Located in woods at the edge of the 35-acre park overlooking Lake George's southern end, the overgrown line of piled stones is easy to miss. Visitors strolling along the park's access road and bicyclists zipping past on the neighboring bike path don't know it's there.
"Most people would walk over that and not notice," said Doug Schmidt, a retired state forester serving as a crew chief for the six-week archaeological field school sponsored by the nearby State University of New York at Adirondack.
Schmidt is among nearly four dozen people spending a second consecutive summer excavating sections of the park in search of evidence from this popular tourist town's bloody past. The park is on land where Colonial American troops fought the French and Indians in 1755, as well as the site of a large British encampment that was besieged two years later along with nearby Fort William Henry.
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| In this Thursday, July 23, 2015 photo, workers look for artifacts at an archaeological dig at Lake George Battlefield Park in Lake George, N.Y. [Credit: AP/Mike Groll] |
Led by David Starbuck, a college anthropology professor who has dug at the region's 18th century military sites for more than 20 years, the battlefield project seeks to identify the footprint of a sprawling encampment known to have occupied high ground just east of Fort William Henry, built in 1755.
It was from this "entrenched camp" that British and Colonial troops started their retreat after the fort surrendered to end a weeklong siege in August 1757. France's American Indian allies set upon the column, killing scores in a massacre that later provided the backdrop for James Fenimore Cooper's novel, "The Last of the Mohicans."
While excavating the stone wall, Starbuck's team uncovered mortar believed to have been made in kilns built into nearby knolls. A few artifacts have been found near the wall, but so far nothing has been found that would help estimate its construction date, Starbuck said.
Only one corner of the fortification was completed in 1759, when work was halted with the end of the fighting after the fall of Quebec. The bastion was used again during the Revolutionary War, but was abandoned afterward. It served as an early tourist attraction as Lake George was settled in the 1800s.
In the 1910s and the 1930s, local history buffs tried to reconstruct the Fort George bastion. Today, the structure constitutes a U-shaped mound with 20-foot-high grass-covered sides. At some point years ago, the open end was filled in with soil. When the overgrowth inside was cut down for the dig, the archaeologists found the top of a stone wall jutting from the dirt.
So far, the top 3 to 4 feet of what's believed to be a barracks wall has been uncovered, Starbuck said. It's unclear yet if the wall is from the reconstruction efforts from 80-plus years ago, but Starbuck said the condition of the mortar indicates the structure could date to the late 1750s.
"It's a much more intact structure than we ever anticipated," he said.
Author: Chris Carola | Source: Associated Press [August 01, 2015]








