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Privy to piece of history
7 April 2006
By JACK KNARR,
Staff Writer
TRENTON -- There
were always rumors at the State House that a mysterious building
had once stood out front in the late 1700s.
So when new
construction plans were drawn up recently to rip up the sidewalks
of West State Street and tighten security-- a project costing about
$870,000 -- state historians figured this might be a good time to
dig deeper. And solve the mystery.
First, they
looked up old legislative bills and maps of the State House to learn
some basics.
And they found
that in 1795, five years after Trenton was named state capital,
the Legislature had acted to relocate the state’s vital records
to Trenton, and approved spending 600 pounds to build offices for
the Secretary of State and the Supreme Court clerk, and "for
the preservation of the public records of the state ..."
Using an early
19th century map of Trenton, and the site description in the legislative
bill, archaeologists from Hunter Research, Inc., began digging.
(The Trenton firm was low bidder on the project.) They figured they
might find remnants of the mysterious 1796 archives building.
"We’re
using the archives in the archives to help us find the physical
archives in the ground that once held the archives that are now
in the archives," said the twisted-tongued Ian C. Burrow, vice
president and principal archaeologist of Hunter.
Yesterday, the
findings were revealed. The digs outside the State House brought
ancient underground stone walls into sunlight for the first time
in about 160 years.
For a moment,
Secretary of State Nina Mitchell Wells, looked back into history.
"This is
the foundation of the original archives building and the office
of my predecessor, John Beatty," said Wells. "How amazing
is that?"
Her office overlooks
the West State Street site next to the foundation of the current
State House.
"As I look
out, I see a very significant place in the history of my office
and of this state," she said. "For 10 years, my distinguished
predecessor preserved and protected New Jersey’s precious
colonial and early state archives right over there."
The state’s
most rare, most precious documents were housed there in the "secure,
fireproof" building.
They included
the state’s 1787 Ratification of the U.S. Constitution, the
state’s manuscript copy of the 1789 U.S. Bill of Rights, the
1776 State Constitution, the original state Great Seal, and 112
years of colonial land records, enrolled laws, military and court
records.
But there were
no "treasure" findings -- no coins or silver spoons, for
example. No gold bricks that might have been, uh,accidentally left
behind when the building was abandoned and demolished some 50 years
later.
There was one
significant find, however: Diggers unearthed a giant circular brick
privy that had been used by legislators of the day, aside the front
steps.
Ian Burrow called
the dig an "astonishing find."
"This is
a real testimony to the importance that New Jersey places on its
history," he said. "... Here, just in front of you, is
an immediate example that you can see and you can touch.
"I’m
glad to say that although we have actually found a privy, we can’t
actually smell the history as well."
Burrow said
when the building was demolished many years later, workers had apparently
filled in the deep hole with clean ground.
Sen. Leonard
Lance (R-Hunterdon) greeted reporters with high humor.
"People
think perhaps this excavation was done because of the safety concerns
at the State House," he deadpanned.
"That’s
inaccurate. I was digging for gold -- to balance the state budget.
It was unsuccessful in that regard."
Ian Burrow spoke
of Trenton’s colonial history being preserved underground.
"This is
nothing short of astonishing," he said. "Here we have
essentially a 19-century city -- Trenton Makes, The World Takes."
And despite
all the industrial development and change, he said, "beneath
the ground, and not very far down, either, in many many places we
have found significant archaeological remains of Colonial times."
No further digging
will be done. The giant hole will be sealed carefully.
And in the later
construction at ground level, the "footprint" of this
old structure will be marked for future generations to see.
©2006,
The Trentonian
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