18ST329 &18ST330 
                    Fly/ St. Inigoes Manor House 
                    c. 1680 - 1750  
                    
           
        Site History 
                 Sites 18ST329 (Fly) and 18ST330 (St. Inigoes 
                  Manor House) are located aboard the Naval Air Station Patuxent 
                  River’s Webster Field Annex in St. Inigoes, Maryland. 
                  In 1637, Jesuit missionaries purchased the land where the sites 
                  are located and established a settlement there. These Jesuits 
                  were among the original investors in the Maryland colonial enterprise. 
                  The settlement at St. Inigoes was a working farm where inhabitants 
                  raised tobacco and other crops to support the Jesuit mission. 
                 The earliest center of activity for the Jesuit 
                  plantation is most likely represented by a site that neighbors 
                  18ST329 and 18ST330, Old Chapel Field (18ST233). The Fly/St. 
                  Inigoes Manor House site seems to have been the center of domestic 
                  activity on the settlement from c. 1680-1750, but a few early 
                  artifacts indicate that it also may have served a non-domestic 
                  function associated with the nearby mid-17th century occupation. 
                Archaeology  
                   
                  A series of studies of Webster Field have been conducted by 
                  the Southern Maryland Regional Center. The sites were identified 
                  by a 1981 field school, and further phase I testing took place 
                  in 1984 and 1996. When identified, 18ST329 and 18ST330 were 
                  designated separately based upon their location on either side 
                  of a modern road. Later projects proved that both sites had 
                  a historic component relating to the early 18th-century St. 
                  Inigoes Manor House, so the division was unnecessary.  
                 Phase II testing of 18ST329/18ST330 and 18ST233 
                  was undertaken in 2000. This project concentrated on features 
                  found during the 1984 survey. One of the features was a brick 
                  floor that, when exposed, proved to cover a 10 x 10 ft. area. 
                  The bricks appeared to have been lain inside an existing timber 
                  framed structure because at the corners they were placed to 
                  border posts. 
                The excavation of the brick floor exposed an 
                  older cellar beneath it which had several intact architectural 
                  elements such as a wooden sleeper for floor joists, intact studs, 
                  and large limestone pavers that ran parallel to the sleeper. 
                  The cellar was presumably dug in the late 17th or very early 
                  18th century. The cellar fill included soils that had apparently 
                  eroded into the area, covering the limestone pavers. Later rubble 
                  from the collapse of a wall and a fireplace added to the fill. 
                  The brick floor was then placed atop the old cellar. The function 
                  of this structure is unknown, but it is clear that it was adapted 
                  and reused over time. 
        For more information: 
         
                Galke, Laura J., and Alyssa L. Loney 
                  2000   Phase I Archaeological Investigations Aboard 
                  Webster Field Annex NAS PAX, St. Mary’s County, 
                             Maryland. 
                  Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum Occasional Papers No. 8. 
                Pogue, Dennis J., and Karlene B. Leeper 
                  1984   Archaeological Investigations at the “Old 
                  Chapel Field” St. Inigoes, Maryland. Maryland Historical 
                  Trust  
                             
                  Manuscript Series No. 38.  
                Sperling, Christopher I., and Laura J. Galke 
                  2001   Phase II Archaeological Investigations of 18ST233 
                  and 18ST329 Aboard Webster Field Annex Naval Air  
                             
                  Station, Patuxent River, St. Mary’s County, Maryland. 
                  Draft report on file at the Maryland Archaeological  
                             
                  Conservation Laboratory. 
                 
                The 18ST329 and 18ST330 archaeological collections 
                  are owned by the Naval District Washington, Naval Air Station 
                  Patuxent River’s Webster Field Annex and curated by the 
                  Maryland Archaeological Conservation Laboratory. 
                 |