
Jamestown's last Statehouse, ca. 1663, is located on
the western end of the Preservation Virginia (formerly APVA Preservation Virginia) property. The foundations,
visible above the ground surface, were first excavated
and stabilized in 1903. Excavations in the 1950s by the
National Park Service found that the 17th-century
statehouse complex stood on an early burial ground likely
dating to the first years of James Fort. Excavations
initiated in the summer of 2000 focused on removing
previously excavated soil along the statehouse footing to
determine construction phases.
Enough records of the statehouse building exist to
provide some of its chronology (and, therefore, the date
of the last burials). In 1694 a patent granted the land
and ruins of three houses located between the
"statehouse" and the "country house" to Philip Ludwell.
There is no question as to the location of this patent,
which is a 1.5 acre lot that lies today among the central
part of the massive three-part foundation, just west of
the Preservation Virginia Rediscovery Center (Yeardley House). The eastern
end of this complex served as the "statehouse," and it is
likely that the "country house" on the west served some
governmental function as well. The name "country house"
meant that it belonged to the "country,"
or at least technically was owned by the
Colony.
In 1698 the statehouse at Jamestown burned, and the
capital moved to Williamsburg the following year. It is
likely that the statehouse that burned stood on the Preservation Virginia
foundation. There is no direct record, however, of where
the government meeting building or buildings were at the
time of the fire. It appears that buildings were not
rebuilt on the foundations of the statehouse
foundations, even though the James City County Court
still functioned at Jamestown until 1715. There is a
reference to the removal of bricks from the statehouse
ruins at Jamestown to be used for construction in
Williamsburg. In any case, while the assembly, council,
and court were held at various other Jamestown buildings
at various times, it is clear that Preservation Virginia's
Ludwell Statehouse complex served a public governmental
function.
The next reference of importance to the complex
followed an excavation of the foundations by Col. Samuel
Yonge in 1903. His recollections were recorded in his book,
The Site of Old
"James Towne," published in 1907. In this book he describes what he
found and includes a photo of one of the cellars and a
drawing of the foundation he uncovered. It is important
to note that based on what he found, he formed three conclusions:
the building burned, it was built in three stages from
west to east, and the eastern section could well match
the description of the governmental functions of various
spaces recorded in a document signed by "T.M." in 1694.
While the excavation was crude by modern standards, this
work and his study of erosion and other patents at
Jamestown were remarkably thorough and insightful.
Statehouse Excavations
Preservation Virginia excavations began in summer 2000 to study both
the statehouse foundations and an earlier, unmarked
burial ground located on the extreme western end of the
Preservation Virginia property. A number of test trenches dug at strategic
locations along the foundations provided a chronology
proving that the building was built over time from west
to east, followed by additions to the north and south.
The sequence was clear from inspecting wall junctions,
revealing which wall was an addition to a wall already
standing.
Excavations within the foundations revealed
architectural features such as the arrangements of wooden
floor joists and scaffold holes. Despite years of disturbances--plowing,
the 1903 cement capping of the foundations, and
extensive previous archaeological investigation--test units
within the foundations of "H"-shaped chimney hearths inside
the central foundation revealed evidence of a fire
that destroyed at least the interior of the structure.
This testing also recovered roofing materials, suggesting
that the easternmost building roof was covered with an
interlocking type of ceramic roof shingle known as pan
tile, while the buildings to the west had either flat
tiles or flat slate shingles.
Burial Study

Preservation Virginia's decision to study the unmarked burial ground
lying beneath the statehouse foundations was predicated
on the assumption that systematic recovery and
preservation of a statistically valid sample of
individual burials would make it possible to construct an
early Jamestown population profile, of which there is
little or no other record. Over 70 burials were excavated
from the unmarked 17th-century burial ground in 2000 and
2001, and are currently being studied to learn more about
how the settlers lived and died. Many of the graves were
under the foundations of the Ludwell Statehouse Complex
built in the mid-1600s, so the burial ground is believed
to date between 1607 and 1662. The position of the
burials raises the possibility that some of them died
during the 1609-1610 "Starving Time."
The recovery of these burials will give a good profile
of the early fort population, including gender, ancestry,
general health, disease, cause of death, burial customs,
and perhaps time of death and social/economic conditions
in the fort area at the time of death. Dr. Ashley
McKeown, Preservation Virginia Jamestown Rediscovery forensic
anthropologist, and Dr. Douglas Owsley, forensic
osteologist at the Smithsonian Institution, are analyzing
the skeletal remains. In addition to an examination of
the bones, tests will include carbon and nitrogen stable
isotope analysis and DNA testing.
These data can be compared to other broader studies of
17th-century burials in the Chesapeake region and provide
researchers with the earliest evidence of the
Euro-American population in order to measure change over
time and across the region.