Things you need to know about the Jessups II Village site before you use the data:
- Field measurements are in meters and centimeters.
- All excavated sediment was passed through 1/4 inch mesh.
- Shovel test pits are on the UTM grid system.
- Ninty-three shovel test pits were excavated at Jessups II during excavation seasons in 2006 and 2008.
- In 2008, an alphanumeric system was established for naming STPs that combined the Area, the Transect Letter, and the STP number. Jessups II is located in area 3. Transects were labeled alphabetically across the site. STPs were numbered consecutively within each transect. As a result, STP context numbers follow this format: 3-D-01, which translates into Pit 1, on Transect D, in Area 3.
- In the DAACS database, the Jessups II village site is designated as Project "1209". Artifact ID numbers for artifacts associated with Jessups II therefore begin with the 1209 prefix.
- Architectural and landscape features including terraces, roads, and a grave were selectively mapped with a total station. The dense overgrowth in the village made it difficult to map landscape features in a systematic fashion; those represented on the site map are features that could be easily mapped with the total station and limited clearing.
The St. Kitts-Nevis Digital Archaeology Initiative
The archaeological survey of the villages at The Jessups Estate was conducted as part of the St. Kitts-Nevis Digital Archaeology Initiative (SKNDAI). Funded by a JISC-NEH Transatlantic Digitization grant in 2008, The St. Kitts-Nevis Digital Archaeology Initiative (SKNDAI) is an innovative collaborative project designed to further scholarship on slavery. The goal of SKNDAI is to develop an integrated digital archive of diverse archaeological and historical data related to the experiences of the enslaved men and women who labored on 17th-, 18th- and 19th-century sugar plantations in the Caribbean. An international team of scholars from The Digital Archaeological Archive of Comparative Slavery at the Thomas Jefferson Foundation in Charlottesville, Virginia (http://www.daacs.org), the University of Southampton's Nevis Heritage Project (http://www.arch.soton.ac.uk/Research/Nevis/Nevis.html), and the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool (http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/ism/) are working together to digitize and deliver on the web information from 18th-century plantations and their slave villages located on Nevis and St. Kitts. The result will be a first-of-its-kind digital collection of fully searchable archaeological and historical data from multiple slave village sites in the Caribbean.
Led by principal investigators Jillian Galle and Fraser Neiman (DAACS, US) and Roger Leech (University of Southampton, UK) and Robert Philpott (National Museums Liverpool/International Slavery Museum, UK), SKNDAI undertook 9 weeks of archaeological survey on three slave villages during the summer of 2008. In addition, Leech worked in archives in Nevis, St. Kitts, and the UK to recover nearly 70 18th and 19th century documents related to slavery on these sugar estates. The archaeological and historical data have been digitized and are available through easy-to-use queries on the DAACS website and through the International Museum of Slavery's website.
Barbara Heath (The University of Tennessee, US), in collaboration with the University of Missouri Research Reactor Center (MURR), conducted instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) on Afro-Caribbean ceramic sherds from these sites. Elaine Morris (University of Southampton, UK) has conducted petrographic analysis on the same sherds sampled for INAA. The results will be available through DAACS in early 2011. Joanne Bowen, Steve Atkins, and their team at Colonial Williamsburg's Zooarchaeological Laboratory analyzed the recovered faunal remains.
The end result of this project acknowledges both scholarly and non-scholarly user-communities by providing free access to information through two web-based portals: the research-oriented DAACS website (http://www.daacs.org) and the publicly-oriented International Slavery Museum website (http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/ism/).
Acknowledgments
The work at Jessups was supported jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities (US) and the Higher Education Funding Council for England of the United Kingdom acting through the Joint Information Systems Committee.
Leslie Cooper (DAACS), Carter Hudgins (University Mary Washington) and Derek Wheeler (Monticello) provided field support that was essential to the success of the project.
Barbara Heath (University of Tennessee, Knoxville), in collaboration with MURR, is conducting the instrumental neutron activation analysis on the African-Caribbean coarse earthenware ceramics. Elaine Morris (University of Southampton) is conducting the petrographic analysis on these same sherds sampled for INAA. INAA and petrography data will be made available through DAACS artifact queries in early 2011.
Excavations conducted on Nevis and St. Kitts were made possible through the help of many hard working crew members. Lynsey Bates (DAACS/UPenn), Ivor Conolley (DAACS/UWI, Mona), Karen Hutchins (DAACS/UMass), Sara Corker, and Brian McCray (UVA) served as field and lab supervisors for the project.
John Guilbert and Paul Diamond from the Nevis Historical and Conservation Society provided invaluable help and support during our field work on Nevis.
The Reed Foundation, Inc. generously funded three-week internships in historical archaeology for students from the University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica. These interns surveyed much of New River I and they included: Krystle Edwards, Suzanne Francis-Brown, Clive Grey, Shailean Hardy, Khadene Harris, and Kenesha King.
University of Southampton students who participated in a four-week archaeology field school were also essential to completing the surveys at New River, Jessups, and The Spring.

