Maine's Lost Colony
Archeologists uncover an early American settlement that history forgot
- By Myron Beckenstein
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2004, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
While about half of the one-acre Fort St. George site is on state land, a key portion, including the chapel, is not. Brain would like to dig there for traces of George Popham's remains. Neighbors, however, have mixed views about a possible major discovery in their backyard. Worried that the state might seize their property or tourists overrun it, some have refused access.
But Merry Chapin, a teacher at nearby Phippsburg Elementary School, sees things differently. Every summer she brings her class of fifth graders to the site to talk with the diggers and even sift a little dirt. "It makes history much more real for them," she says. "When you can hold Raleigh Gilbert's 400-year-old buttons in your hand, it's a lot about wonder."
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Comments (3)
this helped me out on my report
Posted by bobuel on April 21,2013 | 05:11 PM
I spent my childhood in popham and have spent hundreds of hours in both fort popham & fort Baldwin . I have always wanted to explore the sub levels of the two. I'm looking for sub level blue prints to the forts as all entrance access is blocked with large granit slabs, or filled in.
Posted by Chris barter on December 11,2012 | 04:05 PM
In regards to Bellarmine jugs: I saw a specimen in a museum at Pemaquid, Maine some years back. It had been found in several hundred pieces - and was masterfully reconstructed by the Smithsonian. Ifound one COMPLETELY INTACT in the tidal mud of South Carolina over twenty years ago. It is still in my possesion. I would like for a proper authority to examine it and fill in the details of its history. I would be ammenable to loaning it for display in an historical museum setting - if proper insurance could be arranged.
Posted by Rick Baumann on April 12,2012 | 09:26 PM