Site Summary

18PR6 Mount Calvert
By Michael T. Lucas

Site History

Mount Calvert is a multi-component historic and prehistoric site located on the Patuxent River in Eastern Prince George’s County. The Maryland General Assembly established a small settlement at Mount Calvert in 1684. The settlement later served as the first county seat of Prince George’s County under the name of Charles Town from 1696 to 1721. A courthouse, Anglican church, jail, and several stores and ordinaries were established in the town during this time.

The county seat was moved to Upper Marlboro in 1721 and speculation about the future of the town ended shortly thereafter. Mount Calvert was still used as a landing for oceangoing ships traveling up the Patuxent River until the mid-eighteenth century, but without the benefit of the court few people remained in the town after the 1720s.

Mount Calvert was a tobacco plantation owned by the Brown, Burch, Brookes, and Berry families between 1774 and 1864. Hundreds of enslaved African-Americans lived on the plantation during this time. Mount Calvert continued to function as a private farm until the 1990s. Today the property is owned and operated by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission as Mount Calvert Historical and Archaeological Park.

Archaeology

Archaeological testing and excavations completed between 1996 and 2008 have uncovered features and soil deposits dating from several periods including the Archaic (8800-3000 BP), Woodland (3000-400BP), Charles Town (c. 1690-1720), Tobacco Plantation (1780-1864), and Farm (1865-1950). Most archaeological resources are located within 300 feet of the Patuxent River.

Beall’s Gift. A controlled surface collection and excavations in 1997 and 1999 at Beall’s Gift resulted in the identification of two domestic sites. A possible slave quarter site (ca. 1800-1840) was located during a controlled surface collection in 1997. Subsurface testing has not been completed. Excavations during 1997 and 1998 uncovered the remnants of an early eighteenth century domestic site near the Western Branch terrace. A total of 32 5 by 5 foot units were excavated at the colonial site. Artifacts date the site to the first quarter of the eighteenth century. Several features were identified including a hearth, postholes, and a large intact midden. James Moor (1700-1704) or James Stoddart (1704-1713) probably occupied Beall’s Gift. The layout of the site has not been determined.

Terrace Site A. Shovel testing and excavations completed in 1997 and 1998 identified a domestic site near the Patuxent Terrace. Artifacts recovered from the site suggest an occupation between 1700 and 1720. The site was probably used as a dwelling and ordinary while the court met at Charles Town. Block excavations in 1998 identified numerous features including boundary ditches, posts, and a large artifact-filled borrow pit/cellar. The layout of the site has not been determined.

Terrace Site B. An unidentified structure was located through testing and excavation in 1997 and 1998. Very few features were uncovered during the excavations but artifact analyses indicate that the site dates between ca. 1700 and 1715. Few domestic artifacts were recovered from the excavations.

Terrace Site C. Excavations during 2000 and 2007 uncovered a 20-foot wide structure near the confluence of the Patuxent River and the Western Branch. The building contained a large 8 by 12 foot cellar with a hard-packed clay and ash floor, and an entrance on the southwest side. The structure was probably used as a dwelling and ordinary during the first quarter of the eighteenth century.

Tracy’s Ordinary. A controlled surface collection completed in 2006 identified a concentration of pipe stems, bottle glass, and ceramics near the road on the southwest side of Mount Calvert Historical and Archaeological Park. Historical research indicates that this was the former site of Charles Tracy’s ordinary (ca.1695 to 1698). Subsurface testing has not been completed.

For More Information:

Lucas, Michael T.
1999 “att Pig Pointe Upon Mount Colverte” A Phase I Archaeological Survey of Mount Calvert (18PR6). Report submitted to the Maryland Historical Trust, Corwnsville, Maryland.

2008 “Negotiating Public Landscapes: History, Archaeology, and the Material Culture of Colonial Chesapeake Towns, 1680 to 1720”, PhD diss. The University of Maryland.

Lucas, Michael, with contributions by Donald Creveling, Erin Donovan, Michelle Niedzwiadek, Sara Rivers, and Matt Cochran
2001 “att Pig Pointe Upon Mount Colverte” Phase I and Phase II Archaeological Testing of Mount Calvert (18PR6), Volume 2. Report submitted to The Maryland Historical Trust, Crownsville, Maryland.


The Mount Calvert archaeological collection is owned and curated by the Maryland-National Capital Park & Planning Commission, Prince George’s County.


Thank you for visiting our web site. If you have any questions, comments,
or new information to share, please contact us at psamford@mdp.state.md.us.

 


Copyright © 2003 by
Maryland Archaeological Conservation Lab
Updated:  02/28/08