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Fewkes Group Archaeological Site

Fewkes Group Archaeological Site (40 WM 1), also known as the Boiling Springs Site,[1] is a pre American history Native American archaeological site located in the city of Brentwood, in Williamson County, Tennessee. It is in Primm Historic Park on the grounds of Boiling Spring Academy, a historic schoolhouse established in 1830. The 15-acre site consists of the remains of a late Mississippian culture mound complex and village roughly dating to 1050-1475 AD.[2] The site, which sits on the western bank of the Little Harpeth River, has five mounds, some used for burial and others, including the largest, were ceremonial platform mounds.[3] The village was abandoned for unknown reasons around 1450.[2] The site is named in honor of Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, the Chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology in 1920, who had visited the site and recognized its potential.[4] While it was partially excavated by the landowner in 1895, archaeologist William E. Myer directed a second, more thorough excavation in October 1920.[3] The report of his findings was published in the Bureau of American Ethnology's Forty-First Annual Report.[5] Many of the artifacts recovered from the site are now housed at the Smithsonian Institution. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 21, 1980, as NRIS number 80003880.[6]

Fewkes Group Archaeological Site
40 WM 1
Fewkes Mounds No. 1 & 2. Boiling Spring Academy in the background
Location within Tennessee today
LocationWilliamson County, Tennessee USA
RegionWilliamson County, Tennessee
Coordinates35°58′0.44″N 86°46′34.54″W / 35.9667889°N 86.7762611°W / 35.9667889; -86.7762611
History
Founded1050
Abandoned1475
CulturesMississippian culture
Site notes
Excavation dates1920
ArchaeologistsWilliam E. Myer
Architecture
Architectural stylesburial mounds, platform mounds, plaza
Responsible body: City of Brentwood

Inhabitants edit

Two different groups of people lived at the Fewkes Site. The first group, who built the mounds and left the majority of artifacts, buried their dead with their bodies tightly flexed in hexagonal and circular stone box graves. This was probably achieved by tightly binding the body after death, because the bones appear to be in their proper places.[5] These people appear to have lived in circular houses. This occupation dates to the Mississippian period, between 1000 – 1450.[2] A second group moved into the area toward the end of the period. This group buried its dead with the bodies fully extended, on their backs, in rectangular stone box graves.[5] Archaeological research done within the Middle Cumberland River Valley marks a virtual abandonment of the area around 1450. It is unknown what caused this, but the large amount of broken pottery on the floors of their homes may indicate that they were forced to leave in a hurry.[5] This abandonment of the region is part of a larger pattern seen in parts of the Ohio, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Cumberland River valleys known as the "Vacant Quarter" hypothesis.[2] As of 2010, officials at the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Division of Archaeology, have been unable to identify modern tribal descendants of the inhabitants of the site.[2]

Site description edit

 
1920 Map of Fewkes Group

There are five mounds at the Fewkes site. Four of them are located opposite of each other on each side of a level town plaza, and the fifth (smallest) mound is situated on the riverbank directly to the north of mound No. 1, outside the town center. (Looking at the site today, the Boiling Spring Schoolhouse now sits between mound No.1 and mound No. 5). Mound No. 1 is the largest at the site, being 25 feet (7.6 m) in height. Remnants of about a dozen house circles were found scattered around the outer edges of the group of mounds, mostly between mounds No.1 and No. 5. The most important houses adjoined mound No. 1 on the northeast side. These are represented on the 1920 map by circles. Traces of a stone box cemetery were also found on the property, not far from the mound complex.[5]

Mound No. 1 edit

Mound No. 1 is the largest mound at the complex and is located on the northern side of the town square. The platform mound is 25 feet (7.6 m) and measures 185 feet (56 m) by 160 feet (49 m) across. It was left unexcavated in 1920 because of a lack of funding, although archaeologist William Myer believed its use to be ceremonial, and possibly the location of a chief's residence.[5]

Mound No. 2 edit

 
Pottery found in Mound No. 2, in the 1920 excavation

Mound No. 2 is located on the western side of the plaza. It is 235 feet (72 m) across from north to south, and 160 feet (49 m) across east to west. At the time of excavation it reached 7.5 feet (2.3 m) high.[5] Less than one-fifth of the area of the mound was excavated; because of this, it is impossible to know the number of structures constructed upon it. The mound was raised in four stages. The first level, at the base of the mound, was the original ground surface of the soil. In this layer, archaeologists discovered a fire bed filled with ashes and broken animal bones, indicating that a structure had existed there before the mound was built over top of it.[5] After the house was torn down, the 3 feet (0.91 m) high mound was constructed in its place. On the second level there is evidence that at least one building, and probably more, were constructed. The floor of this structure was packed down and layered with stone slabs, much like pavement. A small pile of maize and maize meal were also found. In the southwestern segment of the mound were found the ruins of a structure, named by Myer the "Sacred Image House" because among the items found were the remains of a sacred idol, a shrine, and traces of fire ceremonies.[5] After the buildings were torn down the mound was raised a few more inches for the third construction level. Many items were found on this level, such as a metate and muller, arrowheads, shell tempered pottery, multiple fire beds, and objects made from deer bones. However, the most important was a structure dubbed the "House of Mysteries".[5] The building was an important civic structure, probably used for sacred rites and town gatherings, and had two rooms. Myers described the floor as being made of "black, glossy earth".[5] The walls and roof of the building were built using the cane matting technique and an arched roof. The woven cane matting was then covered inside and outside with a coating of clay plaster known as wattle and daub. Inside the building was an altar, complete with an oval altar bowl. The bowl, filled with white, powdery ashes, was made of fired red clay. The fire was allowed to burn without being put out. The structure was eventually destroyed by fire.[5] Mound No. 2 was in constant cultivation for at least 85 years, and as a result, only limited structural evidence exists for the final stage. However, numerous postholes indicate that there was a building constructed atop the mound during this phase. It is also important to note that a few burials from the later group of rectangular stone grave people were found close to the surface of Mound No. 2. These were discovered in 1895, when the farmer who owned the land plowed over them and decided to take a closer look.[5]

Mound No. 3 edit

 
Stone box grave demonstrating flexed burial

Mound No. 3 is a burial mound of the first inhabitants of the Fewkes group. It is a low oval mound on the southwestern corner of the plaza. The mound is about 3 feet (0.91 m) high and 100 feet (30 m) by 110 feet (34 m) across, but slopes very gradually into the soil, so it is impossible to determine its exact boundaries.[5] Originally, it probably held 10-15 graves, but unfortunately all except two have been destroyed by looters and plowing. These two graves were very different from the usual method of burial during the Mississippian period in the Middle Tennessee region. Typically, the deceased were buried on their backs with their legs fully extended, as in a modern-day burial.[5] The remains found in the two graves from this mound had been buried on their backs with their bodies tightly flexed. Their stone-slab graves were octagonal, hexagonal, or nearly round.[5] When the first grave was opened, the slabs on top were missing and the bones had been slightly disturbed, probably by looters. It was octagonal and made from limestone slabs. Grave goods found with the deceased included five large shell beads and a clay pot. The second grave was similar in size to the first, but it was hexagonal. As with the first grave, it had been disturbed by looters and the body was slightly repositioned. The grave goods found with the second set of remains included a small effigy burial vase (somehow overlooked by the looters) and a mussel shell, which was most likely a spoon.[5]

Mound No. 4 edit

Mound No. 4 is located on the east side of the plaza. It is low and oblong, about 4 feet (1.2 m) high, and 200 feet (61 m) by 180 feet (55 m) across. No evidence of fire pits, pottery, or graves were discovered. William Myer believed it to be a natural knoll in the field, given its shape by the removal of soil used for the construction of Mound No. 1.[5] Erosion and years of cultivation have destroyed any evidence of possible of associated structures atop the mound.

Mound No. 5 edit

Mound No. 5 is a small oval mound 32 feet (9.8 m) across and 3.5 feet (1.1 m) high. It is located about 300 feet (91 m) north of Boiling Spring Academy overlooking the bank of the Little Harpeth River. There was no evidence of buildings or burials in this mound, although broken animal bones and pottery fragments were found scattered throughout the soil.[5] Traces of a fire pit and two bone tools were also found.

Structures edit

 
Original image of child buried against the fire basin found during a house excavation at Fewkes was removed due to a standing request by Native American tribal members as to not have images of ancestral remains on display to the public.

Many saucer-like depressions were discovered around the north side of Mound No. 1 and in an adjoining field that are thought to be the remains of domestic structures.[5] There is also a large number of these depressions to the west of Mound No. 2 and Mound No. 3. These buildings appear to have been made similarly to the ceremonial buildings found on top of the mounds, with cane matting and plastered walls.[5] Objects found in and around these depressions include bear teeth, arrowheads, broken animal bones, traces of plastered walls, stone disks, and a store of yellow ochre that was most likely used as body paint.

Upon excavation, one circular depression was found to be a nearly smooth, level, hard-packed floor. In the center of this structure was an upright, stone-slab fire basin, one side of which had been cut out; this was to allow room for the upright stone slab of a child's grave. The child, thought to be about 12 years old, was found buried against the slab, with its head resting within the edges of the bowl.[5] Ashes remained in the bowl and also along the back and top of the child's head, although the bones do not appear to have been burned at all. Graves of two other children, whose stone box graves were also found in and below the floor.[5]

Other burials edit

Two burials were found about 100 feet (30 m) southeast of Mound No. 3. The first was a woman whose body was loosely flexed on her right side. There were no grave goods found. The second burial, located on the woman's right, was simply a pile of bones. There were no grave goods or stone box coffin found in the burial. It is not known if this person had a connection with the deceased woman. Other burials were discovered scattered around the site, from the later group of people who inhabited the area. Grave goods for these burials included conch shells, pottery, spearheads, playing dice crafted from deer bones, and a black stone female statuette.[7]

Excavations in 1998 edit

The remains of at least 21 individuals, along with their funerary objects, were removed from the Fewkes group site during a road construction project by the Tennessee Department of Transportation in 1998.[2] Grave goods removed included ceramic ear plugs, effigy jars, projectile points, a drilled dog tooth and a bone awl. As of April 23, 2010, efforts are being made to reinter the culturally unidentifiable remains from the Fewkes site.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Peres, Tanya M. (2010). Michael C. Moore (ed.). (PDF). Tennessee Archaeology. 5 (1). Tennessee Council for Professional Archaeology: 100–125. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 16, 2011. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Hutt, Sherry (August 3, 2010). "Notice of Inventory Completion: Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Division of Archaeology, Nashville, Tennessee". Federal Register. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  3. ^ a b Warwick, Rick (2010). Historical Markers of Williamson County Tennessee, Revised: A Pictorial Guide. Nashville, Tennessee: Panacea Press.
  4. ^ Little, Vance (1985). Historic Brentwood. Brentwood, Tennessee: J M Publications.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Myer, William (1928). Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee. Nashville, Tennessee: Southeastern Indian Antiquities Survey, Inc. pp. 559–610.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on August 3, 2012. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
  7. ^ Jones, Joseph (1970). Explorations of the Aboriginal Remains of Tennessee. Knoxville, Tennessee: Tenase Company.

External links edit

  • Primm Historic Park

fewkes, group, archaeological, site, also, known, boiling, springs, site, american, history, native, american, archaeological, site, located, city, brentwood, williamson, county, tennessee, primm, historic, park, grounds, boiling, spring, academy, historic, sc. Fewkes Group Archaeological Site 40 WM 1 also known as the Boiling Springs Site 1 is a pre American history Native American archaeological site located in the city of Brentwood in Williamson County Tennessee It is in Primm Historic Park on the grounds of Boiling Spring Academy a historic schoolhouse established in 1830 The 15 acre site consists of the remains of a late Mississippian culture mound complex and village roughly dating to 1050 1475 AD 2 The site which sits on the western bank of the Little Harpeth River has five mounds some used for burial and others including the largest were ceremonial platform mounds 3 The village was abandoned for unknown reasons around 1450 2 The site is named in honor of Dr J Walter Fewkes the Chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology in 1920 who had visited the site and recognized its potential 4 While it was partially excavated by the landowner in 1895 archaeologist William E Myer directed a second more thorough excavation in October 1920 3 The report of his findings was published in the Bureau of American Ethnology s Forty First Annual Report 5 Many of the artifacts recovered from the site are now housed at the Smithsonian Institution It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 21 1980 as NRIS number 80003880 6 Fewkes Group Archaeological Site40 WM 1Fewkes Mounds No 1 amp 2 Boiling Spring Academy in the backgroundLocation within Tennessee todayLocationWilliamson County Tennessee USARegionWilliamson County TennesseeCoordinates35 58 0 44 N 86 46 34 54 W 35 9667889 N 86 7762611 W 35 9667889 86 7762611HistoryFounded1050Abandoned1475CulturesMississippian cultureSite notesExcavation dates1920ArchaeologistsWilliam E MyerArchitectureArchitectural stylesburial mounds platform mounds plazaResponsible body City of Brentwood Contents 1 Inhabitants 2 Site description 2 1 Mound No 1 2 2 Mound No 2 2 3 Mound No 3 2 4 Mound No 4 2 5 Mound No 5 2 6 Structures 2 7 Other burials 3 Excavations in 1998 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksInhabitants editTwo different groups of people lived at the Fewkes Site The first group who built the mounds and left the majority of artifacts buried their dead with their bodies tightly flexed in hexagonal and circular stone box graves This was probably achieved by tightly binding the body after death because the bones appear to be in their proper places 5 These people appear to have lived in circular houses This occupation dates to the Mississippian period between 1000 1450 2 A second group moved into the area toward the end of the period This group buried its dead with the bodies fully extended on their backs in rectangular stone box graves 5 Archaeological research done within the Middle Cumberland River Valley marks a virtual abandonment of the area around 1450 It is unknown what caused this but the large amount of broken pottery on the floors of their homes may indicate that they were forced to leave in a hurry 5 This abandonment of the region is part of a larger pattern seen in parts of the Ohio Mississippi Tennessee and Cumberland River valleys known as the Vacant Quarter hypothesis 2 As of 2010 officials at the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation Division of Archaeology have been unable to identify modern tribal descendants of the inhabitants of the site 2 Site description edit nbsp 1920 Map of Fewkes Group There are five mounds at the Fewkes site Four of them are located opposite of each other on each side of a level town plaza and the fifth smallest mound is situated on the riverbank directly to the north of mound No 1 outside the town center Looking at the site today the Boiling Spring Schoolhouse now sits between mound No 1 and mound No 5 Mound No 1 is the largest at the site being 25 feet 7 6 m in height Remnants of about a dozen house circles were found scattered around the outer edges of the group of mounds mostly between mounds No 1 and No 5 The most important houses adjoined mound No 1 on the northeast side These are represented on the 1920 map by circles Traces of a stone box cemetery were also found on the property not far from the mound complex 5 Mound No 1 edit Mound No 1 is the largest mound at the complex and is located on the northern side of the town square The platform mound is 25 feet 7 6 m and measures 185 feet 56 m by 160 feet 49 m across It was left unexcavated in 1920 because of a lack of funding although archaeologist William Myer believed its use to be ceremonial and possibly the location of a chief s residence 5 Mound No 2 edit nbsp Pottery found in Mound No 2 in the 1920 excavation Mound No 2 is located on the western side of the plaza It is 235 feet 72 m across from north to south and 160 feet 49 m across east to west At the time of excavation it reached 7 5 feet 2 3 m high 5 Less than one fifth of the area of the mound was excavated because of this it is impossible to know the number of structures constructed upon it The mound was raised in four stages The first level at the base of the mound was the original ground surface of the soil In this layer archaeologists discovered a fire bed filled with ashes and broken animal bones indicating that a structure had existed there before the mound was built over top of it 5 After the house was torn down the 3 feet 0 91 m high mound was constructed in its place On the second level there is evidence that at least one building and probably more were constructed The floor of this structure was packed down and layered with stone slabs much like pavement A small pile of maize and maize meal were also found In the southwestern segment of the mound were found the ruins of a structure named by Myer the Sacred Image House because among the items found were the remains of a sacred idol a shrine and traces of fire ceremonies 5 After the buildings were torn down the mound was raised a few more inches for the third construction level Many items were found on this level such as a metate and muller arrowheads shell tempered pottery multiple fire beds and objects made from deer bones However the most important was a structure dubbed the House of Mysteries 5 The building was an important civic structure probably used for sacred rites and town gatherings and had two rooms Myers described the floor as being made of black glossy earth 5 The walls and roof of the building were built using the cane matting technique and an arched roof The woven cane matting was then covered inside and outside with a coating of clay plaster known as wattle and daub Inside the building was an altar complete with an oval altar bowl The bowl filled with white powdery ashes was made of fired red clay The fire was allowed to burn without being put out The structure was eventually destroyed by fire 5 Mound No 2 was in constant cultivation for at least 85 years and as a result only limited structural evidence exists for the final stage However numerous postholes indicate that there was a building constructed atop the mound during this phase It is also important to note that a few burials from the later group of rectangular stone grave people were found close to the surface of Mound No 2 These were discovered in 1895 when the farmer who owned the land plowed over them and decided to take a closer look 5 Mound No 3 edit nbsp Stone box grave demonstrating flexed burial Mound No 3 is a burial mound of the first inhabitants of the Fewkes group It is a low oval mound on the southwestern corner of the plaza The mound is about 3 feet 0 91 m high and 100 feet 30 m by 110 feet 34 m across but slopes very gradually into the soil so it is impossible to determine its exact boundaries 5 Originally it probably held 10 15 graves but unfortunately all except two have been destroyed by looters and plowing These two graves were very different from the usual method of burial during the Mississippian period in the Middle Tennessee region Typically the deceased were buried on their backs with their legs fully extended as in a modern day burial 5 The remains found in the two graves from this mound had been buried on their backs with their bodies tightly flexed Their stone slab graves were octagonal hexagonal or nearly round 5 When the first grave was opened the slabs on top were missing and the bones had been slightly disturbed probably by looters It was octagonal and made from limestone slabs Grave goods found with the deceased included five large shell beads and a clay pot The second grave was similar in size to the first but it was hexagonal As with the first grave it had been disturbed by looters and the body was slightly repositioned The grave goods found with the second set of remains included a small effigy burial vase somehow overlooked by the looters and a mussel shell which was most likely a spoon 5 Mound No 4 edit Mound No 4 is located on the east side of the plaza It is low and oblong about 4 feet 1 2 m high and 200 feet 61 m by 180 feet 55 m across No evidence of fire pits pottery or graves were discovered William Myer believed it to be a natural knoll in the field given its shape by the removal of soil used for the construction of Mound No 1 5 Erosion and years of cultivation have destroyed any evidence of possible of associated structures atop the mound Mound No 5 edit Mound No 5 is a small oval mound 32 feet 9 8 m across and 3 5 feet 1 1 m high It is located about 300 feet 91 m north of Boiling Spring Academy overlooking the bank of the Little Harpeth River There was no evidence of buildings or burials in this mound although broken animal bones and pottery fragments were found scattered throughout the soil 5 Traces of a fire pit and two bone tools were also found Structures edit nbsp Original image of child buried against the fire basin found during a house excavation at Fewkes was removed due to a standing request by Native American tribal members as to not have images of ancestral remains on display to the public Many saucer like depressions were discovered around the north side of Mound No 1 and in an adjoining field that are thought to be the remains of domestic structures 5 There is also a large number of these depressions to the west of Mound No 2 and Mound No 3 These buildings appear to have been made similarly to the ceremonial buildings found on top of the mounds with cane matting and plastered walls 5 Objects found in and around these depressions include bear teeth arrowheads broken animal bones traces of plastered walls stone disks and a store of yellow ochre that was most likely used as body paint Upon excavation one circular depression was found to be a nearly smooth level hard packed floor In the center of this structure was an upright stone slab fire basin one side of which had been cut out this was to allow room for the upright stone slab of a child s grave The child thought to be about 12 years old was found buried against the slab with its head resting within the edges of the bowl 5 Ashes remained in the bowl and also along the back and top of the child s head although the bones do not appear to have been burned at all Graves of two other children whose stone box graves were also found in and below the floor 5 Other burials edit Two burials were found about 100 feet 30 m southeast of Mound No 3 The first was a woman whose body was loosely flexed on her right side There were no grave goods found The second burial located on the woman s right was simply a pile of bones There were no grave goods or stone box coffin found in the burial It is not known if this person had a connection with the deceased woman Other burials were discovered scattered around the site from the later group of people who inhabited the area Grave goods for these burials included conch shells pottery spearheads playing dice crafted from deer bones and a black stone female statuette 7 Excavations in 1998 editThe remains of at least 21 individuals along with their funerary objects were removed from the Fewkes group site during a road construction project by the Tennessee Department of Transportation in 1998 2 Grave goods removed included ceramic ear plugs effigy jars projectile points a drilled dog tooth and a bone awl As of April 23 2010 efforts are being made to reinter the culturally unidentifiable remains from the Fewkes site 2 See also editOld Town Archaeological Site 40 WM 2 List of Mississippian sitesReferences edit Peres Tanya M 2010 Michael C Moore ed Zooarchaeological remains from the 1998 Fewkes Site excavations Williamson County Tennessee PDF Tennessee Archaeology 5 1 Tennessee Council for Professional Archaeology 100 125 Archived from the original PDF on July 16 2011 Retrieved April 16 2011 a b c d e f g Hutt Sherry August 3 2010 Notice of Inventory Completion Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation Division of Archaeology Nashville Tennessee Federal Register Retrieved April 11 2011 a b Warwick Rick 2010 Historical Markers of Williamson County Tennessee Revised A Pictorial Guide Nashville Tennessee Panacea Press Little Vance 1985 Historic Brentwood Brentwood Tennessee J M Publications a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Myer William 1928 Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee Nashville Tennessee Southeastern Indian Antiquities Survey Inc pp 559 610 National Register of Historic Places Archived from the original on August 3 2012 Retrieved April 16 2011 Jones Joseph 1970 Explorations of the Aboriginal Remains of Tennessee Knoxville Tennessee Tenase Company External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fewkes Group Archaeological Site Prehistoric American Indians in Tennessee Primm Historic Park Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fewkes Group Archaeological Site amp oldid 1218253708, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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