It was an ordinary day. Reading about the excavations that have been taking place at the 1719 Hans Herr Mennonite meeting house in Willow Street. The house, which I have visited many times and have written about in the past, is the oldest original Mennonite meeting house still standing in the Western Hemisphere. I have enjoyed walking through the house, but often wondered what might be hidden in the ground below the lower level of the house or the land that surrounds the house. The soil of the farm, which has been plowed over and over for 300 years, more than likely holds the records of centuries of life during the early years when the Herr family lived on the property near Willow Street, Pennsylvania.
The Han Herr House |
In the fall of 2020 and 2021, a group of students from my alma mater, Millersville State Teacher's College, now known as Millersville University, have been part of an archaeology program which is searching the grounds around the Hans Herr House, gathering real-life information on excavations which are about 3-by-3 foot and 5-by-5 foot test units on the five-acre Hans Herr farm. So far they have unearthed 40,000 historical artifacts which recently was part of a presentation at Mennonite Life - the historical organization which operates the 1719 Museum as well as an archive and library on Millstream Road in Lancaster. So far the students have moved about 4,500 tons of earth. Every bit of dirt is hand-dug, hand-screened and excavated stratigraphically which is layer by layer. The reason for the historical dig is to get a sense of the material that was used and still survives through the centuries. The students are hoping to discover the remnants of the original settler's cabin which predates the historic sandstone house that is still there. They are beginning to think that the original building might have been destroyed and one of the outbuildings was built over top of it. Many of the artifacts they have discovered are a cross-section of material from the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries. Some projectile points are estimated to be from as far back as 5,000 years ago. Tiffany Fisk, the administrator at the 1719 Museum, says she was impressed by the Millersville students and what they have found during the past few years. The students discovered what may have been an area that was used as a quarry when the stone house was being built. The training that the students are receiving is tremendous and will only help them in the future. She is thrilled when the students discovered chisel marks on a layer of sandstone which could have shown that there might have been a quarry at one time. Millersville thanks the 1719 Museum for the tremendous opportunity that they have given to the students from Millersville. They are able to learn so much more through real-life experiences than they could through a simulated experience. What follows are some of the pieces that the Millersville students have found during their hand digging and screening at the 1719 Hans Herr House. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
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