Bones, Bottles, and Buttons,
Oh My!: Archaeological Analysis of a Civil War Feature from City Point,
Virginia
by Todd L. Jensen, John R. Underwood, David W. Lewes
William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research
[This paper was presented at Middle Atlantic Archaeological Conference,
Virginia Beach, March 15, 2003]
From July through October 2002, the William and Mary Center for Archaeological
Research investigated three properties within the City Point section of
the City of Hopewell. This research was performed at the request of Hopewells
city government to partly fulfill long-term goals of improving historical
interpretation and enhancing the citys planning abilities. A 0.5-acre
study area along Prince Henry Avenue was subjected to systematic shovel
test survey, evaluation through seven hand-excavated test units and two
machine trenches, and data recovery excavation of selected features. Evidence
of activity in the study area ranged from the earliest prehistoric periods
through the present. An abundance of nineteenth-century artifacts was
found, but a Civil War occupation yielded the most significant results.
A cellar/trash pit that was filled at the end of the war included military
artifacts and large quantities of animal bone from food refuse. Discussion
and interpretation of this cellar/trash pit (Feature 8) will be the focus
of this paper.
Historical Context of the Project Area
While the City of Hopewell is a relatively new municipality (established
in 1916), it encompasses the much older community of City Point (annexed
in 1923). City Point was formally established in 1826, but a small hamlet
and port have existed there since colonial times. Since 1979, the historic
core of City Point has been listed on the National Register of Historic
Places. While the official historic district extends less than 600 m south
of the tip of the peninsula, the City Point neighborhood includes streets
a few hundred meters further to the south and southwest. Until the early
twentieth century (except for an intensive military presence during the
Civil War), only the low terrace along the James River waterfront and
the bluffs above were even sparsely developed. Beyond this village, the
area now called City Point fell within a vast estate owned since the seventeenth
century by the Eppes family. Their Appomattox Manor plantation house near
the bluff edge commanded a view of both rivers and dominated a landscape
of open fields with scattered agricultural buildings and slave quarters.
In the early twentieth century, the agricultural landscape gave way to
medium-density residential neighborhoods. A core of the old plantation
grounds remains around Appomattox Manor, now managed by the National Park
Service as a part of the Petersburg National Battlefield. Just southeast
of the old port area along the James (now a park), the edges of Hopewells
industrial district extend up to the City Point waterfront.
The Civil War
Early in the Civil War, a brief skirmish occurred at City Point between
some Georgia infantry and Union naval officers and seamen. On May 19,
1862, the Union officers and seamen had gone ashore to give medical care
at the request of some local residents. Approaching the village with white
flags flying above several houses, the Union men came under fire and three
seamen were killed. The navy gunboats responded with a brief bombardment
which caused some damage to Appomattox Manor and Weston Manor a little
further west. No further action occurred until May 1864 when the Army
of the James headed upriver under Maj. Gen. Benjamin Butlers command
(Calos et al. 1993:1718). The first goal was to occupy City Point
as a staging area. From City Point, Butler could attack Richmond and chase
Lees army while Gen. George Meades Army of the Potomac attacked from
the north. Commanding General Ulysses S. Grant hoped to trap Lees army
and end the war. The plan did not materialize and the Confederate army
became entrenched at Petersburg (Lutz 1957:170172). For the next
year, City Point would become a massive military installation as the Union
army laid siege to Petersburg.
Numerous contemporary illustrations depict the scale of military activity
at City Point. The deep anchorage received supplies of weapons, ammunition,
and other provisions for the army. The scale of activity was staggering.
Gazing over the water on a busy day, one might see some forty steamboats,
seventy-five sailing vessels, and one hundred barges(Trudeau 1991:132).
A large military hospital was also built along the Appomattox, stretching
eastward from the current Route 10 bridge. Originally designed for 6,000
patients, the hospital housed as many as 10,000 sick and wounded in 1865
(Calos et al. 1993:29). Union facilities also included an abattoir for
butchering livestock and a large bakery. This luxury must have lifted
the morale of the Union troops considerably, especially as their Confederate
enemy suffered near-starvation rations during the later stages of the
siege. Much of this supply infrastructure appears on a detailed map made
by the Union army in 1865. The busy rail terminal near the waterfront
appears in several illustrations.
City Point itself was never seriously threatened by the Confederates
during the Petersburg campaign. In case of a counterattack, however, the
Union built a series of earthworks and forts on the western limits of
their vast depot. A map completed just after the war illustrates a two-tiered
system of fortification. Forts Abbott, McKeen, Graves, Merriam, and Porter
were connected by earthworks to form an outer line of defense about 2
mi. west of the City Point proper (Michler 1867). A reserve artillery
captain from Maine reported in March 1865 that the four regiments manning
these works had at least 22 field guns at their disposal (Official Records
of the Union and Confederate Armies 1895:275276). East of these
defenses was a line of earthworks connecting two forts. Roughly oriented
east-west, the line converged eastward toward the terminus of the railroad.
Despite these measures, City Points defenses were not airtight. Irregular
operations occurred on both sides of the front as scouts and spies
passed back and forth. Even though the vast supply base at City Point
seemed relatively secure for a war zone, two dramatic Confederate incursions
illustrate its vulnerability. A swift surprise attack could overrun the
small forces assigned to defend the inner line. During the so-called Beefsteak
Raid of September 1864, Gen. Wade Hampton led his forces behind
Union lines to the cattle corral at Cockes Mill, several miles east of
City Point. The thinly guarded line in this area included only 1,400 men
protecting a 15-mi. stretch of defenses. Once through the line, Hamptons
men quickly dispersed the forces tending the livestock and managed to
herd more than 2,400 head of cattle back to the Confederate lines (Trudeau
1991:194195; West 2001). Only a month earlier, on August 9, 1864,
a pair of Confederate agents had devastated part of the port at City Point
by exploding a time bomb on an ordnance barge. John Maxwell did not even
board the vessel to set the device. He simply handed his horological
torpedo to a laborer who carried it aboard for him. The explosion
killed 43 people, wounded 126, and caused more than $2 million worth of
property damage. Despite the heavy toll, the buildings and wharves were
quickly rebuilt and the explosion had little long-term impact on the Unions
operations. Ironically, it was not known until after the war that the
explosion was an act of sabotage rather than an accident (Trudeau 1991:134141).
Following the Civil War, the military presence quickly dwindled. From
a bustling military town, City Point was again transformed into a quiet
village. Photographs of City Point during the late nineteenth century
illustrate the return to a slower pace (Calos et al. 1993:40). Along the
waterfront, only rotting pilings recalled the immense wharves that received
supplies during the Union occupation. A small vestige of the federal military
remained, however, as several Monitor-class ships were stationed along
the Appomattox. Eventually, even the Monitor ships left City Point, bringing
the Federal presence to a close.
Feature 8 Description
Feature 8 was exposed at the western end of Trench 2 after the mechanical
removal of plowzone deposits. It was recognized by a distinctive clay
lens, or cap, observed just below the stripped surface. The feature is
rectangular and measures approximately 2.5-×-1.0 m in size. In addition
to the clay lens, a dark charcoal and cinder-rich deposit was present,
centrally located on the northern side of the feature. Within this deposit,
several bricks were noted as well as charred wood and bone. The western
half of Feature 8 was excavated in two levels. Its removal allowed for
a more controlled excavation of the eastern half of the feature, where
separate strata were identified. A total of 5,975 historic artifacts were
recovered from the feature.
Data accumulated through excavation of Feature 8 and analysis of the
recovered artifacts makes several initial observations possible. First,
Feature 8 represents a pit that was filled during two separate episodes.
The Lower Fill consists of Strata III and IV and represents the earlier
of the two filling episodes. The Upper Fill (Strata I, II, and IIa) represents
the later filling of the feature.
Feature 8 most likely represents the cellar or storage area within a
tent or shelter constructed and utilized during the Union occupation of
City Point. During the war or soon afterward, efforts were made to clean
up remnants of the military depot and encampment. The Lower Fill
of Feature 8 most likely resulted from a first stage of tidying the area
near the feature. Highly organic soil indicates that recently discarded
trash was dumped into the feature at this point. Other evidence of clearing
the area of wartime camp debris includes military ration cans and large
quantities of nails and animal bone. The Upper Fill of Feature 8 likely
represents a capping event, where an effort was made to completely
fill in the remaining depression. This would have involved scraping or
borrowing soil from the surrounding area and depositing the soil over
the trash initially deposited as the Lower Fill.
After integrating and evaluating the above data, four key factors emerge
in support of this hypothesized stratigraphic sequence: soil/fill color
and texture, artifact density, artifact type, and artifact preservation.
Soil/fill color and texture provide a great deal of information as to
how Feature 8 was filled. The Upper Fill, in general, consisted of a mixture
of silty loam and clayey soil. This mixture would be exactly what one
would anticipate if a borrow pit or small trench was excavated in order
to use the soil for fill elsewhere. The Lower Fill consisted almost entirely
of silty loam or fine silty loam, which differs substantially from the
soils in the area of Feature 8.
Analysis of artifact density and type by fill layer further supports
this stratigraphic scenario, with much denser concentrations of material
recovered from the Lower versus Upper Fill episodes. The assemblage from
Upper Fill consists of 1,121 historic artifacts and 100 prehistoric artifacts,
while the Lower Fill contained 4,854 historic artifacts and 80 prehistoric
artifacts.
Since the focus of this paper is the historic function of Feature 8,
the prehistoric artifact assemblage will not be discussed. In general,
most of the historic artifacts from Feature 8 belong to the three dominant
groups: kitchen, architectural, and arms/military. Kitchen items consist
primarily of refined earthenwares (whiteware, ironstone, and yellowware),
bone china, and other porcelains for food serving and presentation, and
a variety of utilitarian stonewares (Albany slip, Bennington, and Bristol)
for food cooking and storage. Kitchen glass items were also quite plentiful
and include tableware settings with pressed decoration and molded and
faceted glass tumblers, colorless, molded bottle glass, including a Lea
& Perrins condiment bottle from the Upper Fill dated to pre-1880,
and jar glass. The faunal assemblage was predominately cow and pig but
also included remains from sheep/goat, chicken, turkey, and rabbit. Biomass
percentages, the type of cuts, and the size of the butchered pig and cattle
bones suggest that the occupants who utilized Feature 8 were eating high-quality
cuts of pork and beef.
Such a large concentration of architectural remains suggests a substantial
structure near Feature 8. Historic construction debris and hardware include
several fragments of window glass, a variety of wrought, cut, and wire
nails, and handmade brick. Military paraphernalia includes ammunition,
buttons/uniform insignia, and metal tablewares and food containers. Metal
kitchenwares, while also present in domestic settings during the nineteenth
century, more commonly reflect Civil War food ration can remnants and
accouterments. Ammunition consists of Confederate bullets such as .45-caliber
Pickett and .56-caliber Sharps and more generic types such as minié
bullets and lead shot (Thomas and Thomas 1996). Other arms/ammunition
items include copper alloy percussion caps, cannonball fragments, and
a lead cleaning plug. Diagnostic military buttons and other uniform insignia
include a domed, General Service type dated to pre-1902 and a U.S. Army
General Service type dated to 18541902; both are made of copper
alloy and have a molded eagle decoration. Other buttons were made of such
varied materials as bone, copper alloy, ferrous material, composite copper/ferrous
material, and porcelain.
Discussion of Feature Function
This assemblage conforms to expectations if large amounts of domestic
or architectural debris were deposited in a small pit and then covered
over with nearby soil, especially considering the history of occupation
at City Point, particularly on this property. Following this line of reasoning,
the Upper Fill, or capping deposit, would contain a mixture
of artifacts contemporaneous with but also more recent than the period
in which the hole was capped.
The difference in the preservation of artifacts from Upper and Lower
Fill deposits also lends to our understanding of the stratigraphic sequence.
This is most evident in the preservation and condition of faunal remains
from Feature 8. Animal bones recovered from Upper Fill contexts are small
and relatively friable compared to the largely intact and well-preserved
animal bones and shell from Lower Fill contexts. This disparity in the
integrity or preservation of faunal material suggests that the animal
bones and shell recovered from these two contexts were disproportionately
exposed to weathering and agricultural activities. In other words, faunal
material from Upper Fill contexts does not exhibit the same level of preservation
as those from Lower Fill contexts because the Upper Fill assemblage was
exposed to the elements for a longer time and were subjected to crushing
or trampling.
Two preliminary interpretations can be derived from the characteristics
of Feature 8, its associated artifact assemblage, and evidence from historical
maps. The feature could represent a root cellar or storage pit within
a Civil War shelter associated with the Union occupation of City Point
prior to and during the siege of Petersburg. On the other hand, Feature
8 may have served as a root cellar/storage area beneath a tavern, saloon,
or sutlers store catering to the soldiers and civilian workers during
the Union occupation.
During the Civil War it was typical for soldiers, when encamped for extended
periods, to improve their Government Issued tents with various amenities
(Jensen 2000). One of the more frequent improvements made to shelters
was the incorporation of a dugout cellar, or pit, for storage. Most Civil
War shelters were impermanent in nature and leave little if any archaeological
evidence. However, because of the duration of the encampment at City Point
and the provisioning nature of the troops stationed there,
construction of this type of shelter would be more substantial. The general
dimensions of Feature 8 suggest that this cellar or pit was most likely
within a wall tent. Wall tents came in several sizes, the smallest measuring
about 8 × 8 ft. Feature 8 is approximately 3 × 8 ft. in size
and would have fit nicely within this type of tent. The wall tent was
mainly used by officers. Lower-ranking officers would share a wall tent
with up to three other officers of similar rank. Higher- ranking officers
would normally occupy a single wall tent but often had two at their disposal
(Jensen 2000:42). In cases where an officer had access to two wall tents,
one served as a bedroom and the other as an office or for cooking and
entertaining guests.
Summary
Because of the type and nature of the artifacts recovered from Feature
8, it is likely that this storage pit/cellar was within a tent utilized
predominantly for food preparation, cooking, or dining. The floor of the
excavated feature was uneven, with the western side of the feature being
at least 20 cm deeper than the eastern side. This would suggest that the
western side might have had board flooring, although no evidence of such
an arrangement was exposed. It is also possible that the entire base of
the feature had board flooring and that the western side was slightly
deeper to provide more storage.
The second possibilitythat Feature 8 represents a root cellar/storage
area beneath a tavern, saloon, or sutlers storeis suggested by
City Points function as a supply depot. According to McBride et al. (2000),
military depots and large encampments often had several sutlers, and an
occasional tavern or saloon. Furthermore, the 1865 map points to the study
area as a likely area for these types of structures. Even though the map
does not clearly identify the structures in the vicinity of Feature 8
(perhaps labeled Stor. for storage or store), two rows of
sutlers stores appear to the northeast of present Prince Henry Avenue.
Taverns, saloons, and sutlers stores are differentiated by the
types and quality of the services provided and the social and economic
classes they served. Taverns, for the most part, offered a variety of
services such as lodging, food service, banquets, as well as activities
associated with drinking alcoholic beverages, such as smoking and gaming.
Somewhat lower on the socioeconomic scale, saloons often only served alcoholic
drinks and a limited array of foods. In contrast to these two groups of
establishments, the sutlers store was associated with the lowest
socioeconomic status. The sutlers store offered, at times, a large
selection of goods and wares to the soldiers and civilian occupants of
any given military encampment or depot. As an independent operator,
the sutler could provide a broader range of food and drink than was available
elsewhere. These products included dried and fresh fruits and vegetables
(especially onions and potatoes), canned fruit and vegetables...coffee
and tea, beer, wine, and whiskey (McBride et al. 2000:108). Given
the composition of the Feature 8 Lower Fill artifact assemblage (e.g.,
tin cans, animal bones, bottles, etc.), the interpretation of Feature
8 as a sutlers store seems more plausible. Thank you.
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References Cited
Calos, Mary M., Charlotte Easterling, and Ella Sue Rayburn
1993 Old City Point and Hopewell: The First 370 Years.
The Donning Company Publishers, Virginia Beach.
Jensen, Todd L.
2000 Gimmie Shelter: Union Shelters of the Civil
War, A Preliminary Archaeological Typology. Masters thesis, Department
of Anthropology, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia.
Lutz, Francis Earle
1957 The Prince George-Hopewell Story. The William Byrd Press,
Inc., Richmond.
McBride, W. Stephen, Susan C. Andrews, and Sean P. Coughlin
2000 For the Convenience and Comforts of the Soldiers and
Employees at the Depot: Archaeology of the Owens House/Post
Office Complex, Camp Nelson, Kentucky. In Archaeological Perspectives
on the American Civil War, edited by Clarence R. Geier and Stephen
R. Potter, pp. 99124. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
Michler, Nathaniel
1867 Map of Bermuda Hundred. Copy on file, Virginia Historical Society,
Richmond.
Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies
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Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Vol. 46, part III. U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
Thomas, James E., and Dean S. Thomas
1996 A Handbook of Civil War Bullets and Cartridges. Thomas
Publications, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
Trudeau, Noah Andre
1991 The Last Citadel: Petersburg, Virginia, June 1864April
1865. Little, Brown, and Company, Boston.
West, Neal
2001 Wade Hampton and the Great Beefsteak Raid. The
Unknown Civil War. <http://www.unknowncivilwar.com/beefsteak%20raid.htm>
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