Continental army barracks burned by British discovered in Colonial Williamsburg
STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE
Archeologists in Colonial Williamsburg, Va., are exploring the remains of a continental army barracks burned by the British during the Revolutionary War.
The researchers have unearthed bricks and artifacts, including parts of weapons, ceramics, a belt buckle and a glass button. They also found lead musket balls riddled with teeth marks left by bored soldiers who, unaware of its laundry list of health risks, would chew on the sweet-tasting lead.
Eighteenth-century maps of the 1.2-1.6-hectare site and other historical documents have long suggested that military housing existed near what is now a visitor centre. It wasn’t until they began excavating last year, however, that researchers found bricks from the buildings’ chimneys.
Built in the midst of the 1775-1783 war for American independence, the barracks could house up to 2,000 soldiers and 100 horses. But they didn’t last.
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