Flowerdew Hundred: The Archaeology of a Virginia Plantation, 1619-1864

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University of Virginia Press, 1995 - Architecture - 204 pages

Deetz's Flowerdew Hundred is a synopsis of the result of twenty-five years of archaeological investigations at Flowerdew Hundred, a former plantation on the south side of the James River in Prince George County, Virginia. Throughout the work, Deetz conveys the importance of combining historiography and archaeology to a reach a better understanding of the past. This multidirectional approach is displayed as Deetz examines smoking-pipe stems, Colono-ware pottery, and post-in-ground buildings at Flowerdew. Through examining regional history of the Chesapeake, comparing the Flowerdew archaeological record with that along the eastern seaboard (particularly in regards to icehouses and pits), and looking at the architecture of Salem, South Africa, Deetz is able to construct a contextual history of Flowerdew in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries. For archaeologists, amateurs, and the general public, the book simplistically relays the intertwining of history, archaeology and folk studies and, of course, reveals a glimpse into life on a Virginia plantation.

 

Contents

Fortified earthfast house at Clifts Plantation
18
Broken bellarmine
29
Smoking artifacts
40
Wine bottle seal
59
Plan of site 92
67
Colono ware chamber pot
80
Chesapeake pipes from Flowerdew Hundred
92
Earthfast building and brick cellar site
98
Window lead
108
Plan of Selden house cellar
119
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