Curator's Choice |
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November 2009 B&O Railroad Plate By: Patricia Samford, In the early nineteenth century, the area several blocks west of Baltimore’s Harbor was a thriving working class neighborhood, filled with row houses of the type still standing in many parts of the city. The uniform street-side appearance of these row houses belied the busy yards behind them. These enclosed yards, used as extensions of home living spaces, were crowded with work yards, privies, henhouses and other small buildings.
A good look at some of these urban back lots was gained in 1980 during
archaeological excavations conducted by Mid-Atlantic Archaeological
Research, Inc. prior to the construction of the Federal Reserve
Bank (18BC27). Excavations revealed a number of wells and privy
pits dating to the first half of the nineteenth century. Abandoned wells and privies often
became handy dumping areas for all manner of household garbage.
One privy, Feature 30, was no exception. In addition to the food
bones, broken medicine bottles, buttons, tobacco pipes, peach pits
and other debris, the feature yielded an artifact relevant to the
history of the city and the state.
The “Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road” pattern was probably first produced by potters
Enoch Wood & Sons in the late 1820s or early 1830s, to commemorate
the laying of the first rails or the actual opening of the railroad
itself (Halsey, 1899; Snyder 1995). The actual pattern was based
on an engraving of the British Hetton Railroad and first published
in The American Traveller Broadside in 1826 (Dunbar 1915). Between
1815 and 1840, many Staffordshire potters appealed specifically
to the American market by producing pottery depicting American landmarks,
such as churches, hotels and resorts, homes, city vistas, and natural
wonders.
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