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http://hdl.handle.net/1903/11034
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| Title: | Archaeological Investigations at the James Brice House (18AP38): A National Historic Site, 42 East Street, City of Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, Maryland |
| Authors: | Harmon, James M. Neuwirth, Jessica L. |
| Type: | Technical Report |
| Keywords: | Archaeology Annapolis, Maryland Anne Arundel County East Street 18AP38 James Brice House |
| Issue Date: | 2000 |
| Abstract: | Beginning in the summer of 1998, Archaeology In Annapolis
performed a multi-phased archaeological investigation in and around
the James Brice House, a National Historic Landmark with associated
archaeological deposits (18AP38), located at 42 East Street in the
historic District of the city of Annapolis, Maryland. The work was
done under a series of contracts to the International Masonry
Institute, owners of the structure. Funding for the project was
provided by the IMI and the Maryland Historical Trust.
A total of twenty-eight units were excavated during the initial
portion of the project, and another four were excavated in support of
a secondary project designed to rehabilitate the retaining wall
located at the southern edge of the South Yard. In addition, several
trenches excavated during construction at the site were profiled, and
the lowering of the grade in the South Yard was monitored by
Archaeology in Annapolis staff.
Testing in the South Yard revealed evidence of a number of
filling and landform modification episodes dating from the periods
following construction of the Brice House up to the beginning of the
twentieth century. Further evidence of twentieth century modification
to the yard space was revealed in the form of a number of utility
trenches and related features. Features related to no-longer extant
stairs including brick piers and postholes were discovered in a number
of areas. Finally, an oyster shell drainage feature and associated
evidence of African-American religious practices were recovered from a
trench and excavation unit at the western edge of the yard space.
Excavation in the interior of the West Wing revealed the presence
of three major stratigraphic units with a large number of associated
structural and depositional features. The first of these depositional
units consisted of twentieth century deposits associated with
modification of the interior of the Wing, and the majority of this
material had been recently disturbed. The second stratigraphic unit
consisted of material associated with the construction of the Brice
House between 1767 and 1773. The final stratigraphic unit in the West
Wing consisted of structural features and a floor deposit dating to
the early 18th century. This material is potentially related to a
store owned by Captain John Brice and his son John Brice II.
Excavations in the East Wing and Hyphen also revealed a number of
stratigraphic units related to the initial construction and subsequent
modification of the Brice House structure. In addition, a large
deposit of late nineteenth and early twentieth century material
associated with the religious practices of African-American occupants
of the house was discovered beneath remnants of a brick floor in the
interior of the East Wing. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1903/11034 |
| Appears in Collections: | Archaeology in Annapolis
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