Patuxent
Point
Just
next door, and possibly even on the same 100 acre parcel since
the reconstructed survey lines are not exact, is the Patuxent
Point site. Patuxent Point is a plantation that was occupied from
about 1658 to the 1690s, and though the inhabitants are for the
most part unknown, the initial builder was likely John Obder who
owned the property and lived in Calvert County from 1658 to c.
1662, when he moved to the Eastern Shore of Maryland (King
and Ubelaker 1996:21). Tenants probably occupied the site
thereafter (http://www.chesapeakearchaeology.org/Site
Summaries/PatuxentPointSummary.htm).
One structure
is evident at the site; a large, 20’ by 38’ four-bay
structure with the fourth bay acting as half chimney/hearth, half
closet (Gibb 1994:222; King 1996:25).
This structure had two rooms, indicating a hall and parlor layout
as opposed to the one-room theme in the Compton buildings. There
is also an addition which may have acted as a shed or porch (Gibb
1994:224). Postholes indicate initial sidewall construction
followed by repairs as posts rotted (King
1996:24).
There
may also have been a second, more ephemeral framed structure at
the site with ground-laid sills, but evidence of the sills did
not survive plowing if that is the case. Only a possible cellar,
evidence of a collapsed wattle and daub chimney, and four possible
chimney postholes survive (Gibb 1994:227).
This alleged building forces us to ponder the possibility that
numerous ephemeral structures have disappeared from the sub-plowzone
landscape and are not recognized, though they may have been as
much a part of rural plantation complexes as their post-in-ground
cousins.

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