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Notes

Oval-shaped bowl with a hole (14mm diameter) in the body underneath scalloped edge on short end. Hole angled downwards. Longer edges undecorated and 75mm high.


Object Type


Where Was It Found?

Project Site: South Grove [more details]


Material

Coarse Earthenware


Vessel

Hollow


Manufacturing Technology

Handbuilt, unidentifiable


Form

Unidentifiable


Completeness

Base, Body, Rim


Decorative Technology

Molded


Decorative Patern


Decorative Notes

Scalloped edge, spiked. 17-23mm between spikes.


Date

18th century


Country of Origin

United States


Dimensions

176mm x 116mm x 130mm (W x H x L)

  • Base Dimeter: 120mm

  • Illustration shows object in comparison to the size of a quarter


    Weight

    325.9 gram(s)


    Object Number

    2692 COLONO v.3

    DAACS Number

    1694718


    Project: South Grove

    "Beginning in the summer of 1990, a multi-year investigation of the area known as the South Grove, situated just south of the Mansion and the associated kitchen, was initiated. The site was selected as the result of numerous 18th-century artifacts being found there over the years, combined with its high potential for yielding surface-deposited domestic refuse associated with the Washington household. In addition to providing information relating to the daily lives of the Washington Family, analysis of refuse associated with the plantation household would allow direct comparison with the material culture associated with African-American slaves excavated at the “House for Families” quarter.

    An extensive sheet midden was partially revealed and tested in 1990, with two much larger portions exposed in 1991 and 1992. The midden was at least 30 feet in diameter and in excess of 1.5 feet in depth at its center. Excavations yielded enormous quantities of faunal remains, ceramics, wine bottle glass—including three different bottle seals—table glass, tobacco pipes, and a wide range of personal and household objects. Based on the materials recovered to date, the midden appears to have been deposited just prior to the American Revolution.

    In addition to the midden, several subterranean brick drains also were revealed. Two of the drains apparently connect with the Mansion basement and with the kitchen larder, and date to a period of Construction and major renovation carried out in the 1770s. A third drain may be associated with the earlier kitchen, built before 1752 and demolished in 1775.
    "

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