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by Derek Wheeler

The week preceding the August 2003 Pilgrim John Howland Society annual meeting was a busy one at the original Howland home site in Kingston, MA. The week of the 18th – 23rd was the forth summer of archaeological excavations on the property involving Howland descendants.

The property owned by the PJHS is located on a small peninsula of land called Rocky Nook and represents the core of the farmstead purchased by John from John Jenny in 1638 and held by three generations of Howlands. Upon John’s passing, the property went to his second eldest son, Joseph, who in turn gave it to his son James. James sold the property off in pieces, with the last being sold out of the Howland hands in 1725 (until the PJHS reacquired the land in 1920).


Site map of features
discovered during 1937
excavation of the Howland Site.
In 1937, Sydney Strickland, an architect from Boston, was hired to locate the original Howland dwelling purchased by John and listed in the 1638 deed. Strickland and his team quickly found the remains of a large dwelling measuring 34 by 17 feet with a large, nine-foot wide chimney on the west end and an 8 by 22 addition to the north with a cellar underneath. Southeast of the dwelling, Strickland identified a square stone pad roughly 5 feet on a side and what appears to have been the corner of a stone foundation. Finally, thirty-five feet to the south of the dwelling, Strickland found a large, and what appeared to be circular, stone filled depression roughly twenty feet in diameter.

Time constraints limited Strickland’s excavations to the dwelling house and a very limited investigation of the other features. Based on these limits, Strickland interpreted the dwelling as the house purchased by John Howland. The square stone pad and the corner of the foundation were identified as the remnants of a barn also conveyed to John Howland by the 1638 deed. Finally, the circular stone filled depression, was the remnants of a small “dew pond” used for watering cattle and other farm animals.


Earthenware milk pan with
a lead glazed interior found within
the dwelling house cellar fill.

Recent excavations at the Howland site started in 1998. In 1998 and 1999, archaeological field schools run by the University of Virginia, conducted excavations on the dwelling house found by Strickland. The idea behind the re-excavation was two fold. First, we wanted to see if we could determine whether the dwelling was the building sold to John Howland in 1638. The identification of historic artifacts during Strickland’s excavation was in its infancy. The 1937 site report for example is filled with entries on the discovery of yellow pottery found in and around the foundation. Unfortunately, there are numerous pottery types that this could refer to. Many types date to John Howland’s lifetime, but there are just as many types that were not developed until after James Howland sold the property out of the Howland family in 1725. So the first question was simply a matter of dating the structure: were there any archaeological deposits associated with the dwelling that could confirm the structure’s early date?

Second, if the dwelling did date to John Howland’s lifetime, then it is one of the only a small handful of buildings dating to the first expansion of Plymouth’s colonists out of the original fortified town. With such an important site, the dwelling would be of vital importance to scholars interested in this early period of the Colony’s history. The dwelling would need to be uncovered to map it carefully; adding much more detail than the schematic drawing executed by Strickland in 1937.

The University of Virginia excavations revealed that Strickland’s team did a thorough job of excavating the main section of the dwelling house. Only a small handful of artifacts were recovered. At the end of the 1998 field season, the team discovered that the 8 x 22 foot cellar had only been partially excavated. This area was the focus of the 1999 field school.


Exterior and Interior view of Base
of Straffordshire Mottled Ware
tankard found in the top
of the dwelling house cellar fill.
The 1999 field season uncovered a larger quantity of artifacts and some interesting architectural details. Unfortunately, the artifacts were not useful in dating the dwelling house. Most were common utilitarian wares such as milk pans and storage jars and are types of ceramics produced over hundreds of years. The top of the filled in cellar did contain a few pieces of an English ceramic type called Staffordshire Mottled Ware that was produced between 1680 and 1780. The lack of any ceramics dating to the 18th century suggests that the dwelling was abandoned and the cellar filled in sometime between 1680 and 1725. This suggests strongly that the dwelling was occupied by John Howland and his family. Unfortunately, we could not find any evidence supporting the claim that the dwelling was the one purchased by John in 1638, but significantly, we did not find any evidence to disprove it either.

Starting in 2000 and continuing through 2003 excavations were able to continue at the Howland site with the help of PJHS members. Each year, the week prior to the annual meeting was spent investigating the site. With the completion of the excavation and mapping of the dwelling house in 1999, our focus turned to the area identified by Strickland as the “dew pond.”

The first step was to figure out exactly what the feature was. In 2000, by placing test pits in the center and along the southern and western edges of the feature, we found out that we were actually excavating a cellar to another structure. Excavating the cellar fill in 2001, we uncovered a “Wood Penny” with a 1723 date. Excavation of the cellar fill was completed during the 2002 season.


1723 "Wood" penny found
in the "dew pond" cellar fill.

The cellar was approximately sixteen feet square and may have had a chimney on the western wall. Significantly, the alignment of the cellar did not match that of the dwelling house. The “dew pond” cellar was only a couple degrees off of magnetic north, while the dwelling foundation was almost thirty degrees off of a north-south alignment. This indicates that the two buildings were not constructed at the same time and may suggest that the “dew pond” structure was built after the dwelling house was abandoned.


Plan of dwelling house based on
1998 and 1999 excavations.

The focus of this summer’s work was two-fold. First, we turned our attention to the area identified as a barn by Strickland. We concentrated our attention on the two features that lead to this interpretation — the square rock pad and apparent foundation corner. Three five-foot by five-foot square test units were placed at the location of the rock pad. While many rocks were exposed and left in place during excavation, they did not seem to form any type of pattern. A few dateable English ceramics were recovered, but it was a type that was produced for almost two centuries – between 1600 and 1770.

The most interesting object this year was also found in these squares. It appeared to be a brass back to a button. Unfortunately, the area surrounding the foundation corner was covered in poison ivy. The ivy above ground was cleared, but its root system proved too hazardous so excavation was put off until next summer. The second focus of this summer’s excavation was an initial exploration of how the inhabitants of the site organized and used the space surrounding the two structures.

Four five-foot by five-foot test squares were excavated between the two structures. In two adjacent squares, we found a linear soil stain and two postholes. This could be the remains of a fence or perhaps a small outbuilding that will be confirmed by opening up a larger area. Next year, the squares on either side of the feature will be dug to determine its extent.

This article appeared in the September 2003 issue of The Howland Quarterly.