Pierce Street Lot
Test
excavations were carried out at the Pierce Street lot in City Point
that had been surveyed during the summer of 2002. We were drawn
back to this location in search of early colonial settlement dating
from the 1600s. A single pipe fragment characteristic of this period
was found by last summer's survey, indicating that this property
held some potential for an early English site. The results of this
year's testing did not disappoint us.
The
first two units we excavated produced a variety of artifacts, ranging
from prehistoric Indian pottery to modern toys. But mixed with this
material were several fragments of telltale 17th-century pipes.
With them were also some small pieces of early colonial ceramics
and glass.
Encouraged by these results, we returned again a few weeks later
to open four more test units. This work was carried out with the
help of about a dozen high school students from Rocky Mount Preparatory
School in North Carolina. These hard-working and enthusiastic students
generated a wealth of new and useful information. Most importantly
their findings substantiate the indications of early English occupation.
More pipe fragments were found along with all manner of other artifacts
from several periods.
Here,
too, the results of this year's work are still under analysis. However,
it is certain that this spot was chosen for European settlement
by the mid-17th century. We can only speculate that it was the site
of a small tobacco "plantation." Future work will probably
reveal features in the ground that define where a dwelling stood
and other activities were carried out.
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