Colonial Sites
Passengers,
who did have a successful voyage to America, settled
along the Delmarva Peninsula. Their colonial home sites
now provide evidence of what life was like in those early
years. By examining these sites we can gain a better
appreciation of the struggles and hardships that our
forefathers faced, as well as our technological
advances.
By the early seventeenth century
as many as half a million Native Americans lived along the
Eastern Seaboard. For the first European settlers, they were a
source of invaluable information and also a threat. The first
English colony in the Americas, founded on Roanoke Island off
the coast of North Carolina shore in 1585, was abandoned,
resettled two years later, and mysteriously deserted again. In
1602, 18 years before the Pilgrims landed on Cape Cod, the
first English attempt to colonize the area we now call New
England failed.
In time, of
course, the Atlantic Coast was colonized, followed by the
slow settlement of the continent's interior. The Delmarva
Coast had many colonial home sites due to the great ports
that had sprung up along the Delaware and Chesapeake
Bays. As they became established, the colonist developed
ways of life that owed much to their European Heritage
and just as much to their challenges and possibilities
that they found in North America.
Archaeology
is an important part of our lives. Archaeological digs
help us to better understand our past. By understanding
we can better cope with the present and by teaching about
the past, we can open doors to the future. Dig sites as
well as shipwrecks are like time capsules. They are
sealed hundreds of years ago with those artifacts frozen
in a moment of time. They represent a cross section of a
different culture at a different time in history. When
excavated they reveal their secrets and stories that
their artifacts have been waiting to
tell.

Colonial Dig
Sites

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