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Overview Archaeologists, affiliated with the James River Institute for Archaeology, Inc. (JRIA), excavated the Quarter Dwelling at 44JC298 in April and May 1992. The site is located in the Governor’s Land at Two Rivers, a 1,440 acre planned residential and recreational community situated a few miles west of the City of Williamsburg near the confluence of the James and Chickahominy rivers. Site 44JC298, including the Quarter Dwelling, is situated on the crest of a terraced bluff nearly forty feet above sea level, and has a commanding view of the mouth of the Chickahominy River some 1,000 ft. to the west. Given its ideal location, it is not surprising that at least five discrete periods of historic occupation have been documented at site 44JC298. Background History Activity began anew at 44JC298 in the 1630s when Captain Bridges Freeman patented several thousand acres, including much of the former Company Land tract. Freeman may have been one of the servants living at 44JC298 a decade earlier (McCartney 1991). Captain Freeman took up residence at 44JC298, building at least a dwelling house for himself and his family. Archaeological evidence indicates his house had a tile roof. Freeman was dead by 1663 and his son and namesake inherited the property. The younger Freeman probably chose to live elsewhere on the vast estate, but operated a ferry service across the mouth of the Chickahominy River within sight of 44JC298 until the early eighteenth century (McCartney 1991). The Quarter Dwelling was built at 44JC298 under Bridges Freeman II’s watch, probably in the 1670s or perhaps as late as the 1680s. There is very little existing documentary information pertaining to Freeman II, and almost nothing concerning the Quarter Dwelling at 44JC298. Determining the identity of the inhabitants of the Quarter Dwelling must be based almost entirely on conjecture and inference. For example, the date of occupancy (ca. 1670 to ca. 1710) appears to correspond with Bridges Freeman II. It is possible that Freeman built the Quarter Dwelling at 44JC298 to house slaves working at the ferry. The site probably also functioned as an agricultural quarter for field slaves working the property. Activity at the Quarter Dwelling seems to have ceased around the time when Freeman II disappears from the documentary record in the first decade of the eighteenth century. Additional buildings were erected at the site in the mid-eighteenth century and the site continued to serve as an agricultural quarter into the early nineteenth century. In the final two decades of the eighteenth century, the property was owned by planter Champion Travis and later by the Francis Whittle family. Much of the property was repeatedly logged beginning in the late nineteenth century and into the twentieth. Eventually in the early twentieth century, 44JC298 was reoccupied again, this time by the Paul Greisenaur family and later the Hoffmeyer family. By the mid-twentieth century, the site was abandoned for the final time. Archaeological Background In 1990, JRIA conducted a Phase III archaeological salvage excavation on a portion of the site in advance of the construction of a golf course fairway. The fairway was due to cut through an area of the site containing primarily early seventeenth-century features. The salvage operation first consisted of mechanically stripping off the plowzone from the threatened area. Among the many features that were exposed, the posthole patterns or foundations of a total of seven structures were uncovered, as well as six major trash pits, four human burials, a large backfilled seventeenth-century well, and other sundry features. The Quarter Dwelling was one of seven structures uncovered in 1990 during plowzone removal, however, it was located on the periphery of the proposed golf course fairway and golf course planners shifted the fairway design to avoid it. Archaeologists assigned context number 104 to the Quarter Dwelling, mapped it in plan, and placed a layer of filter fabric and a sheet of thick, black polyethylene plastic over the Quarter. In 1992, plans for the fairway changed and designers discovered that it needed to be expanded. The proposed expansion of the fairway encroached on the Quarter Dwelling. In April and May 1992, JRIA excavated the Quarter Dwelling and all associated features that were threatened by the fairway expansion. Excavation Methods Archaeological Findings The west end bay was 10 ft. by 16 ft. in size and contained an area of scorched clay in the center of the gable end that betrays the location of a hearth. Based on the position of the scorched area inside the gable wall, the chimney may have been an interior smoke hood. Due to the lack of brick, the chimney almost certainly was a wattled and daubed clay affair. A large complex of sub-floor pits fronted the hearth. Preliminary analysis suggests that at least five discrete episodes of cutting and refilling occurred in this complex. Two additional sub-floor pits were located in the western bay, abutting up against the north and south walls. One, Sub-Floor Pit (SFP) 157, had evidence of wood lining along its walls. The floor of the other, SFP 150, had been heavily scorched. The center bay contained two sub-floor pits, both located near the center axis of the structure. Only a thin shelf of undisturbed subsoil separated rectangular SFP 151 from the complex of pits immediately to the east. SFP 152 was located only a short distance north from SFP 151, and was circular in shape. The shed addition extended 6 ft. off the east end of the main house. Four main structural posts were used to hold up the addition, as well as several post studs. Entrance into the shed probably occurred through a 3 ft. wide door located between Postholes 104H/J and 104K/L. Three sub-floor pits, and perhaps a fourth one cut by later pits, were located inside the shed. A post-and-rail fence may have connected to the southwest corner of the building and extended to the west. A second fence may have extended off the northwest corner of the building to the north. To the best of our knowledge, the Quarter Dwelling stood in isolation at the site. Roughly half of site 44JC298 has been excavated, and within those areas, the archaeological resources either predate or postdate the Quarter. It is possible that contemporaneous buildings and features are present at site 44JC298 that relate to the Quarter Dwelling. However, if they exist, they remain protected in a wooded easement north of the golf fairway, the only threat of damage to the site from errant golf shots.
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