This week our archaeological journey takes us to Luzerne
County located in the Ridge and Valley Province and Appalachian Plateau of northeastern
Pennsylvania. It contains two principal waterways, the Susquehanna and Lehigh, and these include numerous smaller watersheds that drain the county’s mountain
and valley terrain. Bordered by eight other counties, Luzerne is situated within three physiographic sections of the Commonwealth where its geology is comprised
essentially of Pennsylvanian, Mississippian and Devonian formations that are 290-405
million years old. For the most part, the rocks from these formations consist of
sandstone, shale and beds of anthracite coal. Hence, the principal economic
base of the county was coal based, wherein many deep shaft mines went into
production during the 19th and lasted through much of the 20th
century. Unfortunately, along with the economic boon that coal mining brought
to the region many miner’s lives were lost from mine fires, “cave-ins” and
other related misfortunes. The Knox Mine
Disaster of 1959 essentially put an end to the coal mining industry in
northeastern Pennsylvania.
Earlier in the 18th century Luzerne County was the
home of numerous Shawnee, Nanticoke and Delaware Indian towns. Some of these towns
have since been eradicated by urban sprawl and the mining of topsoil in the
main Wyoming Valley from Nanticoke to West Pittston. Assarughney, a former
Delaware village was one of the larger Indian towns in Luzerne County, and it
was located near the mouth of the Lackawanna River (Donehoo 1928). Other Indian
towns were established at Wapwallopen, Naticoke , Plymouth, Wilkes Barre and at other locations along the Susquehanna River. Connecting these towns were overland trails and pathways that
followed overland from one place to
another. Smaller trails and pathways connected
the Wyoming Valley to places on the Delaware such as the 18th Century Moravian
settlements at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. The Great
Warrior Path that linked the Athens area in Bradford County to the Forks of the
Susquehanna at Sunbury, Northumberland County (Wallace 1965) was another heavily
traveled Indian path and played an important role in the American Revolution.
vista of the Wyoming Valley from Campbell's Ledge Overlook - photo courtesy Jim Herbstritt
Late in the 18th century, Luzerne county was the
scene of the Battle of Wyoming where British, Tories and Indians massacred
nearly 300 settlers at present Wyoming, Pennsylvania. Leading up the massacre
was the indiscriminate “squatting” of land along the Susquehanna by Connecticut
and Pennsylvania settlers. A monument marking the grave site can be seen in
the town of Wyoming to honor the victims
of this tragic act.
Luzerne County was originally part of Northumberland County
but in 1786 it became its own entity. According to the U. S. Census Bureau, more than 320,000 people presently reside in
Luzerne making it the only county in the United States whose Polish ancestry exceeds
any other reported ethnic group. The largest community is Wilkes Barre with a
plurality population of over 41,000
people. Frances Slocum State Park, Lehigh Gorge State Park, Nescopeck State
Park and Ricketts Glen State Park located in various regions of the county serve
to preserve the natural beauty of this part of “Penns Woods.”
A review of the Pennsylvania Archaeological Site Survey
(P.A.S.S) files for Luzerne County reports a site density of one site for every
2.89 square miles. There are nearly as many historic period sites as there are
prehistoric period sites and taken collectively, span the range from the
Paleoindian period through the 20th century. As well, there are
nearly as many riverine related site settings as there are upland related site
settings and these nearly equally represent all cultural periods.
Not surprising, given their proximity to the Susquehanna
River, many of the prehistoric sites have chert and rhyolite as the principal
lithic materials. All of the rhyolite and much of the chert is found in bedded
geological contexts from locations as far away as Adams County and as close as
the forks of the Susquehanna at Sunbury, Pennsylvania. Late Archaic period
lithic tools appear to be consistently made from local pebble cherts that were
available in the river gravels all along the Susquehanna river and certain if
its tributaries. Such tools made from jasper likely made their way into the
county prehistorically from the Easton area where it is a principal lithic
material used throughout prehistory.
The general prehistory of the Wyoming Valley is
characterized by archaeological camp and village site occupations representing
all of the cultural periods that occur throughout the Susquehanna valley.
According to the PASS files for Luzerne County Late Woodland period sites are
followed by Late Archaic period sites in terms of site density. Transitional period broad spear and Early
Woodland fishtail sites follow next in site density with Middle Archaic, Middle
Woodland, Early Archaic and Paleoindian sites diminishing in that order of
frequency.
A large number of prehistoric tools in the Steuben Jenkins
collection from the Wyoming Valley was acquired by the State Museum in
1923. Comprised of projectile points, preforms, ground stone objects that
include celts, axes, pestles and pottery, the collection is representative of
the kinds of artifacts found on archaeological sites in this section of the Upper
Susquehanna.
sample of artifacts from the Steuben Jenkins collection and associated documentation (1923)
For sure, some archaeological
sites in the Wyoming valley have been destroyed by major flood events, such as
caused by Hurricane Agnes and as a direct consequence that information is lost
forever. For the most part, earthen levees built along the river’s edge by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers now protect much of the valley from flooding
during most periods of high water. River bank surveys, before and subsequent to
many of these flood events, and predictive site modeling, have been proven to be useful
tools for soils scientists, geomorphologists, and ultimately archaeologists in
identifying and evaluating archaeological resources within major watersheds
such as the Susquehanna. One of these Wyoming
Valley projects was completed in 1989-1990 by R. Christopher Goodwin & Associates, Inc. (Goodwin and Shaffer 1991).
The Wyoming Valley Flood Protection Project covered 10
segments along the main trunk of the Susquehanna and at several other locations
along two of its tributaries, Lackawanna River and Mill Creek. The primary
purpose of the project was to delineate existing site boundaries, obtain
information to assess their cultural importance and to provide new information
on previously unreported archaeological resources prior to raising the height
of the levee and floodwall and undertaking new construction of levees at Exeter
and West Pittston and other nearby locations. This archaeological study
generated important information on six prehistoric and historic period sites
that were inhabited during the Late Archaic, Transitional, Early and Late
Woodland and Historic periods.
deep excavation at the Cremard Site (36Lu58), c.1989 - photo courtesy of Jim Herbstritt
Members of the Frances Dorrance Chapter, Society for
Pennsylvania Archaeology have been conducting archaeological excavations at the
Cremard (36LU58) and Conrail sites (36LU169) located near Duryea, Pennsylvania
for a number of years. Located on a high alluvial terrace that is owned by the
Coxton rail yard, the Conrail Site is one of the most important multi-component
stratified archaeological resources in the Upper Susquehanna Valley. Through the
ongoing efforts of the chapter’s members, under the careful supervision of Al
Pesotine, the Conrail site is yielding a prehistoric sequence of cultural
occupations dating from the Early Archaic through the late 19th
century. For more information on the Frances Dorrance Chapter and the Conrail
site’s interesting archaeology see their web site at: http://mysite.verizon.net/vze7isi8/francesdorrancechapterofthesocietyforpennsylvaniaarcheaology2222222/
We hope you have enjoyed this journey to another part of
Pennsylvania’s ARCHAEOLOGY! Please visit us next time when we will be featuring
Lycoming County in the heart of the West Branch.
References
Donehoo, George P.
1928 A History of the Indian Villages and
Place Names in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Historical Commission. Harrisburg.
Goodwin, R. Christopher and Gary D. Shaffer
1991 Phase
II Archaeological Investigations within the Wyoming Valley Local Flood
Protection Study Area, Susquehanna River Valley, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.
Report submitted to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Baltimore District.
Wallace, Paul A.
W.
1965 Indian
Paths of Pennsylvania. 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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