Discovering
Soon after the capital moved to Annapolis in 1695, St. Mary's City ceased to exist as a city. Local people scavenged bricks and wood from its decaying buildings and farmers began to plow the land where the city once stood
Most written records that might have been lost. There are no old maps or drawings that are known to survive. Historical documents contain only tantalizing clues to the appearance and layout of Maryland's first capital.
Archaeology is an essential tool in verifying what was once here. The archaeologists of Historic St. Mary's City have investigated the plowed fields, collecting and mapping the location of bricks, ceramics, tobacco pipes, and other artifacts. This work has confirmed where a number of buildings were located and where roads once ran. Excavation has revealed the presence of fence-line trenches, foundations, and postholes. Thousands of fragmentary artifacts have come to light, helping to reclaim the "lost world" of St. Mary's City.
[Captions:]
Every artifact that will be studied in depth is marked with a permanent label identifying precisely where on the archaeological site it was found. In archaeology, controlling the exact location of each object is essential for that object to provide useful information.
This computer map shows the distribution
of handmade colonial nails found by archaeologists over a part of St. Mary's City. The three nails (circled above) indicate the location of Cordea's Hope in the town center. If those three nails show one building, how many other early buildings might have existed in St. Mary's City?
Most structures in early Maryland were built with wooden posts. The archaeological remains of these buildings are usually subtle, consisting of the dark soil where a wooden post stood and the mixed soil of the fill in the hole around it.
Archaeologists find not only the remains of buildings but also pits filled with the objects people used and discarded in daily life. These deposits are like "time capsules" from which we can learn how life changed over the centuries.
[Aside:]
"...with all the ground within the payles from the backside of the said house [Lawyer's Lodging] until within twenty feet of the gutter before the door of the house wherein Garrett [Van Sweringen] then lived [Smith's Ordinary], the division line to run from the payles fronting toward the Country House...until it come parallel with the kitchen chimney then in the possession of Mr. John Moorecroft, and so with a straight line to the Kitchen Chimney."
Some of the few surviving historical records give valuable clues about the locations of buildings and fences. The 1672 lease shown here is the only detailed description for the Lawyer's Lodging property to survive. It helped archaeologists identify three of the key buildings in the town center.
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