This week we travel to Elk County located in the
“Pennsylvania Wilds” of northern Pennsylvania. The county forms 832 square
miles in the eastern section of the High Plateau Section of the Appalachian
Plateaus Province of Pennsylvania and has a population of about 32,000 people.
The principal water system is the Clarion River and its tributaries that form
part of the Upper Ohio Valley. A small, eastern section drains to the
Susquehanna’s West Branch Valley via the Driftwood and Bennetts branches of the
Sinnemahoning Creek. Established in 1843, Elk County was formed from parts of
Clearfield, Jefferson and McKean counties and its namesake is the Elk,
a majestic four legged creature that still roams the more isolated parts of the
county. Two state properties, Bendigo State Park and Elk State Park are also
located in its forested woodlands and are popular outdoor facilities especially
during the warm summer months. A large
part of the Allegheny National Forest is located in the western section of Elk County
which holds favor to hikers, hunters and snowmobilers alike, at various times
of the year.
Elk County has a long prehistoric record extending back to
the Paleoindian period when much of the Northeast was experiencing a cool dry
climate filled with a mosaic-like forest of spruce-pine and hardy deciduous
hardwood trees. In “The Story of Ridgway” by Harry Hill (1964), mention is made
of two fluted point discoveries near the mouth of Bear Creek, attesting to the site
as a hunting station for Native Americans of the earliest times who went there
before the climate turned warmer and drier and the forest cover approached
modern standards.
36El 17 excavation trench
The Archaic Period in Elk County is represented by sites
containing side-notched and corner notched points made from river drifted
pebbles principally of the gray mottled Onondaga and other glacially derived
cherts of the Allegheny and lower Clarion River Valleys. A dark grayish brown
to black colored marine chert of the Vanport member was also a lithic material
favored by Archaic hunters and gatherers for tipping their atlatl dart shafts.
Typical forms were of the Brewerton side and corner notched, although stemmed
points leading into the Woodland period were also made and used by the Archaic people
who once lived in this region of northern Pennsylvania.
location of post molds at 36El 17
As time went on native populations grew in size. By the Late
Woodland Period we see a rise in site density throughout the Clarion and
Sinnemahoning drainages where settlement locations seem to have focused on
upland and riverine settings. Archaeological research at one of these sites,
the McKinley Earthwork, was carried out in the mid-1970’s by the Pennsylvania
Historical and Museum Commission under special contract with the Allegheny National Forest (Smith and Herbstritt 1976). The site is one
in a cluster of three-dimensional earth rings constructed by the McFate Culture
sometime in the 15th century. Its location seems to suggest that it
was a place of refuge selected for defense where a palisaded wall encircled an oval-shaped
area measuring 315 feet by 230 feet. Archaeologists discovered that a ring of earth averaging about five feet in width
and about two feet in height was mounded up to support a wall of upright
posts. It is estimated that the wall was
about 15 feet high and spanned the entire perimeter of the site. Interior
postmold stains indicated the presence of dwellings and internal pit features,
however, their actual size and function was not wholly ascertained owing to the
time constraints of the field project.
triangular projectile points
The principal artifact classes recovered were confined to
stone and ceramic objects. Triangular points and utilized flakes made from
locally derived pebble cherts were the dominant stone tool types which suggest
that hunting was a much practiced activity at the site. Points were essentially
isosceles in shape with straight or concaved bases that appear generically
Iroquoian in their execution. Ceramic fragments characterized by the shell
tempered McFate Incised type, indicate cultural contact with groups further
west and north in the French Creek and Chautauqua Creek drainages of
Pennsylvania and western New York, respectively.
McFate Incised ceramic rim sherds
The archaeologists also found evidence of smoking technology
at the earthring site. Stem and bowl fragments of out-flaring trumpet shaped
pipes of fired clay and a small sand-tempered bird effigy pipe bowl fragment
indicate Iroquoian influence from northern Pennsylvania and/or western New
York, as well. Certain of the trumpet shaped pipes displayed exceptional skill
in their manufacture that implies craft specialization within the site’s Native
American population.
Moving on to the Historic Period we find that there are 63 recorded
sites that are listed under this site/period category. The predominant type numbers
47 Commercial/Industrial with most as “petroleum related” and within the
boundaries of the Allegheny National Forest. Among the other Historic Period sites
listed is the Loleta Park site (36EL105), a sawmill town dated to the 1898-1913
period. There, two industrial and 11 domestic locations were selected for
specific investigation by the National Park Service (Frye et al. 1993). Some of
the discoveries at 36EL105 related to the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
days of the last century when buildings were constructed on the site and where
several of their remnants now survive. The recordation of two water dams were
completed during this study that also relate to the CCC component.
Civilian Conservation Corps artifacts
We hope you have enjoyed this brief journey into the
prehistory and history through archaeology where interesting information continues
to contribute to our ever-growing body of knowledge about the people and their
material culture from a part of Pennsylvania where the Elk still roam.
Frye, Lori, Deborah Dobson-Brown, Herb Beamer and Robert
Corso
1993 A Cultural Resource Examination of the
Loleta Recreation Area, Millstone Township, Elk County, Pennsylvania.
Report submitted to USDA Forest Service, Allegheny National Forest by
Archaeological Services Consultants, Inc.
Hill, Harry
1964 The Story of Ridgway. Ridgway
Publishing Company.
Smith, Ira. F.
and James T. Herbstrit
1976 Preliminary Investigations of the
Prehistoric Earthworks in Elk County, Pennsylvania. Report submitted to the
United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Allegheny National
Forest by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.
For more information, visit PAarchaeology.state.pa.us or the Hall of Anthropology and Archaeology at The State Museum of Pennsylvania .
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