May 2008 Triangular Bit Smoking Pipe By: Edward Chaney,
MAC Lab Deputy Director
In
1999, Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum archaeologists conducted
a Phase I shovel test pit survey around a small tidal inlet known
as Goose Creek, located aboard the Naval Air Station Patuxent River
in St. Mary’s County. A number of prehistoric and historic sites
were discovered during this survey. One of the sites, 18ST727, appears
to have been a seasonally-occupied Late Woodland period camp. Artifacts
found at the site were typical of the period, and included 13 Townsend
Series pottery sherds and a triangular Potomac projectile point
(Sperling 2000). However, there was one unusual find there: a triangular
bit tobacco pipe fragment.

The pipe is 5.69 cm (2.24 in.) long, although much of the bowl is missing.
The bit (mouth end) is 2.3 cm (0.9 in.) wide and 0.66 cm (0.26 in.)
high at its thickest point, and has a round bore that is approximately
0.4 cm (0.16 in.) in diameter. This bore hole was probably made
with a small stick or reed. The bit was carefully crafted and flared,
and appears as an elongated diamond in cross section. Although the
bowl is largely missing, similar pipes generally have bowls that
extend at an obtuse angle to the
stem. Sometimes the angle is very slight, which may have been the
case with the Goose Creek pipe.
The pipe is made of untempered red clay, is burnished, and is decorated
with a series of dentate-impressed geometric designs at the bowl
end. These designs, consisting of at least two-and-a-half diamonds,
occur on both the top and bottom surfaces of the pipestem. The diamond
patterns are carefully positioned along the centerlines of the pipe,
and wrap around the stem, where they meet the ends of the diamond
decorations from the opposite side. This type of decoration was
in use by at least the thirteenth century AD in Virginia (Potter
1993:226).
Triangular bit pipes are seldom found in lower Southern Maryland, and seem
to be generally rare throughout the Middle Atlantic region. However,
specimens have been found at sites like Potomac Creek (44ST2) in
Virginia and Accokeek Creek (18PR8) in Maryland (Schmitt 1965; Stephenson
and Ferguson 1963; Stewart 1992), as well as elsewhere. All known
examples of triangular bit pipes have been recovered from Late Woodland
components. The care with which they were crafted makes them some
of the finest examples of the Indian pipemaker’s art in the Chesapeake region.
Pipe from 44St2, similar to the Goose Creek
example. Reproduced from Stewart 1992.
All images courtesy Naval District Washington, Naval Air Station Patuxent
River, unless otherwise noted.
References
Potter, Stephen R.
1993 Commoners, Tribute, and Chiefs: The Development of Algonquian
Culture in the Potomac Valley. University Press of Virginia,
Charlottesville.
Schmitt, Karl Jr.
1965 Patawomeke: An Historic Algonkian Site. Archaeological Society
of Virginia Quarterly Bulletin 20(1):1-36.
Sperling, Christopher
2000 A Phase I Archaeological Survey of Goose Creek Aboard Naval
Air Station Patuxent River. Prepared by the Maryland Archaeological
Conservation Laboratory. Submitted to the Natural and Cultural Resources
Branch, Department of Public Works, Naval Air Station
Patuxent River.
Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum Occasional Papers #11. St. Leonard,
Maryland.
Stephenson, Robert L. and Alice L. L. Ferguson
1963 The Accokeek Creek Site: A Middle Atlantic Seaboard Culture
Sequence. Anthropological Papers Museum of Anthropology, University
of Michigan #20. Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Stewart, T. Dale
1992 Archaeological Exploration of Patawomeke: The Indian Town Site
(44ST2) Ancestral to the one (44ST1) visited in 1608 by Captain
John Smith. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology #36. Smithsonian
Institution Press, Washington, D.C.
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