View Full Version : Archaeologists dig up history of US Army camp


Knight-Dragon
Sep 02, 2004, 11:12 PM
http://www.showmenews.com/2004/Aug/20040829News019.asp

Illinois field holds relics from 1801-1802.

PULASKI COUNTY, Ill. (AP) - Arrowheads that turn up in the mud after a heavy rain are common here, but now archaeologists are digging up broken bits of fine china, parts of military uniforms and even charred firewood, relics of one of the biggest Army camps in the earliest days of the republic that went unnoticed for two centuries.

Known as Cantonment Wilkinson - named after Gen. James Wilkinson, the man who ran it - the camp housed as many as 1,500 soldiers in 1801-1802, about a third of the standing U.S. Army at the time, historians say.

Alexander Hamilton and George Washington had posted them along the Ohio River, a few miles from where it meets the Mississippi, to take the Mississippi River from the Spanish by force if a war ensued.

When it didn’t, the camp was abandoned and crumbled into the brown clay - until this summer, when residents led Southern Illinois University archaeologists to the site.

"It’s a significant find," said Robert Moore, a historian with the National Park Service in St. Louis and author of a book about explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark.

Lewis and Clark had noted the abandoned camp when they sailed by in 1803, on their way to their historic expedition.

Traveler Thomas Rodney described it this way that the same year: "There are 2 or 3 hundred logged houses in this town, built for our army in regular streets as a post or place of arms."

In the past few weeks, SIU archaeologists have dug eight rectangular holes into the grassy field, where they believe cellars, trash pits and old latrines stood under rows of log houses.

They’ve pulled from the soil clay pieces of broken china, some still painted with dainty orange petals.

They’ve also bagged and tagged a truckload of rust-encrusted nails, broken bricks and window glass, as well as what looks like a boot heel, said archaeologist Mark Wager of SIU’s Center for Archaeological Investigations, who heads the project.

"Someone described it as the only time-travel device we have," archaeologist Jon Pressley said as he scraped topsoil from a bathtub-sized trench, handing it to others to sift through metal trays for any bits of history.

The dirt walls around him show streaks of black, where wood from long-ago trash fires burned, preserved for the past 200 years in the hard clay.

The arrowheads that have been found were made by Cherokee who inhabited the camp after the soldiers left.

The field went unnoticed by archeologists for so long because people were looking for the wrong relics, Wager said. Because the camp wasn’t a fort, it didn’t have the kind of heavy artillery that can be easily excavated generations later, such as the artifacts found a few miles upriver at Fort Massac.

Instead, soldiers simply lived and trained in "Wilkinsonville," as it was known, in preparation for fighting elsewhere, he said. Instead of leaving cannons, they left a light scattering of household items from daily life.

"These might seem small and insignificant, but they tell us the story of how these men lived here in the frontier," Wager said, rubbing the mud off a fingertip-sized piece of floral china. The finery was likely shipped there for officers use, he said.

The digging is now finished for the summer, and Wager hopes the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency and the Library of Congress will continue to fund the project so he can return next year with his team. He’s received about $60,000 for it so far.

He hopes no one will loot the site in the meantime. Collectors have visited the area, metal-detectors in hand, searching for the site, Wager said. He agreed to speak to The Associated Press about the project on the condition its precise location not be specified.

For Chrystal Parker, all that’s important is the area’s local history is finally being unearthed. Parker lives near the dig and says her family often discussed the field over the dinner table.

"They always said if you could get down there after a good rain, there would be arrowheads to find," said Parker, 43, standing on her sweeping verandah overlooking the Ohio. "We just never thought it was anything big like this."

Cataphrak
Sep 03, 2004, 08:26 PM
wow, I never knew americans actually distrusted the spanish... after all the Spanish did for then during reveolutionary war

Lonkut
Sep 03, 2004, 08:35 PM
Again could anyone write a short summary plz?

John HSOG
Sep 04, 2004, 12:17 AM
Perhaps Cataphrak would be so kind as to remind me exactly what is was that the Spanish did for the United States, during the Revolution?

Drakan
Sep 07, 2004, 02:40 AM
well John HSOG, we financed your Revolutionary War of Independance among other things. The cathedral in my hometown is missing one of it's huge towers because the money was sent to the Rebel colony which would become the US. And this, is only the money from one of our spanish cities at the time. We never sent you troops unlike the French.

majk-iii
Sep 07, 2004, 04:46 AM
yes, but then they went to war with each other in the 19th century ending up in the US "freeing" spanish colonies in the filipines for example.
I however dont really remember if the american "spanish wars" were before or shortly after the mexican wars...

majk-iii
Sep 07, 2004, 04:49 AM
...probably before...

Drakan
Sep 07, 2004, 05:09 AM
We didn't go to war with the americans. Americans set us up with the USS Maine explosion and put the blame on us and obliged us to go to war. We weren't in the least interested in starting a war against a much mightier foe.