Jackson Homestead (18MO609)
Jackson Homestead is the 19th-early 20th-century residence of
an African American family in Montgomery County, Maryland. The
site is located within the boundaries of a tract called “Prospect
of Peace” purchased by Zacharias Downs (b. ca.1750-d.1831) in 1801.
By the time he wrote his will in 1825, Downs listed 10 slaves among
his household: five adults and five children. Among them was
Malinda Adams Jackson, whose family occupied site 18MO609.
Malinda Adams Jackson was born into slavery in December 1825.
Her mother, Rachel, was willed to Zacharia Downs’ daughter
Ann Magruder Downs along with 100 acres of land in 1831.
Presumably, Malinda stayed with her mother, because she
and Rachel are both listed as part of Ann Magruder Downs’
household in the 1850 census. By that time Malinda had her
first son, John Adams. In the 1850s, Malinda married Thomas
Jackson, a laborer on a neighboring plantation, but the
couple apparently continued to live apart as was common for
married slaves of different owners. The Jacksons had at least
five children together between 1855 and 1865: George, Milburn,
Thomas E., Emma, and Mary E., all of whom lived with Malinda
as part of Ann Downs’ household.
The Civil War and the end of slavery do not seem to have parted
the Jacksons from Ann Downs’ household, but the dynamic was
certainly altered. In 1869, Malinda Jackson purchased 8.75 acres
of the Prospect of Peace tract from Ann and became a landowner
herself. When Malinda died between 1870 and 1879, her son John
Adams became the head of household, possibly after an absence
in which he served as a Baltimore mariner. John then lived at
the house along with his wife, children, and unmarried half
siblings.
The property was occupied by different descendants of Malinda
Adams Jackson throughout the following decades as some of her
children married and raised families there, some family members
moved away for good, and others came and went depending on
their circumstances. The Jacksons also hosted farm laborers
as boarders. In 1910, seven family members and two boarders
lived at the site. Catastrophic fire marked the end of occupation
at Jackson Homestead ca. 1915. By the time Malinda’s daughter
Mary E. Jackson sold the property in 1916, no one was living
there, and no one was listed as occupying the site from that
point on.
Jackson Homestead was identified during a 2004 Phase I survey
prompted by plans for construction of the Intercounty Connector
(ICC) between I-270 in Montgomery County and U.S. Route 1 in
Prince George’s County. Phase II and III excavations followed
in 2008. The site was surveyed with ground-penetrating radar,
followed by hand-excavation of test units. The yard and house
exterior were sampled by the excavation of 35 units and 36
shovel tests. Three structures were identified at the site:
Structure A, the main family house; Structure B, a possible
dwelling or storage building with an associated cellar; and
Structure C, a pier-set dwelling less substantial than the
main house.
Archaeological and historical evidence indicates that Structure
A was constructed for Zacharias Downs’ slaves in the first
quarter of the 19th century as a 10’ x 13’ single-pen 1.5 story
log quarter with a fieldstone foundation and chimney. At some
point after Malinda Jackson bought the property in 1869, but
before 1890, a balloon-frame two story addition measuring 13’
x 20’ was constructed, again on a fieldstone foundation. This
house burned ca. 1915, presumably while people still lived there,
so clothing, furniture, and household objects were deposited
in the archaeological record in such a way as to make it possible
for archaeologists to make conjectural drawings of the internal
arrangement of the house’s contents. Additionally, artifact
caches interpreted as spiritual or religious in origin were
identified in the chimney and around the foundation. This
structure was fully excavated with 100% collection and over
160,000 artifacts were recovered at the site.
Evidence for Structure B was limited to a cellar feature. No
heat source was identified, so it could have been some kind
of storage area or secondary dwelling. No determination could
be made based on the archaeology. Structure C was located by
the identification of stone piers in situ and the presence of
domestic trash and stove parts point to its use as a dwelling.
It is possible that structures B and C housed the boarders
who stayed with the family.
(Edited from
summary written by Sara Rivers Cofield)
References
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Furgerson, Kathleen M., Varna Boyd, Carey O'Reilly, Tracy Formica, and Anthony Randolph
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2011.
Phase II and III Archaeological Investigations of the Fairland Branch Site and the Jackson Homestead (18MO609). Intercounty Connector Project, Montgomery County, Maryland.
3 vols. SHA Archeological Report No. 426.