Robert Hunter and Hank D. Lutton The jug was found in 1989 during archaeological excavations of a Civil War encampment in Yorktown, Virginia, prior to the development of a housing complex. Archaeologists from the James River Institute for Archaeology uncovered a roughly rectangular feature filled with dark brown and gray sandy loam that stood out against the surrounding orange clay subsoil (fig. 2). Further excavation revealed a small, semi-subterranean “dugout” dwelling no more than 7.5 feet long and 6 feet wide with a partially intact brick chimney projecting from one end (fig. 3). The feature was interpreted as the remains of a Civil War–era winter hut.1 Among the artifacts recovered in the fill of this feature is an intact one-gallon salt-glazed jug with rouletted decoration and impressed with the word “gin” (fig. 4). The vessel is attributed to one of the potteries in Old Bridge, New Jersey. The potting operations at Old Bridge date as early as 1805, when James Morgan Jr., Jacob van Wickle, Nicholas van Wickle, and Branch Green established a “Manufactory of Stone Ware,” which continued under various owners to at least 1823 and possibly as late as 1827. The stoneware is distinguished by fish and berry coggle wheel ornamentation, the decoration seen on the excavated example.2 For comparison, a similar antique jug, without any history and from the same New Jersey pottery, is shown in figures 5 and 6. The historical record of Civil War activity in Yorktown suggests that the hut was built and occupied by Confederate forces during the winter of 1861–1862 and subsequently occupied and/or backfilled by newly arrived Union troops in May 1862. The Union troops occupied Yorktown through July 1864. Which troop might have owned the jug is unclear in the archaeological record, but the best inference suggests a Union origin. It is tempting to speculate as to the contents of either jug in the military context. Did the New Jersey jug actually contain a winter’s ration of gin, or did it merely hold cooking oil? Perhaps future residue analysis can provide additional fodder for both military and ceramic historians to ponder. For now, the simple artifact provides confirmation of the relative long-term use of an everyday object—in contrast to the disposable orientation of twenty-first-century America. Robert Hunter, Editor, Ceramics in America; somerwell@aol.com |