Founded at least as early as the 1720s, this quiet little village
once was a bustling port town filled with shops and dwellings and
warehouses. But the town's life-blood, the navigable Port Tobacco
River, soon filled with silt from the eroding lands of neighboring
farms. The town declined throughout the 1800s, giving up its status
as the County seat in the 1890s to the newly created town of La Plata.
Despite economic misfortune and devastating hurricanes, some residents
remained and their descendants, joined by some newcomers, have kept
this community alive.
The Port Tobacco Archaeological Project began in August 2007. A
small but merry band of professional archaeologists were quickly
augmented by an equally merry band of volunteers as we set out to
discover the archaeological deposits of an entire town. Port Tobacco's
origins stretch back to the early 1600s but it was not until the
early 1700s that it became the port town for which it is known. Before
the arrival of European settlers, Native Americans inhabited the
area and local legend says that a village was once located within
the current town limits.
We began our work in the south end of "downtown" Port
Tobacco. Shovel test pits were excavated at 25-ft intervals with
the goal of identifying the locations of remnant building foundations,
roads, trash deposits, and anything else no longer visible on the
surface. The heat and drought made the digging difficult but we were
rewarded with artifacts in every one of our test pits.
Using the late 1800s maps of the town, we could correlate some of
the deposits to known buildings and property owners. But, our finds
were not limited to the 1800s. We recovered material from the 1700s
and Native American artifacts that are hundreds to thousands of years
old. Our excavations continued into early December and in that time
we excavated 400 shovel test pits and recovered over 25,000 artifacts.
The archaeology of Port Tobacco is unusually rich. The reason for
this is the same reason for the town's demise. Soil erosion brought
sediment into the Port Tobacco River at such a rate as to choke off
the port. The town's economy could not recover from this loss and
the relocation of the County courthouse to La Plata. People left
Port Tobacco as the sediment that filled the river blanketed the
town, preserving it for archaeologists of the future. With little
new development, these deposits remained undisturbed. What we have
at Port Tobacco we have because of the town’s demise.
Our main goal is to recover the history of Port Tobacco, from Native
American occupation right up to the present time. We are working
with the Society for the Restoration of Port Tobacco, which has already
reconstructed the 1800s courthouse and restored one of the three
remaining 1700s houses. More reconstructions are planned, as are
interpretive displays and trails.
The field session at Port Tobacco will include the excavation of
units near the Port Tobacco town square. Here we have intact deposits
from a residence, a store, and a hotel. We will also explore areas
that produced concentrations of prehistoric artifacts, and attempt
to locate and study all deposits relating to the historic jailhouse.
For more information on the Port Tobacco Archaeological Project,
visit our blog at http://porttobacco.blogspot.com.
For more on the restoration efforts at Port Tobacco, visit the Society
for the Restoration of Port Tobacco’s website at http://restoreporttobacco.org.