ARCHEOLOGY METHODS AND INTERPRETATION
The President’s House: Freedom and Slavery in the Making of a New Nation
Archeology of the President's House Site they suffered from. What can we expect to find here at the President's House Site? Research has indicated that nineteenth- and twentieth-century development of the property has probably destroyed much of the physical evidence.The construction of deep basements, for instance, has in all likelihood eradicated all or nearly all of the late-eighteenth-century ground surfaces, as well as most of the building foundations and footings. What may have survived later development are the lower portions of shaft features, historic pits generally lined with brick or stone. These pits were used for a variety of purposes, but the most commonly encountered shaft features are privies (outhouses) and wells. Other less commonly found shaft features include ice pits, cisterns, dry wells, and other specialized structures. Shaft features often served a secondary function as receptacles for disposal of trash from adjacent homes and businesses. They sometimes contain household items that were deposited while the feature was in use or after it was abandoned. When deposits of household trash are found within these deep features, the study of this material can reveal in great detail aspects of daily life that are otherwise absent in historical documents. Such deposits can illuminate the lives of all strata of society. A partial listing of the artifacts we might expect to find here would include objects such as broken ceramic dishes, bottles, pins, needles, animal bone, jewelry, and clothing items like buttons and buckles. Sometimes, if the conditions of preservation permit, we can recover pieces of cloth, seeds from the fruits or vegetables consumed, and even the remains of parasites that plagued their human hosts. Putting it all together The recovery of archeological remains from the site can then help us to address some questions about the people who lived here: Can we identify artifacts associated with enslaved people who lived and worked at the President's House, and if so, how do these material goods compare to those used by free persons occupying the site? What might these objects have meant to the people (enslaved and free) who owned and used them? Did the objects possessed by enslaved people, and the spaces in which they were used, help them to maintain an identity separate and distinct from the Free occupants of the President's House? Through the analysis of the site's material remains—coupled with information from historic research and input from scholars, students, and the local community—we can begin to answer some of these questions, formulate others, and ultimately draw inferences about the everyday life of the enslaved community that lived and worked at the President's House Site.
On May 2, 2007, Independence National Historical Park and the City of Philadelphia announced that archeologists working at the site of the President’s House at 6th & Market Streets located remains of the actual house. This find surprised many experts, who believed that the remains of the house had all been demolished during construction in the 19th and 20th centuries. National Park Service Archeologist Jed Levin recalls that unforgettable moment of discovery: “In archeology, you never know what you’re going to find until you dig. It was a long shot that any portion of the house would survive. And now we’re learning things we might otherwise never have known!”
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Did You Know?
Did you know the Liberty Bell first went on public exhibit in 1852. At that time, the Bell was moved out of the Independence Hall tower storage room and down into the building’s first floor Assembly Room, the room where the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution were signed.