Unearthing Gothan Cap 11 Ao 15

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Urban Space in the Colonial and Post-Revolutionary City


The ways that the European settlers used the land in New Netherland and . York were very diferent from the ways the Munsees used it. They did not the concept of a collective guardianship of the land. Instead, land was so~ thing that individuais enclosed, owned, bought, and sold. And landowners ha exclusive rights to their propcrtythey could prevent odiers from using it. Tac Europeans also had a much more aggressive approach to the land; diey racUcLsr transformed it by draining swamps, filling hollows, and razing hills. They evcw "made land" by claiming it from the sea (see chapter T3). I n addition, New Amsterdammers and early New Yorkers structurcd ir.1 used the space that now makes up New York City in ways that were very dib-ent from those of today. First of ali, before the late nineteenth century, their "city" included only the developed parts of Manhattan Island; the rest of r island and the other boroughs were predominately rural countryside doures with towns. The city began at Manhattan's southern tip and grew northward. cr "uptown." But this was a slow process. Before the nineteenth century the c~ was still so small that it was a "walking citv" people walked from place to plaoe and could easily cross the city from one end to the other. I n the 1720S (fig. 11.: cxtended only as far north as today's City Hall Park, and even by 1790 (fig. 11.1 it barely reached the southern end of today's Soho. When City Hall was bmir near Chambers Street around 1811, its front and sides were made of marble b its back was made of plain stone. At die time, people thought that the buildirir. was so far uptown that its back "would be out of sight of ali die world." I t v. only later that the city began to grow rapidly; during die first half of the nineteenth century it more than doubled in size so that by mid-century it extendec north beyond i4th Street (fig. 11.3).
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Second, the early city was much more integrated than die modern city, in the

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Plan ofthe C i l v p f X

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-.4 P / w o/" Cy oJNew Yorkfroman Actual Survey" by James Lyne, showing New York . The Gommon later became City Hall Park. Collection ojthe Neiv-York Historical negative number isop. that a business proprietorwhether merchant or artisanusually houscd both home and work space in die same structure, whcre he also provided accommodafor diose who worked for him. The enslaved lived with their owners, and employrended to live with their employers. Bccause of this integration, the eightcenthrv city was more hetcrogencous in its use of space than the modcrn city is. The re of the city diat we know today, with its commercial, industrial, and residenneighborhoods for the most part separated by function, and widi its residential iborhoods often scgregated by class, began developing only in the early ninecentury.
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//.2. o/V/;? Czfy ofNew Yrkf 1789 (redrafted by Haywardfor D. T. Valentine's Manual, I8SI). The area that would become the Assay site block is two blocks south ofWall Strcr: on the viver side ofFront Street. No matter where the}' work, archaeologists are interested in how people organiz: their spacehow they create their landscape and why they construct it in the way the do. In doing "settiement studies," archaeologists take a large area as their research um and, within that area, study die relationships among scvcral sites from the same t : ~ period within a singlc culture. The area they studythe "site" in the larger sense might be a river drainage or an ancient city, or even New York City, and within &.n larger site they exeavate a number of smaller ones. For the pre-colonial past in coasoi New York, the data are so poor that wc can only speculate about settiement system>But archaeologists studying the settiement systcms of New York and other moderr cities are in a much more fortunate position: they can reconstruct the city at any poirr in its modern historv almost entirely by studying maps and other historical documenta In studying the settiement system of a modern city, they often do not hafe to excavat> at ali.
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Since modern archaeology carne to New York City, two archaeologistsNan Rothsttsd and Diana Wallhave studied the changing patterns of settiement within the : i n . They wantcd to be able to place the individual sites that they had studied so nensively in their excavations into the larger context of the city as a whole. By examine me changing use of space through time, they aimed to gain insight into die city^s tciging culture. They knew that although people created the urban landscape, the -rin landscape in turn strucnired the social rclations of the people who lived in the They wanted to be able to study that landscape so that they could better undernnd the social dynamics of the city at different points in its past.
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Pvothscliild and Wall, working independendy on separate projects, used historical

I New York in 1840, as shown by the Societyfor the Diffusion of Usefnl Knowledge.

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records to reconstruct the city at various points in its history. Rothschild focusec : the eighteenth-century city, while Wall concentrated on the city in the early ninetecnj century. Togethcr, their work covers tlie spatial metamorphosis of the city ovcr a ca tury and a half, at a time when it was undergoing a dramatic transformation.

Eighteenth-Century Neighborhoods
Although the eightccnth-century city has long been known for its heterogcneity i m integration, this does not mean that ali the land in the city was used in the same v^n. Rather, there were definite neighborhoods in colonial New York: people with a cocrmon bond tended to live and work in clusters on the same street, although they m i c be joined there by others who did not share diat bond. Nan Rothschild wanted to explore how wealdi and ethnicity influenced the formition of New York's neighborhoods at difTerent points in the eighteenth century. Hisrorians studying the colonial period in New York (and in the other American scaboz^i cities) have noted that as time went by, fewer and fewer people controlled more aze: more of the wealth. In 1701, for example, the wealthiest 10 perccnt of the city^s popimtion owned about 45 pcrcent of the land in the city, while by 1796 the wealthiest :: percent of the people owned more than 60 percent of the land. Rothschild wanted r: see if the increasing imbalance in wealth was expresseci in the cit^s social geograph;
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New York lias always been known for its ethnic hcterogeneity; at any point in 13 history it can provide a laboratory for studying the importance of ethnic identity in the formation of neighborhoods. After die Munsees and other Indian peoples, the citys oldest ethnic groups included the Dutch (among the most tolerant of their contempcraries) and the cnslaved Africans. They were joined by a small group of Jews who firsi arrived in New Amsterdam in the 1650S. After the English conquest in 1664, more anr more English settled in the city, and exiled Huguenots also moved there after the i65Revocation of the Edict of Nantes threatcned their rights in France. A half-cenniry latez the Scots and Germans began to make their presence felt in die city. Rothschild knew that ethnicitythat part of social identity that is based on the perception of a shared conimon cultural or geographical or biological origincould be ar. important factor in creating neighborhoods in die city. Both today and in the past, recent immigrants tend to move into reas that have already been settled by people from their home comniunities. Ethnic ties can be important in finding jobs and places to live in a new country, as well as in creating a comfortablc cultural milieu. As migrants become acelimated to the ways of their adopted city, some move away from their originai neighborhoods to comniunities that are based on factors other than ethnicity.
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Although, as Rothschild pointed out, ethnic identity can be rigid and used as the

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basis for discrimination against some groups (such as Native Americans and African and Jewish Americans in both colonial and modern times), for odier groups it can be extremely fluid. Under some circumstances, for example, individuais can choose to emphasize their edinicity or to neutralize it (by "assimilation") in constructing their social identities. They can even switch from one ethnic group to another. One of the residents of New Amsterdam provides a classic example of this fluidity. Charles Bridges had been born in Canterbury, England, but when he emigrated to die Dutch colony of Curaao, he changed his name to Carel Van Brugge. In 1647 Van Brugge accompanied Peter Stuwesant to New Amsterdam, where he continued to be Van Brugge until the English conquest, when he changed his name back to Charles Bridges.
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Rothschild wanted to compare the relative importance of ethnicity and wealth in >tructuring urban space at the beginning and end of the eighteenth century. Choosing 1703 n d 1789 as target years for examining neighborhood formation in the city, she i?egan by compiling a dircctory of the people who lived in New York in each of these vears. Hcr directories iucluded peoples' names, ethnic affiliations, leveis of wealth, ocrapations, and, of course, addresses. She obtained this information from a broad varirry of histrica! records: tax and church records, census returns, city directories, and even the records from a German fraternal organization. Ali told, her directories listed ibout one thousand people for each of the two years. She then plotted the locations of neir homes on a set of maps that indicated their ethnic afnliations and leveis of wealth ror each of die study years. What Rothschild discovercd was intriguing. At the beginning of die eighteenth cenrury, when the city was relatively young, ethnic identity was a very important factor i strucuiring the cit/s neighborhoods, especially for those of Dutch, English, and rrench Huguenot descent: they tended to live in definite residential clusters. The Dutch *ere heavily concentrated on several streets in the southern and central parts of the sand, while die English were most heavily elustered on the east side. The Frendi Huguenots tended to live in a separate cluster to the north of one of the Dutch enzaves, as well as on the east side, alongside the English. I n fact, Broadway 011 the west was the only street that had approximately equal numbers of English, Huguenot, Dutch families living side by side. Furthermore, Rothschild noted that in the city of 1703, the members of the different lie groups appear to have used several principies in deciding where to live. First of the Dutch for die most part lived separately from both the English and the Frendi lenots. Second, churches seemed to play an important role in forming and maing ethnic neighborhoods. The Dutch Reformed Church was just adjacent to the enclaves in the central part of the city, die old Anglican church at die foot of lattan Island was close to an English enclave diere, and die newly built Trinity
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Church (on Broadway at the head of Wall Street) was just down the street frcc English homes on Broadway. The Huguenot cluster was just adjacent to their UEglise Franois de Nouvelle York, which had been established in 1688. The presence of a church was not the only attraction that lured residents to 2 ticular part of the city. Members of ali three groups lived near the East River. the at the hub of the crrVs economy. When Rothschild looked at the spatial distribu' the city^s residents by wealth, she saw that in 1703 in general, rich people of ali groups tended to live on the east side, near the East River port, and poorer tended to live in the western and northern parts of the city. But she was surpr find that she could identify only four rcsidential clusters that were based on w One street near the East River port was the site of a cluster of homes belongins 1 many of the cirVs richer merchant families and to artisans who made luxury gcoi These craftsmen presumably located their shops to be near their rich customers lived nearby. The southern end of the city, which was heavily oceupied by Dutch rza*| lies, and two streets in the center of the city were inhabited almost exclusively by Ion income New Yorkers. But most of the citVs streets were economically heterogneo;, with wealth\ , middle-income, and poor people living side by side. I t seems, then. at the beginning of the eighteenth century in New York City, people paid more axuat tion to ethnicity than to wealth or class in deciding where to live.
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When Rothschild looked at die distribution of the city^s residents by ethnicitv irai wealth in 1789, she was struck by several changes. First of ali, for the members of sosac of the city^s older ethnic groups, ethnicity no longer seemed to be a factor in decidm where to live. She found that Dutch, English, and Frcnch families were spread farrr evcnly throughout the whole city, although there were still slight concentrations a both English and Dutch residents on the streets where their ancestors had lived zz 1703. For the most part, however, she noted tiiat the citVs "major early ethnic conce-> trations had broken down." Rotiischild discovered that although the Dutch and English no longer lived in ethme enclaves, the members of other ethnic groups did. Some of tiese were groups whose members had first arrived in the city wcll over a century before but who had alwavs faced discrimination from other New Yorkers, while others were made up of more recent immigrants. Africans, for example, were among the earliest arrivals after the Dutch founded New Amsterdam. After the Revolution, although most of the cirVs residents of African descent were still cnslaved and forced to live in the homes of their owners. thosc who were free established their own community in the northeastern part of the city. Jews, who had been in the city for almost a century and a half, were most hcavih clustered in the lower city, around the corner from their M i l l Street synagogue.
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The other ethnic neighborhoods in the 1789 city were made up of more recent im-

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migrants: the Germans and Scots who had begun to arrive in numbers in the middle of the century. Most Germans lived in clusters on Broadway and Chatham Street, two sneets that together made up one of tlie citVs main inland thoroughfares. Scots lived ali over the city (except at its southern end) but formed thrcc clusters: one on the west side, one on the east side, and one, on a street that they shared with the frcc African community, in the northern part of the city. Whcreas ethnicity was apparently an important factor for some groups in die shap:ng of the 1789 city, money was now more important than it had been earlier in the Benniry. The city^s wealthier residentsits merchantstended to live 011 the east side, dose (but not too close) to the East River port. And although the city s poorer inhabitants tended to live throughout the city, they formed clusters at the city^s southern end and 011 the streets overlooking the docks. The rich and poor were not the only ones to duster, howevermembers of the emerging middle class were concentrated on two streets running parallcl to die East River and 011 several other streets as well.
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Although both ethnicity and wealth, dien, were important factors in organizing the spatial structure of the city at both the beginning and end of the eighteenth century, Rothschild was able to show how their relative importance had changed for diferent iroups during that time. At the beginning of the century, when the English conquest ?: die Dutch colony was only a generation old, many English and Dutch families marked their social distance from each other by living apart, but by the end of the century, rmnicity was no longer important to them in deciding where to live. For other groups, ethnicity remained important in structuring the cit^s space: newly arrived Scots and Germans and members of those older immigrant groups that faced discrimination me free people of color and die Jewsali tended to live in ethnic enclaves. As for ecoraomic factors, aldiough they were important at the beginning of the eighteenth cennry, they became much more important as the century progressed. As Rothschild put K, "Even given economic constraints 011 residential choice, it is clear that people did exercise options in choosing dieir living place and that, as the century wore on, more : : these choices were linked to economic factors than to ethnic ones." These economic ictors became only more important as time went by. I n fact, by die mid-nineteenth aentury, they had become paramount.
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Xevertheless, it is misleading to assume that Dutch ethnicity ceased to be important a the post-Revolutionary city or that assimilation was an irreversiblc process. After the 7-rvolutionary War, well over a century after the English conquest, some New York rreemasons of Dutch extraction claimed diat they were "not well acquainted with the English language" and successftilly petitioned the Masonic Grand Lodge to form their OWTI Holland Lodge, where they could perform "their labours in the Low Dutch ariguage." Many of the early members of die Holland Lodge were prominent New

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Yorkers, and they were by no means ali of Dutch extraction. They included Fraunces, a West Indian reputed to have been of African and European ancestry. owned tlie Pearl Street tavern where George Washington bade farewcll to his oiti the end of the Revolutionary War; John Jacob Astor, a German-born millionaire made his stake in tiie far trade and his fortune in Manhattan real estate; and De Clinton, a governor of New York State who is known for his successful support o l Erie Canal. Holland Lodge members m a y have chosen to affirm tiaeir identities Knickerbocker New Yorkers (whether real or imagined) in order to achieve the and prestige that they thought would accompany die descendants of the Dutch. prcsumably thought that this association with the "first European settlers" would hance dieir position in the new and unstable world of the post-Revolutionary city."

Deciding Where to Live

One of die best ways that we have of understanding what these changes in the use a the citys space meant in the lives of the people who expcrienced them is to look a: some of the households whose members helped to create the shifting social geogE*-| phy of the city. Here, we examine two families whose collective experiences illustrzz many of the changes tiiat took place in d i e social landscape of the city during d i e po>rRevolutionary period. The first is the family of silversmith Daniel Van Voorhis and f s wife, Catherine Richards, who lived in the city in the 1780S; the second is d i e family o f Benjamin Robson, a successful physician, and his wife, Eliza Bool, who raised t h e x children in the city in the early nineteentii century. We chose these particular families because archaeologists have discovered traces of their households at archaeologiaa. sites in the city. I n diis chapter we discuss where tiiese two families chose to live and work; we return to these same families in the next chapter. In 1983 Bert Herbert and Terry Klein were directing excavations at the corner of Wall and Water Streets in lower Manhattan, where Barclays Bank was building its necorporate hcadquarters (see fig. 1.2). There the archaeologists discovered a long-buriea basement floor that was paved with river cobbles and covered with debris made up of the brick and mortar that had been dumped there when an early building was tora down. Mixed among the debris were artifacts that had been used by people who oncc occupied d i e early building. The archaeologists were able to pinpoint the date of the demolition of the house to the 1780S or early 1790S. I t had to be after about 1780 because the demolition debris containcd sherds of a distinctive ceramic that had been ictroduced around that yearan earthenware with a blue-tinged white glaze commonh known as pearlware. And it had to have been before about 1795 because the rubble had no sherds from odier kinds of dishes (such as annular and transfer-printed earthen-

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wares) that were first made in the early 1790S and that quickly became popular in New York. The wide variety of artifacts that die archaeologists found scattered throughout the demolition debris suggested that the people who once occupied this building had used it for both a home and a workshop. They found thousands of domestic artifacts, including sherds from plates and teacups, jugs and wineglasscs. But they also found hundreds of crucible fragments, from vesseis used for melting down metais (fig. 11.4). Although the crucibles carne in different sizes, they were ali relatively small. When the archaeologists
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^ Crucibksfrom the Van Voorhis silvershop on Hanover Square, i 8os.


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also found a few tiny scraps of gold in the rubble, they realized that the crucibles must have come from the workshop of a craftsman working witii precious metaisa goldsmith or silversmith. The archaeologists scoured the records for the 1780S and early 1790S, hoping to identifv die craftsman who had once used the crucibles. Finaliy, when they turned to newspaper advertisements for the mid-i78os, they struck gold themsclves: they discovered ads placed by Daniel Van Voorhis, a jeweler and silversmitii, who lived and worked on ihat lot at 27 Hanover Square in the mid-i78os. Archaeologists have since learned much more about the Van Voorhis family. Daniel Van Voorhis and Catherine Richards married in 1775, just before the beginning of the Revolutionary War. Like many patriots, they fled the city while it was occupied by the British army. Van Voorhis fought in die rebel army and later became silversmith to me Continental Congress. After die war, the couple remrned to the city and opened their gold, silver, and jewelry shop on Hanover Square, close to the East River port. They probably chose riis fashionable street to be close to their prosperous customers who lived nearby. Like so many of their wealthv and middle-class contemporarics in colonial and postRevolunonary New York, the family slept above the shop along with their journeymen aod apprentices. I n 1788 they moved a block north to Pearl Street, where they stayed zuni the mid-i790S. From then until 1803, the family moved almost every year. Most TCITS diey lived above their store, but in some years they lived away from it, in less apensive neighborhoods. Each year, however, they kept their shop 011 the east side so ar it would be close to their wealthv customers. Perhaps they lived away from the ore because they could not find an east-side house they could afford that was large cnough to accommodatc both their domestic and work needs.

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We knovv a little bit about their Hanover Square home because of the artifacts f o o f at the Barclays Bank site. The fragments of yellow brick, terra-cotta rooing tiles, tiles, and green- and orangc-glazcd ceramic floor tiles mixed in with the demolirobris showed that the Van Voorhises' house was an old-fashioned one, built in the style with its stepped gable facing the street (see fig. 10.9). But although both the name and the family home were Dutch, and although Daniel Van Voorhis hclped nize the Dutch-speaking Holland Lodge mentioned earlier, the Van Voorhis c were baptized at die Episcopal Trinity Church and not at a Dutch Reformed one. In 1984 archaeologists Arnold Pickman and Bert Salwen (fig. 11.5) directed es tions at the Sullivan Street site on Washington Square South in Greenwich Village fig. 1.1), where New York University was adding an extension to its law school lib The crew uncovered a number of privies and cistems from nineteenth-century yards. I n one of the privies, they discovered an assemblagc of artifacts from a h tiiat had once stood there. The artifacts included several sherds of yellow ware, a of earthenware used for kitchen bowls, pitchers, and other utilitarian vessels that rlrs became popular in the 1840S. Thev checked their records to see who was living in zz house at that time and had presumably used the dishes that had been tosscd into tr* privy. They discovered tiiat in 1841 Benjamin Robson and his wife, Eliza, had boug die house on Washington Square South and moved into i t .
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Robson was a physician who, after apprenticing in a doctor's office in New York. began his practicc as a ship's doctor. Later he settled in the city, where in 1813 he married Eliza Bool, the daughter of a ship captain. The young couple lived on Roosc ; Street until 1829, when they moved to East Broadwav, not far from the home of Eliza"s : i ther, Hemy Bool. Wealthv families lived oc both these streets, which were within walking distance of the downtown commercial diste.that was developing around Wall Street. Like otiier doctors of his era, Robson rar. his practice out of his home. He realized tha: the success of his practice rested 011 the trusr of his wealthv patients, and that the best wav for him to earn that trust was by being a respected member of his patients' community Furthermore, as a doctor he presided at the most important and dangerous events in his patients' livesbirth, death, and serious 11.s. Bert Salwen at the Sullivan Street laboratory, 1984. illnessand because the timing of these

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events was often unpredictable, he needed to live nearby. Robson continued to live among his wealthv patients for more than three decades. However, when the family moved to Washington Square South in Greenwich Village in the early 1840S, die Robson family made a radical change: Dr. Robson separated his home from his workplace and kept his practice at his old ofnce on East Broadway. Greenwich Village, at that time a new neighborhood, presented a new way of life for its inhabitants, who were primarily middle class and wealthy. Developed in the iSaos and 1830S, i t was one of New York's first residential suburbs (fig. 11.6). The Robsons probably moved to Washington Square South to be near their daughtcr, Mary, who lived next door with her husband, Francis Sage (a flour merchant who porked downtovvn on South Street), and their children. Both Benjamin Robson and Francis Sage commuted downtown to work. Sage probably took the horse-drawn Dmnibus that ran down Broadway to his officc, while Robson took his own carriage: me census records tell us that Samuel Stevens, a coachman of African descent, lived in rhe Robson household. The Robsons continued to live in their Washington Square ::. 6. View ofthe Mount Washington Collegiate Institute, showing the southwest comer of "'.ishington Square, looking toward the southeast, ca. 184.9. The Robsons lived in one ofthe late F:\ic ml houses with their roofs, chimneys, and dormer windows visible above the tires. Engraving r Jrunes Smillie. Collection ofthe Neiv-York Historical Society, negative number zoos4-

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house next door to their daughter and grandchildren until 1878, when Benjamin Rcoson died. These vignettes about the Van Voorhis and Robson families allow us to examine. :>r a micro levei, some of the changes that took place in the social geography of New during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Earlier we took a macro-level viem of some of the changes that oceurred in the eighteenth-century city, and we now use tiiat same lens to look at the city in tlie early nineteenth century.

The Separation o f the H o m e and Workplace


When Diana Wall was digging at the Stadt Huys Block in the late 1970S, she noticec 2 curious phenomenon: although the crew found numerous ceramic sherds from the seventeenth, eighteenth, and early nineteenth centuries, they found very few from perods more recent than the 1830S. At first the archaeologists looked on die absence x these sherds simply as a complication: Instead of being able to use ceramic sherds : c finely dating ninetccntii-centuiy' soil layers, they had to rely 011 pieces of glass bothes and other artifacts. But when Wall saw this panern repeated at site after site in the Wal Street district, she realized that the sudden disappearance of ceramics from these sites 111 the early nineteenth century marked a major shift in urban living: the separation :z tlie home and workplace.
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Before the early nineteenth cenmry, most families, like the Van Voorhises, worked ir_ the same buildings they lived in. But during the early nineteenth century, more ar.a more members of the city's middle and wealthv classes made the same decision that th; Robsons did: to move their homes away from their workplaces and into neighborhoods that were becoming almost exclusively rcsidential. The reason why tlie archaeologists did not find ceramics dating to the later nineteenth cenmry at the downtown sites is that tlie people who had formerly lived in the ncighborhood had moved their homes (with their dishes as well as their other domestic goods) away from what was becoming a business district. The reasons behind the separation of tlie home and workplace are related to the enormous economic growth that oceurred in the city after the Revolutionary War ana the concomitant growth in population as more and more people were attracted to th; city. During tlie T790S New York became the primar)' port of the nation, and durinz die next half-century the value of the goods that passed through the port grew astronomically. The strong economy attracted both immigrants and migrants to the city. and the population jumped from 3 3 , 0 0 0 in 1 7 9 0 to almost 3 1 3 , 0 0 0 in 1 8 4 0 a n almosi tenfold increase. Many of tiiese newcomers were poor Irish Catholics from rural backgrounds who did not fit easily into the predominantly Protestant city. And as the

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economy grew, tlie impersonal social relations of the modern market rcplaced tlie faceto-face relations that had characterized tlie cit)^s economy in tlie eighteenth century. One ramification of the change in social relations was the "privatization" of the homes of the middle class and wealthy, which meant that, widi the important exception of domestic servants, houscholders no longer provided room and board for their employees in their homes. The enslaved were formally emancipated in New York State in 1827, and they, along with male employces who 110 longer lived with the people they worked for, moved out to become part of the growing working class. They either boarded with families of their own class or ethnicity or established their own households in what were becoming increasingly class-consistent neighborhoods. An economy that was often strong, the privatization of the home, population pEOWth (particularly among the poor), and the separation of the home and workplace ali affected the demand for real estate in the city, and real estate values soared, particularly in the area of the East River port. Furthermore, between the 1 7 9 0 S and early 1820S, a number of yellow-fever epidemics swept through the city; the most severe one, in 1798, resulted in the death of some two thousand people, 3 percent of die city^s 7>opulation at tiiat time. As die nineteenth century progressed, the city^ downtown business area carne to be associated with tlie large, impersonal, and even ruthless economy, widi die poor, and with disease, and tiicrefore was seen by wealthy and newly emerging middle-class New Yorkers as more and more dangerous and inappropriate for fostering home life. Many of those who could afford it moved their homes away from the downtown business district. Wall decided to explore this sea change in urban life. Her study began where Rothschild^ left off, following the story of the changing structure of urban space in New York from the late eighteenth century into the middle of the nineteenth. Although Wall, too, was interested in studying neighborhood formation, she approached it in a iighdy different way. When she began her smdy, she already knew tiiat middle-class ir.d wealthy New Yorkers had separated their homes from their workplaces some time iuring the early nineteenth century. She also knew that this resulted in the formation : f a discretc business district and the beginnings of residential neighborhoods segreiated by class. Wall was interested in exploring exactiy how this transformation in the spatial orgamzation of the city carne about. When did wealthier and middle-class New Yorkers ieoarate their homes from their workplaces, and thus create a specialized, separate business district in the city? Where did they move their homes? She was also interested n exploring the changes in family life and gender relations that were associated with e separation of tlie home and workplaceissues we explore in the next chapter. Using written records, Wall began her study by compiling a list of some of the

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people who lived in the city in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. S consulted sources similar to thosc that Rothschild used: city directories and tax aau census records. She ended up with six samples of people who were living in die ten-year intervals, from 1790 to 1840 (the samples totaled more than two thousaai people). The samples showed where people lived and whether they lived in combine; or separate homes and workplaces. They also indicated the values of their real cszzzz and personal property so that she could place them into rough socioeconomic grourI n looking at her data, she saw tiiat most of the city's elite had separated their home and workplaces during the first decade of the century, before 1810, while most merabers of its middle class waited until the 1830S, a full generation later. Wall plotted the locations of the cirys separate workplaces and the homes of r poor, middle-class, and wealthy families for three diferent years. She used 1790 as base year, to show the structure of the city before any of the changes that she was atploring had oceurred. She also chose 1810 and 1840, the years following the perioes when most of the wealthy and middle class (respectively) had moved their homes awfrom their workplaces. The 1790 city was relativelv integrated; there were very few separate workplaceWall could see that class, as Rothschild's study had shown, was an important factor n deciding where to live. Wealthier families clustered their homes and workplaces ir. : core area near the East River port and on the west side near Broadway, although there were poorer and middling families (like the Van Voorhis family) living and working tiiese reas as well. Significandy, the rich did not live outside this central urban cor; Instead, they stayed close to the source of their wealth: the warehouses and wharves a the rapidly growing comniercial city. Only the poor and middling lived on the periphery, beyond the urban core.
21

Twenty years later, in 1810, the social geography of the city had changed. I t now haa a "downtown"a commcrcial district made up prcdominately of merchants' countinghousesin the area where the city^s wealthy families had once lived, along Wall Streer and near the East River port. Most of these wealthy families had separated their homes from their workplaces and now lived in new residential reas clustered around the commercial core. The men from these households could still walk to work and come home for their midday dinncrs. But these new neighborhoods were not onlv residential, for rnixed among the homes of the cirVs leading citizens were the combined homes and workplaces of the tfs poor and middle class (like the Robsons' houses. first on Roosevelt Street and then 011 East Broadway). Many of the men of these more modest households either worked in their homes or walked to work in the new commercial hcart of the city. Middle-class artisans and shopkecpers continued to board their male employees in their homes. Their combinec

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homes and Workplaces formed clusters around the commercial core, while the area with the heaviest density of poorer residents was located to the nortii, near the Collect Pond. By 1840 most members of the middle class had joined the cin/s rich in establishing separate homes. For ali but die poorcst New Yorkers, the city of integrated homes and workplaces was gone. Most remarkable was die increasing specialization in the use of urban space: the city now consisted of a number of neighborhoods diat were much more consistent than ever before in terms of function and socioeconomic group. There was now a commercial district focused on the Wall Street arca that was almost strictly devoted to business; only die poor lived there. In addition, the rest of the city was beginning to become segregated by class. While some wealthy families still lived downtown, close to the business district, many odiers suecumbed to die exorbitant sums they were ofered for dieir downtown homes, which had become prime commercial real estate, and moved out to the new exclusive elite "suburbs" that were developing at the citVs edge, in the area of the old village of Greenwichthe area diat had attracted the Robsonsand in Brooklyn. In 1836 the diarist Philip Hone accepted what hc considered to be an outrageous offer for his home on lower Broadway and moved with his family out to Greenwich. As he explained in his diary, " I have turned myself out of doors; but $60,000 is a great deal of money." He added: "Ali the dwelling houses are to be converted into stores. We are tempted with prices so high that none can resist, and the old downtown burgomasters, who have fixed to one spot ali dieir lives, will be seen during the next summer in flocks, marching reluctantly north to pitch their tents in olaces which, in their time, were orchards, cornfields, or morasses a pretty smart distance from town, and a journey to which was formerly an affair of some monient, and required preparation before hand, but which constitute at this time the most fashionable quarter of New York."
22

The elite Greenwich Village neighborhood focused on Washington Square, which had been dcveloped in the late 1820S 011 the site of a potter's field. The men in these wealthy suburban families (Uke Francis Sage) commuted to work, traveling on the omnibuses and ferries that began commuter service to serve them. For these families, New York was no longer a walking city. The city of T840 also contained middle-class and working-class residential enclaves. Most middle-class men commuted to work, while many members of poorer families continued to work at home as part of the "out-work" system, where whole families Eving in tenement apartments performed piecework for local manufacturers (fig. 11.7). Working-class neighborhoods had to be close to the commercial corethese workers could not afford to use public transportation to get to and from work. Omnibus fares :: eight to twelve and a half cents were too high for a laborcr who made only a dollar a

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day. Many other members of the poor worked in the service industries. Some, like rhe Irish women who worked as domestics, still lived in the homes of their emplc . while others, including men and women of African descent, lived in enclaves close o? the homes of their clients. Both provided services to the residents of the new suburb ra Greenwich. The spatial separation of homes and workplaces among the members of die cir middle class and elite changed the social geography of the city in another significar-: way. For these groups (although not for the poor), the city^s commercial district haa been transformed into a world of men, and the middle-class and wealthy residente neighborhoods became during die day a world of women and children. These worlj were so separate that on August 31, 1839, a local newspaper, thcMirror, asked its reacers: " D i d vou ever see a female in Wall-strcet, dear reader? . . . The sight of a female in that isolated quarter is so extraordinary, that, the moment a petticoat appears, the groups of brokers, intent on calculating the value of stocks, break suddenly off, ar.a gaze at the phenomenon."

11.7. View ofthe Five Points, ca. 1827, lithogvaphfromValentine's Manual, i8ss- This workingclass neighbovhood was afew bloclis to the north ofCity Hall. Collection ofthe New-Tork Historical Society, negative number 44668.

THE
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POST- R EV OLU T I ON AR Y

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In addition to having a significant cfFect on the use of space in the city, tlie separation of the home and workplace was also associated widi profound changes that took place in family life, inside the homes of middle-class New Yorkers. We use their dishes, cups, and glasses from die archacological record to examine some of diese changes in domestic life in the next chapter.

C H

PTE R

T W U V E

Daily Life in the Nineteenth-Century City

During the century that followed die Revolutionary War, broad changes sw through New York and the other American seaboard cities as the impersonal r: lations ofthe markct economy replaccd the old kinship tics and face-to-face relations of the colonial economy. We have alreadv examined the effect that this rrarsition had on the social geography of New York, where middle-class and eor families separated their homes from their workplaces, tiius creating a new c mercial district in the Wall Street area as well as a new set of residential neighberhoods. At the same time, immigrants were pouring into the city and rrean-g working-class neighborhoods that were within walking distance from thear workplaces. I n this chapter, we first explore how this urban transformation was expressed in the family life of the native-born middle class. Then we look at ooe of the citVs poorer immigrant neighborhoodsthe Five Points district examine aspeets of home life there.

The Great Transformation and Middle-Class Family Life


When the homes and workplaces of the middle class and wealthy were still corr bined under the same roofs, men like silversmith Daniel Van Voorhis and phv>cian Benjamin Robson produced goods for markct and sold goods and services out of their homes. Yet diese heads of households were not only in charge o I economic lifethey were also responsible for the moral and physical well-beina of dieir families. Artisans' wives like Catherine Van Voorhis were primarily responsible for running the household and caring for small children, but they ais: helped their husbands in the family business. Older children worked alongsic. their parents, with daughters helping their mothers and sons helping their fathers in the family trade. And like the Van Voorhis householdwhich in 1-9:

206

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was made up of sixteen people, half of whom were not members of die immediate familymany colonial and late eighteenth-century homes included a number of people who were not family members. Employees, including journeymen, apprentices, and clerks as well as young women who helped with die housework, ali tended to live with their employers. And many New York City households (as many as one in five in :~9o) also included enslaved Africans. For the most part, these households were tighdy knit corporate units, made up of people who, whether through choice or coercion, lived and worked together.
1

By the middle of the nineteenth century, the structure of the middle-class household had changed, and a stricter division of labor governed the activities of family members. The Robson and Sage households on Washington Square were typical of the times. Benjamin Robson and his son-in-law and next-door neighbor, Francis Sage, worked iowntown and were away from home ali day. Their primary domestic responsibility jras for the household's economic well-being, a responsibility that they fulfilled in the separate, public sphere of the marketplace. Children no longer learned their adult roles by working alongside their parents at e. Instead, like die Sage children of Washington Square, tiey went off to school like their fadiers, were away from home for much of die day. For die first time, and other things were made and marketed for middle-class children, with the z;ht that these objeets would help teach them appropriate adult roles. I t is from period that archaeologists first find a profusion of children's toys and other items: and platcs inscribed with adages to inspire morality and good work habits, dolls tov china tea and dinner sets to teach girls to be nurturers and hostesses, and pieces competitive games like marbles, dominoes, and chess to instill the entreprespirit into boys (figs. 12.1 and 1 2 . 2 ) . iliddle-class women like Eliza Robson and her grown daughter Man' Sage were during the day, tending to the house and cliildren. They had become the fullcaretakers of the moral, physical, and emotional well-being of the members of households. Historians have referred to this new emphasis in the role of middlewomen as the "cult of domesticity" which was marked by the elaboration of 'c life, or "women's sphere." Womcn's roles now revolved around several intergoals of domestic duty: raising rcsponsible citizens for the good of the nation, g the moral guardians of the family and the larger society, and projecting an image ined gentility to reinforce their families' position in the class structure. Women red their families' status by entertaining in their new doublc parlors that replaced ?rk spaces diat had once occupied the first floor of the old combined homes and ices. These housewivcs now supenised "servants" or "domestics" (as opposed rae "help" and enslaved of the earlier era) who actually did the work diat enhanced

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12.1. A doll, piecesfrom a dolVs tea set, and a dolVs baking disb,from a middle-class home in Greenwich Village, iSos.

the quality of domestic life. The servants tended to be young and unmarried, and w o j usually, like two young women who worked in the Robson home, recent immigranri from Ireland. They slept on the top floors of their employers' homes, in spaces triz: were unheated in winter and sweltering in summer. By contrast, male employeeslike the journeymen and apprentices who had worked in the Van Voorhis shopno longer boarded with their employers' families. Instead. they lived in the new lower-middle- and working-class neighborhoods that were devdoping in other parts of the city, like the Five Points and the Lower East Side. Free pecple of color lived in dieir own homes, too. The middle-class home, instead of being the "little commonwealtii" of the colonial period, had become a "haven in [the] heartkd world" ofthe marketplace, with its appurtenances serving as symbols of respectability.-' Diana Wall wanted to find out how this change in gender roles and the emergenec of the related cult of domesticity had oceurred among the citVs middle class. Scholar> are divided in their views of who acttially instigatcd this change. Some regard womec simply as victims whose roles were redefined not by diemselves but by men and the larger society. Others look on women as actors in their own right who, along w::

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men, contributed to this restmcturing of gender relations. But which of these interpretations is correct? Wall thought diat she might be able to answer this question by combining the study of changes in the composition of the people who lived in these households (informauon she could glean from the historical record) with die study of changes in the kinds of dishes women bought and used in their homes (information she could get from the archaeological record). If, on die one hand, she could show that middle-class women had already begun to enhance domestic life before die spatial separation of die home and workplace, tiien women, as well as men, could be seen as actors in the development of a separate sphere that ultimately led to the transformation of gender relations. On the other hand, if she could see evidence that women began to enhance home life onlv after homes separated from workplaces, dien it would seem that they were reacting, or adapting, to economic changes that had already been initiateci by men and the larger society. I n order to find out about the changing composition of die city's middle-class aouseholds, Wall used census records to discover more about die people she had used ror her study of the city^s changing social geography. And she used the ceramic sherds from sites dating to that period to see what kinds of dishes women were using to set rheir tables. Focusing on the half-ccnmry that followed the Revolutionary War, she chose 1840 as a cutoff date because she knew that by then this new domestic role for omen had already become die ideal: during the 1830S a whole new literature had bea~an to appear promoting this new definition of womanhood. Wall realized diat i f women's roles were changing inside the city's combined homes and workplaces, she would see changes in the makcup of the people who were living in these integrated households. First, there would be a decrease in die average number of children, as children were no longer looked on as helpful *!itde hands" but instead wtre regarded as responsibriiries who had to be eduaared to become the citizens ar the future. There would
3

jco be an increasc i n the

n b e r of women working domestic servants in each ehold because the enj \ ^ ^ that probably belonged to the Sage children on Washington ement of domestic life Square. These mugs were found in the backyard privies behind the led a grcat deal more Robson and Sage homes.
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housework than had been considered necessary in tlie eighteenth century. Finallv. sac also expectcd to see a decline in the number of male employees living in these houtcholds, because as the home became a private haven, cmployers no longer pro\ie room and board for their employees. I n looking at the census records, Wall was intrigued by the patterns she saw. Firsr a ali, there was a decline in the average number of children in the middle-class famLae* between 1810 and 1830. Sccond, the average number of domestic hclpers in the hota>cholds showed a steady increase betwecn 1810 and 1830 and stayed high in the decack between 1830 and 1 8 4 0 . Together, these patterns showed that changes in women's roies and in the quality of domestic life were already under way in these integratcd homet But the data on the male employees inside diese middle-class households told a ditrepent tale. Their numbers, too, rose steadily until 1830 but then fell between 1830 and 1 8 4 0 . This pattern showed that home life was becoming more private only as most members of the middle class separated their homes from their workplaces (fig.12.3 ."

3.0

r-

12.3. The average numbers of men, women, and children in middle-class homes in New Tork, 1810 through 1840.

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Setting the Table for Middle-Class Meais


Wall was pleased diat the ccnsus information was beginning to tell a cohercnt story about the rcdeflnition of home life in the early nineteenth century. Now it was time to look at the meais that middle-class women were serving and the dishes diat they were using to set their tables. From rcading the accounts of travelers who visitcd the citv in the early nineteenth century, she discovered that die social meaning of some meais changed during this period and that some of these changes were associated widi womerfs changing roles insidc the home.
5

Among middle-class New Yorkers, dinner parties became common only in the late nineteenth century. But although dinner was just for family members before that time, there were changes in the meaning of tiis meai. When the family lived and worked rogether, people like the Van Voorhises or the young Robsons ate their dinncrs (often i single, one-pot dish, such as a stew served with bread) in die middle of the day. Both iomestic help and employees ate with their employers at a table in the basement in a oom next to the kitchen. There were also more elaborate dinncrs where a number of dishes were served, eidier ali together or in a series of courses. For these fancier dinaers, die table was set in the Old English or covered-table plan (fig.12.4), widi serving dishes covering the table in a balanced and symmetrical pattern. By the mid-nineteenth century, the redefinition in the roles of family members was iso expressed in family meais. Because most of the men of the middle class commuted :-.vntown, the dinner hour was switched from midday to evening. And with men and aer children away from home ali day, dinner became more important as a family oial. As one observer put it, the meai had become a "constant and familiar reunion," 1 it was the only occasion in the day when ali family members gathered together. The y used dinner as an arena for reinforcing family ties and the moral values of home and for educating children. As Catherine Sedgwick wrotc in a novel of 1837 set in York, family meais were "more than die means of sustaining physical wants"; they "opportunities of improvement and social happiness." lhe new importance of family dinner as a ritual can be seen in several innovations were introduced into die meai. First of ali, it became more elaborate for most "e-class families. The one-course, one-dish meais cooked at the open hearth were much less common. Cooking was donc on a cast-iron stove, and dinner had seviistinct courses. A second important change was in die way the table was set. In - ghteenth century, the food itself was the visual focus of the table; in more elabodinners, uncovered serving dishes completely covered it, with no particular dish jj the focus of attention. But by the middle of the nineteenth century, the focus was
6 7

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A R R A N G E M E N T OF A DINNER OR SUPPER GONSISTING ge= 1 :=ss=g TABLE,

OF NINE DISHES. 1-".'! -asgssaaggi -


1

no longer on tlie food (which was now mostly out of sigri covered serving dishes) but on a centerpiece, which mia a castor or condiment stand, a celery glass, or even a vasc i inedible flowers (ig.12.5). The appurtenances of middle-^H domesticity and respectability had replaced the food as ii center of die meai. Although household help (now called servants or dooa tics) were much more common than they had been berre they 110 longer ate with die family but instead waited on zbcm at meais. The mistress ladled out the soup (the dish that die meai), stressing her role as family nurturer, while the r r ^ ter carved and served what Americans then (as now) con ered the most important dish of the meaithe meatthal stressing his role as die family provider. The servant hanes round the dishes considered to be relatively unimportant rac vegetables and starches.

Throughout the same period, "tea" was also an unporrarar meai but one widi a very different meaning: it was a sco 1 2 . 4 . A planfor arrunging serving event. Because families entertained dieir guests at tea, r dishes on the table, ca. 1802, from meai provided an opportunity for displaying social stao Susannah Crteres The Frugal while trying to enhance the family^ position in society and asHousewife (1802). range marriages and careers for the children. The tea cacH mony was held after dinner, first in the late afternoon during the period when dir:-' took place at noon, and later at night after dinner shifted to die evening. Hostes^a served tea and, sometimes, wine at these parties and (in die evening) often supper :r desserts. When the parties shifted to the evening, another ritual appeared: afternocc tea, which became a female social event, indulged in by bodi middle-class and wealtrai women. Women put a great deal of thought into choosing the dishes they used for servirar meais, as is evident from the diary of Elizabeth Bleecker, a broker's daughter. After her marriage in 1 8 0 0 , Bleecker and her husband, Alexander MacDonald, lived with her family while they set up their household. Bleecker recorded some of the purchases thar she made for her new home, including die dishes she chose. She and her mother werr shopping 011 Broad Street, where her mother bought her some "Cups and Saucers7 presumably for tea. She also went alone on several separate occasions to shop for "Plates and Dishes." I n August, just before the couple moved into their new house, she and her sister Mary went shopping to "look for Tea Pots." They evidenty did not nd
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any that suited, because she continued to shop for them. She finally reported in early September that she. had bought "a Tea-Pot, Sugar Pot, and Milk Pot at Mr. Peter's," a china and glass dealer who had his shop in Maiden Lane. Bleecker's diary entries show that women were very selective when shopping for dishes to grace dieir tables. Wall rcgretted diat Bleecker and her contemporaries did not describe their purchases in greater detail. But she knew she could use the ccramic perds from archaeological collections to find out about die kinds of ceramics these women were actually buying. Wall looked at die dishes from New York households dating to the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The dishes, recovered from the privies and basement doors of eleven middle-class homes (including the Van Voorhis and the old Robson homes), were used at family meais and social teas in combined homes and workplaces in lower Manhattan diat dated from the 1780S to the 1830S. Based on the dates of manufacture for die dishes that made up the assemblages, which reflected the time when die dishes were bought, she placed the households in three groups, dating to die 1780S, around 1 8 0 5 , and the 1820S. She then looked at two different aspeets of die dishes: dieir ecorative motifs and their cost. Wall was interested in examining die decorative motifs on tiiese dishes to see what ~ey might reveal about the changing import c e of dinner for early New York families. Araaaeologists know that people use style to mark aae different social contexts in which objeets xrght be used. For example, clothing is a com:on marker in American culturemany people wear one style of clothes for work and another sbe leisure so that they and others will know ahether they are at work or at play. Archaeoloaasas also know that changes in the styles of obeaas through time can reflect changes in the aaeaning of tlie context in which the objeets pere used. Women's fashions, for example, A. Castors F. Scolloped Oysters K. B. Boiled Turkey G. B o i l e d H a m PP. |fcange as the meaning of womanhood changes.
9 10

With this in mind, Wall began to look at the pfceorative motifs 011 the china from tlie eleven
I

C. OysterSauce D. Roasred Duck E. Gravy for Ducks


$ A p h n

H . Potatoes I . Turnips S. Celery


t h e t M C j

Parsnips Pickles JJ. Jelly X. Host Y. Hostess

Useholds. She expected that the motifs used ^46, from I r tea dishes would be quite different from Catharine Beecher's Domestic Receipt-Book Ihose used for dinner dishes, because the social (1846).
2 f o r s e t t i m Mm

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meanings of these meais were very different throughout the period. Tea was a pos meai, for outsiders, while dinner was always a private meai, for household memb Furthermore, if the social meaning of these meais changed through time, with tea coming more feminized and dinner becoming more rimalized, she expected to see rbt changes cxprcsscd in the motifs on the dishes used in presenting these meais. Wall found that the decorative motifs on most of the teawares and the tablew from dae households fell into four broad groups for ali three periods: ali-white di>r dishes with shell-edged decoration, dishes with Chinese landscapes, and dishes floral motifs. She also saw that the motifs on the teawares and the tablewares 1 different for each of the direc periods, and that the popularity of diese motifs chanca: through time. Ali the households in the early group (which included the Van Voorii household and dated to the 1780S) showed a preference for "royaT plates that \\ err plain white with simple, classically molded rims, like diose used in the Van Voonm household (fig. 12.6, left). The early teawares, by contrast, were evenly divided betweer Chinese landscapes and floral patterns. Ali the households in the middle group (c. 180c had sets of plates with blue- or green-painted shell-edged decorations around ther rims (fig. 12.6, middle) along with sets of plain white dishes. The tea vessels from trjr households in the middle group showed that floral motifs were now more popular than Chinese landscapes. Finally, for the latest group, dating to the 1820S, there v marked change in both plate and teacup patterns. Just as in the Robsons' old horr.e. most of the tablewares from these households were decorated with Chinese landscapr(fg. 12.6, right), while most of the teawares were embellished with floral motifs. The changes in the popularity of the various stylesfrom plain white to shell-edgea to chinoiserie for the plates and from chinoiserie to floral motifs for the teacups showed that die social meaning of these meais had already begun to change inside the combined homes and workplaces of the citfs middle class, before families moved to the suburbs. Next, Wall looked at the amounts of money that middle-class women were willin to spend on their dishes. She wanted to find out if they were beginning to spend more money on the dishes used for serving family meais while they were still living in their integrated homes and workplaces. I f they were, it would suggest that women were already making more elaborate meais, and hence enhancing domestic life, before th; shift into separate homes. She assigned values to the dishes by using information both from the price lists of the English potters who made die carthenware dishes that were popular in the United States at this time and from die records of local merchants who imported Chinese porcelain from Canton.
11 12

She saw that for die three chronological groups, the relative costs of the tablewares

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12.6. Left to right: a creamwareplate in the royalpatternfromthe Van Voorhis household,

1780S;

.1 pearlware plate in the shell-edged pattern, ca. 1810; a pearlware plate in the willow pattern from iJje Robsons' old home, 1820S.

fere quite different from those of the teawares (fig. 12.7). Those for the teawares were relatively high for the early group and stayed relatively high, with only a slight increase in value through time. This suggcsts that the goal of die mistress of the house was alpays to have an expensive, showy tea set for entertaining her friends. The relative costs of die tablewares, by contrast, were quite low for the earliest group. But during the first three dccades of the century, middle-class New York women were willing to spend ever-incrcasing amounts of money 011 die dishes that they used for fcamily meais. I n fact, by the 1820S, the mistresses of diese households were willing to spend almost as much for their plates, which were usually seen and used only by household members, as for their cups and saucers, which were used to entertain their guests. This decision suggests that the meanings of family meais and hence of family life were changing as well: they were becoming more important inside the combined homes and workplaces of die city^s middle class. The data from the census records and from the fragments of dishes from the city's irchaeological sites thus allowed Wall to show that middle-class women were redefinam: domestic life, and their role within it, well before the separation of the home and workplace took place. This suggests that women, along with men, actively contributed D the separation of men's and women's spheres and the development of the cult of domesticity. I f true, this interpretation lias ironic implications: if this strucmral transfcemation was a consequencealbeit unintendedof changing social practices on the part of both men and women, then middle-class women were at least partly responbie for their ultimate isolation in die home. And i t is this very isolation that many an-adlc-class American women have been protesting off and on ever since.
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4 r-

3 -

1780s Tablewares

ca. 1805 Tea-

182 Os

12.7. The average value ofthe tablewares and teawaresfromthe eleven households, by chronologicalgroup.

Life in a Working-Class Immigrant Neighborhood


New York Cin/s working class had invented itsclf twice by the middle of die nineteenrr century. The earlier working class, which dated to before the 1840S, was a hetercgeneous group of predominately native-born people who worked with their hands ar.a who had inherited the republican ideology of die Revolutionary War. But dieir chidren did not become the working class of mid-century. Instead, dieir place was taker. by immigrants who began arriving in New York in waves in die 1840S. Between iS: and 1855, the city^s population doubled, with immigration playing a major role in iz growth: in 1855 more than half its population of almost 630,000 was foreign-born. Ana most of these immigrants were manual workers; in diat year almost 85 percent of the citys manual workforce had been born overseas. I t was die immigrants and their ch_dren who transformed the ciu/s working class by drawing on cultural roots developea in Europe. Since then, immigrants have for the most part dominated the ctofi workforce and shaped its working class.
14

At die middle of the nineteenth century, most of the cirVs immigrants were Irish ara German. The Germans immigrated for a number of economic, religious, and politica. reasons, while the Irish were fleeing the potato famines that repeatedly ravaged thea Country beginning in die mid-i840S. By 1855, when diere were almost twice as mar.

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Irish as Germans in the city, these two groups together made up almost 45 percent of the city^s population. Irish men tended to work as laborers, bricklayers, and stonecutters, while German men worked as cabinetmakers, tailors, cigar makers, bakers, and shoemakers. Because a workingmaifs wage was usually not enough to support a family E h die nineteenth century , the women of the working class, unlike their middle-class counterparts, helped make ends meet by using various economic strategies both inside and outside their homes. The work of working-class women, like diat of working-class men, tended to follow etiinic Unes. Many young unmarried Irish women (most of whom had emigrated on their own) worked as servants, living in the homes of the middle- and upper-class women who were their employcrs. I n fact, census records indicate that more women in New York worked in domestic service than in any other sphere: in 1855, more than 3 1 , 0 0 0 women were cmployed as servants in the city. Irish women, both married and singlc, also worked in their own homes, often as seam>tresses or laundresses, while German women tended to work alongside their husbands md children in family-organizcd shops in the tailoring business and other trades. Women of many edinic groups also provided accommodations for boarders, many of whom were thcmselves recent arrivals from the home country.
7 15

Under the strictures of contract archaeology, die vagaries of modern development determine the locations of archaeological exeavations. I t just so happens that only a few modern development projeets have taken place in neighborhoods where the poor lived in die nineteenth century. Therefore, although contract archaeologists have exeavated many sites associated with the city^s middle and upper-middle classes, they have aag only a few sites associated with the citVs working class. One of these exeavations, zl the Courthouse site, took place in the city^ most famous working-class area, the Five Points district (see fig. 1 1 . 7 ) . The Five Points, named for the space created by the intersections of three streets, lay BD the northeast of City Hall Park 011 die edge of toda^s Chinatown. Although the zmeteenth-centary neighborhood was associated with crime and iiiiquity, today i t is evoted to the cin^s criminal justice systcmthe prison popularly known as the Tombs ind many of the city's courdiouses are located there. In fact, the site was exeavated in rreparation for the construction of a new federal courthouse. The site consisted of Tourteen building lots located at one end of a block bounded by Pearl and Baxter Screets (see fig. 1.2); the other end of the block fronted 011 the Five Points intersection. Before die nineteenth cenmry, the area was outside the cin/s edge, near the Collect Yon, where Dutch colonists had noted the presenec of Native American shell midatns. For Dutch and English colonists, the pond was the focus for many industries that cher needed fresh water or were so noxious or dangerous tiiat they were inappropdate for the densely settied city, including slaughtcrhouses, potteries, tanneries, and
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breweries. During the first decade ofthe nineteenth century, the city began to fill in tc pond, which had become heavily polluted, as well as the surrounding low-lying areaThe neighborhood first became home to many African Americans and otiier membe of the native-born working class, but diey were soon joined by Irish and other irrrrragrants. By the 1830S the neighborhood had achieved its status as the citys most notcoous slum. When Charles Dickens carne to the city in 1842, he made a point of visitag the neighborhood and wrote: "Poverty, wretchedness, and vice, are rife enough wbcJ we are going now. This is die place: these narrow ways, diverging to the right and terr_ and rceking everywhere with dirt and filth. . . . Debauchery has made the very houses prematurely old." The Five Points owed much of its notoriety to its location: it v a the slum that was closest to the city^s politicai and commercial center, and thereforc was the slum that was most visible to the city^ middle class and foreign visitors. Over the past few decades, historians have argued that contemporary stereotypes rc slums belied communities that, diough often beleaguered and dangerous, could ais: be sustaining and even nurturing for many of dieir residents. Their studies documerr the importance of kinship and neighborhood ties in aUeviating the hardships of tencment life. In addition, although most of those who lived in die tenements were eatremely poor immigrants, they had not necessarily been among the poorest in their home countries. Instead, the immigrants were those who could afford to emigrate. Th; standard of living for most of the poor in New York was higher than for dieir counterparts in the home country many were able to furnish their apartments relatively comfortably and had access to better clothes and food, including, as immigrants ofter bragged to their relatives back home, meat two or even three times a day.
17 18 19

What Rebecca Yamin, the director of the interpretive phase of the Courthouse projcct, and her research team found in looking at the records and artifacts from the tenements on the Courthouse site adds an important dimension to this picture. Their work underlines the dissonance between the stereotypes portrayed in contemporary descriptions of life in the Five Points and what life was actually like for many of the people who lived there. Although some of the artifacts support the stereotypical view of the slum, other discoveries repudiate tiiat stereotype and instead suggest that at least some of tlie residents had a vision of home life tiiat would not have been completely foreign to members of the city^s middle class. The artifacts from one privy, for example. "included matching dishes and serving pieces, as many as six tea sets, including three imported from Staffordshire, one of bone china, and one of Chinese porcelain, and extensive glassware including an unusual Iacy pressed square bowl manufactured in New England, and numerous cut decanters. The tenants ate imported condiments, cured their ailments witii prescribed medicines, and saved their pennies in a redware bank." ' Thcir study supports the view tiiat the term slum as applied to working-class neighbor2

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hoods in New York is an oversimplification; tlie citVs poorer comniunities were complex places. This becomes clearer in looking at the records and artifacts from one of the tenements in the Five Points district. Heather Griggs, one of the archaeologists working on the Courthouse project, took a close look at a predominately Irish tenement on Pearl Street. Using a combination of historical and archaeological data, she discovered enormous diversity among that building's residents. Although many of the tenements occupants were unskilled laborers and seamstresses, some artisans and entreprencurs who owned their own businesses also lived there. Griggs was able to smdy the financial dealings of some of these entreprencurs by examining dieir banking records at die Emigrant Savings Bank. She discovered, for example, that Timodiy Lynch, a tinsmith who lived with his family in the tenement in the 1850S, moved as much as six hundred dollars in and out of his bank account every month over a four-year period. This is die same amount of money that the New York Times, in 1853, estimated a workingman's family needed to survive for a whole year. Lynch was certainly doing better than most of his fellow tinsmidis; although there is 110 record of illegal doings, he may have been making his money in the underground economy. Lynch's neighbor Michael McLoughlin, the brother of the Pearl Street tenement's owner, kept more dian two thousand dollars in his bank account over a three-year period in the m i d - i 8 5 0 S .
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The artifacts found in the backyard cesspool were not at ali what the archaeologists had expected to ind in one of the poorest sections of the city. They found dishes in a variety of brightly colored printed and molded white patterns, a few gilded porcelains, elegant stemmed glasses, and a cruet of imported Irish glass. They did not find many serving dishes, suggesting that American middle-class standards for respectable dining were not followed by Irish hnmigrant families. But they did find decorative figurines and flowerpots, showing that the residents had definite visions of what constituted ?roper home life. The artifacts included a teacup printed with the image of Father Theobold Mathew, the founder of Ireland's temperance movement (fig. 1 2 . 8 ) , suggestaig that temperance may have been highly valued in at least one tenement home. The archaeologists also found children's thingscups printed with names and didactic savings, toy tea sets, porcelain dolls, dominoes, and marblesthat were identical to those found in middle-class neighborhoods. Conventional wisdom had held that the children of the tenements had to spend their time scavenging for things diey could sell in order to contribute to their families' finances. But, as Griggs notes, these toys suggest :hat "some children . . . may not have been required to work . . . to supplement the family income" but instead "were being raised with a set of [middle-class] values that emphasized . . . individual and private property, values that would allow them to succeed in American society."
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The study of the Pearl Street tenement suggests that for many, the support of the local immigrant community' was so important that it overrode distinctions of monr and class. Successful members of the immigrant communities in New York do n : : seem to have attempted to conform to nineteenth-century American protocol by mo.ing to middle-class neighborhoods, where they probably would not have been weicomed anyway. Instead, they, like the immigrants who preceded and succeeded thena continued to live among their relatives and friends of dae same ethnic group in e neighborhoods where they owned property, and where their children prepared fc: entry into the middle class. But these successful members of die community were unusual. For most of the residents, life was much harder. The artifacts found in one backyard privy at the Courthouse site were very differea: from those found in other features on the block: there were some very ornate ceramics: an unusually high number of chamber pots (thirty-seven in ali); three glass urinais, ai designed for women (fig. 12 .9); and a ceramic pot inscribed with the words " A M A I L L E . s.d. Vinaigrier." The privy also containcd die skeletons of three infantstwo iewbonaand a fetus. Taken together, these objeets suggested to Yamin that at least some of the privas contents may have come from a brothel. At first, Yamin was not sure she couia prove itillegal businesses like brothels tend not to be listed in such records as city directories. But she had a stroke of luck when she consulted Timothy Gilfoyle, a historian who smdies prostitution in nineteenth-century New York. His research had discovered that a John Donohuc had been indicted for running a "common, ill-governecL and disorderly house" in the cellar of 12 Orange Street (one of the buildings 011 die lot where the privy was found) in 1843right around the time that the artifacts had been discarded. This fact provided a convincing link for Yamiifs argument tiiat many of the artifacts in the privy had come from a brothel and indicated that they had been tiirown away when the brothel was closed down. In the nineteenth century, prostitution was the most lucrative oceupation open to a working-class woman. Mosa prostitutes carne from working-class families where a parent had died or where there were problems at home. Although many young women worked at prostitution fulltime, others worked in other trades and occasionally used prostimtion to supplement their incomes. Most left "the life" by the time they were thirty or so and went on either 12.8. A teacup, printed with the image of to marriage or to another profession. Many others died Father Theobold Matheiv (the founderof Ir ciando temperance movement),from the young, from venereal diseases, from violence directiy reCourthouse site. lated to their oceupation, or from the complications of
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drug or alcohol addiction. A few stayed in the business and went on to own and run their own brothels as madams. I n the midnineteenth century, bcing a madam was one of the few ways that a woman could hold a managerial position or be an entrepreneur. In other words, although prostitution posed serious risks to ali of its practitioners and often had tragic consequences, it had a strong economic allure: it could not only provide a good income for young women (for a short period of time); it also offcred a few women substantial financial opportunities diat they had in no other line of work.
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Although historians know a great deal 12.. Glass urinaisfromthe privy behind the brothel at about what middle-class reformers thought the Courthouse site. about prostitutes and brothels, they know very little about brotiiels from die points of view of the women who worked in them or the men who were their customers. When Yamin examined the objeets from the privy, they provided her with a new perspective diat underlined the duality between the private lives of the young women and their public lives at work. The more ornatc ceramics that carne from the privy were almost consistcntly the kind that were used among the middle class at that time for entertaining; in this case, they were presumably used for entertaining their middle-class male customers, who would expect such amenities. There was an old-fashioned tea set made of Chinese export porcelain, which included chocolate cups as well as tea cups, and other showy tea cups as well. Punch aaps and the ninety-nine wine bondes found in the privy suggest that drinking played ir. important role in brothel life. The wine was probably served in tumblerstiere *ere sixty-six tumblers but just a few wineglasses. There was also a large number of rr.all plates, brightly decorated in printed patterns, which might have been used for serving snacks. These snacks probably included brandied fruits, olives, or capers (evidenced by wide-mouthed bottles, used for storing these foods), veal (evidenced by the bons from calves), soft-shell clams (evidenced by their distinctive shells), and coffee evidenced by coffee beans). Ali these foods were not found in other feanires at the lourthouse site. The archaeologists also uncovered three glass bird feedersobjeets aaat otherwise have been found in New York only at sites associated with middle-class fanilies.
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The archaeologists found many personal items that the young women may have

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used for their public performancesperfume bottles, a miniature flask, combs, a hair brush, mirror fragments, and the ribs from a folding fan. They also recovered sewing materiaisnot only the hooks and eyes and straight pins that archaeologists often find. but also more elaborate sewing equipment, including a folding ruler, a carved bone stiletto for making decorative holes in embroidery, a delicate thimble, and some bobbins for making lace. A contemporary account describes prostitutes as sewing or knitting in the brothels as they waited for customers; this equipment might have been used by the young women as props when they were on display. There were also poignant reminders of the hidden, dangerous, and tragic side of prostitution. The three women's urinais presumably were used when the young women were sick in bed, perhaps from the venereal discase that was one of daeir oceupational hazardsa contemporary study shows that almost half the prostitutes practicing in the city at mid-century sufFcred from syphilis. I n addition to a syringe, thirtynine medicine bottles were found in the privy, oneembossed BRISTOL'S EXTRACT OF SARSAPARILLA prescribed specifically for venereal disease, others for general stomach ailments. But most tragic of ali were the remains of the three infants. Two ofthe infants had come to term; it is not known if they died of natural causes or were the victims of infanticide. The third, who had not reached term, had been aborted, either deliberately or spontaneously. But none of tiiese infants had been buried; instead, their deaths had been hidden. Ali in ali, Yamin's study presents a complex picture of the women of the brothel.
26

ate a lot of mu leg. Germans are City at the time. J Around the co at least some of 1 one of the chearnumber of foot been simmered found among Worcestershire residents were fi alternatives."
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Faunal experts Pamela Crabtree and Claudia Milne studied animal bons and shell from tlie Courthouse site in order to find out about the diet of the people who lived there. Faunal experts are well aware of the pitfalls involved in making inferences about diet from such remains. They have evidence only for the parts of people's diets that included meat from tlie bons or shells that people disposed of at home. By contrast. butcher-bought boneless cuts of meat (such as Italian and German sausages, stewing meats, or hamburger) and shucked shcllfish (such as preserved oystcrs) are invisible in the archaeological record. This limitation notwithstanding, Crabtree and Milne's study of the animal bons from tlie features at the Courthouse site revealed that different ethnic groups showed definite preferences for different kinds of meat. One building was occupied by several northern European families. Two were Germanhcatied by Samuel Stone, who ran a secondhand clothing store, and Samuel Lubra, a tailorwhile the thirdheaded by Lambert Blower, also a tailorwas Dutch. The bons found in tlie backyard cistern tiiat these three families shared included a preponderance of those from sheepin fact. more sheep bons were found there than in any other feature from the site. Because the bons were from older sheep and not lambs, it was elcar that at least one of the families
27

The meat prd others' but we : class family who 1 from those of ot bons from carni Down the stra Polish families a^ only the food i strong preferenq Catholics who z lived in the tenq grinders traditi< the cup for tip block in the las this way of mak research showe; only their insm dollars).
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The Five Poi landfillthey 1 century. LandrH jor thenies of > ries; it lias beeoj next chapter we the rivers.

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ate a lot of mutton. The bons also showed diat the mutton was usually bought by die ieg. Germans are not known for eating mutton, but it was relatively cheap in New York City at the time, and that could well have been the important factor. Around die corner was the Irish Pearl Street tenement that we discussed above. For at least some of the families in this building, the meat of choice was pork, which was one of the cheaper mcats available in the city but by no means the cheapest. The large number of foot bons from pigs showed a preference for pigs' feet. They may have been simmered in wine and spices to make crabeen, a traditional Irish favorite. Also found among the pig bones were fragments of botties that had hcld Lea and Perrins Worcestershire Sauce and pepper sauce, showing tiiat, as Heather Griggs put i t , the residents were following "their cultural tastes, even if this were more costiy than . . . alternatives." The meat preferences of the immigrant groups were not only different from each others' but were also very different from the Robsons', tlie native-born, upper-middleclass family who lived on Washington Square. The animal bones from their privy (and from those of other middle-class New Yorkers) showed a definite preference for beef; bones from cattlc were much more prevalent than those from sheep, pigs, or fish. Down the street from the German families was a tenement where several Italian and Polish families lived. The faunal remains found in the privy they shared included not only the food bones that the analysts expected (this group seems to have shown a strong preference for fish, particularly cod, suggesting tiiat many of the tenants were Catliolics who ate fish on meatless days) and the bones of the cats and rats that also lived in the tenement, but also the bones from a small male monkey. Italian organ grinders traditionally used monkeys from Central and South America to pass around the cup for tips, and census records listed many organ grinders on the Courthouse block in the last half of the century. The monkeys bones provide a vivid reminder of this way of making a living, one that persisted well into the twentieth century. Further research showed the analysts that organ grinders usually hired, rather than bought, not only their instmments but also tlie monkeys (which were often worth twenty or thirty dollars).
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The Five Points and Washington Square are neighborhoods that were built on landfillthey had both been low-lying land before the beginning of tlie nineteenth century. Landfilling by claiming land from rivers and marshes has been one of the maor themes of New York's growth from the seventeenth through the twentieth centuries; it lias been used to ercate some of the most valuable real estate in tlie city. I n the next chapter we investigate what archaeologists have learned about claiming land from the rivers.
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Building the City: The Waterfront

Although the goods that passeei through the port of New York formed the city? economic base throughout most of its history, an important component o: die city's economy was, and still is, its real estate. In fact, a real estate deal forms die central event in the popular myth diat describes the birth of the city: Peter Minuit's purchase of the entire island of Manhattan from the Munsee Indians in 1626 for a mere twenty-four dollars' worth of trinkets (see chapter 8 for the Munsee perspective on this deal). I n fact, a large part of die story of the physical growth of die city (as well the private fortunes of many of its residents) is the story of the growth of the citys real estate market. Over and over again, as the city grew northward from the tip of Manhattan Island, spcculators bought up huge traets of land just beyond its edge and then, as the city continued to grow. subdivided these parcels into urban lots that they sold at enormous profits.
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As part of this commodification of land, the Europeans altered die citVs terrain on an unprecedented scale. They levcled hills, drained marshes, and filled in ravines to make the land suitable for their needs. They even made new land by claiming it from the rivers. People tend to think of the process of adding landfill along the city^s shores as a modern phenomenon, one tiiat was made feasible only after the introduction of modem earth-moving equipment like front-end loaders and backhoes. But in fact, the citys residents began making new land well over three hundred years ago, soon after the first European settiement. They focused this activity 011 that part of the outpost that contained its most valuable real estatealong the shore adjacent to the East River port. In the intervening centuries, New Yorkers conducted landfilling operations in ali five boroughs, including much of the shoreline of the modern city. And during the past few decades, archaeologists have been able to study the early transformation of Manhattan^ waterfront.

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Vicws and old maps of the city provide an overall picture of the development of the waterfront and the landfill process in New York. Because the East River port was the city's economic focus until the mid-nineteenth century, it was a popular subject for the artists who portrayed the settiement. They drew vicws from ships anchored in the river, from Governors Island in the city^s harbor, or from Brooklyn, then a separate town across the river. By comparing the views and maps from different periods, we can uace die development of the waterfront and the landfilling process from the time of the first Dutch settiement. The appearance of the port in the mid-seventeenth century was amazingly different from its aspect even fifty years later. A view depicting New Amsterdam at the southern tip of Manhattan Island around 1650 shows the East River shoreline before most alterations had begun (see fig. 2.2). With die exception of a small wharf, the riverfront then was untouched, widi a narrow beach extending down from the low-lying island to the river. The Dutch called this area along the shore the Strand, which means "beach" in their language as well as in English. Beginning in the 1650S, New Amsterdammers began to develop the waterfront, and widiin a decade its configuration had changed completely (see fig. 2.3). First, to counteract the continuai crosion of the shore in front ofthe Stadt Huys, the municipal government ordered the building of a seawall. By the ios, this wall extended ali along the East River shore and linked up with the city's defensive palisade at today^s Wall Street. Second, the New Amsterdammers, following Dutch tradition, dug a canal, or Gracht, 011 the line of today^s Broad Street to drain the low-lying swampy ground there. Three bridges crossed die canal, which small craft could enter at high tide. Throughout this period, ships anchored in the East River, where small boats loaded and unloaded them, as the water was too shallow for dockage along die shore. After the English conquered New Amsterdam and rechristened it New York, they continued to develop the waterfront. By the 1670S they had filled in the Gracht and had built die Grcat Dock, which extended out into the East River, enclosing a marina where boats could moor (see fig. 2 . 4 ) . But the innovation diat was to have die most profound impact on the changing shoreline was the Dongan Charter ( 1 6 8 0 ) , which set the precedent of allowing die city government to raise revenue by selling "water lots" or the right to build wharves and "make land" out in the rivers between the low and high watermarks. And its successor, the Montgomerie Charter (1731), granted the city the additional power to sell water lots extending beyond the low watermark, four hundred feet out into die water. Under these charters, those who bought water lots were required to fill them in at their own expense. At the time that the Dongan Charter was idopted, the East River shoreline was still located at todays Pearl Street, three blocks inland from South Street, which forms die shoreline today, while the Hudson shore

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was located near today^ Greenwich Street, four blocks east of the modern sfiOFtBeginning in the i 6 8 o s , the city began to sell the water lots that would eventually forra the land between the seventeendi-century shoreline and the shoreline of today. The making of land accomplished two goals for early New Yorkers. First of ali. ra extended the citais shoreline beyond die shallow water near the natural shore so rhac eventually ships could tie up at landside wharves instead of having to anchor out in rinr river. Second, the "made land" provided more of the city^s most valuable real estate the low-lying area adjacent to the harborwhich merchants could develop to accommodate the warehouses and stores they needed to handle the goods entering ara leaving the port. By the eighteenth century, these newly made waterfront parcels haa become the bases of operations for some of the citais richest mercantile families, such as the Schermerhorns and Van Cortlandts, who often acquired the right to make lane through their politicai connections with the city^s government.
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Old maps provide us widi an overview of the landfilling process, which oceurred cr a lot-by-lot basis. These lots eventually formed block-wide ribbons of new land nanning parallel to the shore. By the late 1720S (see fig. 11.1) land had been claimed up rc toda/s Water Street, and by the end of the century (see fig. 11.2) the next ribbon land, between Water and Front Streets on the east side, was completed and landfilhra had begun on the west side as well. New York's waterfront during die colonial period is unusual among the British American colonial cities in tiiat New Yorkers did not build many piers that projectec out into the harbor; they built slips instead. As blocks of landfill were added along the East River waterfront, fill was added out into the water on either side of the ends of the larger streets that ran perpendicular to the shore, forming slips or inlets where smal boats could moor (see fig. 11.1). Later, as a subsequent block of landfill was added, t h e original slip was filled in and converted into a dry street and a new slip took its plaa (see fig. I T . 2 ) . These filled-in slips provided large pieces of public land that were often the sites of markets, as they were located conveniently close to landings where farmers could moor their boats and unload livestock and produce for sale. The landfill process continued in the early nineteenth century, and the ribbons of land between Front and South Streets on tlie east side and between Washington and West Streets on the west side were gradually completed (see fig. 11.3). By 1 8 4 0 , lower Manhattan had achieved the silhouette that would characterize it for more than a century, until the 1 9 6 0 S . Then New Yorkers once more began to claim and build the new blocks of land in the Hudson River that resulted in Battery Park City, just to the west of the World Trade Center. Today, well over a third of Manhattan south of City' Hall is land claimed from the rivers.
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During the past few decades, archaeologists have conducted exeavations on many

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landfill blocks in die city. Most of the sites, which date from the seventeenth through the early nineteendi centuries, are located along Manhattan's East River waterfront. The exeavations in the landfill have allowed archaeologists to flesh out the story of how early urban dwellers first made the land and then built upon it. They have pinpointed the sources of die material used to make up the landfill and they have documented how early builders held tile landfill in place so that it would not be washed away by tides and currents. Furthermore, they have delincated techniques that early New Yorkers de\ elopcd for building on newly made land so that buildings did not crack and crumble as the fill continued to settle beneath them. Finally, they have discovered the presence of archaeological sites that were created before the landfill was installcd and that have been preserved beneath it.
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The Archaeology o f Landfill


Archaeologists have discovered that early New Yorkers obtained their fill from almost any place where they could find a supply of appropriate material. Digging in lower Manhattan, archaeologists have found dark gray silty deposits in some landfills, indicating that the soil had been dredged up from nearby slips that had silted up so much that it was dimeult to sail boats into them. They have found trash in some landfills, showing that the landfill had been used as a dumping ground by both local residents and the workers who picked up garbage around tlie city. They have also found remarkably clean fill, suggesting that it had come from razing a hill or exeavating a cellar hole. More surprisingly, they have found fill made up of "exotic" materiais, which presumably entered the harbor as ship ballast before being dumped in the landfill. In fact, the nll can sometimes help trace the voyages of some of the ships that anchored in the harbor. At several sites, archaeologists have found coralline sand and large pieces of coral from the Caribbean, brought in on ships plying the Caribbean tradc. They have also found large pieces of English flint, testimony to the trans-Atlantic trade. Artifacts that archaeologists find in the landfill can date to any period before the fill -as used to make land. When they exeavate seventeenth-century landfill, for example, ali tlie artifacts they find date to the seventeenth century or earlier. These early artifacts are invaluable because so few traces exist of the brief four decades of Dutch rale and rhe long eleven-thousand-year presence of Native Americans in what became tlie city. The artifacts from one seventeenth-century landfill include fragments of dishes and toracco pipes and even the soles and heels from seventeenth-century shoes, ali reminders : f the European presence (fig. 13.1). At another seventeentii-centuty landfill site, archacoiogists found several Native American artifacts, including spear points, Late Wood.and arrowheads, and even a weight used to sink a fishing net.
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Archaeologists working in landfill can learn about impoctant concerns of the day, some of which were matters of life and death to the cit/s inhabitants. During the summers of the 1790S and early i8oos, the city was swept by a series of yellow fever epidemics. At diat time doctors did not agrec about the causes of yellow fever or how dais disease spread (it was noc until the beginning of the twentieth century diat it was coofirmcd that yellow fever is transmitted by mosquitoes). One common hypothesis was that yellow fever was spread througa the vapors or miasmas given off by decaying organic matria.and one place that such miasmas could be found was ia landfill, which was often made up of garbage. Physician Richard Bayley graphicaliy described the garbage and other objeets

13.1. Fragmento of seventeenth-century t h a t h e s a w b e i n g u s c d for l a n d f i m l 7 6 : C a r t sw e r e e m shoesfrmn the landfill at Hanover lous Squai e. cities furnish in abundance; and with materiais of this description [it] was filled up, and to give greater salubrity to the mass, there were occasionally added, dead horses, dogs, cats, hogs, &c. &c." That same year, in response to die yellow-fevcr epidemics, the city created the Department o: Health and made Bayley its first health commissioncr. Soon after, the city enacted regulations demanding that clean sand be used to fill in die water lots and bring them up to grade. But ordinances, of course, are not always followed. This became clear when archaeologist Joan Geismar, working with the data from two sites she had exeavated, compared the garbage content of the landfill to determine how effective these ordinances were. One site, 175 Water Street on the East River, was created in the mid-eighteenth century, long before yellow fever had become a serious issuc in the city. The other, located on the Hudson River on the west side, was filled between 1797 and 1817, after the ordinance had been issued and while yellow fever was still a concern. Geismar discovered that the ordinances prescribing clean fill were taken seriously during the period when the epidemics raged. I n comparing die amounts of artifacts or garbage from die landfill from the two reas, she discovered that garbage was more than five times as densc in the landfill at the East River site than at the west side site. The earlier landfill had especially large quantities of leather scraps and animal bon in it exactly the organic material to create the miasmas that later became of such concern. Yct the later fill, which was deposited during the period of the epidemics, was by no means complctely clean. Geismar found a large cache of bones, including die skulls and jaws of catde, suggesting that the area may have been used for illegal dumping by
7 p l o y e d t o c o l k c t s u c h d i r t a n d fikh a s a l l l a r g e a n d p o p i l 5

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butchcrs from a nearby market. So although the fears of yellow fever and the city regulations to improve the city's sanitation certainly had an effect on the behavior of most people, some New Yorkers flouted these rules. Obtaining material to use for landfill is only one of the problems involved in making land. Anothcr is figuring out how to hold die landfill in place so that it is not washed away by tides and currents. Before the nineteenth century, these techniques were not documented in written records. Instead, they formed part of a vernacular tradition, passed down orally from master craftsman to apprentice, that lias since been lost. But archaeologists working in New York have rediscovered some of these traditions.
6

Wooden-plank bulkheads provide the simplest solution to this problem, archaeologists have found. But they have seen other solutions as well. They have uncovered sections of large wooden wharves, known as cobb wharves, which are made of log frames filled with large stones or cobbles (hence the term cobb) and then sunk in place in the river. These are much stronger than plank bulkheads and were used not only to retain landfill but to provide dockage for boats and support for waterfront buildings. Contemporary views (see, for example, die lower right corner of fig. 10.8) and written accounts give us some information about these wharves. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, a Frcnchman who lived in the British American colonies in the late eighteenth century, wrote: " I have seen them made in forty feet of water. This is done with the trunks of pine attached together which they gradually sink, fill in widi stone and cover the surface with earth." But these contemporary descriptions are not detailed enough to reveal how these wharves were actually made. Archaeologists interested in studying waterfront structures like wharves face two problems. The first, of course, is finding a wharf in their project area. I f an entire set of ater lots was filled in at arotmd the same time, there may be no large fill-retaining structures inside the archaeological site, which in lower Manhattan is almost inevitably confined inside the borders of a modern city block. The larger and more permanent retaining structures are instead located at the river end of the original water lots, which are now under the modern sidewalk or street. The other problem is diat tiiese strucrures extend well below the water table, down to the bottom of the river. Archacolo -:s usually have access to pumps during their exeavations, but these pumps can remove the water only from small reas because of the rate at which the water flows back in.
7

Before 1984, archaeologists had discovered several cobb wharves at the East River landfill sites; however, because of pumping problems, they could only partially uncover and document them. But owing to a fortuitous set of circumstances, archaeologjsts Roselle Henn and Diana Wall and their crew were able to uncover and record more than one hundred feet of one of these wharf systems, ali the way down to the old :r bottom, at the Assay site. This site, located between Front and South Streets just

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north of Old Slip, in the shadow of the East River Drive on the modern shore ( s e e j fig. 1.2), was claimed from the river at die beginning of the nineteenth century and 3 3 0 1984 was about to be turned into Financial Square, a modern office tower. As is usually the case, before going into the fleld the archaeologists had studied rrc properrys history, which old maps showed was both complex and provocative. One map (see fig. 11.2), which documented the block in die 1780S, before any landfill had been added to it, showed several piers extending from Front Street out into die river. through the area that would later become the block. Another showed that less thar decade later (fig. 13.2), the block had been partially filled in in an L-shaped configuration: lanei had been made in the southern half and north west quarter ofthe block while a small basin was still unfillcd on the northeast quarter of the site. Finally, by 1803, the block was completely filled inthe basin was gone. The maps showed, then, that the block had been filled in at least two episodes: threcquarters of it had been made between 1789 and 1797, while die fill in the fourth quarter had been added later, after 1797. Because the archaeologists would be digging in the northern half of the block, they realized that they had a good chance of uncover: both the north-soutii wharf that supported tiic fill deposited 011 the west, or landwarc. side of the little basin in the 1790S and the wharf along its southern boundary. When the archaeologists explored the locations of the wharves shown on the map of 179they discovered the tops of both the northsouth wharves and the pier that had once extended out into the river. Although Henn and Wall were thrilled that they had found the wharves, they were also disheartened. The water table at the site was so high that they knew that ali they could do was record the uppermost parts of the structures. But here the archaeologists had a stroke of luck. Throughout the earlier part of the project. construction workers had been building a slurry wall around the edge of die southern part of the site, south of the area where the archaeologists were working. The slurry wall, which was made by pouring concrete into a narrow trench dug 13.2. A detail ofthe Taylor-Roberts Plan, showing Nen> down to bedrock, would eventually form a wall York in 1796. The partiallyfilledAssay site block is enclosing the entire site, sealing it off from shown two bloclzs to the left ofWall Street, on the river groundwater. After its completion, water could side of Front Street.
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be pumpeci out of the block and would not seep back in. The construction workers had rinished the slurry wall on the southern part of the block and now wanted to continue their work around the northern edge of the site, in the area where the archaeologists were working. The archaeologists rcalized that if they had access to the wharves after the slurry wall was completed, they could do the unpreccdented: record the construction of the wharves ali the way down to the bottom of tiie river. The archaeologists and the Landmarks Preservation Commission began a series of negotiations with the developer, the Howard Ronson Organization. The compromise they reached represented a win for both sides: construction could begin immediately on the slurry wall in the northern part of the site, but the archaeologists would have access to the wharves after the slurry wall was finished. Throughout July 1984, the archaeological crew worked on recording the wharves. First the backhoe removed ali die landfill alongside the wharves in the area where die marina had been in the 1790S (fig. 13.3). Then the crew began to make scale drawings and take photographs of the wharves. They even exeavated inside them i n several r>laces. By the end of July, they had recorded the construction of the wharves in their entirety, a feat that might never be accomplished again. They discovered that the landfill on the west side of the marina was hcld in place by two separate nortia-south wharves that were made in a similar manner and tiiat abutted each other. Each wharf was about forty-five feet long and fifteen feet high and consisted of a framework of heavy timbers, each well over a foot in diameter, and a

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floor of split timbcrs that restcd on the lowermost logs. The framework formed a of four- to eight-foot-long cclls (fig. 13.4). Each cell was filled with ballast, made cr field stones and large pieces of coral, that rested on the floor; the weight of the sank the wharf and anchored it in place. Cross-ties fastened with dovetailed joints used to rcinforce tlie structure. Above the floors, toward the tops of the wharves. a series of semi-platforms made up of smaller logs tiiat did not extend ali the through the wharf. The semi-platforms served to redistribute tlie weight of the so that its pressure would not cause the outer wall to collapse. Ali the logs were tached to each other through various fornis of wood joinery; there was no metal ware in the structure. The only metal fasteners found were used to connect uj braces extending from the bottom to the top of the wharves at each end, to prev them from shimmving. The third wharf at the site, the one that formed the southern seawall of the 1 - 9 1 marina, was very differentit was made up of two different kinds of structures (see . 13.3). One consisted of a series of square "blocks," about twenty feet on a side and ser about forty feet apart, that were built in a manner similar to the north-south wharwes. I Between the blocks were simple wooden bulkheads, which together with the bloco formed a solid seawall to hold back the landfill. But why were there two different se^ wall structures? After rechecking their old maps and studying later views of die shoreline, the archaeologists realized that the different structures had been built at differerr times. One setthe blockshad been built before the 1780S, long before any lancrl had been added to the area, as part of the pier that extended out into the river; this s the pier shown 011 the map of 1789. While the pier was in use, the blocks were spanDea by "bridges" of planks, providing a road-like surface so that carts could roll out alorar
; 9

the pier (fig. 13.5). The block-and-bridge styie was preferred for building piers out into the river because currents could run freely betweea the blocks and prevent the buildup of silt an filth resulting from more solid constructiora In fact, in 1798 (long after this particular p:er was built) the city required this kind of pier construction to help fight yellow fever. Bur the exeavations at the Assay site showed t h * block-and-bridge piers were in use well before the epidemics. After the decision had been made to fill the area south of the pier, the piara: 13.4- A view inside the wharves. Most ofthe ballast that bridges were removed and the spaces betweer had formerly been between the logs has been removed, although some rocks are visible under the central hg. the blocks were filled with simple bulkheads tc
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_7 o- View of a block-and-bridge wharf on the Hudson River, ca. 1807. From Valeiitine's Manual, jf/p. Collection ofthe~New-YorkHistorical Society, negative number 7414S.

hold back the landfill. The complete uncovering of the north-south wharves and of the aces of several of the blocks from the block-and-bridge pier at die Assay site allowed us to understand the fabric of New York's waterfront as it existed in the eighteenth and earlv nineteenth centuries. -Although by no means as ubiquitous as the wooden bulkheads and wharves, die most dramatic examples of structures used to hold back the fill are die derelict ships that have been discovered in Manhattaifs landfill. The hulls of the ships provided die physiaal support needed to hold the fill in place, so diat it would not be washed away by tides. Ships discovered in archaeological contexts are extremely important in that they nier concrete examples of how these vessels were built throughout the past, during periods when shipbuilding was still largely a vernacular tradition; for example, diere are aeidier plans nor models showing how ships were made in the colonial period.
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When exeavations began at die 175 Water Street site in 1981, Joan Geismar was directing her first large-scale urban project. The site was being dug before its development by the Howard Ronson Organization for the American hcadquarters of the National Westminster Bank. Before fieldwork began, background research showed that diis site was made up of landfill that had been deposited in die mid-cighteentii century, Geismar focused the exeavations primarily on the site's old backyards so that she and her crew could discover the artifacts that had been lcft by die people who had lived and

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worked on the block after the landfill was in place; her aim was to address issues cr trade and economics. The archaeologists planned to confine their exploration of rbe landfill to four "decp tests," or large holes that would be dug by the backhoe. Exeavations began in late October. By the first of the year, the field season was drawing to a close. The exeavation of the backyards, which had been very productive. almost finished, and only one deep test in the landfill remained to be dug. On Januar 6, as the backhoe exeavated this fourth and final decp test, which was located am Front Street, close to the middle of the block, the earth fell away, revealing a woodera stmeture. At first the archaeologists assumed that it was a plank bulkhead, like thc>: that had been found at other landfill sites in tiic area. But as the backhoe exposed men of the structure, its curved shape and outer sheathing of pitch and horsehair indicatea that they had found a ship. The discovery of the ship was not completcly unexpected. A few years earlier, part of a ship had been discovered in the landfill under 2 0 7 - 2 0 9 Water Street at the South Street Seaport Museum. Archacologist Robert Schuyler and his students had been able to uncover only a small part of the ship because it was under a standing building.
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After the identification of the ship at 175 Water Street was confirmed, nautical archaeologists Warren Riess and Sheli Smith were called in, and for the next thirty-four days they supervised the crew, who worked overtime to uncover the ship and record how it was made. Almost ali of the ship was inside the site block and accessible to th; archaeologists. She proved to be a ninety-two-foot-long, twenty-five-foot-wide merchant vessel, built with a blunt bow to carry more cargo. The tropical shipworms, or teredos, embedded in her pitch-and-horsehair sheathing testified tiiat tlie ship had played a role in the triangular trade; she had probably transported agricultural produce from New York to feed the enslaved on the plantations in the British West Indies and carried rum, sugar, and molasscs back to New York. The ship had been stripped of ali of the hardware that could possibly be reused. floated out to the river side of the water lots that were about to be filled at what woulc later become Front Street, and tied into a wooden bulkhead line. Her hull was then loaded with a ballast of coralline sand, granite cobbles, and yellow brick clinkers, and she was sunk in place. The ship formed the boundary for the eastern ends of tlie four water lots belonging to five merchants who had obviously worked cooperatively in organizing the sinking of the ship, which would help in the filling and stabilizing of their newly made land (fig. 1 3 . 6 ) .
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The exeavation of the ship (dubbed the Konson, after the developer who paid for the exeavations) generated enormous excitement even among that most jaded of audiences, resident New Yorkers. On a freezing cold Sunday in February, more than eleven thousand of them waited on line to file past the site so they could see the ship. Some

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175 WATER STREET

Site Map with Water Lots and Grantees Indicated


WaUrSIfMt

m
c3 11 I, . Q Lol well Lol numtr Ptop*rl Bn S w o o r t ealumn Umlt ot ahtp x c v i l o n . 0 Wrtvr lot B f n l

.<. Map ofthe 175 Water Street site, showing the water lots, the names of their owners, and the cation ofthe ship that was sunk to hold the landfill in place.

New Yorkers wanted the whole vessel to be excavated, conserved, and reconstructed so that it could go on display in the city where it had been scuttled. However, die -vooden ship owed its preservation to the fact that it had been buried under the ground and below the water table for more than two hundred years. Once taken out of that environment, the wood from the ship would begin to deteriorate quickly and would need to be conserved. Estimates for removing, conserving, and then exhibiting such an enormous artifact ran to $6 million, a hefty price tag. As a compromise, a twentyiot section of the ship's bow was removed and sent away for conscrvation at the ieveloper's expense; die rest of the ship's timbers were measured, photographed, and iestroyed (fig. 13.7). Almost three years after the initial discovery, a new quest began. The 8350,000 redged by the developer to conserve and store the ship's bow was running out and me bow was ready for a permanent home, but it was proving hard to find one. New York's mayor, Ed Koch, called a news conference to announce that unless a museum n New York carne forward to take responsibility for the Ronson, she would go to the Maritime Museum in Newport News, Virgnia, which had pledged $400,000 to house

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and display die bow. Unfortunately, no New York museum could match this ofFer. So the bow of a New Yori eightccnth-century merchant ship now makes its home in Virgnia. As of this writing, however, die ship is expectei to be returned to New York as a pcrmanent exliibit at t h ; South Street Seaport Museum. After landfill is put into place, it takes a long time tc setde, and any buildings that rest on it while it is settiing soon begin to crack. Ever since people first began making land, builders have been coming up with engineering Solutions to this problem. Today, structures built on landfil usually rest on steel pilings that are driven through the landfill and the underlying natural soil to bedrock, which supports the weight of die building. Archaeologists have discovered diat in the past, New Yorkers have used several solutions to this problem. The oldest of these solutions was first discovered in 1981 at 7 Hanover Square (see fig. 1.2), where an office tower was being built just a block north of the Stadt Huys Block 13.7. Archaeologists recordmg the structure and tire Fraunces Tavern Museum. This was the first largeofthe Ronson. scale exeavation of a landfill site in the city. Before fieldwork began, the site's background study showed that the fill here was extremely old: it had been deposited on the block, which was just next to the Pearl Street shore, in the i68os and 1690S. Nan Rothschild, Arnold Pickman, and Diana Wall, the projecfs directors, were interested in exploring the nature of the landfill and the underlying shore deposits, as well as looking for fill-retaining structures.
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The crew began the exeavations by placing several test cuts 011 different parts of the site to sample die landfill. But as they dug, they kept finding deeply buried stone walls. The archaeologists decided to follow these maze-like walls through die site to see where they went and what they were. Much to their amazement, they soon discovered that the stone walls were the foundation walls of the earliest buildings that had been built 011 the Pearl Street side of the block, dating from the 1690S. Furthermore, they realized that these walls extended ali the way down through the landfill and rcsted on the original shore. The walls had not been destroyed when later buildings were built on top of them only because the walls extended to such great depths. Ultimately, the archaeologists realized that what they were dealing with at 7 Hanover Square was a seventeenth-century solution to the structural problem of building on

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unstable landfill in an intertidal zone, and pcdaaps it was a method to hold the fill in place as well. This technique allowed the load of each building to rest on its foundanon walls, which in turn rested on die original river shore beneath the fill. In other words, the stable natural shore, instead of the unstable landfill, bore the weight of the building.
17

Because the seventeenth-century builders had come tip with this solution to the problem of building on fill, the archaeologists were able to uncover the foundation walls of seven of the houses that had been built on the landward, or Pearl Street, side of the block in the i 6 8 o s and 1690S (fig. 13.8). They uncovered the walls of the Englishstyle mansion belonging to Robert Livingston on the large water lot that he had acquired from Captain William Kidd, the famous privateer, in 1693. They also found die walls of six moremodest houses tiiat a contemporary view shows had been built in the Dutch steppcd-gable style for Livingston's ethnically Dutch neighbors to die north. Like tlie landowners on the 175 Water Street site, who had arranged cooperatively to scuttle tlie ship to hold the landfill, these six landowners at 7 Hanover Square also cooperated in building the back wall for their housestlie threc-foot-wide wall formed a continuous back building line for ali six aouses. These buildings were still standing in 1717, when they were incorporated into a view of the New York shore from the East River (see fig. 1 0 . 8 ) .
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Laying deep stone walls that rested on original land would work only when building 011 landfill blocks that were in the intertidal zone and close to rhe original shore. When new land was made further out, in deeper parts of the river, this technique was anpracticaltlie stone walls would have had to have been laid under water. Instead, archaeologists have iscovered two other solutions that early builders evised for building 011 this deeper landfill. One is extremely common and lias been recorded at site after site; the other lias been found at only one site. These two solutions follow two different principies. Most commonly, early builders rested a building's

13.8. The seventeenth-century stone walls at the 7 Hanover Square site. The Livingston house, which takes up two lots, is in the lower left comer ofthe view; the Dutch houses are the smaller ones toward the top ofthe image.

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stone foundation wall on top of a wooden complcx called a spread-footer (fig. 13.9)- To make a spread-footer, builders first laid a series of heasi wooden planks side by side, perpendicular r: the line of the foundation wall that thev '.ver: building. These planks formed a platform abom five feet wide ranning the entire length of trje wall. Then die builders laid one or two larjp wooden beams, with square cross-sections of up to a foot 011 a side, down die middle of the plara platform in line with the foundation wall. Rnally, they laid the building's stone foundahzr wall 011 top of the wooden beams. This construction technique spreads die load of the building over die wider area covered by the underlying plank platform, so that in cffect the building floats 011 top of the landfill. Builders" guides from the early nineteenth century men13.9. A spread-footer complex from the Assay site. tion these spread-footers and stress that the should be placed below the water table, so that the wood will remain constantlv and therefore will not decay. In ali the cases where archaeologists have found spreadfooters in Manhattan, they have found them below the water table. The builders who constructed the first series of buildings in what had been the open basin or marina at the Assay site carne up with a solution for building on landfill tha: lias not been found anvwhere else in the city. The structures, which were built righ: after the marina was filled in, rested on pilings. These were made of logs about ten inches in diameter; one end of each log had been hewn to a point that was reinforced with an iron strap. The logs were then driven, pointed ends first, down through the landfill into the gray silts of the old river bottom, so that thev formed a double row along the line of the wall that was to be built (fig. 13.10). Heavy wooden beams (similar to those used in spread-footers) were then laid across the tops of the pilings, and the stone foundation wall of the building was laid 011 top of these beams. Again, as with the spread-footers, both the pilings and the overlying beams were placed below the water table. In choosing this solution, the builders ensured that the load of the building passed from die foundation wall through the wooden beams to the underlying pilings and finally carne to a rest on the original river bottom into which the pilings had been driven. But the reason why builders chose this solution is hot clear. This tech-

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Bique, which was used at the Assay site before the invention of the steam-driven pile drivcr, was obviously much more labor intensive and expcnsive (in terms of die consumption of wood) than die spread-footers. Perhaps the landfill in the basin had not been filled up to grade at the time the buildings were built, and the pilings in effcct were stilts supporting the buildings, which were probably warehouses.
19

Buried Ground Surfaces


One of the most important lessons that exeavations in the landfill have taught archaeologists is that the landfill can serve as a blanket, protecting and preserving an older ground surface buried beneath it from the ravages of later development. Thus, by examining the ground under the landfill, we can, for example, discern the original slope of the shore of the East River, retrieve artifacts that had been dropped (either accidcntallv or intentionally) on the natural
r r v J J

. , . ... 13,10. lhe tops ofthe pilings, upon which river bottom, and even discover earlier archaeological sites ^ ^ ^ located beneath the old ground surface. f f buildings. When the archaeologists were exeavating at 7 Hanover Square, they wanted to explore the natural seventeenth-century shorelinethe one diat had been seen by Henry Hudson, Tackapausha, Sara Roelofs, and Anthony Van Angola. As their backhoe exeavated from west to east across the block, die wall of the trench that it exposed showed the layers of soil that made up both the landfill and the underlying topography of the old shore, allowing them to see for die first time in three centuries the old natural beach that had been hidden from view under the landfill (see fig. 2.2). They discovered that die "beach" was a layer of reddish-brown sand deposited by die outwash of an early glacier that had melted forty thousand years ago; these saneis at me time ofthe filling were in the process of being eroded by the tidal action of the East River. The slope of this sandy shore was quite steep near land but became more gradual Ebrther out in the river. About forty feet out from shore, the archaeologists discovered a laver of gray silt overlying the reddish-brown sand and extending further out into the river; the silt layer had been deposited by the river. The reddish-brown sand of the beach marked the area above low tide, where tidal action did not allow the gray silt to accumulate. The archaeologists discovered a number of seventeenth-century artifacts 011 top of
i( M d w Q o d m b m m $ s t m e 00tings 0 the 20

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tliis ancient shore, showing that New Amsterdammers and early New Yorkers times dumped their trash in the river. The broken edges of some of these fragmenta pottery and tobacco pipes had been dulled by being rolled around by the waves. Archaeologists working at exeavations on landfill blocks further out in the River have found artifacts on die old river bottom, buried under the landfill. U : the discarded trash that archaeologists usualiy find, some of these items were prol dropped accidentally into the river, either overboard from a boat or of the side of wharf that had formed an earlier shoreline. Many of the artifacts were made of me: material that seldom ends up in the archaeological record because in the past it w usualiy sold for scrap and recycled. But on the river bottom, archaeologists have fouric: pewter plates and spoons, utensils that we know from estate inventories were ubiqvatous in colonial homes but which are rarely found in the ground, as well as persoava. items like shoe buckles, probably lost from the shoes of passersby (fig. 13.11). One of the spoons found on die river bottom at the Assay site may have been placea there intentionally. As archaeologists worked to uncover the large wooden wharf corrplex at this site, they found a number of objeets embedded in the river-bottom silanext to die wharves. The river bottom in this area had been sealed by the early nineteenth century, when landfilling moved the shoreline further to the east. One of the artifacts discovered in the buried silt was a spoon with several x's or +'s scratched on th; inside of its bowl. In 1984, when the find was made, the archaeologists did not even notice the +'s, and if they had, they might have assumed that they had been scratched there accidentally. However, more recent work by Leland Ferguson, an archacologh" who studies the enslaved in the South, suggests another interpretation. Ferguson was the first archaeologist to notice the presence of incised +'s on the base? of some hand-built, unglazed red eartienware (or "colonoware") bowls from the Carolina low country. Similar motifs have also been found on the bowls of spoons found on plantations in Virginia. Ferguson argues that these marks are cosmograms derivec from the Bakongo people who live in today^ Angola and Congo in West Africa, one of the places where die enslaved whc were brought to North America were captured. The Bakongo use this cosmogram to depict the relationship between 13. TI. Two spoons found under the landfill, on the bottom of the earth and the water and the living and the dead: the horizontal line in the + repthe eighteenth-century East River. The lower spoon shows the x^s or +'s scratched in its bowl. resents the water that serves as the bound21

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ary between the living and their ancestors, while the vertical line represents the path of power across the boundary, from below (the land of the ancestors) to above (the land of the living). Ferguson thinks diat the bowls were used as containcrs for sacred medicines (or minkisi), which "control the cosmos connecting the living with the powers of the dead" and which were used in curing rituais. I t is possible that the incised spoons found in Virgnia played a similar role. Most of the colonoware bowls marked with such crosses were found on the bottoms of rivers and streams, supporting the interpretation that the enslaved used them in rituais involving the waters that separate the living from the dead. So far, these bowls have not been found in the North. But the discovery of the spoon with its inscribed +'s on the buried bottom of the East River suggests that some of the enslaved Africans in New York may have practiced a similar ritual there. And if so, the evidence of that rimai was preserved for almost two centuries by the protective layer of landfill above it. Landfill preserves inland sites as well as those located on the shore. The eighteenthcentary African Burial Ground was preserved from the ravages of development until die late twentieth century because of a thick layer of landfill that was placed on top of it in the early nineteenth century. And much of the Late Woodland Aqueduct site is still preserved under fill that was laid in the 1930S. But whedier inland or on die shore, after the landfill is put into place, it becomes land where people build their homes and workplaces and lay out their backyards.
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Privies The study in the are bodilv wasts misms like excretion pletely differenr pL to the out the chaml were emi ceramic that were The like New often coi pit was house wa mi um; When 1 spot to Are two and an people study the about the abandonei provide book. By priw. arca lived or ~i and even dents accaJ ing the struetion features cM inferenoc

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Building in the City: Early Urban Backyards

Just as today some city dwellers use their backyards as settings for barbecues or gardening while others use theirs for dumping trash, throughout the city^s history people have used backyards for many purposes. Although some backyarca had kitchen or decorative gardens, baclcyards were also work reas where peopi; hung out dieir clothes to dry and performed tasks that were messy or that toei; up too much space to do indoors. Some people worked in their backyani when it was too warm to work inside; others kept their pigs there (when they were not roaming the citais streets). Most significantly from the archaeological perspective, throughout much of the citais history backyards were the sites of basic Utilitiesthe outhouses or privies that held human waste and the rain barreis and cisterns that held rainwater. When archaeologists dig in the backyards of early New Amsterdam and New York, they do not find the remains of the old outhouses or rain barreis that once stood there. Features like these were located at or above the old ground surface and have usualiy been erased by the development and redevelopment that characterizc urban life. They also have few opportunities to trace the layouts of olc garden plots. But archaeologists often find the remains of diose backyard features that were originally built undergroundthe shafts or pits from wells, privies, dry wells, and cisterns. These deep features are interesting for two reasons. First of ali, because manv early New Yorkers used them for rubbish disposal, archaeologists often find them filled with trash. And archaeologists love trash because it can provide many insights into the details of everyday life and the cultures of the past. Second, these features are artifacts in their own right. The construction techniques that New Yorkers used to build these featureslike the wharves we described in the previous chapterformed part of vernacular traditions that had been lost until archaeologists rediscovered them.
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Privies
The study of privies and of tlie deposits found inside their shafts is an important thcme in the archaeology of the modern period. Just as discussion of the cxcretion of human bodily wastes is taboo in polite modem American culture (today Americans use euphemisms like "going to the bathroom" or "going to the john" to avoid direct reference to cxcretion), it was also taboo in the recent past. Historical documents are almost completely mute on this subject. People who lived in early urban North America had two different places for eliminating bodily wastes: the backyard outhouse or, when the trip to the outhouse was unappealing on cold or rainy nights or when someone was sick, the chamber pot. Chamber pots were kept in commodes or under beds and after use were emptied into the backyard privy. Archaeologists have found an enormous array of ceramic chamber pots, dating from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries, that were used by New Yorkers (fig. 14.1). The backyard outhouse sat on top of a shaft or pit. Underground privy shafts in a city like New York are different from many of those found in rural arcas. Country shafts often consist of a simple hole dug in the ground and topped by an outhouse. After the pit was filled, it was capped off with clean soil. Then a new one was dug and the outhouse was moved and placed 011 top of it. But in urban backyards, space was at a prernium; privy pits were permanent structures, carefully lined with wood, brick, or stone. When the pits filled up, they were cleaned out. Privies were rarely moved from one spot to another. Archaeologists have learned a great deal from studying privies, which often contain two distinct kinds of deposits: a lower one, made up of "night soil" or human waste, and an upper one, made up of the trash and debris thrown in to fill up the pit after acople had stopped using it. Archaeologists can study die materiais in both layers of fill to find out about the lives of the people who used the privy and ahandoned i t . I n fact, die artifacts found in privies aro vide the data for many of the chapters in this book. By dating the artifacts in die upper fill of a privy, archaeologists can learn when the people who aved or worked on the property stopped using it and even (for nineteenth-century privies) when residents acquired access to indoor plumbing. By studying the structure of the shafts, diey can see how construction techniques for building these hidden .!. A white earthenware chamber pot, dating features changed through time and can even make from the mid-nineteenth century,froma New arerences as to why they may have changed. So far Tork City site.
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in New York, archaeologists have recorded four different kinds of privy shafts. eac characteristic of a particular phase of the city*s history. Archaeologists working in the arca of New Amsterdam in today^ Wall Street found some distinctive seventeenth-century barrei features in several old bacleyards. first tiaey couldht figure out what these features were. But after analyzing their strutture and contents, they realized that they had uncovered the vaults or pits from priv Each vault consisted of two barreis, two to three feet in diameter, with their tops aaac bottoms removed. They had been set into the ground, one on top c the odier, so that the bottom of the uppermost barrei fit inside the r:c ofthe lower one (fig. 14.2). Encased in clay, the barreis formed sleeves lining the pits in which they were placed to depths of more than fhi feet. Soil was then packed around the clay-sheathed barreis to ho tiiem in place, and a layer of shell was strewn across the dirt floor tiae vault.
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14.2. Section drawing of fragments of a seventeenthcentury privy shaft lineA with wooden buireis, from the Stadt Huys Block site. Note how the bottom ofthe upper buirei sits inside the top ofthe lower one. The Unes around the bairels demarcate dijferences in soil types, and the reas above the buireis indicate layers oflaterflooring.

The archaeologists studying the barrei features saw tiiat thev \~ ert well suited for serving as the vaults for privies. The clay around rre barreis provided an impcrmeable barrier, preventing the pit's contem from escaping through its sides; the contents could leach out onr through the bottom of the lower barrei, where uric acid would be neutralized by the lime in the shell. The exeavators noted that some n the barreis contained a layer of dark organic soil at the bottom, resrrac 011 top of the shell layer. This layer was night soil, deposited while rre privy was in use. I n some of the features, the soil packed around rac barreis to hold them in place contained datable artifacts, such as ceramic sherds and tile fragments. These showed that the vaults haa been made in the mid-seventeenth century. The artifacts found in rac fill inside the privies showed that they had ali been abandoned by the beginning of the eighteenth century.
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Although archaeologists found several Dutch seventeenth-centurT privies, they did not find the foundation walls of any of the houses associated with them. But they know from early pictures of the c r that most Dutch colonists built houses with their facades flush wrrr the streets (see fig. 2.3). Therefore, we can use the privy vaults' locations in backyards to make inferences about where seventeenthcentury Dutch New Amsterdammers thought it was appropriate r: place their privies relative to houses and work reas. Each privy w located slightly more than halfway to the rcar of the property, at the

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I4-3- Top and side views of a late seventeenth- or early eighteenth-centuiy brick-lined privy shaft from the Broad Financial Center site. The Unes around the bricks demarcate differences in soil types; those above the bricks indicate a more recent brick floor, side of the lot, so that it was conveniently close to the house but somewhat secluded. In later years, New Yorkers organized their backyard spaccs diferently. Archaeologists have found more-claborate late seventeenth-century privy vaults that replaced the earlier barrcl-lined pits. These newer vaults were lined with dry-laid, arcshaped bricks dcsigned so that the bricks, when laid end to end, formed a circle about three feet in diameter (fig. 14-3)- Like the barrei vault, the brick-lined pit had a dirt door; it was designed so that its contents could leach out into the underlying soil. These privies, abandoned and filled in during the early eighteenth century, were placed about two-thirds of the way toward the back of die lot (slightly to the rear of the earlier Dutch barrei privies) and, like the barrei privies, off to the side of the yard. Archaeologists digging at eighteenth- and early nineteendi-century residcntial sites have discovered more than a dozen square or rectangular wooden boxes buried in backyards. These boxes, which had dirt floors, contained the dark organic silty deposits that : :>nstitutc night soil as well as the heavy density of artifacts that is associated with privy vaults. Although they were ali made of wooden boards, their construction was not uni:':>rm. The boards of some were set vertically, while those of others were set horizontahy. Some were found on landfill blocks that had old abandoned cobb wharves runaang through them. Often the vault builders on these blocks used the side of the wharf as one side for die vault. One box privy at the Assay site was nestled into the corner where two wharves intersected, with the logs from the wharves forming two sides at the vault, while horizontally laid boards formed the other two sides. The lack of
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standardization in wooden vault construction shows that these were ad hoc s built with only one goalto line die privy pit and hold back the surrounding soe cheaply as possible; the method used was not important. In 1833 the cit/s Board of Health stipulated that privy vaults built in the older r of the city (the area south of Spring Street, in todav^s Soho) be constructed only brick or of stone. But by then many of the wooden box privies had already been placed. The datable artifacts found inside the box vaults show that these privies been abandoned by around 1820. These box privies were placed nearer the back o: yards than the earlier brick or barrei privies and cither to the side or in the middie dac yard.
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A large majoritv of the privy vaults that archaeologists have exeavated in New more than fifty of them to datewere lined with dry-laid, rough stone. These were installed during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries (fig. 1 Measuring about five feet in cross section, they extend down to depdas of up to tecn feet. Builders constructed them in the same way as the earlier brick privies: dug a hole the same shape but slightly larger than the p r i w vault and tiien the courses of stone that would serve as die pits lining. Some of these stone-lined r were square, and others were round. Ali the p r i w pits exeavated so far in Brooklyn ar Greenwich Village, parts of the city developed relatively late (after about 1820), a round, suggesting that this shape may have been preferred by then. In some cases where a singlc landlord owned two adjacent houses, the oceupants both houses shared a single stone-lined pr. that straddled the property line (fig. 14 These shared privies were abandoned and filled by around 1820, when individual privies witra stone-lined pits were built on each of dic K : The introduction of the custom of one privy per building was presumably related to changes in die meaning of privacy in the early nineteenth century. Archaeologists have discovered that the introduction of privies with standardized, stonelined pits was accompanied by the introduction of their standardized placcment. In yards that did not contain other backyard buildings, the 14-4-A brick cistern (lower left), a stone privy (upper privies were just inside the rear property line of right)j and two dry wells at the Sullivan Street site, the yard, either at the corneror in the center of seenfromabove, showing their awangement in a the lot. There, the priw, though close enough backyard.
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Lot 27

Lot 26

Lot 25

Lot 2+

Lot 48

I4S- Detail ofthe site map ofthe Telco Block, showing the narrow backyards with cisterns and rnviesplaced side by side. Lots 37-38 and 26-27 each had an early singleprivy that straddled the property line. Tronghs linking cisterns to dry wells or privies are evident in lots 26, 40, and 41.

ro the house for convenience, was far cnough away to keep the smell at bay and preent the privas contents from sceping into the basement. But properties in workinghass neighborhoods often had two tenements on them, one facing the street and one to its rear, with the yard in between them. In these lots, outhouses were placed bc- een the tenements.
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Cisterns and Dry Wells


-si ample supply of fresh, clean water was a continuai problem for early New Yorkers. In the seventeendi century, residents obtaincd their drinking water from natural springs jrcated north of what was then the city, near the Collect Pond at todav/s Foley Square. Vendors filled their casks at the springs and loaded them onto carts, which they drove jaro the city where they sold the water. Later New Yorkers drew water from public and private wells located throughout the city. Residents had to haul the water to their homes :cten up many flights of stairs) and then haul slops out again. But the eity^s everracreasing population put a strain on dais systcm, as dae water table became more and more contaminated by human waste and industrial activities. A t the beginning of the aar.eteenrii century, politician Aaron Burr hclpcd establish the Manhattan Company, r c citais first water supply system. This company laid twenty-five miles of water pipes ar.vle of hollowed-out pine logs under the city's streets. But this system, which pumped

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water from the springs that were by then just at tlie cit/s outskirts and stored it in a reservoir near today\s City Hall Park, only partially solvcd the problem. I t was run by a private company, and water was not cheap; only two thousand households were able to afford subscriptions to the piped water. There were also continuai problems with water flow. Furthermore, as the city continued to grow, the water table that fcd the springs that filled die company^ reservoir became more and more polluted. I t was onfy widi die completion of the Croton Aqueduct in 1842 that the installation of indoor plumbing became feasible for a large number of New Yorkers. Before piped water was readily available, many New Yorkers had cisterns in theabackyards. These rcceptacles stored rainwater that could be used for cooking, bathima and washing elothes. Some cisterns were made of wood or brick and placed underground in the yard, next to the house so that diey were close to the roof gutters th a: supplied them with rainwater and to die kitchens where the water would be used. The construction of cisterns, like the construction of privies, is not recorded in historical documents. I n fact, when archaeologists first found some large wooden-bea features in backyards 011 the late seventeendi-centuiy landfill sites along the East River. these boxes were complete mysteries to them. Now, however, they generally accep: that the boxes, which range from three and a half to five feet in width and from five ana a half to more than six feet in length, were cisterns. We do not know dieir heights because they were truncated by later construction, but unlike the wooden box features that proved to be privies, they were built with a great deal of care and according to a standardized plan (fig. 1 4 . 6 ) . The artifacts found in the rcfilled trenches around the boxes showed they had beer built at the beginning of die eighteentii century. This was around the same time thar the landfill was installed and the properties were first developed. The artifacts founc inside the boxes indicated they had ali been abandoned and filled in the mid- to late eighteenth century. Each box was located in a backyard and placed next to the kitchen ell extension of the earliest house diat had been built on dic lot. At first, archaeologists thought that the boxes might have been used for cold storag; or for storing ice. But archaeologist Ed Morin convincingly argued that they were cisterns. He based his theory on several lines of evidence. First was the way the boxes were made: they were built to withstand enormous pressure on the inside walls as as on the floora real concern for storing a liquid like water but not for storing solics like ice or root crops. Second was their location: they were placed right next to the houses whose roofs served as catchments for rainwater and the kitchens where the v.: ter would eventually be used. Third was the evidence from the layer of fine, dark sih that covered the bottom of one of the boxes. This silt looked like the dark silt layers found 011 the bottoms of nineteenth-century cisterns; it carne from fine particles sus11
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pended in the wter that gradually settled to the bottom of the cistern. Fourth was die clay casing surrounding the boxes that helped seal the cistern, preventing the fresh water it contained from seeping out and keeping the brackish water in the surrounding landfill from seeping in. Finally, this interpretation was supportcd by an advertisement for the sale of one of the Barclays Bank site lots, which appeared in a newspapcr in die
1750S:

TO B E S O L D , the house in Hanover Square belonging to the estate of Bartiolemew Skaats, deceased, new [sic] in possession of Hugh Gaine: "tis" 3 story high, has two rooms on a floor, with a good kitchcn, cellar and cellar kitchen, a cistern andpump in yard, with priviledge of passage to the dock.
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Archaeologists have discovered diat by the early nineteenth century, brick cisterns were ubiquitous in die cit/s backyards (see fig. 1 4 . 4 ) . They were large (one is reported to have had the capacity to hold ten thousand gallons of water) and usualiy cylindrical ML shape. Their brick foors rested on stone platforms for stabilization. Inside, the ciserns were lined with mortar to help make them watertight. Builders sometimes placed asiab of stone on die cistern floor; the slab served as the rcsting place for the nozzle of raie pump's hose so that it would not draw in the silty sediments that had collected on me cistern's floor. Like their wooden-box predecessors, diese structures were placed oderground, just outside the back kitchens of the houses tiey served. Archaeologists have found a number of dry wellswhich look like very small, round rrv.y shafts and are lined with dry-laid stone a nmcteentii-century backyards (see fig. 1 4 . 4 ) . pary New Yorkers used these features to d rain are excess water that accumulated in dieir backards. Sometimes tiey placed a dry well close p the backyard cistern to catch the cistern's rerflow. Often, brick troughs or drains chanwcd the water from the cistern to the dry well
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i\ies, Cisterns, and Health


rhe early nineteenth century, the arrange of cisterns and privies in most of the cirys irds had become standardized. Builders ced stone-lined privies just inside the back rcrtv line in either a back corner or in the

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middle of the lot, and they placed brick cisterns just outside the back walls of adjacera: houses. Although this arrangement was fine in many parts of the early nineteenrrcentury citysuch as the dcveloping suburbs of Brooklyn Heights and Greenwich YSlage, where properties consisted of relatively small singlc-family homes placed on re_atively deep lotsit could have disturbing ramifications in parts of the city where people used land more intensively. As property became more valuable, landowners in working-class neighborhoods hegan to build two tenements on a single parcel, widi the privy in the yard between them The privy^s placement had the alarming consequence that the contents of die privy vault could seep into adjacent basements, where families were often living. And pre rerty owners in the downtown business district tended to enlarge their buildings by extending them furdier and further into the backyards. The Telco Block site on Fultoc Street near today's South Street Seaport provides a glimpse of what this meant in terms of the sanitation on these properties.
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as the beverage| public order. * Archaeolc rhe citais resi a problems. i t j began to pi needed a way rheir old brick 1 verted their But, given rhe| rermanent began in the
:

Fire swept through dic Telco Block in 1816 and destroyed most of the building? there. After the fire, the landowners on the block redeveloped dieir properties. In orceto get as much valuc from their land as possible, they extended their new buildings as far back as they could, leaving only narrow strips of backyard bchind these structuresWliat this meant was that the brick cisterns, which builders placed (according to standard procedure) just outside die back wall of the structure, and the stone-lined privies, which builders placed (also according to standard procedure) just inside die back property line, were positioned side by side on those narrow strips of land (see fig. 14-5)- The contents of dic privies could leach out not only into the adjacent basements but also. if the cisterns' mortar seals were broken, into the cisterns, contaminating the water stored there. With die enormous population increase in the city in the nineteendi century, hum ar waste began to contam inate the ground water, the source of the citais drinking water. One result of the city^s poor sanitation facilities was the series of cholera epidemics that struck New York in the nineteendi century: dic epidemic of 1832 killcd more tiian three thousand city residents, and that of 1 8 4 9 , more tiian five thousand. The situation was so serious that it finally prompted the city govcrnment to initiate the construction of 1 modern water and sewage system. In 1842 New York City celebrated, with enormous fanfare, die complction of the Croton Aqueduct. The system consisted of forty miles of pipes and aqueduets that brought a virtual river of water from die Croton Reservoir in Westchester County down into the city. Most people thought that the system would have a profound impact on the lives of New Yorkers; some even thought that its pur water would replace alcohol
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Howson system by no members of access to mi the city had houses had fairly quicl plumbing one-time h( cin/s wealt homes to by absentee throughout J ier neighborh had to pay a 1 street did not No record citais sewer in ing. Howson Sullivan Srro century resid Universiry, a lies such as Street, on t n | (see chapte

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as the beverage of choice in the city and would thus prove a force for morality and public order. , Archaeologist Jean Howson has explored dae inapact of Croton water on the lives of the city's residents. She discovered diat although access to public water solved one set of problems, it also created a new set. As New Yorkers installed indoor plumbing, they began to pump water in unprecedented amounts into their homes. O f course, they needed a way to dispose of the waste water. Some laid waste pipes from dieir houses to dieir old brick cisterns, punched holes in the cistern floors for drainage, and thus converted their cisterns into cesspools. Others hooked up their privy shafts as ccsspools. But, given die enormous quantity of water that began to flood the city, this was not a permanent solutionit urgentiy needed a system of public sewers, a project the city began in the late 1840S.
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Howson was struck by her discovery that die completion of die water and sewer system by 110 means guaranteed the introduction of indoor plumbing into every home; members of different socioeconomic classes had very different experiences in obtaining access to municipal sanitation facilities. Before water could be introduced into homes, the city had to lay hundreds of miles of water pipes under its streets, and individual houses had to be hooked up to diese pipes. Although the city began to lay water pipes fairly quickty, the decision to hook a particular building up to the pipes and to install plumbing fixtures in die house rested with the owner of the building, who had to pay a one-time hookup fee and an annual ten-dollar fee for using the water. Members of the city^s wealthier families (who usualiy owned their own homes) tended to hook up their homes to the water pipes first, whereas the poor (whose homes were usualiy owned bv absentee landlords) often had to wait for tiiis amenity. And the laying of sewers throughout die city was a long-term, piecemeal process. The city laid sewers in wealthier neighborhoods long before diey laid tiiem in poorer neighborhoods, and owners had to pay a hookup fee as well as a sewer tax. The appearance of a sewer line under a -areet did not guarantee that the streefs inliabitants had access to this amenity.
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No records reveal when most buildings were hooked up to Croton water and the eira^s sewer lines, so it is hard to document exaerly when people acejuired indoor plumbzag. Howson used the dates of the artifacts found in the cisterns and privies at the Van Street site in Greenwich Village to explore this issue. The mid-nineteenthresidents of the site, which is now part of the law school library at New York Vniversity, consisted of two groups of people. "Respectable" upper-middlc-class famies such as Dr. Benjamin Robson and his wife, Eliza, lived in the houses on Fourth icreet, on the northern side of die block overlooking fashionable Washington Square chapters 11 and 12). Poorer families faced Amity (now called Third) Street, 011 the

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southern side of the block. I n the 1830S the Amity Street homes were occupiea : middle-class artisans, but as the century progressed many of these buildings were c a verted into multi-family tenements. Water pipes had been laid under both Amin" zn. Fourth Streets by 1848, and sewers had been laid under Fourth Street by 1845 and rarder Amity Street by 1857. By looking at die artifacts from the privies, Howson showed that the wealthier rcsdents of the Sullivan Street site acquired indoor plumbing long before their poorer neighbors. The Robsons on Fourth Street, who owned dieir own home, abandone; their p r i w in favor of indoor plumbing as early as 1850, while the people who li the tenement across their backyard fence were not able to abandon theirs for anome twenty years. Into the late nineteenth century, women and children of die tenemen who unlike their wealthier neighbors had no household help, continued to haul war: from corner pumps or backyard cisterns into their homes and up many flights of stam*. and to carry their waste and slops down again.
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m: -a :c maman:

nseif 1 the <M rfivedthen koccssnil had] It is with unes unosBU mrereenm veie renovan o n e of them dae cise \virii

Dcciphering a Nineteenth-Century Backyard


In most cases where archaeologists have the chance to explore backyards in d populated reas like New York, they find only the underground parts of backyard tares. Ali evidence of the historie landscapethe paved reas and planting beds. me cistern pumps and outhouseswas usualiy destroycd by later construction on the property. In one case, however, an archaeologist working in New York did have me opportunity to explore die landscape of a relatively untouched urban backyard. Trmyard is located behind die Merchanfs House, a house built in the 1830S diat is now i museum 011 Fourth Street in the East Village (seefig.1.1), in a neighborhood that : : day is a mosaic of trendy clubs and Bowery flophouses. The Merchanfs House project began in 1990, when Diana Wall received a cal! from a historie architect whose firm was doing an architectural study of the Merchant"* House. He asked i f she would be interested in doing an archaeological study of the backyard. Wall knew the property and was endiusiastic about the project because of ha history. I n some ways the history of the Merchants House is typical of properties in Greenwich Village. Its small urban lot was once part of a larger farm that was located outside the city before urbanization began to encroach on the area in die early nineteenth century. The farm was subdivided rcpeatedly as die Village was developed as a residennal suburb on the city^s edge. Joseph Brewster, a hatter, bought the lot and the one nexr door in 1831. Brewster, like many small-scale developers of his day, built two identical houses 011 the adjacent parcels in the area, which was quickly becoming one of the city?
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jod the folia ihe backyard. The htdet

diat these wc parhways tha house or priv that was cios jass, while d mg vines.
:T

When the ippeared sim large central m rated from eal

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most fashionable residential neighborhoods. The row houses were built in a style that he thought would appeal to the cirVs wealthier families, who were now moving their homes out to Greenwich. Brewster sold one of the houses and moved into tlie other himself (the one that would later become the Merchants House). But he and his family lived there for only a few years; in 1835 he sold tlie property to Seabury Tredwell, a successful hardware merchant.
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It is with the arrival of the Tredwells that the history of the Merchanfs House becomes unusual. Most of tlie existing houses in New York that were built in the early nineteenth century have complex histories. Though built as single-family homes, they pere renovated into multifamily dwellings in the late nineteenth century; subsequendy, some of them were re-renovated back into single-family homes. This, however, was not me case with the Merchanfs House. From the time the Tredwells moved there in 1835, ramily members continued to live in the house for almost a cenmry, until the death of their youngest daughter, Gertrude, in 1933. As the family lived there, their fortunes ined, so they did not continually renovate their house to keep up with the times rat left it relatively untouched for almost a century. After the death of Gertrude Tredwell, family members led die effort to have the house converted into a museum because shey realized that it provided a rare glimpse of upper-middlc-class home life in the mneteenth-century city. Wall jumped at the chance to excavate in the yard behind the house because she mought that it, like the house, might be relatively undisturbed and could provide a -are opportunity for archaeologists to explore the nineteenth-centary landscape of an mban garden. She arranged to teach a field course at the City College of New York, aad the following spring she and the students began the first of three field seasons in me backyard. The litde that is known about the landscaping of die yards behind middle-class row houses in nineteenth-century New York comes from a handful of architectural plans md real estate advertisements from contemporary newspapers (fig. 14.7). They indicate mat diese were simple, classical spaces, made up of symmetrical planting beds and rathways tiiat provided both pleasant views from house windows and sites for the outhouse or privy that was placed near the rear garden wall and the underground cistern diat was close to the back wall of the house. Central garden beds were planted widi arass, while diose along die edges of the backyard contained flowers, shmbs, and climbraa: vines. When the exeavations began, the layout of the yard behind die Merchant's House arpeared similar in fceling to the gardens shown in the architectural plans, with two isrge central planting beds and narrow flower beds along dic sides of die garden sepamaed from each other by stone pathways (fig. 14.8). The old outhouse was gone; a
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raised planting bed in its place at die rear of the garden was a recent addition that ta; museum had installed in the 1960S. Wall and her students had one main goal for their project: to decipher the layout o: the garden during the period when the Brewsters and Tredwells lived in the house in the mid-nineteenth century. As they exeavated, they discovered in many parts of the garden a layer of reddish-brown sand that lay just under the layer of tan sand that v. 1 the bedding for dic modem stone paths. They analyzed the artifacts in the reddishbrown sand and saw diat they ali dated to the late eighteenth or early nineteenth centuries. They realized that this layer of reddish-brown sand was the bedding for die paths of the mid-nineteenth century garden and that they could use the sand layer as a signarure to show them where these nineteenth-century paths had been. As they plotted the presence and absence of the layer of reddish brown sand ffora test cut to test cut, the teani discovered that although the modern layout of the was quite similar to diat of die nineteenth-century garden, i t differed in some detahs (fig. 14.9). The reddish-brown sand under the modern side paths showed that these

14.7. Calvin Pollard's architectural drawing of an early nineteenth-century brownstone, showing itsfacade, aplan of each floor, and the backyard (on the ground-floorplan). Collection ofthe NnrTork Historical Society, negative number 74146.

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Test C u t C

WIJWl
Test Cut F

Test Cut B

Test Cut D

Test Cut A

Test Cut E

14.8. The backyard behind the Merchanfs House Museum, 1993. 14.9. Detail ofthe site map ofthe backyard behind the Merchanfs House. The hatching indicates reas where the archaeologists found the layer of reddish-brown sand.

naths remained roughly where they had been in dic nineteenth century. However, the central planting area was much larger in the ninetecnth-cenmry garden than it is today. And the absenec of the sand layer under the path dividing the two central beds showed that there was 110 path there when the garden was laid out in the 1830S. I n the original garden, there may have been one large central planting bed (like the onc in the contemporary architectural plan) or the path may have been located elsewherc, further to the north, dividing the original, longer planting arca into two planting beds of roughly the same size.

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Below the layer of reddish-brown sand, the students found eighteentii-cenrorr artifactsceramic sherds from teacups and plates and fragments of tobacco pipe sterra: that had been left behind by die families who had lived there when the propertv w still a farm. Those artifacts served as reminders that until recently, much of todavs ara was countryan issue we explore in the next chapter.

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Beyond the City s Edge

The city of New York began in tlie early seventeenth centuiy as a small settiement at the foot of Manhattan Island, and from there it grew "uptown." At first its growth was very slow. I t was only in the nineteenth century, when its economy was booming, that the city grew radically: between 1790 and 1890, its population multiplied almost fiftyfold, from 3 3 , 0 0 0 to 1.5 million. And in 1898, with the incorporation of die modern boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, and the Bronx into New York City, the city assumed its modern politicai boundariesthe boundaries of the archaeological site we discuss in this book. But because of its gradual early growth, for much of its history diere were thousands of acres of rural land within the 325 square miles that make up the city today (fig. 15.1). This landwhich only a century and a half ago was farmland interspersed by towns and villagesplays an important role in our study of the city as a site. I n die eighteenth century, New York started building institutions at the city's edge to serve its poor. During the Revolutionary War, the land was dotted with fortifications and camps for the soldiers who defended the city from attack. I n the nineteendi and into the twentieth centuries, much of die land at the cit/s periphery was transformed from farmland into residential suburbs for middle-class and wealthy families. Archaeologists have uncovered many traces of the tfs rural past in northern Manhattan, die Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, and Staten Island. They have brought to light ways of life that were common there before the reas were swallowed by urban sprawlways of life that most modern Americans tend to overlook when diey think about New York's history.

iS.i. Ratzer's "Plan ofNew Tork, ' showing the southern half of Manhattan an parts of Brooklyn in 1766-67. The city is confned to Manhattan's southern tip, and the rest ofthe area that later became the city is rural in nature. Collection ofthe New-York Historical Society, negative number S6S3S.
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Farms, Estates, and Plantations


Several kinds of farms encircled the early city. Some farmers lived on isolated farmsteads, others in nucleated farm villages, and still others on large estates run as plantations. During die late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, most farmers grew grains like wheat, corn, and oats for export; raised livestock, both for export and to sell locally; and grew produce for sale in the city. Merchants shipped most of the grain and livestock to the British West Indies to feed the enslaved laborers on the sugar plantations diere. Toward the end of the eighteenth century, grain production shifted further up die Hudson Valley as farmers closer to the city began specializing in the perishable but more valuable produce and dairy produets for the citais growing population. Before emancipation in 1827, many of the nearby farms and plantations depended on enslaved labor for agricultural production. At the end of the eighteenth century, around 4 0 percent of die white households within a dozen miles of die city included enslaved workersa higher proportion than in any southern state.
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Colonial farmhouses survive today in every borough. Most are owned by the city and protected as historie structures; one is a farm museum. But ali that is left of the farmlandwhich in the past could total hundreds and even thousands of acresare small plots surrounding the houses. The woodlands, orchards, vmeyards, ficlds, marshes, meadows, and pastures that made up these farms have been sacrificcd to urban development. People today know litde about the city^s agrarian past. Archaeologists have tested reas around many of tiiese houses in places where modern construction was about to take place; in one case they even got the chance to dig in some old agricultural fields. Although the exeavations have been small in scale, they have revealed some interesting information concerning the structural history of several old farmhouses. At the early eighteenth-century Wyckoff House in East Flatbush, Brooklyn (see fig. 1.1), for example, Arthur Bankoff and his Brooklyn College field school discovered the original bed of Canarsie Lane. The exeavations showed the road's alignment as it was from about 1650 until the late nineteenth century, when it was shifted to the other side of the house. The orientation of the farmhouse was also reversed when the road was moved what had once been the back of the house became its frontso that the house continued to look out on the road (fig. 15.2).
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Archaeologists Arnold Pickman and Eugene Boesch, while digging at the late eighteenth-century Adriance Farmhouse in Bellerose, Queens (now the Queens County Farm Museum; see fig. 1.1), found the eighteentii-century farm road under the modern driveway. They discovered that the old road had begun as a dirt track, which became heavily rutted with use. Then the Adriances laid a new roadbed over it, made up of a

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The Wyckoff House in the IOOOS.

cobble bedding (for good drainage) covered by earth. Preservationists had rhought that the orientation of this house, like that of the Wyckoff House, had been reversed at some point in its history. But the discovery of the farm road's original alignment under the modern driveway, combined with the fact that the house today looks out on the old farm road, revealed that its orientation had not changed. Exeavations have also been conducted at the eighteenth-century Rufus King House in Jamaica, Queens (see fig. I.I ). King was a key figure in early American history. In addition to being a framer of the Constitution, he also served as the new nation's ambassador to England after the Revolutionary War. In 1805 he bought the house that is now named after him and began expanding it. Written sources indicate that among the additions he made was a summer kitchena separate building designed to keep both the main house and the cooks cool in hot weather. Archaeologist Linda Stone discovered that a building standing 011 the property today, which preservationists had interpretcd as the kitchen that King had built, in fact was not that addition. She found the remains of King's original summer kitchen, which she dated with the help of a British gambling token inscribed with the year 1793. The token may have been a souvenir from
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King's ambassadorship. Stone found that the original kitchen, which had had a dirt floor, had burned down and was replaced by the present, more substantial kitchen building during the tenure of the family of King's oldest son, John, who served as governor of New York in the 1850S. Stone's discovery has enabled the historical association that runs the house-muscum to interpret the histoiy of die house more accurately. Archaeologists have also uncovered rcmnants of eighteenth- and early nineteenthcentury farmland. I n 1982 Anne-Maric Cantwell, Arnold Pickman, and Diana Wall led an exeavation at Sheridan Square in the heart of Greenwich Village (see fig. 1.1), where community groups and the New York City Department of Transportation were planning a viewing garden. This exeavation was a volunteer dig, with community members and archaeologists contributing their time and labor. The archaeologists were intrigued by the site because there was no record of there ever having been any buildings on it. And they did make some remarkable discoverics related to the city^s early farm history. They uncovered traces of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century topsoil that was underlaid by scars left by an early plow, a tangible reminder diat before Sheridan Square became the hub of the trendy West Villageand even before the Robsons moved to the fashionable suburb at Washington SquareGreenwich had been a rural farming community. They also found holes left from a line of posts that had once cut across the site. These were aligned widi an old property line; the posts could well have been from the fence that divided two substantial eighteenth-century farms that were owned by the Herring and Warren families, neighbors who were active on opposing sides during the Revolutionary War.
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I f we look fartiier north, we see that during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, much of today^s Bronx was partitioned into a few large landholdings, which were controlled by some of New York's richest and most powerful families. Although most were gradually subdivided into smaller properties, several remain quite large to this day. Archaeologists have conducted long-term projeets at two of these sites: Rose H i l l Manor and Van Cortlandt Mansion. For more than a decade and a half, Allan Gilbert of Fordham University has worked with Fordham historiai! Roger Wines in researching and exeavating Fordham's campus, which was part of the sevcntcendi-ccnturv Fordham Manor (see fig. 1.1), which spanned 3 , 9 0 0 acres. Shordy after the British government granted die manor to John Archer in 1671, Archer sold ofF parts of the land to pay his debts. In 1694- Rever Michielsen, a Dutchman, bought some of the land (the parcel that encompasses most of the modern campus) and built a farmhouse there. Benjamin Corsa, who had married into the Michielsen family, bought the farm in 1737. His family continued to live in the house until after die Revolution.
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I n 1787 a wealthy New York mercantile family named Watts acquired the farm and

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tiirned it into a country estate, which they christencd Rose H i l l . The Wattses continued to farm the land until they sold it in 1823. Then the land changed hands several tinics before the Roman Catholic Diocese of New York acquired it in 1839 for the site of St John's, a Catholic men's college and seminary. I n 1846 the Jesuit order took over zr college, which was incorporated as Fordham University in 1907. Gilberfs exeavations have focused 011 both the ruins of the original farmhouse and the daily life of the boys who lived at the college in the nineteenth century. His carerYx reading of both the historical and the archaeological records has revealed details aboar the building's structural history. The house, which was built around 1694 and tora: down in 1896, began as a small, one-and-a-half story Dutch-style wooden farmhouse. The Wattses enlarged it by adding two wings, and it was probably they who added the

IS.3. A watercolor by Arclribald Robertson showing Rose Hill in I8IS.

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fiill second story and made it look more up to date by adding a Georgian-like facadc when they transformed it into Rose H i l l Manor after the Revolution (fig. 15.3). The diocese and the Jcsuits altered it again so it would better suit its new, institutional rolesat various points in the nineteenth century it served as a novitiate, an infirmary, a dairy, and a residence hall for various groups, including members of the Sisters of Charity, priests, and workmen. As Gilbert points out, because he has been able to unravel the history of die house's renovations, he is in a position to use the architectural materiais from the house to develop a comparative collection of mortar, brick, and window glass dating from the late seventeenth through the nineteendi centuries. Although these materiais are the most commonly found artifacts at modern sites, archaeologists usualiy ignore them in their analyses because they do not know how to study them. Gilbert hopes diat this collection will allow archaeologists to use these materiais to date old ruins, particularly those that do not have other artifacts associated with them. I n 1986, when workers building new dormitories on the Fordham campus uncovered several trash dumps, Gilberfs crew shifted their attention from the old farmhouse to the dump sites. They found enormous quantities of broken mid- to late nineteenth-century plain white ironstone dishes (fig. 15.4), which had probably been used by die generations of students and faculta' who ate die pork and bcef whose bones were also found. Fragments of panelcd tumblers and of bottles that had held wine, sarsaparilla, and ginger ale (including one marked " C A N T R E L L & C O C H R A N E / B E L F A S T & D U B L I N " ) showed somctliing about drinking habits at the college. The wine bottles probably contained the wine diat was produced in the college's vineyards. The archaeologists also found marblcs (made from marble, clay, and glass), bone dominoes, and diceevidence of the students' games, some of which may have involved gambling.
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Less than two miles northwest of Fordham lies Van Cortlandt Park, site of the Van Cortiandt Mansion (see fig. 1.1), a historie house that was the heart of a colonial wheat plantation. In 1 9 9 0 - 9 2 , Brooklyn Collegc's field school, directed by Arthur Bankoff and Fredcrick Winter, exeavated in reas around the house, which had been built on land that had been occupied by Late Woodland people. In 1646 Adrian Van der Donck acquired the property as part of an enormous tract with sixteen miles of Hudson River waterfront, which extended north from Spuyten Dtryvil at the southern edge of the Bronx to Yonkers, just across today*s Westchester border, and east to the Bronx River. Van der Donck acquired the estate as a patroonship, under a land tenure policy established by die Dutch to encourage settiement. The Dutch West ndia Company granted the patroon a large tract of land on the condition that he guarantee its settiement, clearance, and cultivation. I t is not clear if Van der Donck kept his side of the bargain, because he abandoned the property after an Indian attack in 1655 and died in Holland

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soon thereafter. The property was then sutxvided. I n 1694 Jacobus Van Cordandt began to acquire the land that would become today s Yam Cordandt Park. His father, Oloff Stevense Yzz Cordandt, had arrived in New Amsterdam aa 1638 as a soldier working for the Dutch West ndia Company and soon became one of ahc richest merchants in the colony. After his dcara the family continued to expand its mercanz_i fortune; its ships were important carriers a a _ ISA- DishesfromSt. John% the Catholic men>s college the triangular trade. By the 1730S, Jacobus Yam that became Fordham University. Cordandt had acquired ali of uhe original Yam
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der Donck holdings, which he turned into a plantation where the family grew wheat and milled it into flour before shipping it a: the West Indies. When he died in 1739, his son Frederick inherited the land and in 1-4S began to build the large, vernacular Georgian stone house that is today^s Van Cortiana: Mansion (fig. 15.5). For the rest of the eighteenth and most ofthe nineteenth centurie?the house and land were owned by a succession of Van Cordandt heirs. The wheat plantation included such industrial components as mills and forges as well as extensfve farmlands. The family sold the land tiiat became tlie park to tlie city in 1889. During the Revolutionary period, tlie Van Cordandt Mansion played several rolesI t was George Washington's headquarters after his defeat at the Battie of Brooklyn in 1776, and it was from the mansion that he set out to repossess tlie city after the British defeat in 1783. Earlier, during the long British oceupation of tlie city, tlie property s proximity to the British Unes made it a convenient spot for General William Howe to have his headquarters. But before the British took over the plantation, its owner. Augustus Van Cordandt, who was the New York City clerk, hid the city^s records in the family^ burial vault, which was located nearby. There they remained for the duration of the war, under the noses of tlie British. The archaeologists were interested in learning about land use throughout the site"? history, from Native American times through the end of the Van Cortlandt era. More than seven feet below the modern ground surface, they found a buried foundation wall tiiat appeared to be from a seventeenth-century building, probably from Adrian Van der Donck's home. Unfortunately, in 1910 the city had run a sewer line right through tlie area and gutted much of the foundation; the archaeologists could find no undisturbed layers of soil with artifacts that they could use to date the wall.
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Using old photographs to guide them, tile team next exeavated in an area where a

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large barn had once stood. Although they did not find the banrs foundation, they did discover two underground diy-laid stone features set side by side, ten feet apart. The features were square, measuring slightly more than five feet on a side and, as subsequent exeavation showed, had dirt floors at depths of around ten feet. To this day archaeologists do not agree about what these features were. Although they rcsemble the p r i w vaults found in die city, these are too far from the house to have been convenient for its residents. Some archaeologists have suggested that they were privies that had been built for farm workers, whereas others have proposcd that they were root cellars or underground silage pits used for storing grain (although getting grain or root vegetables in and out of dae pits might have been awkward). Whatever dieir original function, they were later filled up with trash that has proved to be an archaeological bonanza. Inside these mystery structures, die team found fragments of what ultimately proved to be more than six hundred dishes, glasses, and bottles, including sixty-four plates,

is.s. The Van CortlandtMansion in the 1990S.

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fifty soup bowls, almost thirty serving dishes and plattcrs, twenty-seven cups and sai cers, and eleven pitchers. Although most of the dishes were in patterns popular in a* early nineteenth century, mixed in among these were cmbossed botdes that had made much later, after 1880, suggesting that both the dishes and the bottles been dumped in the pits soon after that date. Because this was around the time that zc Van Cortlandts sold the property to the city, it seems likely that cither Parks Dera: ment personncl or family members dumped old, unwanted family dishes that had bea stored in the house into these feamres, both to get rid of the dishes and to fill the r up to grade. Assuming that the dishes and tableware had been used in the mansion between iSa and 1840 (the period when dishes like these were fashionable), they were probablv u>ea by Augustus Van Cordandt (a widower whose wife had died in 1808) or his grandsoaa Augustus White. When his grandfather died in 1823, White inherited tiae estate on the condition that he change his name to Van Cordandt. Augustus White Van Cortlancra. who never married, died in T83911 12

Alyssa Loorya, who began working on the collection as a Brooklyn College undergraduatc, went on to do a study of the dishes in graduate school. What struck her mos about the collection was that tire people who were living in the house in the 1820S ana 1830S were using dishes tiiat were very similar in pattern to those used by contemporary middle-class New Yorkers, like the Robsons on Washington Square. Both families had plates in two different blue-on-white chinoiserie patterns: a more expensive Canton Chinese porcelain and a more modest English willow-patterned earthenware. Bur there were also enormous differences between the collections from tlie Van Cortlanc: and Robson homes. Proportionately, the Robsons had far more cups and saucers than plates, while the Van Cortlandts had many more plates than cups and saucers. I n addition, in absolute numbers the Van Cortlandts had many more plates than the Robson* (or than any other middle-class family in the city whose dishes have been exeavated . and many more of the Van Cortlandts' plates were in the more expensive Canton pattern rather than in the cheaper willow pattern. The question, of course, was why. It seems most likely that the disparity in the numbers of different kinds of dishes used by tlie two families is related both to their positions in the city^s class structure and to the locations of their homes. The Van Cortlandts were one of the richest families in tlie state, while the Robsons were merely members ofthe city^s growing uppcr-middle class. During the early nineteenth century, the city's wealthiest families entertained each other at dinner parties as well as at after-dinner tea parties, while the middle class usualiy entertained their friends only at tea. The Van Cordandt Mansion was located about twenty miles north of the city, a fair distance to travei in the early nineteenth century. while the Robsons lived in the new suburb at Greenwich, just at tlie citais edgeclose
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enough to be convenient for daily commuting. What this may have meant for the Van Cortlandts is that when they were at their Bronx estate, they did not entertain gucsts at evening tea parties but only for longer, overnight visits. Tea was just one of many different meais the Van Cortlandts offered to their guests at their country house, and the many ornate plates and relatively few teacups found among their dishes underline this way of entertaining. By contrast, most ofthe Robsons' guests arrived after dinner and were served a cup of tea along widi a light refreshment. The high number of teacups that were used in their home highlights their different mode of entertaining and the different role they played in the social life ofthe city.
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Villages and Towns


Many early towns and villagesoften located at transportation nodes like boat and ferry landings, the intersections of roads, and, later on, at railroad stationsserved as entrepts for transporting farm produce to the city. In die seventeentii century, die Dutch established a number of towns, including Harlem in northern Manhattan; Brooklyn or Breuckelen, New Amersfoort or Flatlands, Midwout or Flatbush, New Utrecht, and Boswick or Bushwick, ali in today^s Brooklyn; and Oude Dorp or Old Dorp on Staten Island. English families also settled towns in New Nedierland. They moved across Long Island Sound from New England, first to eastern Long Island and then further to the west, to today's Brooklyn and Queens. There they settled Gravesend; Maspeth; Flushing, which became a Quaker community; and Middleburgh (later known as both Newtown and Elmhurst). Other English families moved west from Connecticut to settle the town of Westchcster in today^s Bronx. In the late 1970S, Winter and Bankoff conducted exeavations with dieir Brooklyn College students at Gravesend (sec fig. 1.1), which was settled in 1643 by die English Anabaptist Lady Deborali Moody and her followers. The Anabaptists had come to Dutch Long Island to escape the religious restrictions of Puritan New England. Gravesend was unusual in that it was a planned community; it was laid out in four contiguous talares divided by two intersecting roads. Each quadrant was designed to hold ten house lots arranged around a common, with supporting farmland radiating out from rhe village center. The archaeologists, digging in the northwest and southwest quadrants of the town, located die seventeenth-centtuy ground surface buried under modern debris. But they bund no traces of house foundations anywhere, not even in die southwest quadrant, where the exeavations were most extensive and where early records indicated that uses had stood. As Winter notes, die "exeavations indicated that no houses had ever reen built there. . . . In fact, it appears that die well ordered plans for the early Graves-

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end community . . . were never entirely carried out." Some of the plans must have esisted only on paper. Towns continued to be established in the civfs environs throughout the nineteenta cenniry. In the 1820S and 1830S, at around the time of emancipation in New York Staaa. free people of Africau descent founded several villages that would later be incorporatea into the city. These include Weeksviile, in today's Bedford-Smyvesant section of Broelyn, and Sneca Village, in toda^s Central Park in Manhattan. I n addition, Sandr Ground, an eighteenth-century white community on Staten Island, became an interracial one at about this time. Many of the churchcs in diese comniunities are thought :: have served as stations on the Underground Railroad. The African Americans wbo bought land in these towns may have been motivated at least in part by an amendmerra to die state constitution, which imposed a $250 property requirement for sufTrage ::c African American men at the same time that it gradually removed ali property requirements for men of European descent. This discriminatory provision remained in efFecr until 1870. There have been exeavations in two of these towns.
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The first town, Weeksviile (see fig. 1.1), was named after James Weeks, an Africar: American stevedore who bought land in die 1830S from what had been die Lefferts estate. By the 1850S, the conimunity had grown so large that it could host a number of African American institutions, including an orphanage, a home for die aged, and "Cc ored School no. 2." Some of the churchesthe Bethel Tabernacle African Methodht Episcopal Church and die Berean Missionar)' Baptist Churchsurvive to this day, ana the school continues as P.S. 243. Many men from die village worked in the Fulton Street markets, and many of the women did domestic work in die nearby town of Bedford. The village was the birthplace of Susan Smith McKinney-Steward, the third African American woman physician in the nation and die first in New York State. I n 1883, with die rapid urbanization that followed the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge, Weeksviile lost its identity as a separate community and was gradually forgotten. I t later became part of Bedford-Snryvesant, a modern-day African American neighborhood. In the late 1960S, with the growing public interest in African American history, Weeksviile was rediscovered. Four of the original houses are still standing on Hunterfly Road and form the centerpicce of the Society for the Preservarion of Weeksviile and Bedford Stuyvesan: History.
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In 1968-70, historian James Hurley and community member William Harley foundec die historical society and organized a community project that saved many of Weeksviile^ material traces from the ravages of urban renewal. Project members salvaged objeets from many ofthe houses before they were torn down and organized a community archacology project. Advised by archaeologist Michael Cohn of the Brooklyn Children^ Museum, they arranged for young people from youth groups and a local Bov

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Scout troop to dig with college students and adult voluntecrs. Although most of the block they xamined had already been heavily disturbed by demolition machinery, the project proved to be a catalyst for the community's preser\'ation. Under dic long-term leadership of Joan Maynard, the liistorical society became a vital force in the community^, which it still is today. The second town, Sandy Ground (see fig. I . I ) , was settled by Staten Islanders of European descent in the late eighteenth century. Beginning around 1830, African American families, first from New York and New Jersey and then, a decade later, from the Chcsapeake Bay area, joined them and in 1850 built an African American church there. For much of the second half of the century, more than a third of the residents of Sandy Ground were of African descent. Most Sandy Groundcrs were farmers who grew produce for the Manhattan market, but some of the African Americans were oystermen. New York's waters had been rich in oysters ever since Archaic times, but by the early nineteenth century overharvesting and pollution had dcplcted the beds close to Manhattan. Those near Staten Island continued to yield oysters for a few more decades, but by the middle of the century these beds, too, were depleted, and oystermen began to bring immature "seed" oysters up from the Chcsapeake to "plant" in beds off Staten Island for later harvesting. For much of the rest of the century, oystcring, which had been a part-time oceupation, became a full-time one that supplied a good income for several of Sandy Ground's African American residents, as well as for native-born whites from other parts of the island. Because of their contaets, those who had migrated north from the Chesapeake developed and sustaincd the arrangements for planting the oyster beds, a role that gave them status in their community. Toward dae end of the century, as the railroads dramatically expanded the market for oysters, large companies widi gas-powered boats and power dredgers moved into Staten Island's waters. These companies lobbied successfully for the passage of state laws allowing them exclusive legal rights to the beds. Formerly, the beds had been allocated tiirough custom: an oysterman had die right to work a bed as long as he marked it out and used it every year. Although a few of the more prosperous oystermen managed to hang on, most could not compete with big business and were shut out of the industry. And the oystermen were not the only Sandy Grounders to be affected by the expansion of the railroads. Sandy Ground farmers found that thev could not compete widi distant farmers whose cheaply grown produce could be transported into the city in the new refrigerator cars. So by die 1890S, many black and white Sandy Grounders were forced to compete with each other for factoty and clerical jobs. African Americans, however, were systematically shut out of many of these jobs as part of the growing racial discrimination associated with the expansion of the Jim Crow laws in the
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Northeast. Some worked as day laborers on oystering boats in an industry where t h o had once held prominent positions; others worked wherever they could. But bv 191* the waters had become so polluted that the Staten Island oystering industry collapsed completely. In 1971 and 1972, archaeologist Robert Schuyler brought archaeological field schoo from City College to Sandy Ground. He was interested in locating trash dumps from both black and white homes so that he could use the artifacts to study this multi-ethra: community. His students found more than one hundred spots where Sandy Grounders had dumped their garbage. Schuyler chose several dumps, which dic students then etcavated. Later, William Askins, who as an undergraduate had dug at the site, used thi material as part of the data for his dissertation.
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Askins was interested in exploring how expressions of class and ethnic idennix might have changed among Sandy Grounders of African descent as their position I the community declined with the arrival of big business and the passage of Jim Crom laws toward the end of the nineteenth century. He argued that people might emphasize through a combination of choicc and coerciondifferent aspeets of their social identity depending on their situation. He wanted to investigate the extent to which Sandy Grounders of African descent exercised their complcmentary identities as African Americans and as members of the working class as their economic and social po*:tions changed. Askins looked at two different kinds of artifacts to explore this issue: the houses in which Sandy Grounders lived and the dishes 011 which they ate their meais. He argued that because houses are so large and visible, they make clear statements about the identities of their residents to neighbors and outsiders. He discovered that during the earlier period of the settiement (before 1870), Sandy Grounders of African and European descent were living in houses built in different styles. White Sandy Grounders were living in die Dutch Colonial or Georgian houses typical of much of Staten Island, while black Sandy Grounders were living in I-houscs, which are designed with a central hall and a room to each side (fig. 15.6). These houses were popular among both blacks and whites in the Chesapeake. where many of the Sandy Grounders of African descent hadgrown up. As Askins notes, the African Americans "may have is.6. An1- housefromSandy Ground. built in the traditional English [I-houseJ

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style of the eighteenth century Mid-Atlantic which their ancestors had learned in their acculturation to this dominant culturc." Askins discovered diat black and white Sandy Grounders who built houses later in the century seemed to be following a different principie in choosing a style for their homes. Their choice now seemed to depend not on regional or ethnic origin but on class. Two different styles of houses were popular after 1870: the three-bay tcmple (fig. 15.7) and, again, the I-house. I houses were now built for the poorer residents of Sandy Groundthe black and white farmers who were having trouble making ends meet or who rented (rather than owned) their homes. The three-bay temple houses, by contrast, were built by relatively affluent members of the community, both black and whiteoystermen, small-business proprietors, or tliose who were in prestigious oceupations, such as ministers.
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three-bay temple home from Sandy Ground.


A

As Aslcins argues, "a simple corrclation of ethnicity and house style is not found throughout Sandy Ground history. Though ethnicity, or regional culmre, may have been expressed in the earliest period ofthe community, during the later period the picture is much more complex. Instead of ethnicity, . . . relative class position is what was expressed." When Askins turned his attention to the ceramics that the women of Sandy Ground used, he discovered that ali the womenwhether of African or European descent used similar dishes from the late nineteenth through the early twentieth cenniries. This suggests that the African American and European American women of Sandy Ground, during good times and bad, chose to underline their common ground with their neighbors. These similaritics in dish styles paralleled the mutual aid that crossed the color line in the community. People from Sandy Ground who were interviewcd in the 1930S talked nostalgicalfy about die community^s cohesion in the late nineteenth century; they recalled that black and white children played and went to school together, that some black families attendcd white churches, that some white Sandy Grounders attended cakewalks and ox roasts organized by black churchcs, and that some of the sports teams were integrated. People of different ethnicitics shared garden produce, midwife services, and health remedies. The similarities in the dishes showed that this forni of solidarity continued in die community even after the bottom fell out of the oystering industry and the economic status of the oystermen plummeted. However, the similarity in the dishes did not mean that the meais eaten in ali these houses were the samethe dumps associated with white homes contained many more glass bottles
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and jars used for storing condiments like pickles and sauces, showing that the cuisines in these homes were quite different. As Askins notes, diese differences and similariues in styles of houses and dishes could also be related to different gender roles in the Sandy Ground community: "Women, the most important links in inter-househola conviviality, may have expressed . . . a community identity, as modest rural Victorians. Men, who built the houses or chose the builders, expressed oceupation or class in their very public symbolic domain."
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The Suburbs
New York has the oldest commuter suburbs of any city in the world. Their creation was directly related to the factors of urbanization that caused the separation of the home and workplace in the early nineteenth-century city (see chapter n ) : the growth of the large, impersonal economy, die increasing numbers of immigrant poor, and the virulent diseases and epidemics that carne to be associated widi "the city." Those who could afford it moved their homes away from the downtown business district and out into the suburbs that were developing at the citys edge, in Greenwich Village, Jersey City, Hoboken, Brooklyn Heights, and, soon after, in other parts of Brooklyn. There they lived in residential comniunities made up of almost identical single-family row houses. Teclinological innovations in transportation, including steam ferries and horsedrawn omnibuses, linked the new suburbs to the city so that men could commute from these comniunities to work in Manhattan. At home in die suburbs, mid-nineteentii-century "how-to" books encouraged women to use home furnishings to further their agendas for their families. They were advised to shop for furniture in different styles for decorating different rooms in their suburban homes, as befitted the activities associated with each room. One style, Italianate, was deemed appropriate for the entertaining that took place in the parlor, where middleclass women tried to project the image of refined gentility to reinforce their families' position in die class structure. The Gothic style, with its ecclesiastical associations, was suitable for family dining rooms, where women inculcated moral values into their children during meais and thus encouraged them to become responsible citizens.
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used o meais Whether of the stone p plain ^ rims, fo rooms. their ItaJ lain cup decorarii style (fig Then and Broc and soi women | families bowls w dition. the city. have pL it did aiu

Forts
In Augi and 13.! the nexi his troo Brookly hattan.: ish tem] carne a" Americ Revolur to com Evacuai

Archaeologists have uncovered traces of middle-class niid-nineteendi-century suburban life in Manhattan's Greenwich Village (including at the Robsons' home on Washington Square) and in Brooklyn's Boerum H i l l and Fort Green. In studying their finds from these different but contemporancous comniunities, they have been struck by the almost rigid uniformity of the artifacts from ali the sites, indicating that the ways of life inside these homes followed the same pattern. I n spite of the profusion of china patterns diat became available with die industrial revolution, the women in these homes
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used one kind of china to serve their families' meais and another to entertain friends at tea. Whether they were at the poorer or richer ends of the middle-class spectrum, they chose ironstone plates in the Gothic pattern, which were plain white with molded paneis around their rims, for family use in their Gothic dining rooms. And for entertaining their friends in their Italianate parlors, they chose white porcelain cups and saucers, often with gold-painted decoration, in die more elaborate Italianate There was, however, one diffcrence between the dishes from the Greenwich Village and Brooklyn households. The archaeologists working in Brooklyn found dinner plates and soup bowls in both the Gothic and Italianate patterns, showing that Brooklyn women entertained for dinner as well as for tea. But none of the Greenwich Village families had dishes in these Italianate forms: ali of their large dinner plates and soup bowls were in plain Gothic ironstone. Because the trip to Brooklyn was a major expedition, perhaps when the Brooklyn families entertained their friends or relations from the city, they served them dinner instead of just after-dinner tea. So geography may have played a role in determining entertainment styles among the middle class, just as it did among the very rich, as we saw in looking at home life at the Van Cortlandts'.

Forts and Encampments


In August 1776 the British fleet, armed widi 1,200 cannon and carrying 32,000 troops and 13,000 seamen, had massed in the Narrows off the coast of Staten Island. Over the next two months, the British conquered the city. First, General William Howe led his troops to victory against Washington's men at what became known as the Battle of Brooklyn. Then, with the British in pursuit, the Americans retreated, first to Manhattan, then north to Harlem Heights (where they succeeded in turning back the British temporarily), and then to Westchester. The British controlled the city, which became a Tory stronghold, until the very end of the war, in 1783. New York was the only American city to be occupied by the British army for almost the entirc duration of the Revolutionary War. As recently as tlie late nineteenth century, New Yorkers continued to commemorate November 25, 1783, the day the British left the city, by celebrating Evacuation Day each year. Amazingly enough, extensive traces of the fortifications from tlie Revolution and
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from the War of 1812 survive today within the modern borders of the city. Avocationa. archaeologists have always been fascinated by these sites. Early in the twentieth century, William Calvcr and Reginald Bolton spent years salvaging traces of Fort Washin-ton and of dic British encampment around the Dyckman Farm in northern Manhattaa They exeavated 50 of the 120 semi-subterranean huts where British and Hessian so.dicrs lived. Their work there produced an outstanding collection of militaiy buttoaT5 and other accoutrements associated with eighteenth-century British soldiers in Nc America. More recently, avocational archaeologists have exeavated at other Revolutionar War sites. One of the most important of these exeavations was at Fort Indcpendenee (see fig. 1.1), which was built in T775-76 as part of the network of fortifications rhc Americans prepared to protect the city from British attack. The fort safeguarded the King's Bridge, the city^s link to the mainland across the Harlem River. The Brit seized Fort Indepcndence in 1776 and continued to hold it until their offensive coh lapsed in 1779. In 1958 the New York City Archaeological Group, led by Julius Lopez and includina Stanley Wisniewski, Michael Cohn, and Harry Trowbridge, found die remains of Forr Independence. The details of the fort's construction are not known except for the fact that it was enclosed by earthworks. But the archaeologists found parts of the stone foundation walls of two buildings that had stood within it. The function of the smaller building, which was around fifteen by thirtecn fect, remains a mystery, but the larger building, which measured about thirty-two by ten feet, seems to have served as officers' quarters during the British oceupation. The archaeologists made this interpretation because amid the building's rubble they found relatively ornate artifacts, including buttons; cuff links, including one of pevvtcr embossed with a lion; green, blue, and clear glass faux gems that had been lost from their settings; and small-caliber lead shot, presumably for use with officers' pistols. They also found artifacts that indicated the tedium of life at the fort: dice that someone had made from lead musket balis. The balis had been shapcd into cubes, and the dots 011 each facet had been punched in with a nail or other sharp object. The officers had probably used these dice for gambling, to while away the hours as they guarded the fort. Making dice from musket balis seems to have been a fairly common practice during the War for Indepcndence, because Calver and Bolton found similar lead dice at Rcvolutionary War sites in northern Manhattan.
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The archaeologists also found a number of brass and copper bucklcs from the clothing of officers and common soldiers. Some were from belts worn round the waist. others from straps worn at the knee, and others still were from shoes. They also found twenty-two coins (most of which were British pennies bearing the image of King

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Avocational meth cenWashingManhattan. Hessian solitarv burtons in North jRevolutionary I Indepcndence rrihcanons the pfeguarded the ler. The British Lr offensive coife and inclucling bemains of Fort fcept for the facr Irrs of the stone ia of the smaller fcr. but the larger
rrved

George I I ) and numerous buttons, including twenty-seven inscribed with one of the numbers of the seven different reginients that were posted at the fort. Lopez suggested that the soldiers ate from wooden or pewter dishes because they did not find any sherds from ceramic plates; most of the sherds they found were from tea cups and saucers. These vessels were in patterns that were surprisingly fashionable considering that they were being used at a fort in a remote colonial outpost that was at war. Some sherds, those of creamware and of white salt-glazed stoneware, were Englishmade, while odiers were of imported Chinese porcelain. The artifacts provide an intimate look into the daily rimais at Fort Independencc.

A n Almshouse Kitchen
Traditionally, New Yorkers built institutions to serve the poor out at dic city's edge, where land was cheap and where the inhabitants were out of sight. As the city grew over time and its borders advanced, these institutions had to move over and over again. During the eighteenth cenuiry, many of the cirVs institutions were located on the Commons, in today\s City Hall Park, then an open area at the city's northern edge where local residents had pastured livestock in the seventeenth century. There the city housed its mcntally ill in an asylum, its prisoners in a jail, and its poor in an almshouse. In later years, many of these instiuitions were moved to BlackwelTs (later Welfare and now Roosevelt) Island in the East River, where they stood throughout much of the nineteenth century. Today there are two buildings standing in the northern end of City Hall Park: the Tweed Courthouse, which was built 011 Chambers Street between 1862 and 1870, and City Hall, built between 1803 and 1812. I n the late 1980S die city planned to install a utility line between die two buildings. Before they began dieir project, however, archaeologists exeavated along die path of the utility line. They discovered die brownstone foundation and cellar hole of an eighteenth-century building as well as a buried layer of organic soil that was the ground surface of dic Commons in die 1700S. The architecmral materiais they found included mortar and a lot of bricks, indicating diat the building had been built of brick. One of the archaeologists, Sherene Baugher, argues that die building served as die kitchen for the cit^s first almshouse, which had been built in the 173os.
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as officers"

krerpretation beincluding butblue, and clear lead shot, preicated the teballs.The balis in with a nai. bling, to whik seems to have luse Calver and | Manhattan.
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from the clothround the waisr. Thev also founc image of Kina

The artifacts included unusually high numbers of bone button backs bone disks that would later be covered with cloth and that were pierced by a single holeand "button blanks"pieces of flat bone, often die ribs or shoulder blades of cartle, from which die disks had been cut (fig. 15.9). Baugher notes that the "residents were

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requircd to work in return for their food, lo ing, and clothing." The abundance of burrct backs and button blanks suggests that butta making may have been one of the tasks requira of Almshouse residents. They made the buttc eidier for dieir own clothing or for the city sell. The discovery of the Almshouse kitchen iz> derlines the role that archaeology can play i revealing the ways of life of one of the m i n groups ignored in written documentsthe poor. Archaeolog}' was also responsible for tbc iS-. Pins, buttons, and a button blankfor making bone buttons,fromthe city's Almshouse, eighteenth discovery of a burial ground for another such groupthe city's enslaved Africans. century.
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