Martin's HundredThis first-hand account examines an important excavation in American historical archaeology--the discovery of a lost plantation, providing extensive evidence of English colonial life in early seventeenth-century Virginia. |
Contents
THE JAMESTOWN PERSPECTIVE | 22 |
PUTTING THE GOVERNOR IN HIS PLACE | 62 |
PAINTERS AND POTTERS | 84 |
Copyright | |
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acres archaeological archaeologist armor artifacts Audrey began Bill Henry Bill Kelso's bones brigandine British building burned Carter's Grove Carter's Grove plantation cellar century clay close helmet coffin Company Compound crew decorated delftware digging discovery ditch Dutch edge eighteenth-century England English Eric Klingelhofer evidence excavation feet fence film fire fragments Granny grave ground holes inches Indians interpretation iron James River Jamestown kiln Kingsbury knew land later layer London looked Macosquin mansion Martin's Hundred massacre matchlock mold Museum musket nails National Geographic National Geographic Society painting pales palisade parallel patch pieces pipe plantation plate plow post-holes posts pottery remains Richard Frethorne scraping Sea Venture settlement settlers seventeenth seventeenth-century sherds showed side silt skeleton skull slipware slot stoneware subsoil survived tion Tower of London trees trench Virginia Company wall William Harwood Withyham Wolstenholme Towne wood