Undergraduates
and graduate students from the University of Maryland
excavated outside and inside the Maynard-Burgess House
for three seasons. We proved conclusively that the house
was the work and residence of African Americans. John
Maynard, a free African American, built the house. No
archaeological material excavated was earlier than his
building, which was put there in 1847. In the middle of
Annapolis, on one of the oldest streets in the City, right
opposite City Hall, we had an archaeological treasure.
The archaeology was exclusively the remains of free black
people. This is very rare in any city and not only showed
the details of African American life, but also life of
free people almost twenty years before Emancipation.
African Americans
aspired to and embraced citizenship through the consumption
of goods. In the second half of the 19th century a growing
number of Americans shopped for an ever-increasing volume
of consumer goods, and African Americans embraced the
emergent consumer culture. For people who had themselves
been commodities prior to Emancipation, African Americans
embraced the rights reflected in material goods. Archaeology
reveals that many African Americans assembled model Victorian
interiors that reflected common period styles. Victorian
parlors often had exotic goods evoking other cultures
and times and America's national and industrial might.
The Maynards' home had many typical parlor goods including:
decorative bric-a-brac, as well as chromolithographs,
rugs, and fine parlor furniture.
Typical 19th-century backyards consisted mostly of hard-packed
soil surfaces with small artifact scatters, and the Maynards’
yard is no exception. There is no evidence for distinct
workspaces in the yard, but a variety of tasks such as
laundering and maintenance were common. There was a concentration
of fish scales and smaller bones around the rear door,
which reflects fish cleaning on the rear stoop. A decorative
brick sidewalk fanned out from the back door from the
1850’s until 1874 and a privy sat along the rear
lot line. Perhaps the only universal feature on urban
sites into the 20th century was an outhouse, and one of
these was excavated at the Maynard-Burgess House. The
Maynard-Burgess privy was simply two barrels whose ends
had been removed and then stacked and placed into a hole
in the ground. The household emptied the privy of its
contents periodically, but sometime shortly after 1905
the privy was cleaned out a final time and filled with
household refuse.
Maynard
Burgess House Artifacts
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Naval
uniform button. Looking at census records from
the second half of the 19th century and the
early portion of the 20th century showed that
many of the women in the Maynard and Burgess
families found employment as laundresses. Many
of these women were also recorded as working
at the Naval Academy, which is why a large number
of buttons from naval uniforms were uncovered
in the backyard, where the laundry would have
been done.
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