We
are going to interrupt our blog by county theme this week with a short announcement
concerning a major threat to the archaeological resources of the Washington
Boro area in Lancaster County and specifically the Washington Boro
Susquehannock site and its associated cemeteries. Earlier this month, an article appeared in a
Lancaster paper, that the Safe Harbor Power Company was “quietly” selling land
containing some of the most significant archeological sites in the country.
Selling what were essentially the front yards of the great Indian settlement of
Washington Boro and its burial grounds.
Caught off guard, conservation groups have scrambled to respond. Unfortunately,
the problem has yet to be resolved and the land sales may continue. We are very
concerned and may need your help. In the paragraphs below, we present a short
overview of the archaeology of Washington Boro and its significance to the
prehistory of the Commonwealth. As the situation develops we’ll keep you
informed.
The
Washington Boro area has been a major Native American habitation site since
Paleoindian times over 11,000 years ago. Artifacts from every time period in
Pennsylvania prehistory have been found here, frequently in large numbers,
representing substantial occupations. There are few other places like this in
the Commonwealth. For example, it represents a major center of Paleoindian
activity with five sites recorded within a half mile of the Boro. This level of
activity continues up through the Contact period when there are at least three
major Susquehannock villages covering a span of approximately 100 years between
1550 and 1650 AD. These contained between 1000 and 3000 men, women and
children. During the Contact period, this represents the highest density of
Native Americans in the Commonwealth. The villages are protected by double and
triple wooden stockades and contain up to 80 long houses. John Smith sent
military advisors to help the Susquehannocks in their ongoing war with the
Seneca in New York. The latest village, the Strickler site, was partially
excavated by the State Museum of Pennsylvania and European style bastions were
discovered, documenting the English influence. All of the villages contain huge
quantities of artifacts and food remains documenting the lives of these people.
Surrounding, each village are several cemeteries, probably representing
individual clan burial plots.
Washington Boro ceramic rim sherd
Clearly,
the well known high fertility soils for agriculture were an important
attraction for the Susquehannocks but also this location placed them in close
proximity to the English trade in the Chesapeake and the Dutch trade in the
lower Delaware. Prehistorically, the high fertility soils produced a bountiful
forest full of oak, hickory, chestnut and butternuts, all of which attracted a
wide variety of mammals and birds. Add to this the food resources from the
Susquehanna River such as mussels, water fowl and anadromous fish such as shad
and this represents a near perfect setting for prehistoric populations adapting
to the temperate forest.
Canine pipe bowl fragment from the Washington Boro site
We hope that you are concerned about the preservation of these important archaeological sites, and would like to support this preservation effort. For additional information please visit the Living Landscape Observer's website.
For more information, visit PAarchaeology.state.pa.us or the Hall of Anthropology and Archaeology at The State Museum of Pennsylvania .
Too bad most of the people living here now have no idea............
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