Maryland
Related: About this forumArchaeologists find earliest colonial site in Maryland after nearly 90-year search
Archaeologists find earliest colonial site in Maryland after nearly 90-year search
Historic St. Marys has located the palisade that guarded the states first European settlement in 1634
By Michael E. Ruane
March 22, 2021 at 12:01 a.m. EDT
Maryland archaeologist Travis Parno was at a board game convention in Philadelphia, sitting at a table surrounded by thousands of other enthusiasts when he got a text message.
He was supposed to be on vacation, taking a break from his search for the legendary fort at St. Marys, the first permanent English settlement in Maryland and one of the earliest in what would become the United States.
Back at St. Marys, archaeological geophysicist Tim Horsley had been scanning a site a half-mile from St. Marys River with ground-penetrating radar that could detect the outlines of ancient buildings. ... The text message interrupting Parnos vacation was from Horsley. It said: I think we found it.
On Monday, Historic St. Marys City announced that Parno, director of research for the organization, and Horsley had indeed found the outlines of the palisaded fort that was erected in Southern Maryland by White settlers in 1634.
{snip}
Michael Ruane
Michael E. Ruane is a general assignment reporter who also covers Washington institutions and historical topics. He has been a general assignment reporter at the Philadelphia Bulletin, an urban affairs and state feature writer at the Philadelphia Inquirer, and a Pentagon correspondent at Knight Ridder newspapers. Follow https://twitter.com/michaelruane
TheBlackAdder
(28,981 posts)elleng
(136,689 posts)Will go there, if/when they memorialize it, as it's likely within ? 30-40 miles of my house.
There's lots of history down there, including Civil War 'monuments.' https://www.visitstmarysmd.com/things-to-do/museums-history/civil-war/
Collimator
(1,875 posts). . . about the long ago experience of Irish maids in America.
When the Potato Famine ravaged Ireland resulting in an influx of immigration of young women to this country, many took on work as household domestics in fine houses of one or more stories. This resulted in a quirky little issue surrounding cultural adaptation.
The young Irishwomen mostly came from homes that were simple one room cottages, often with a loft--reached via a ladder--for sleeping. As anyone who has used a ladder knows, whether climbing up or coming down, you face the ladder and grip the side rails for support. However, when it comes to a staircase, one faces in the direction of one's descent or ascent. But the average Irish girl from the country didn't know this because she had never encountered a staircase. Thus, the maids were coming down the stairs backwards as though descending a ladder and had to be taught how to properly walk down from one flight to another.