Archaeologists excavate NY Colonial battleground
"It's a confusing and complicated site," said David Starbuck, the archaeologist who's leading the project during the State University of New York at Adirondack's annual six-week archaeology field school.
Starbuck and his team of two dozen students and volunteers began excavations two weeks ago in a section of Lake George Battlefield Park, located on rising ground overlooking the southern end of the 32-mile lake. New York state has owned the park since the late 1890s, a fact that Starbuck credits with protecting the site from commercial development and intrusion by treasure hunters.
The village of Lake George has yielded troves of artifacts over the decades. Starting with the French and Indian War (1755-63) and continuing through the end of the Revolutionary War in 1783, tens of thousands of American, British, French and Indians encamped here during various military campaigns aimed at controlling the waterways connecting the upper Hudson River and Canada. Battles were fought and forts were destroyed or abandoned; the material traces of all that activity are still being uncovered.
Many of the discoveries have been made at the battlefield park, one of the most significant 18th-century military sites in the region. It was the site of the Battle of Lake George, fought on Sept. 8, 1755, between British Colonial troops and their Mohawk allies and a force of French and Indians. After an ambush that killed scores of New England militiamen, the Colonials - their backs to the lake and only a single British officer among their leaders - successfully fought off the ensuing enemy attack.
Starbuck said he hopes to uncover evidence of the 1755 battle and the so-called entrenched camp that played a role in the siege and massacre that inspired James Fenimore Cooper's "The Last of the Mohicans." The field school last dug at the park site in 2001-02, uncovering a bayonet, musket barrel and military compass, among numerous other artifacts.
So far, the dig has mostly yielded pieces of wine bottles dating to the 18th century, Starbuck said.
On a recent balmy day, Engwer uncovered a section of a cow's vertebrae with the butcher's marks clearly visible. The find jibes with 18th-century accounts of cattle being driven north from Albany to Fort Edward, then along the Military Road to the lake's southern end to feed the thousands of soldiers manning the wilderness outposts here.
"It's really cool to apply my skills," she said. "I'm pursuing my passion."
Starbuck hopes the project draws more visitors to the park, which is open for daytime picnicking and anchors the southern end of the Warren County bike path. With a quarter-century of history within its confines, the park has an intriguing story to tell, he said.
"It's a wonderful resource that a lot more people could be using," he said.
Author: Chris Carola | Source: The Associated Press [July 19, 2014]
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