33
High in the Blue Ridge Archaeology and the Historic Landscape at Catoctin Mountain Park Conducted by: The Louis Berger Group, Inc. Gregory Katz, RPA Study conducted for: National Park Service, National Capital Region

High In The Blue Ridge

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Archaeology at Catoctin Mountain Park, focus on historic settlement. Presented at Society for Historic Archaeology Conference (2012)

Citation preview

Page 1: High In The Blue Ridge

High in the Blue Ridge

Archaeology and the Historic Landscape at Catoctin Mountain Park

Conducted by:The Louis Berger Group, Inc.

Gregory Katz, RPA

Study conducted for:National Park Service,

National Capital Region

Page 2: High In The Blue Ridge

Catoctin SAIP Study

• Survey of 2,700 acres out of 6,000 (45% of park)

• Identified 119 new sites

• Phase II evaluation of 9 sites

Page 3: High In The Blue Ridge

Appalachians

CatoctinGreat Valley

Potomac R.

Page 4: High In The Blue Ridge

Rugged Landscape Abundance of rocks,

trees, and streams

Shortage of flat, tillable land, and open pasture

Big influence on area’s history

Page 5: High In The Blue Ridge

Living on the Mountain Small farms

Lumber industry

Support trades (e.g. blacksmithing, shopkeeping)

Tourism

Moonshining

Page 6: High In The Blue Ridge

Rocks: the Native Landscape

Page 7: High In The Blue Ridge

Rocks: Thin Soils Variable

across park, but generally quite thin and stony

Not well-suited for most forms of agriculture

Page 8: High In The Blue Ridge

Streams Two large

streams: Owens Creek and Hunting Creek

Good mill seats

Page 9: High In The Blue Ridge

Forest Composition is mostly oak Eastern part of park was chestnut prior to the

blight Used for timber and for fuel - charcoal

Page 10: High In The Blue Ridge

Catoctin Furnace 2 miles from park Burned local charcoal Employed

teams of colliers

Catoctin Mountain provided wood

Operated ca. 1775-1903

Page 11: High In The Blue Ridge

Life on the Mountain: Farmsteads Small with diverse production

Strong “Dutch” influence (Palatinate/German and Swiss descent)

Income from produce and timber products

Participated in a very local economy

Page 12: High In The Blue Ridge

18th & Early 19th Century Farms Crops were grains and vegetables

Small plots

Parcels vary greatly in size

Active farmland was 4-5 acres per farm

Page 13: High In The Blue Ridge

Small Farms ca. 1810

Page 14: High In The Blue Ridge

18th & Early 19th Century Farms Log and stone

houses

Some sheds, root cellars, and small barns

Often banked- dug into a hillside

Ike Smith Farm ca. 1937 (CATO tract file 93)

Page 15: High In The Blue Ridge

Mid-to-Late 19th Century Farms More livestock and pasture land

Corn, grains, and orchard fruit

Active farmland grew to 35 acres per farm, on average

Page 16: High In The Blue Ridge

Farms ca. 1913

Page 17: High In The Blue Ridge

Stone Field Walls Unplanned and

gradually accumulated

Found along field edges and property lines

Page 18: High In The Blue Ridge

Terrace Garden Site

Page 19: High In The Blue Ridge

Terrace Garden Site: History Possibly part of 1773 patent, iron prospecting

Owners mostly of German descent; farmers Creager family (1796-1830s) Series of owners (1830s-1870) Wilhide family (1870-1937)

Page 20: High In The Blue Ridge

Terrace Garden

The Farm at Acquisition (1937)

CATO tract file 111

Wooded

Crops

PastureHouse

Page 21: High In The Blue Ridge

Terrace Garden

The Farm at Acquisition (1937)

Wilhide Farm ca. 1937 (CATO tract file 111)

Page 22: High In The Blue Ridge

Terrace Garden: Redwares

Page 23: High In The Blue Ridge

Sawmill House Site

Page 24: High In The Blue Ridge

Sawmill House Site: History Patented in 1797

Probably settled ca. 1800 by Ignatius Brown

Browns were farmers and possibly millers

Sawmill operated until the late 1890s

Page 25: High In The Blue Ridge

Sawmill House Site

Schatzer Farm ca. 1937 (CATO tract file 109)

The Farm at Acquisition (1937)

Page 26: High In The Blue Ridge

Sawmill House Site: Ceramics

Page 27: High In The Blue Ridge

Horse Trail Oasis Site

Horse Trail Oasis

Page 28: High In The Blue Ridge

Horse Trail Oasis Site: History Land was patented in 1782

House probably built ca. 1850 as a tenancy James, Joseph, and Isabella Prior; laborers

Owned by the Buhrmans from 1874-1915; farmers

House destroyed prior to 1911

Page 29: High In The Blue Ridge

Horse Trail Oasis: Sample Artifacts

Page 30: High In The Blue Ridge

Horse Trail Oasis: Tobacco Tags

Page 31: High In The Blue Ridge

Acknowledgements

•Stephen Potter, NPS-NCR•Mel Poole, Holly Rife, Jeremy Murphy, and Becky Loncosky, NPS-CATO•John Bedell, Charles LeeDecker, Lisa Kraus, and Jason Shellenhamer •Field crew: Jen Babiarz, Chelsea Borchini, Robin Kuprewicz, Jackie Maisano, Mary Patton, Tiffany Raszick, Emily Walter, and Brian Wenham

Page 32: High In The Blue Ridge
Page 33: High In The Blue Ridge

Late 19th & Early 20th Century Farms Frame houses, often with stone

foundations

Larger barns and sheds

Charles Brown Farm ca. 1937 (CATO tract file 92)