New Discoveries at Jamestown - Site of the First Successful English Settlement in America by J. Paul Hudson;John L. Cotter
page 23 of 79 (29%)
page 23 of 79 (29%)
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in the soil of Jamestown remains to be told.
PART TWO Daily Life at Jamestown 300 Years Ago As Revealed by Recovered Objects By J. PAUL HUDSON Museum Curator, Colonial National Historical Park "Hitherto they [historians] have depended too much upon manuscript evidences... Perhaps the day is not distant when the social historian, whether he is writing about the New England Puritans, or the Pennsylvania Germans, or the rice planters of Southern Carolina, will look underground, as well as in the archives, for his evidence."--DR. T.J. WERTENBAKER Archeological explorations at Jamestown, Va.--site of the first successful English colony in the New World--have brought to light thousands of colonial period artifacts which were used by the Virginia settlers from 1607 until 1699. A study of these ancient objects, which were buried under the soil at Jamestown for many decades, reveal in many ways how the English colonists lived on a small wilderness island over 300 years ago. Artifacts unearthed include pottery and glassware, clay pipes, building materials and handwrought hardware, tools and farm implements, weapons, |
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