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Smith Site

Site History
The Smith site was the c. 1660s-1690s home of Richard
Smith Sr., the first Attorney General of Maryland. Smith owned a sizable
parcel of land at the fork of the Patuxent River and St. Leonard Creek.
His son inherited the property in 1689, but Richard Smith Jr. apparently
chose to build a new plantation hub at King’s Reach rather than
update the buildings his father had erected. The Smith site was abandoned
for the most part in the 1690s, though the family cemetery there may have
been used into the 18th century.
The site reverted to farmland until 1932 when Jefferson
Patterson purchased the property and built a large farm complex directly
over Smith’s former plantation center. Patterson’s farm buildings
were then adapted for reuse as part of Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum
in the 1990s.
Archaeology
Archaeological
investigations at the Smith site have consisted primarily of testing by
Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum archaeologists to assess the impact
of construction activities related to the rehabilitation of the 1930s
farm center. An 18th century map that was discovered in a court case alerted
archaeologists to the possibility that a cemetery was located in the path
of construction. In 1991, a backhoe was used to trench through thick fill
and map the Smith family cemetery, though the burials were not excavated.
Shovel tests, trenches, and test units were also placed in other areas
of the site in advance of building renovation. These excavations identified
paling ditches, post holes/molds, a 17th-century pit feature, and an artifact
concentration that most likely indicates the approximate location of Smith’s
dwelling.
For more information:
Michaud, Cassandra. 2000. Sites & Insights:
Archaeological Discoveries at the Jefferson Patterson Park &
Museum. Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum Studies In Archaeology
No. 2.
The Smith Site archaeological collection is owned by the
Maryland Historical Trust and curated at the Maryland Archaeological
Conservation Laboratory.
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