Archaeology in Newfoundland and
Labrador 1997
Edited by K. Nelmes
St. John's Waterfront
Archaeology Project 1997
Peter Pope
BRIEF BACKGROUND The St. John's Waterfront Archaeology
Project is designed to uncover, record, assess and conserve archaeological
vestiges of the St. John's waterfront and interpret these data through
integration with the documentary record. The research project will
continue over several seasons, with the intention of looking closely at
several loci within the study area: the original beach waterfront on the
north side of St. John's Harbour, where Water Street is now. The project
will assess the development of the waterfront, (A.D.) 1500 to 1900, with
special attention to the changing character of exchange in a specific
harbour as it evolved from a fishing station into a port.
1997 FIELD SEASON
The summer started with a significant
boost from City Hall, when St. John's Municipal Council accepted the
recommendation of the City Planning Committee to advise the Provincial
Culture and Heritage Division of development projects in a defined
waterfront area. The Waterfront Archaeology Project has, in turn, agreed
to help the Culture and Heritage Division with assessments in this area,
defined on the basis of historic and archaeological sensitivity. The City
Engineering Department put these promises to work when they invited us to
carry out surveys at several development sites in or near the designated
waterfront area. Surveys at two parking projects, Prince Street (CjAe-29)
and Bell Street (CjAe-30) suggested there were no significant
archaeological resources at risk. A revisit to Kenny's (Civic #127-129 New
Gower Street, CjAe-17), recovered materials from a 19th/20th century
forge, with some 18th century materials in the form of grey Westerwald
stonewares. The latter helped to clarify the 18th century occupation of
the town but since the site itself is a redeposit associated with
construction of about 1900, our work at the site was limited.
The Waterfront Archaeology Project
operated as a field school for Memorial University of Newfoundland
archaeology students, under the direction of Dr. Peter Pope of the
Archaeology Unit, assisted by graduate students Amanda Crompton and John
Wicks. We began the season at King's Beach (Harbourside Park, CjAe-12),
but recent fill to a depth of almost 3 m precluded further work at this
time, given our limited budget for backhoe work. Our testing indicates
that whatever remains of the King's Wharf is deeply stratified.
A week of survey work followed. This
included the development assessments already mentioned; the identification
of two 19th century sites, 62 Water Street (CjAe-28) and Temperance Street
(CjAe-31), as well as recovery of late 18th century glass during a revisit
to 325-327 Water Street (CjAe-8), near the Murray Premises. These wine
bottles may have surfaced during demolition at the site a few years ago. A
test excavation near Water Street did not locate a source context, but did
suggest that builders about 1840 cut into the natural slope. The area
southwards, to the stone quayside identified in 1993, merits further
attention pending redevelopment.
We spent most of our energy on extensive
shovel and trowel excavations at Temperance Street. This site consists of
the rear lots of the well-known stone houses built by the master mason of
Cabot Tower. Large hardwood shade trees suggest that little has disturbed
these lots since they were laid out after the Great Fire of 1892. Shovel
test pits located fire rubble to depths of over 2 m, indicating extensive
re-landscaping after the Great Fire. Finds of tin-glazed and other early
modern earthenwares in tests at the bottom of the slope encouraged us to
expand our excavations there, until we had several square metres exposed
to sterile soil at a depth of nearly 3 m. We found no early features,
except a disused sewage system, dating some time before the Great Fire.
Nor did we locate the contexts from which our early finds were strays. We
do have the basis for reconstructing the early 19th century landscape and
we have tested the most easterly part of the City's designated Waterfront
Area. Since the lots are not accessible by backhoe, a crew matching our 20
or so was actually necessary to do this. (We were, unfortunately, denied
access to one of the lots, and the adjacent commercial property.)
Students cleaned and numbered over 6000
artifacts, under the supervision of Paula French, our conservation
assistant. The leather boots retrieved from Temperance Street will
probably be our biggest conservation challenge. We have a fine range of
late 19th century bottles from that site, many of local design, and
several of which are complete. In general, this year's excavations confirm
the considerable depth of cultural deposits along Water Street. We
continue to work at survey rather than detailed areal excavation but,
without a wonderful increase in funding, this is probably all that is
practical. It is also what is most needed, as the archaeological resources
of the Waterfront area remain largely unmapped. The City has now
recognized that the handful of sites identified to date are not by
themselves the archaeological reources to be protected but are, instead, a
sample which suggests the rich potential of the area to be developed as
the times permit.
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