skip to main content
return to Gazette front page about the Gazette publication schedule links complete contents search the Gazette; browse back issues
more stories news briefs faculty and staff news photos
Bus tour introduces new faculty to Tar Heel state

State budget includes highest raise in years

UNC taking steps to replace aging computer systems

University, town first to pair on carbon reduction

   

CONTACT THE GAZETTE:
(919) 962-7124
FAX (919) 962-2279
gazette@unc.edu

The Gazette staff is always looking for ideas for
interesting feature stories.
Do you have one to share?

University Gazette

Artifacts suggest that the South Carolina site that archaeology students and faculty from the University have been excavating was indeed the home of UNC founder William R. Davie, but contradict the local lore that Union troops burned the house in 1865.

Davie dig

DIGGING DAVIE UNC Professor Steve Davis, right, and undergraduate student Jiwoo Son examine artifacts while at the Davie site.

The excavation uncovered parts of the foundation, which the researchers used to determine the dimensions of the house.

“It was 40 feet wide, and from chimney to chimney, about 45 feet long. For the early 1800s, that’s a pretty big house,” said R.P. Stephen Davis, associate director of the University’s Research Labs of Archaeology and an adjunct professor of anthropology.

“Those house dimensions, in combination with the artifacts that we found there — some very expensive table wares, for instance — lead us to confidently assert that it is William R. Davie’s home,” said Brett Riggs, staff archaeologist in the Research Labs of Archaeology.

Remnants of tablewares found at the site include Chinese export porcelain and English porcelain with painted decorations.

But the researchers and their undergraduate collaborators did not find the key evidence that would suggest a fire.

“We would expect masses of charcoal and burned window glass, and we just didn’t encounter that,” Riggs said. “It’s possible that such evidence was obliterated, but we really doubt it.”

The house, known as Tivoli, may have been abandoned a few years after Davie died, his daughters married and his youngest son built his own house nearby.

“We didn’t find any evidence to suggest that the house was occupied later than about 1830,” Davis said. “We know from Davie’s will that the property, including the house, went to his youngest son, Frederick William. By 1828, he had built his own house several miles away from Davie’s house.”

None of the materials found around the house postdate Davie’s death.

“I imagine the family was loathe to have someone who was not family living in the house,” Riggs said.

Other interesting finds — both at the site of Davie’s house and of the slave quarters — were full of fragments of Catawba Indian ceramics.

“We anticipated some Catawba ceramics, because the Catawbas were engaged in commercial trade of these wares. But we didn’t expect it would be on such a scale,” Riggs said.

“Because this site is so close to the Catawbas’ home town — it’s only eight miles away — I think that we can infer that we’re seeing direct contact in which Catawba potters were coming to Tivoli and selling their wares,” Riggs said.

Davie was associated with the Catawbas during the American Revolution, when Catawba Nation warriors were enlisted as soldiers in the American army and periodically came under Davie’s command, he said.

“So he knew all these people, and he knew them quite well,” Riggs said.

The team conducted the excavation as part of the Research Labs’ and anthropology department’s summer field school, which teaches and trains undergraduate students in archaeological methods.

The initiative is one of many at Carolina that provide hands-on research opportunities to undergraduate students.

Two years ago, student and faculty researchers homed in on this site from a list of five possible candidates, using a letter from Davie and other historical documents.

The Tivoli site is on property that is managed and protected by the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources.

The researchers will clean and catalog artifacts and write the final research report over the next year or so.

After the report is complete, all artifacts will be transferred to the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology at the University of South Carolina.

The excavation effort received support from the UNC Summer School, from Duke Energy through a grant to the Catawba Valley Land Trust, and from Winthrop University.

The discovery coincided with the 250th anniversary of Davie’s birth on June 22, 1756.

An exhibit honoring the “father” of UNC was one of several University events commemorating his birth.

Nearly 50 artifacts, books, images and documents relating to Davie were on display through June 30 in the North Carolina Collection at Wilson Library.

The excavation, which is among the annual field studies for students, is also part of the University’s official observance.


Return to Top