Research & Sponsored Programs Report ResearchAnnual201819-electronic | Page 14

Gulf Power project allows UWF archaeologists to uncover remains of colonial Pensacola While Gulf Power crews work to upgrade down- town Pensacola’s power grid, University of West Florida archaeologists are uncovering evidence of the city’s colonial past. UWF archaeologists have been able to uncover finds from Pensacola’s First Spanish, British, Second Spanish, and American periods along Jefferson and Zaragoza streets. Stains in the ground reveal the locations of former building foundations and trash pits dating to Pensacola’s First Spanish (circa 1740-1763 A.D.), British (1763-1781) and Second Spanish (1781-1821) occupations. “(Gulf Power) has been flexible with us,” said April Holmes, staff archaeologist with the Archaeology Institute. “They are giving us the time to document all the intact deposits and co- lonial features before they do their work.” UWF researchers have been working in concert with Gulf Power since May 2018 as the utility re- places aging power lines as part of a five-year, $83 million project to modernize the 70-year old power network. Some of the remains uncovered include a series of barrel wells that date to First Spanish, British, Second Spanish, and American periods. The wells were constructed by hand excavating a large pit down to the water table (about 7 feet down in this part of Pensacola), and then placing an upright barrel that has had its ends removed into the water. A second barrel may be stacked on top of the first, and then the whole construc- tion pit is backfilled, leaving an open shaft to the water inside the stacked barrels. Archaeologists can discern and record the disturbed sediments in the construction pit, the remains of the barrels and the fill inside the well. “Once they get the pavement up, we hand exca- vate it right away,” said Dr. Elizabeth Benchley, director of the Archaeology Institute at UWF. “And then (Gulf Power) brings in their machines, and we watch and record what they come up with that might be different from what we documented.” Datable artifacts, such as broken sherds of pot- tery bowls and plates, can be used to estimate when the well was dug and when it was aban- doned. After the well is no longer used, it is often filled with trash including animal bones, broken bottles and dishes, nails and other debris. In two cases on the Gulf Power project, UWF archae- ologists have recovered intact barrels preserved below the water table. One barrel dated to the Top: April A. Holmes, M.A., RPA Faculty Research Associate/Archaeologist, examines artifacts discovered during the excavation. Above: Grad student Hillary Jolly talks with Holmes at an excavation site in downtown Pensacola. 14 2018-2019 Research Annual Report