact that it was confined to the western half of the hearth
suggests it was probably lit at a time when the weather was relatively
mild.
That portion of the floor
sealed beneath the rubble overburden had, indeed, burned and its charred
remains were clearly visible once the rubble was removed to the north of
the fireplace. The burnt sill extended northeast for 5.1 m and its
northern and southern ends rested on large flat stones that seem to have
served as 'sill plates.' In places the burned floorboards could still be
seen running northeast to southwest parallel to the sill inside the
structure. Those boards that survived measure, on average, 27 cm wide.
However, they undoubtedly shrank during the fire and originally must have
been somewhat wider. When we take into account the gaps between the
boards, we arrive at a measurement of just slightly over 32 cm. Assuming,
as seems likely, that the floorboards were originally placed tight
together, then they probably measured about 32 cm across prior to
shrinkage. Farther east, ploughing had eradicated any evidence of
floorboards but traces of the underlying joists remained extending
southeast away from, and perpendicular to the sill. Portions of five of
these joists survived. They had been placed 61 cm apart and the longest
surviving example was 3.9 m long.
Assuming that the longest
remaining joist accurately represents the maximum width of Structure 1,
then the fireplace originally opened up into and heated a room measuring
roughly 16 ft x 12 ft with a wooden floor constructed of 12 inch wide
planks placed over joists set 2 ft apart. This was one of two rooms that
made up Structure 1. The second was located to the north of and adjoining
the first and it proved necessary to expand our excavation to the north
and east to expose it.
Twenty-five cm northeast of
the northern sill plate, we uncovered part of a cobblestone surface
perfectly aligned with the burnt sill. These cobbles were clearly part of
Structure 1, however only a 1.18 m section was contained within the
perimeter of Operation 4. To uncover the rest, we first established an
operation (Operation 6) measuring 4 m from north to south and 3 m from
east to west adjoining and extending 2 m north and 3 m east of Operation
4. Later, we expanded our excavation 2 m farther east and establish
another operation (Operation 8) adjoining Operation 6 to expose the rest
of Structure 1.
Unlike the southern half of
Structure 1, there was no well defined rubble deposit this far north.
Instead, the north end was overlaid by an undifferentiated deposit of
brown silt measuring, on average, 28 cm thick and containing mostly 17th
century material and some late 18th/early 19th century material. Obviously
there had been considerable disturbance in this area after the destruction
of Structure 1 and apparently this was caused by a combination of
ploughing in the latter period and either intentional destruction or the
salvaging of stone during the former. Fortunately, most of the northern
half of Structure 1 had been solidly constructed and survived this
activity. The only direct evidence of the destruction of Structure 1 in
this area was occasional burnt timbers resting directly above the floor.
When the overlying burden of silt and burnt wood was removed an elaborate
construction of cobblestones, flagstones and stone walls was revealed.
The cobblestones first
exposed in Operation 4 extend northeast for 3.6 m forming a walkway 70 cm
wide. To the east are what appear to be two small chambers with cobble and
flagstone floors divided from northeast to southwest by a low, well made
stone wall measuring 55 cm across. A second stone wall measuring 2.4 m
long and 60 cm wide runs perpendicular to the first just north of it and
forms the north end of Structure 1. A second cobble walkway of roughly
equal length and width seems to have once existed parallel to the first on
the opposite side of the chambers but was largely destroyed probably some
time towards the end of the 17th century. While the exact nature of these
chambers is as yet unknown they most likely served as either a storage or
service area for Structure 1.
Beneath the overburden of
silt to the northwest of this area (in Operations 4 and 6) we uncovered a
jumble of burnt timbers that were obviously related to the destruction of
Structure 1. When these were removed other timbers were revealed that
displayed a much more coherent pattern. Abutting the cobblestone walkway
and running parallel to it along its entire length is a timber that is
obviously an extension of the burnt sill farther to the south. Two other
timbers run parallel to the sill, the first 38 cm northwest of it, and the
second 55 cm northwest of the first. Overlaying and running perpendicular
to these timbers are traces of what appear to be floor boards. Only a
small portion of these timbers was exposed in 1997. However, they are
almost certainly the remains of another wooden floor and appear to be
either an extension of Structure 1 or an adjoining building running
perpendicular to it.
As mentioned above, much of
the southern end of Operation 4 was covered in rubble and in most places
this deposit was about 25 cm thick. However, this was not the case
southeast of the fireplace. Digging here revealed a 30 cm wide stone wall
adjoining the southeastern corner of the fireplace and extending southwest
away from it. On the western side of this wall we encountered the typical
destruction and occupation levels found elsewhere on the site but on the
eastern side the rubble continued down to a surprising depth.
Here, loose rubble extended
north from the southern boundary of Operation 4 for a maximum distance of
1.7 m and east and south beyond the perimeter of Operation 4 for an
unknown distance. Once this rubble had been removed to a depth of roughly
1 metre below the surface, the south and east profiles became so unstable
that any further digging would have caused them to collapse. Rather than
risk this, we established an operation (Operation 5) extending 4 m north
and 2 m east of the southeast corner of Operation 4 in an effort to find
the eastern boundary of the rubble. However, we soon discovered that the
loose rubble extended east beyond the boundaries of Operation 5 and a
third operation (Operation 7) was created measuring 2 m from north to
south and extending east for another 5 m. It was in Operation 7 that we
finally located the eastern edge of the rubble.
At this point it was obvious
that we were dealing with a rubble-filled pit. That portion of the pit
encompassed by our excavations extended east from the stone wall adjoining
Structure 1 for 6 m and north from the southern boundary of our excavation
for 2.8 m. How far south it extended we had no way of knowing. Most of the
pit was filled with loose rubble. However, around the edges the rubble was
enclosed in a matrix of brown silt. Once all the loose rubble to the east,
north and west had been removed to a depth of 1 m, we reinforced the south
profile to keep it from collapsing and continued digging down.
Although it seemed clear that
this pit was contemporaneous with Structure 1, much of the material
contained in the loose rubble that filled it clearly dated to sometime
around the late 18th century or early 19th centuries. Numerous fragments
of creamware and pearlware were recovered along with late 18th/early 19th
century bottle glass. The reason for this apparent anomaly became clear as
we continued to dig. At a depth below surface of just over 1 m we
encountered a deposit of fine brown silt that was, on average, 25 cm thick
and beneath which were the remains of two stone walls. The walls, on
average 30 cm wide and constructed of a combination of fieldstones and cut
stones, come together at a right angle to form a corner and are perfectly
aligned with the walls of Structure 1. Between the walls was a second
rubble deposit in a silt matrix which contained early to mid-17th century
material and beneath which, at a depth of 2.13 m, was a floor of hard
packed grey sand and gravel.
It now seemed clear that we
had uncovered the remains of a collapsed cellar adjoining and
contemporaneous with Structure 1. Originally, the cellar probably had been
walled with stone all the way to the surface. Apparently, it was abandoned
after the destruction of Structure 1 and the upper courses of the walls
gradually fell in reinforcing the lower courses and preventing them from
collapsing. Over the next 100 or so years the pit remaining after this
collapse silted and sodded over and by the late 18th century all that
remained was a sod lined depression. Then, sometime around 1800, somebody
must have filled the depression with loose rubble, perhaps as a safety
precaution.
Like Structure 1 the cellar
runs at roughly a 45 degree angle to the site grid and extends southwest
away from Structure 1 for an unknown distance. Only a corner has been
exposed to date and until further excavations are conducted we have no way
of knowing either its total length or width. The corner that is exposed
extends north from the southern boundary of our excavation for 1.7 m and
the maximum distance between the walls, at the southern end of the
excavation, is 3.15 m. Since the section of the north wall that is exposed
is 2.3 m long and that of the west wall is 2.15 m long, we know that the
dimensions of the cellar must be somewhat greater than this but how much
greater we cannot as yet say. A substantial portion of the walls have
survived. The north wall rises to a maximum height of 65 cm and the west
wall to 89 cm.
Structure 1 is not unlike
many buildings that have either survived or been excavated from the late
Medieval and early modern periods. Measuring 11.1 m long by approximately
3.9 m wide, it was divided into two main units. At the southern end was a
16 ft x 12 ft room with a wooden floor heated by a large stone fireplace
with a brick lined firebox. At the north end is what appears to have been
a storage area with a cobble and flagstone floor divided by a stone wall
into two separate chambers. Such a building would not have been out of
place in Britain during the 16th and 17th centuries. Houses during this
time often consisted of no more than two rooms. The upper room with the
hearth, usually referred to as the 'hall,' was where the inhabitants
lived, ate and slept. Sometimes, the lower room served as a bier for farm
animals but more often the animals were housed in a free standing barn and
the lower room served as a service or storage area. In many cases this
area was further divided into a buttery and a pantry. The hall and service
area were frequently separated by a cross-passage running perpendicular to
the long axis of the structure at one end of which was the entrance (Quiney
1990:77-89). Whether or not Structure 1 had such a cross-passage we cannot
as yet say.
In rural parts of England
cellars were apparently rare during this period although they were much
more common in urban homes, especially in the homes of merchants. This is
understandable given the relatively mild English winters. However, it is
hard to imagine how supplies could have been preserved during the long,
hard Newfoundland winter without resorting to a cellar of some kind.
Certainly, cellars were a part of vernacular New England architecture from
quite early on and some of the earliest houses excavated in New England
include them (Deetz 1977:95-98).
Destruction
Rarely does one find enough
fragments of a particular vessel on a living site to permit a
reconstruction. Activity both during and after the occupation usually
disperses the pieces over a wide area leaving the archaeologist to
identify complete vessels using only the few sherds that remain. However,
the destruction level that sealed and preserved a portion of Structure 1's
burnt floor also sealed and preserved, in a semi-articulated state, a
number of the vessels that were in the building when it was destroyed.
A minimum vessel count
conducted on the ceramics from the destruction level indicates that there
were at least 45 vessels in Structure 1 when it was destroyed. Of these, a
surprisingly high number (at least twenty) were of Iberian origin. These
include fragments of fourteen different tin-glazed earthenware vessels
which had previous been identified as English delftware (Gilbert 1996,
1997). However, an analysis of these fragments by John Allan of the Exeter
Museums in Devon has shown them all to be of either Spanish or Portuguese
manufacture and of a type generally referred to as Iberian blue and white
(John Allan, personal communication). Many of these vessels were so
fractured by the immense weight of the chimney collapse that the fragments
were too small for us to determine vessel type. However, they include at
least three small bowls and a shallow dish. Fragments of six Spanish
Merida ware vessels were also present including two bottles, one jug and
an amphora.
Not surprisingly, various
types of West Country wares were also recovered from inside the house. The
majority of these were storage jars, and fragments of at least eleven were
inside Structure 1 when it was destroyed. Of these, three were
manufactured in north Devon, three in south Devon at Totnes near
Dartmouth, and five in south Somerset. Fragments of three tall pots, used
for storing butter, were also found in the house, all of which were the
work of north Devon potters. Other vessels inside Structure 1 include at
least four German manufactured Rhenish stoneware Bellarmines and portions
of two large bowls. The latter have not yet been identified but may have
been manufactured in southeastern England, perhaps around the London area.
Three small fragments of
French Saintonge, possibly all from the same vessel, and a single fragment
of Italian Sgrafitto ware, probably manufactured in Pisa (John Allan,
personal commmunication), were also recovered from the destruction level.
While these last vessels were probably broken inside Structure 19 the few
fragments recovered suggest that this happened sometime prior to the
destruction and that most of the pieces were discarded elsewhere while the
building was still occupied. A number of other fragments of Saintonge,
including the spout from a barrel costrel, have been found to the east and
west outside Structure 1 and a fragment of Italian Sgrafitto, very similar
to the one from inside Structure 1 was found just east of the cellar.
Several iron implements were
also recovered from inside the structure including a shallow iron bowl and
a 17th century axe head, both resting on the floor in front of the
fireplace. Two metres to the north were the badly corroded remains of a
reaphook, or sickle, and at the north end of the building were three 17th
century iron keys. Of these, one was resting on the cobblestones inside
the house, another was lying just west of the cobblestones and the third
was found just outside the building to the north. Another two keys were
found farther east just outside Structure 1. South of the cobblestone
floor were three cast iron cannon balls: a four pounder, a five pounder
and a six pounder. Literally hundreds of wrought iron nails, almost
certainly left from the collapse of the building's wooden superstructure,
were also recovered from the destruction level.
Four types of glass were
found in the destruction level: window glass, case bottle glass, onion
bottle glass, and glass beads. Of these, window glass was the most common
and literally thousands of small fragments were recovered. Hundreds of
fragments of case bottle glass were also present and, while the exact
number of case bottles is impossible to determine, the presence of two
bases in the upper room and a rim and shoulder fragment at the back of the
hearth indicates that there were at least three such bottles in the house
when it was destroyed. Only a few fragments of onion bottle glass were
recovered and these may all be from a single bottle.
Seven glass beads have been
found in the destruction level over the past three seasons. Four of these
are the typical bright blue beads, usually identified as trade beads on
17th century sites, and the other three are of a type generally referred
to as 'chevron' beads. Roughly cylindrical with a layer of dark blue glass
over layers of red, white and yellow, the ends of these chevron beads have
been ground down exposing the different colours and creating a layered
effect. According to Ivor Noel Hume such beads are usually found on
colonial sites dating to the first half of the 17th century (Noel Hume
1969:53). Similar beads have been recovered from a 16th/17th century
context at the Woolster Street excavations in Plymouth, Devon (Gaskell-Brown
1986:39-40 & 50 #173-176). Of the three chevron beads found in
Structure 1, one was resting on the cobblestones at the north end of the
house and another was directly above one of the burnt timbers extending
northwest from the north end of the house. The third, also located at the
north end of the house, obviously had been caught between two burning
timbers, partially melted and flattened during the intense heat of the
fire. Three other chevrons were found at the north end of the building
but, unfortunately, were from a disturbed context.
Based on the results of the
1995 and 1996 seasons, we concluded that Structure 1 probably had been
destroyed sometime between about 1650 and the early 1660s (Gilbert 1997).
A reanalysis of this data combined with new data recovered in 1997
suggests that a more accurate date for the destruction is sometime in the
early to mid 1660s. While most of the material recovered from the
destruction level was almost certainly manufactured prior to 1660, several
of the clay pipes indicate a slightly later date.
Certainly, the bottle glass
found in the destruction level suggests a date of 1660 or before. Case
bottles were the only type of glass bottle manufactured by the English
prior to 1645 and, while they continued to be manufactured after that
time, they were increasingly displaced as time went on, first by onion
bottles and later by dark green wine bottles (Noel Hume 1979:42-43). Onion
bottles first appeared around 1645 and were themselves largely replaced by
dark green wine bottles by about 1660 (Noel Hume 1969:63; 1979:42-43). If
Structure 1 had been occupied much after the latter date, dark green wine
bottle glass undoubtedly would have been present in the destruction level
but it was not. However, dark green bottle glass was present on the site
in the post-destruction level both above Structure 1 and to the east of
it. As we have seen, the glass chevron beads also suggest a date from the
first half of the 17th century.
Ceramic evidence also points to an occupation
ending no later than about 1660. Most of the west country vessels
recovered from the building have a fairly broad temporal range and, while
clearly of 17th century origin, are of little other use as dating tools.
Nor is the Merida ware of much use in dating the destruction. However,
some of the other pottery is much more period-specific. All of the Iberian
blue and white tin glaze recovered from Structure 1 dates to the first
half of the 17th century as does the single fragment of Italian Sgrafitto
(John Allan, personal communication). The four bellarmines found inside
the building could be of a somewhat later date. However, all are of
mid-17th century origin (John Allan, personal communication) and could
easily have been manufactured before 1660.
All of this points to a
destruction date of 1660 or before. However, one pipe bowl and a pipe bowl
fragment recovered from the occupation level were almost certainly
manufactured somewhat later. Three diagnostic pipe bowls and a pipe bowl
fragment have been recovered from the destruction level. Two of the bowls
have no maker's marks but one was obviously produced sometime between
roughly 1620 and 1660 and the other between about 1650 and 1680 (Gilbert
1997:13 & 30-31) suggesting a destruction date of roughly 1650 to
1660––the period when both these types of pipes were in use. The third
bowl, discovered in 1997 resting beneath a burnt timber on the
cobblestones at the north end of Structure 1 bears the maker's mark 'IA'
on its heel and is identical to Bristol pipes assigned by Iain Walker to
the period 1660-1670 (Walker 1977:1462-1463, C,D,E). Apparently, the only
Bristol pipe maker with the initials 'IA' working during this period was
John Abbott whose career spanned the years 1651 to 1681 (Oswald 1975:150).
This is almost certainly one of his pipes and, based on stylistic
evidence, was probably made sometime between about 1660 and 1670. Too
little of the fourth bowl fragment has survived for it to be identified by
shape. However, it has the maker's mark 'IT' on its heel and is apparently
the work of Bristol pipe maker John Tucker who was active between 1662 and
1687 (Oswald 1975:158; Gilbert 1997:13).
While the 'IA' pipe could
have been made as early as 1660, if the 'IT' pipe is the work of John
Tucker, then Structure 1 still must have been standing in 1662 when Tucker
began his career. Yet, given that all the other datable material inside
Structure 1 seems to date to 1660 or before, it seems unlikely that the
building survived much after that time.
Occupation
It seems clear that Structure
1 was occupied during the first half of the 17th century, but exactly how
long was it occupied and when was it built? To answer this question we
need to look outside the structure and below the destruction level to the
deposit that accumulated around the building during its construction and
occupation. Unless the building was occupied for only a short period, most
of the material inside it probably dates from close to the end of the
occupation. It is highly unlikely that broken glass and pottery would have
been left lying around on the floor of a house that was in regular use.
However, material lost or discarded during the occupation of the building
would have accumulated outside it and we are fortunate in that Structure 1
has a well defined and easily identified occupation level (Level 4)
outside the structure and immediately below the rubble and burnt timbers
of the destruction level. Most of the occupation level excavated to date
is just west of and adjoining Structure 1 around the area where the
entrance appears to have been located.
As we have seen, the
destruction level consists of stone and brick rubble in a silt matrix. In
contrast, the occupation level which lies beneath it is made up of a fine
brown silt with very little rubble. Aside from these obvious differences
in matrix, the destruction and occupation levels differ in another
fundamental way. While the ceramic from the destruction level is made up
mostly of relatively large fragments, many of which join to form partial
reconstructions, the ceramic in the occupation level consists mostly of
smaller fragments with very few joins. This reflects the fundamental
difference between these two deposits. The destruction level represents a
single event––the destruction of Structure 1––which took place in
a fairly short time and which remained relatively undisturbed until we
uncovered it. In contrast, the occupation level accumulated gradually
around Structure 1 over the period that the building was occupied.
Vessels, both of ceramic and glass, undoubtedly were broken outside the
building during that time but most of the fragments would have either been
collected and discarded elsewhere or knocked about by later activity
leaving only those few that escaped to enter the archaeological record.
There are also some other significant differences between the artifacts
from the occupation level and those from the destruction level.
Four types of glass were
recovered from the occupation level: 17th century window glass, case
bottle glass, trade beads and blue-green glass. Of these, window glass was
the most common and much of it was located directly outside Structure 1 at
the base of the burnt sill. Case bottle glass was the next most common
type and the only type of bottle glass in the deposit. Most of the
fragments were small, which should come as no surprise given the fragility
of these bottles. However, a well preserved rim and shoulder fragment was
recovered from the north end of the structure near the base of the sill.
Seven glass beads, almost certainly trade beads, were recovered. Of these,
three are cylindrical blue beads, one is a round blue bead, three are
round white beads and one is a round black bead with four white stripes.
Only a few small fragments of 17th century blue-green glass were
recovered, possibly all from one vessel. This glass is typical of glass
manufactured in the Low Countries in the early to mid-17th century.
The window glass and its
location just outside the burnt sill suggests that Structure 1 had glazed
windows. The glass most likely accumulated over time as panes were broken
and replaced. The presence of case bottle glass to the exclusion of any
other type clearly points to an occupation during the first half of the
17th century. Indeed, since no onion bottle fragments have been recovered
from this level, an occupation date of sometime prior to 1645 is strongly
suggested.
The presence of trade beads
also points to an early date for the occupation level. We know that up
until at least 1620 the planters at Cupers Cove were making a concerted
effort to establish a fur trade with the Beothuk Indians living to the
west in Trinity Bay and a number of trips were made into the bay for that
purpose. Among the items used in this trade were beads and there are two
references to trade beads in the early documents from the plantation. Guy
mentions that he took a number of amber beads with him on his voyage into
Trinity Bay in the fall of 1612 and left several at a Beothuk camp on
Dildo Pond (Gilbert 1990:154). Later, in 1619, Thomas Rowley included
beads in a list of items to be used as 'Truck for savages' in Trinity Bay
(Gilbert 1992:7). A total of 87 beads have been found at Cupids to date
and most, if not all, are almost certainly trade beads. Unfortunately,
many have been disturbed from their original context as a result of
ploughing and frost action and cannot be dated stratigraphically. However,
one in particular is worthy of special mention. In Operation 7, just east
of Structure 1, we found a cylindrical amber bead measuring 1.25 cm long
and 0.71 cm wide. Such beads are extremely rare on archaeological sites
and while we may never know for certain, it is possible that this is one
of the amber beads mentioned by John Guy.
Ceramic evidence also points
to an occupation beginning early in the 17th century. There are certainly
similarities between the ceramics from the occupation level and the
destruction level. Fragments of Iberian vessels are common, including a
few examples of Iberian blue and white tin glaze, dating from the first
half of the 17th century, and a number of pieces of Merida ware including
fragments of two Merida trefoil jugs. West country wares are also present,
among which are a number of sherds of South Somerset and North Devon ware,
including the burnt rim of a North Devon ware storage Jar. A number of
fragments of Saintonge have also been recovered.
However, several types of
pottery have been found in the occupation level that were absent from the
destruction level and point to an occupation beginning early in the 17th
century. These include a number of fragments of a grey micaceous
earthenware believed to be of either Breton or Norman manufacture, an
English delftware apothecary jar, or 'albarello,' with a hand painted blue
and yellow design, and three fragments of Werra Slipware. The grey
micaceous earthenware is identical to examples recovered at Ferryland in a
pre-1621 context and is usually assumed to be of 16th century origin (Gaulton
1997:4-5; James Tuck, personal communication); the albarello, found just
south of Structure 1 near the back of the fireplace, was manufactured in
London sometime between 16l2 and 1640 (Gilbert 1997:19-20; Drey 1978:115;
Noel Hume 1977:26-27, 64-65); and the Werra Slipware was made in Germany
sometime between 1575 and 1625 (John Allan, personal communication).
As is usually the case, our
best indicators of age are clay pipes, and eleven diagnostic pipe bowls
have been recovered from the occupation level to date. Nine of these came
from the area to the west of Structure 1, in Operations 1, 2, 3 & 4,
and the remaining two came from just east of the structure in Operation 7.
These pipes range in date from roughly 1610 to 1650. Six are of types
manufactured between roughly 1620 and 1650. Another is a Dutch pipe with a
five-leaved rose pattern in relief on one side of the bowl also
manufactured sometime between 1620 and 1650 (Oswald 1969:140-141). Yet
another has a maker's mark consisting of a cross stamped in relief on its
heel which resembles marks found on London pipes dating to between 1620
and 1640 (Oswald 1975:66; Gilbert 1996:18-19). The final three are
extremely early and date to the earliest occupation of the site. These are
of a type assigned by Noel Hume (1969:303) to between 1580 and 1620 and by
Oswald (1975:37-39) to between 1580 and 1610 (Gilbert 1997:29). If
Oswald's dates are correct, these pipes date to the very beginning of
settlement at Cupids in 1610 and indicate that Structure 1 was built about
that time. If Noel Hume's dates are the more accurate, then these pipes
were still manufactured no later than 1620 and indicate a construction
date of 1620 or before.
Three other early 17th
century pipe bowls and a pipe bowl fragment also have been recovered at
the site and, while they are from a disturbed context, it is worth noting
that all three of the bowls have a date range of between roughly 1620 and
1650. The bowl fragment, found in the ploughed area on the eastern side of
Structure 1, is especially interesting. It has a distinctive rosette
design stamped on the back of the bowl which is identical to marks found
on clay pipes excavated at Plymouth and dating to between 1590 and 1630.
Pipes with similar marks have also been excavated at Bristol where they
date to between 1630 and 1640 (Oswald 1969:127-129).
Post-Destruction
It was clear from our work in
1995 and 1996 that there had been considerable post-destruction activity
in the area around Structure 1 during the latter half of the 17th century
and this is certainly supported by our findings in 1997. Ceramics, bottle
glass and clay pipe fragments from this period have all been recovered
both from the post-destruction level and from a disturbed area to the east
of Structure 1. Indeed, it appears that most of the post-destruction
activity, at least during the 17th century, took place to the east of the
structure.
Five clay pipes bearing the
'PE' maker's mark of Philip Edwards have been recovered from the post
destruction level. Edwards was a Bristol pipe maker who worked between
1649 and 1669 (Walker 1977:1420-1423) and the presence of his pipes above
the destruction level not only indicates post-destruction activity but
clearly shows that Structure 1 was no longer standing in the late 1660s.
Even if all of these 'PE' pipes were manufactured at the very end of
Edwards' career, which is clearly not the case based on differences in
design between these five pipes, Structure 1 must still have been
destroyed by 1669 at the latest.
Based on the results of our
previous work we had suggested that most of the 17th century
post-destruction activity around Structure 1 had taken place prior to
1680. However, new evidence recovered during 1997 indicates that the
post-destruction activity continued until at least 1690 or somewhat later.
A total of 39 diagnostic clay
pipe bowls have been recovered from Cupids over the past three years and
all but one clearly date from the 17th century. The one possible exception
is a pipe recovered from a disturbed context just east of the north end of
Structure 1 that was manufactured in the West Country, possibly in Exeter,
sometime between 1690 and 1720 (John Allan 1984:280-261, & personal
communication).
A somewhat later date for the
post-destruction activity is also Westerwald tankards, one from the
post-destruction level above the cobblestones and the other from the area
east of Structure 1 were recovered and both have a date range of between
1680 and 1710 (John Allan, personal communication). Several of the bottle
necks recovered from the area east of Structure 1 also clearly date from
about the end of the 17th century.
Conclusions
Documentary, archaeological
and architectural evidence all combine to indicate that the structures
uncovered at Cupids over the past three years are part of the original
Cupers Cove plantation. Certainly, they are in the right location. Indeed,
if the information contained in the letters and diaries of the people who
settled Cupers Cove is correct, they are in the only possible location.
The site is 240 paces from Cupids Pond, on the landward side of the salt
water pond, and adjacent to the original river bed, just as the documents
say it should be. Although one could argue that it is possible to move
farther to the east or west and still be 240 paces from Cupids Pond, it
should be borne in mind that up until 100 or so years ago the land to the
west of the terrace was a marsh and totally unsuitable for settlement and,
while the land farther east is both level and dry, if ones moves much
farther in that direction one is no longer either near the brook or on the
landward side of the salt water pond.
At this point it is worth
noting the significance of the salt water pond. This 'pond' is in reality
not a pond but a natural haven and the most sheltered part of Cupids Cove.
Located at the very bottom of the Cove, it is protected from winds and
seas by a wide barachois beach that extends northwest from the south side
virtually cutting it off from the rest of the harbour. However, there is a
passage on the north side and it is through this passage that the boats of
Cupids pass to find shelter for the night. This is the case now and it was
undoubtedly the case in the 17th century.
When Guy's party arrived in
1610 they almost certainly moored in the 'pond'; later, Guy's bark, the 'Endeavour,'
and the colony's fishing shallops would have anchored there, as would any
vessels visiting Cupers Cove; and the colony's boat building operations
would undoubtedly have been located there as well. In a very real sense
the pond was the centre of 17th century Cupids Cove as, in many ways, it
is today, and the plantation would of necessity have been built adjacent
to it just as the documents say it was.
As we have seen, the land at
the bottom of the harbour west of the terrace on which the site is located
was originally mostly marsh and, while the brook that passed through it
provided a much needed source of fresh water, it was totally unsuitable
for settlement. The nearest dry, level land to the pond is the terrace.
Indeed, of all the land in this area, the terrace and the land sloping
away from it to the east are by far the best suited for both settlement
and agriculture and undoubtedly were heavily forested when Guy's party
arrived. Clearly, when these first colonists landed at the bottom of
Cupids harbour in August of 1610, they selected the nearest piece of dry,
level land close to a source of fresh water they could find to begin their
plantation.
The archaeological evidence
clearly indicates that the site is from the right period. While we cannot
as yet say exactly when Structure 1 and its adjoining cellar were built,
it seems clear they were built sometime between 1610 and 1620. In fact,
many of the artifacts recovered from the occupation level, such as the
Werra Slipware, grey-micaceous earthenware, Iberian blue and white tin
glaze, and a number of the clay pipes could well date before 1610,
although an earlier date is highly unlikely given their location and
context.
Even if Structure 1 was built
as late as 1620, it still fits well within the appropriate time range for
the plantation. When Guy's party arrived in 1610, they immediately set to
work cutting and/or constructing the first buildings, and this work
continued for a number of years. Henry Crout reported in August 1612 that
all of Guy's carpenters were busy building a "sawe myll and other
houses" (Crout to Willoughby, 27 August, 1612, Mi X 1/15). A fort was
also completed in the summer of 1612 to defend the plantation against
pirates (John Slany to Willoughby, 3 September 1612, Mi X 1/18) and by 8
September of the same year work had begun on a house for Crout and his
ward Thomas Willoughby (Crout to Willoughby, 8 September 1612, Mi X 1/20).
By the spring of 1613 at least sixteen structures were standing at Cupers
Cove and more buildings were almost certainly added after that. [1]
Indeed, the plantation was
still a going concern in the mid-1620s. In 1624 William Alexander reported
that, "The first houses for habitation were built in Cupids Cove
within the Bay of Conception where people did dwell for sundry yeeres
together, and some well satisfied both for pleasure, and profit are
dwelling there still, finding small difference between the seasons of the
yeere in that Climate, and here" (Alexander 1624:24). Perhaps the
most interesting thing about the structures uncovered so far is not that
they were built at such an early date but that, as the archaeological
evidence clearly shows, they continued to be used for such a long time
after that date.
The architecture is also what
one would expect to find during the early days of the plantation. These
buildings were clearly not the work of migratory fishermen whose premises
invariably consisted of insubstantial structures adjacent to the water
(Faulkner 1985). Instead, whoever built the massive stone fireplace,
wooden, and cobblestone floors, and seven foot deep stone-walled cellar
uncovered at Cupids was obviously planning a long stay. Nor is this likely
to have been the work of an ordinary planter. The stonework is clearly
that of a professional mason and it, along with features such as the
wooden floor and glazed windows, suggests a level of affluence beyond the
means of the average 17th century settler. However, it is certainly not
beyond the means of an official colony backed by a consortium of merchants
and nobles. In fact, we know that the London and Bristol Company hired
professional sawyers, carpenters, stonemasons and other tradesmen and
brought them to Cupers Cove specifically to build the plantation and as we
have seen, the structures at Cupids resemble buildings constructed in
England during the early 17th century.
It is also worth noting the
similarities between the buildings at Cupids and some of the earliest
buildings constructed at Ferryland. One of the first things the planters
at Ferryland did upon their arrival on 4 August, 1621 was dig a cellar
(Cell 1982:256). According to Edward Wynne, the first governor of the
Ferryland colony, the cellar, which had been dug by 26 August and enclosed
by 31 October, was twenty feet long and fifteen feet wide. Although he
does not specify its depth, it must have been fairly deep since the earth
from it and a nearby 'kitchen room' was used to construct an earthenworks
defensive wall. This cellar was part of a larger structure, 44 feet long
and 15 feet wide, that included a hall 18 feet long and 15 feet wide, with
'one Chimney of stone-worke' and a six foot wide entryway (Cell
1982:196-197). We do not as yet know the dimensions of the cellar at
Cupids but, as we have seen, the hall has a single stone chimney and
measures sixteen feet by twelve feet––only slightly smaller than the
one built by Wynne. The ground floor of the structure at Ferryland had an
eight foot high ceiling above which was a four foot high half storey
divided into four separate chambers (Cell 1982:196). Unfortunately, we may
never know if the buildings at Cupids had an upper storey but the
construction may well have been similar. Indeed, some of the craftsman who
built the Cupers Cove plantation may also have worked at Ferryland. Wynne
mentions in a letter written to George Calvert on 17 August 1622 that he
hopes to hire "a Mason, and one more" in Conception Bay (Cell
1962:204).
Perhaps one of the most
interesting revelations to arise from our work to date is the length of
the occupation at Cupers Cove. We know from documentary sources that the
plantation was occupied up until at least 1624 but beyond that time the
documents are of little use. Some historians have taken this to mean that
Cupers Cove must have been abandoned by the late 1620s. However, the
archaeological evidence clearly shows that, whether later documents have
not yet been found, have not survived or were never written, at least
those structures uncovered so far at Cupids were occupied up until about
1660. Around that time there was a fire that either destroyed the
structures or damaged them to such an extent that they were abandoned and
soon fell into ruin.
Those looking for a dramatic
explanation for this event might suggest that the destruction was the
result of an armed conflict. Obviously, a conflict requires an enemy but
who might be responsible for the intentional destruction of an English
plantation in Conception bay during the 1660s? Certainly, it is far too
early to be the result of one of the French raids, the earliest and most
infamous of which took place in 1697. However, there are two possible
candidates: the English migratory fishermen and the Dutch.
Perhaps the on again-off
again conflict between the planters at Cupers Cove and the migratory
fishing crews reached a climax in the 1660s and the plantation was
destroyed. On the other hand, the plantation could have been destroyed
during the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665-1668). In 1665, the Dutch fleet
under De Ruyter attacked several Newfoundland ports including St. John's (Prowse
1895:183) and, while apparently there is no documentary evidence for a
raid on Conception Bay, such a raid is not totally beyond the realm of
possibility. It is at least worth noting that fragments of several Dutch
clay pipe stems have been recovered from the destruction level at Cupids.
However, at this point this
is all conjecture and the actual explanation may be much more prosaic.
Perhaps the fire was simply the result of an unfortunate accident as is so
often the case even today. Only more work will allow us to determine what
actually happened. As work proceeds, other structures will undoubtedly be
uncovered. If the plantation were intentionally destroyed, then all the
buildings were likely put to the torch and the charred remains will be
clearly visible. However, if the fire was an accident and was extinguished
before it could spread, then most of the other buildings will have been
left untouched by fire.
Clearly there was
considerable activity at the site after Structure 1 and its adjoining
cellar were destroyed in the 1660s. The archaeological evidence indicates
an English presence, concentrated mainly in the area to the east of
Structure 1, from the time of the destruction up until at least the 1690s
and possibly as late as 1720. Whether this activity represents year round
occupation by planters or seasonal utilization by migratory fishermen we
can not as yet say. However, the quantity and quality of the material and
its location at some distance from the main part of the harbour suggests
the latter.
The scant documentary
evidence to which we have access might lead one to conclude that Cupids
was abandoned by the late 1670s. However, this evidence may be open to
interpretation. The Berry census of 1675 (C.O. 1/35) lists only one person
living at Cupids, a Mr. Atkins, the 'keeper of Mr. Butler's cattle.' The
Mr. Butler in question is almost certainly Thomas Butler who with his wife
and three sons is listed as living at Port de Grave at that time. However,
one is inclined to wonder what else besides pasture land Butler may have
maintained at Cupids. Given that the census was taken during the summer,
it is conceivable that Butler and his family were following a practice
that had become well established by the 19th century, and were spending
their summers fishing at Port de Grave and their winters hunting, trapping
and cutting wood at Cupids. The 1677 census (C.O. 1/38) also lists Butler
and his family, which now includes a daughter, as living at Port de Grave
and makes no reference whatsoever to Cupids. However, this census was also
taken in the summer and it is possible that things changed at the end of
the fishing season.
A fifteen week field season
is planned for Cupids during the summer of 1998. During that time the
excavation will be extended to the south exposing the remainder of the
cellar and to the northwest exposing the burnt timbers adjacent to
Structure 1. As mentioned above, these timbers appear to be part of either
an extension to Structure 1 or part of another, adjoining building. Two 1
m wide test trenches will also be established, one extending north from
the northernmost limit of the excavation for ten metres, and the other
extending south from the southernmost limit of the excavation for the same
distance. It is hoped that these trenches will allow us to both locate the
enclosure that once surrounded the plantation, thus better defining the
perimeter of the site, and identify some of the other structures that were
part of the plantation. While some of the sixteen structures we know of at
Cupers Cove, such as the sawmill, brew house and fort, stood at some
distance from the centre of the plantation, most appear to have been
located either within or near the enclosure built by Guy in 1610. If the
state of preservation of the structures uncovered to date is any
indication, then many of these buildings probably lie relatively
undisturbed, awaiting excavation.
[1] There
is no list of buildings constructed at Cupers Cove in the original
documents. The figure sixteen was arrived at by counting each structure
mentioned at least once up until the spring of 1613. There were almost
certainly other buildings that were not mentioned.
REFERENCES
Manuscripts
|
Middleton MSS,
|
Mi X 1/1-66, papers
of Sir Percival Willoughby relating to the Newfoundland Company,
1610-1631.
|
|
|
C.O. 1/35, Census
1675.
|
|
|
C.O. 1/38, Census
1677.
|
Primary Printed Sources
|
Alexander, Sir
William (Knight)
|
|
1624
|
An Encouragement
to Colonies: Alter Erit Tum Tiphis, & Altera Quce Vehat Argo
Defectus Heroas. London: William Stansby, 1624.
|
Other Sources
|
Allan, J.P.
|
|
1984
|
Medieval and
Post-Medieval Finds from Exeter, 1971-1980. Gloucester: Alan
Sutton Publishing Limited.
|
|
Deetz, James
|
|
1977
|
In Small Things
Forgotten: The Archaeology of Early American Life. New York:
Anchor Books.
|
|
Drey, Rudolf E.A.
|
|
1978
|
Apothecary Jars:
Pharmaceutical Pottery and Porcelain in Europe and the East
1150-1850, with a Glossary of Terms Used in Apothecary Jar
Inscriptions. London and Boston: Faber and Faber.
|
|
Faulkner, Alaric
|
|
1985
|
"Archaeology of
the Cod Fishery: Damariscove Island." Historical
Archaeology, 19(2).
|
|
Gaskell-Brown,
Cynthia (ed.)
|
|
1986
|
The Medival
Waterfront, Woolster Street, the Finds. Plymouth: P.D.S.
Printers.
|
|
Gaulton, Barry
|
|
1997
|
"Seventeenth
Century Stone Construction at Ferryland, Newfoundland." Avalon
Chronicles, Vol. 2, 1-42.
|
|
Gilbert, William
|
|
1997
|
"Excavations at
Cupids: 15 July to 20 September, 1996." Manuscript on file at
Culture and Heritage Division, Department of Tourism, Culture and
Recreation, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador.
|
|
1996
|
"Looking for
Cupers Cove." Avalon Chronicles, Vol. 1, 67-95.
|
|
1992
|
"'great good
Done': Beothuk/European Relations in Trinity Bay, 1612 to
1622." Newfoundland Quarterly, LXXXVII(3).
|
|
1990
|
"'Divers
Places': The Beothuk Indians and John Guy's Voyage into Trinity
Bay in 1612." Newfoundland Studies, VI(2).
|
|
Noel Hume, Ivor
|
|
1969
|
A Guide to the
Artifacts of Colonial America. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
|
|
1977
|
Early English
Delftware from London and Virginia. Williamsburg, Virginia:
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.
|
|
1979
|
Martin's Hundred:
The Discovery of a Lost Colonial Virginia Settlement. New
York: Delta Books.
|
|
Oswald, Adrian
|
|
1969
|
"Marked Clay
Pipes from Plymouth, Devon." in, Post Medieval
Archaeology, Vol 3, 1969.
|
|
1975
|
Clay Pipes for the
Archaeologist. Oxford: TRUEXpress Ltd.
|
|
Prowse, D.W.
|
|
1895
|
A Historv of
Newfoundland from the English, Colonial and Foreign Records.
London: Macmillan and Company.
|
|
Quiney, Anthony
|
|
1990
|
The Traditional
Buildings of England. London: Thames and Hudson.
|
|
Quinn, David B. (with
Alison M. Quinn and Susan Hillier)
|
|
1979
|
Newfoundland from
Fishery to Colony: Northwest Passages Searches. Vol. 4 of New
American World: A Documentary History of North America to 1612.
New York: Arno Press and Hector Bye Inc.
|
|
Walker, Iain C.
|
|
1977
|
Clay
Tobacco-Pipes, with Particular Reference to the Bristol Industry.
History and Archaeology Series 11C, Parks Canada, Ottawa.
|
|