Get Local Alerts on Your Mobile Device

Text "LOCAL" to 98999 to get breaking news, traffic and weather alerts.

Page 2 of 2   <      

Dig Casts New Light On Indian Culture

Students Rebecca Dolan, left, Will Foster, Ashley Atkins, Ben Leatherwood, James Krigsvold and Ethan Brown sort artifacts, including nails, shown below, from a site by the York River that has sparked new insight into the culture of Indian tribes in Virginia's Tidewater region.
Students Rebecca Dolan, left, Will Foster, Ashley Atkins, Ben Leatherwood, James Krigsvold and Ethan Brown sort artifacts, including nails, shown below, from a site by the York River that has sparked new insight into the culture of Indian tribes in Virginia's Tidewater region. (Photos By Bill O'leary -- The Washington Post)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

The archaeologists began analyzing the artifacts they were finding.

Near the river, they found cooking pots and vessels of every size and shape. But on the other side of the ditches, they found serving vessels and smaller bowls of the type used only by chiefs for feasts, where each guest was given a separate bowl. They found ceramics that had originated throughout the Southeast, perhaps brought to chiefs as tribute or as gifts by visiting delegations.

They found postholes of the largest Indian house of this era found in the state, more than 70 feet long and 22 feet wide. The house sits about 600 paces from the river, exactly where Smith described Powhatan's house. And they found copper, prized by the Indians and hoarded by Powhatan, the chemical composition of which matches copper scraps from Jamestown.

All the evidence pointed to the ditches as monuments. "The landscape was intentionally structured to reflect the power of the place," Gallivan said, "and the importance of the people residing at that place."

Now, they're thinking that Powhatan, who was born farther inland and inherited only a handful of tribes, most likely chose to make Werowocomoco his capital once he consolidated power over 30 tribes and became paramount chief.

"This shows that Powhatan was a remarkable politician," said Randy Turner, an archaeologist with the Virginia Department of Historic Resources and a member of the research group. "He was viewed as a godlike individual. And if our hypothesis is correct, he was using the sacred nature of this place to further validate his status not only as a political and military leader, but a spiritual and religious one."

The discoveries of an ancient and complex Indian past at Werowocomoco are shedding new light on the events of 1607 and beyond. By 1609, after six increasingly tense visits by the English -- once when they tried to crown Powhatan a vassal of King James and the last when Smith wanted to kidnap him and steal his food -- Powhatan left Werowocomoco forever.

"That says something quite profound about the effect that the English were having on the native people," said David Silverman, a historian at George Washington University. "Now that we're finding that Werowocomoco had been the center of Powhatan Indian life for a very long time, it could not have been a lighthearted decision."

Although archaeologists and historians have known for decades the likely location of Powhatan's capital, it remained officially "lost."

But for many years, historians and archaeologists had their eyes trained on colonial America onward. What few "prehistoric" Indian sites were excavated were largely found by accident, before a golf course or a bridge was about to be built.

"Werowocomoco was not a priority," Brown said. "Nor did it become one until 2001 with the right landowner, some pretty lucky archaeology and, quite honestly, the right political moment. We could have done an excavation like this 20 years ago, but it wouldn't have been as important as it is now."

The right political moment is the commemoration of Jamestown's 400th anniversary. And the right landowners are Bob and Lynn Ripley, who fell in love with the riverfront property and bought it in 1996. Lynn Ripley got into the habit of walking the land with her dogs every day. Almost immediately, she began picking up things that edged their way out of the dirt -- broken glass, crockery, old medicine bottles.

One day she saw a tiny, thin-lipped bottle with a crosshatched design. "I just knew it was Indian," Ripley said. She began to look more closely on her walks and started to find arrowheads, pipe stems, pottery. Her cache of native artifacts soon outgrew the shoebox lids where she kept them. So she bought two gun safes and began arranging the pieces in glass cases.

In 2001, Brown and his partner, Thane Harpole, were visiting potential archaeological sites and paid a call to the Ripleys. When Brown and Harpole saw Ripley's collection, they knew they were onto something big. Together with the College of William and Mary and the state's Department of Historic Resources, they created the research group and met with tribal leaders from the eight state-recognized tribes to create an advisory council, the first of its kind in Virginia.

Now, every summer, Ripley goes out to dig with the archaeologists. She no longer picks up artifacts, only sticks little flags in the ground so the archaeologists can analyze the finds in context. And Bob Ripley, a former commonwealth's attorney, no longer plants corn in the excavation area. When the Ripleys decided to build an addition onto the house, they refused to put in a basement, so as not to disturb the subsoil. They are in the process of ensuring that, after their deaths, their property will be run by a private foundation, with Virginia Indians on the board, to continue researching and educating the public.

"We want to keep it a sacred site," Bob Ripley said. "Because that's what it is."

That's something Stephen R. Atkins, chief of the Chickahominy tribe, and Ann "Little Fawn" Richardson, chief of the Rappahannock, said they felt in their bones when they walked the site. "It was pouring rain and very windy, and I felt led to this certain place. When I got there, I smelled smoke. There were no fires burning that day," Richardson said. "It was an incredible spiritual experience."

For Atkins, it is fitting that the secrets of Werowocomoco are coming to light with the attention centered on Jamestown. "The primary driver around the work at Jamestown has been to teach people about the invaders," he said. "But one can't look at Werowocomoco now without acknowledging that these were a civilized people. These were not savages.

"It's time for Werowocomoco to take its rightful place in history."


<       2


More in the Metro Section

Local Blog Directory

Find a Local Blog

Plug into the region's blogs, by location or area of interest.

Virginia Politics

Blog: Va. Politics

Here's a place to help you keep up with Virginia's overcaffeinated political culture.

D.C. Taxi Fares

D.C. Taxi Fares

Compare estimated zoned and metered D.C. taxi fares with this interactive calculator.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2007 The Washington Post Company