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RELEASE:

CONTACT:
IMMEDIATE

Dawn Eischen 804-524-6179
richmondinfo@VDOT.Virginia.gov
Tiffany Erbach 757-925-1660
RICH-091

Jan. 6, 2006



18TH CENTURY DOMESTIC SITE DISCOVERED IN JAMES CITY COUNTY
VDOT archaeologists unearth findings during excavation for Route 5 bridge replacement project

JAMES CITY COUNTY — Hand-wrought nails, stemmed glassware and ceramics dating back to 1750-1780 are among items discovered by Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) archaeologists as part of a routine archaeological investigation of the area where the replacement of the Judith Stewart Dresser Memorial Bridge will be constructed over the Chickahominy River later this year. Archaeologists are excavating this site, which may provide new insights to eighteenth century life in colonial America.

Preliminary results suggest the site is associated with the Barrett family plantation circa 1750. Structural components from the home were unearthed as well as late colonial housewares. The site is along the east bank of the Chickahominy River within the Chickahominy Riverfront Park in James City County.

“The site has excellent potential to yield information on themes and questions related to the history of James City County and the surrounding region,” says John Wells, preservation program manager for VDOT’s Richmond District. VDOT archaeologists and consultant, The Louis Berger Group, Inc., are currently completing the large-scale excavation for VDOT’s Cultural Preservation Program. The excavation includes photographing and documenting the artifacts, which will then be sent for curation to the Virginia Department of Historic Resources in Richmond.

The data recovery program will focus on:
  • the structure and evolution of the domestic house lot
  • the local availability and popularity of commodities
  • material culture fashions and technological innovations from the colonial period
  • early national and antebellum periods
  • changing consumer behavior and its relationship to social class and ethnicity
  • gender-based activities and use of space.
VDOT’s Cultural Preservation Program regularly conducts field studies of proposed highway construction projects to identify historic properties such as archaeological sites, buildings and other structures, old cemeteries and battlefields. Agency archaeologists and architectural historians review plans for new construction and highway maintenance to ensure that effects on properties of cultural and historical significance are avoided or minimized.

VDOT is expected to begin construction of the new Judith Stewart Dresser Memorial Bridge in late fall 2006 with estimated completion in late 2008.

For more information about the Route 5 bridge replacement project, visit the project Web page.

Information in VDOT news releases was accurate at the time the release was published. For the most current information about projects or programs, please visit the project or program Web pages. You may find those by searching by keyword in the search Virginia DOT box above.



Page last modified: Jan. 18, 2008