Previous Archaeology Jamestown Rediscovery
 









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  Cotter Excavations

It had long been believed that the remains of James Fort were claimed by erosion along the bank of the James River. In 1893 The Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities acquired 22 1/2 acres surrounding the old church tower. At this time Mary Jeffrey Gault, founding member of the APVA, began the first excavations to uncover the foundations of the church. There have been scholars all along that believed the fort was still intact in the vicinity of the 1639 church site. As early as 1902 Samuel Yonge, the engineer responsible for building of the seawall, placed the fort between the Confederate earthworks and the church tower. The National Park Service purchased the rest of the island in 1934 and established the Colonial National Park. With the acquisition of the land came archaeological projects ranging from the W.P.A. projects of the 1930's to the excavations leading up to the 350th anniversary in 1957. Most notably by J.C. Harrington in the 30's and 40's and John L.Cotter in the 1950's. While Harrington and Cotter are most often associated with Jamestown, a list of the archaeologists who worked at Jamestown reads like a who's who of American archaeology. Edward B. Jelks, Henry C. Foreman, Louis Caywood, Joel Shiner, Frederick Parris, John T. Zaharof, H. Summerfield Day, Conrad Bentzen, and Rex Wilson have all had a hand in the past excavations for the National Park Service.




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