October
2003. PETER POND SOCIETY NEWSLETTER, Number 17
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Hello again. I hope everyone is enjoying a pleasant fall
as the weather around here in mid-October is just starting
to get nippy and the leaves changing color.
Time has come to dwell more on those three sultry days in
August when a fine collection of almost two dozen knowledgeable,
concerned, dedicated people came together to help Peter Pond
Society pursue its classic goal: find the unmarked grave of
Peter Pond.
As you remember, I sent you the flash message on August
22, the third and final day of the search, that we were unsuccessful.
What follows is a little more detailed discussion of those
three days complete with six images culled from two rolls
of slides I took Two Connecticut Post stories are included
here along with the Channel 8-TV story script, video replay
and a list of everyone who worked on the dig.
We worked in a seven-by-seven foot square next to the grave
of Mary Pond, Peters mother, the same area marked out
in a ground penetrating radar scan two years ago that showed
evidence of disturbed earth and two possible unmarked
graves. What we found were three children ranging in size
from 17 inches to three feet long. So the earth had indeed
been disturbed, but not for the reason we hoped.
Apparently infant mortality in colonial days was common
to the extent that putting babies in unmarked graves was not
unusual. But we think we have names for all three. The theories,
as stated in the Post story, is they are: Charlotte Pond,
Peters niece who has a stone next to Mary. The other
could be Jedediah Pond, the last of Marys nine children
(Peter being the first) who died around two months old. The
third could be Joel Hepburn, infant son of Susanna Hepburn
who has a stone on the other side of our square from Mary
Pond.
The atmosphere was expectant if not downright tense through
the three days. The weather was sunny, warm and humid but
thankfully all the work was done in shade next to a tree line
separating the edge of the cemetery from railroad tracks.
Dr. Nick Bellantoni, state archeologist who assembled this
fine crew, was a tireless worker with both shovel and getting
close with a whiskbroom when burials started becoming apparent.
What he found was interesting, and he took some samples back
to a lab for further testing. As he said during one of the
rest breaks: Sometimes weve dug for two days and
found not so much as a chip.
The chip reference was that we found pieces of
worked stone that had been apparently fashioned
by Indians while making arrowheads. This came out in sifting
the dirt dug up from our pit, showing the spot was probably
an Indian encampment once and chips had been part of the earth
used in filling in graves.
But what impressed Nick the most was the first burial on
the apparent 17-inch long body, likely a premature baby, found
around 2 p.m. the first day. It had 20 pins used to hold together
a shroud that had long since decomposed. Only pieces of bone
were left. Nick had never seen so many shroud pins on a body.
None were rusted. He took several back to the lab to determine
if they were pre or post 1820. If made after 1820 then the
burials would not be the three who we named. Im told
that bodies were never buried wearing clothes which could
be sold at good prices ie. youd get $4 for a highboy
but $8 for a great coat.
The next burial also about three feet down and a foot away
revealed only coffin nails arranged about three feet long
with nothing more than part of a skull with some teeth, found
around 3 p.m. the first day. A look at a tooth chart determined
this person was about three years old.
Nick and his crew spent most of the next day cleaning around
and documenting those two burials ie. making sure they were
only children and making a chart or map of their description
and location in the hole we were digging.
Another foot away and six inches further down was the third
grave, about two feet long judging by the outline of the several
coffin nails. But no bones or fragments were found in this
discovery around 10 a.m. of the third day.
Each time we came on a burial, excitement rose until we saw
that each was only a child or infant.
In the end, we left plastic over the first two burials as
a sign of respect and show someone had dug there, for any
similar archeological dig in the future. But plastic was not
put over the third burial since we found no bones there, only
nails. The hole was quickly filled back up. All dirt had been
placed on plastic sheets covering the ground. Grass squares
taken off the top were the last to be put back. So there was
minimal evidence of an excavation when we left the site, sign
of a caring, scientific operation from start to finish.
People ask me if I was disappointed. Well, yes, but not shattered.
The evidence prompting a dig on this spot was not that solid,
but still compelling. So we dug and found it was the wrong
place. People gave me some ideas of where to look for more
information ie. probate records saying how PPs property
was ultimately disbursed and perhaps his grave location as
well. Or try to find an old obituary. Maybe I should have
done this early on, but I thought what I had was pretty good
at the time. Im only an amateur historian. If I ever
try to organize another dig, the evidence will have to be
compelling all over again. Nick has told me to keep in touch.
He expects to file his own report on the project by the end
of the year.
Here are the dig participants, besides Dr. Bellantoni and
me (should also be noted Milford Historian Richard Platt visited
several times during the dig and brought documents helping
in possible identification of the burials; Milford Cemetery
Association President Robert Beard visited after giving kind
permission for the project; and Cemetery Director Ray Scholl
helped in digging, filling and providing extra tools including
a portable generator for better lighting.)
(1) Barbara Kipfer, Essex, archeologist, archeological writer
and lexicographer (one who writes dictionaries and thesauruses);
(2) Kyle Kipfer, her son, senior at Valley Regional High School,
Deep River; (3) Eric Conrad, West Haven, fifth grade teacher
at Calf Pen Meadow Elementary School, Milford, Southern Connecticut
State University graduate student for masters degree
in Science Education participating in dig for his degrees
mentor program; (4) Audrey McClure, North Haven, member of
the Arthur Basto Archeological Society who has worked with
Nick on past digs; (5) Kathryn Etre, Vernon, archeology undergraduate
student at Boston University who had emailed Nick on how she
could help over the summer and was invited to this; (6) Cynthia
Redman, Windsor, member of the Friends of the State Archeologist
(FOSA); (7) Mary Murray, Killingworth, sixth grade teacher
at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School pursuing Science Ed. masters
degree at SCSU and, like Conrad, using this as mentorship
project; (8) Kathleen Richard, Cheshire, fifth grade teacher
at Roger Sherman School, Meriden, also SCSU Science Ed. Masters
degree candidate in mentorship; (9) Ruth Shapleigh-Brown,
Manchester, Connecticut Gravestone Network executive director.
Also: (10) John Spaulding, Manchester, Connecticut Gravestone
Network research clearinghouse coordinator; (11) Peter Bass,
Colchester, FOSA volunteer; (12) Jackie Nadeau, Meriden, University
of Connecticut anthropology major who works in Nicks
office and has been a dig volunteer since her high school
junior year; (13) Hank Coppes, Westbrook, FOSA member; (14)
Samantha Cox, Mendham, N.J., entering sophomore year at Mendham
High School, doing summer internship with Dr. Nick; (15) Paul
Scannell, East Windsor, FOSA member; (16) Dick LaRose, Windsor
Locks, FOSA and Arthur Basto member; (17) David Cooke, Rocky
Hill, FOSA, has been doing this work 40 years with Nick and
his predecessor, Dick Jordan; (18) Jack Rajotte, Groton, FOSA;
(19) George Kinsella, Hartford, FOSA.
Also: (20) Kristen Batis, Windsor Locks, UConn archeology
graduate student; (21) Renee Petrucelli, Avon, anthropology
graduate student at University of Alaska/Anchorage about to
transfer to UConn; and (22) Roger Thompson, South Windsor,
FOSA.
Connecticut Post
Explorer's grave yields
only children
By FRANK JULIANO
Friday, August 22, 2003 -
It's not a trick question: Who's buried in Peter Pond's
grave?
A team of archaeologists, students and amateur historians
has found the remains of two children in the Milford burial
plot believed to be Pond's, but so far there is no sign
of the 18th century explorer-entrepreneur.
The team headed by State Archaeologist Nick Bellantoni
opened the Milford Cemetery grave, next to the marked plot
of Pond's mother, Mary, on Wednesday, and worked through
Thursday on a meticulous search.
The eight-member team is expected to wrap up its work today.
Bellantoni squatted inside the 4-foot excavation, using
paintbrushes, a whisk broom and a magnifying glass to search
for artifacts and remains, while assistant Renee Petruzelli
plotted the dig on graph paper.
One of the bodies is almost certainly that of an infant
who lived only a few days, said William McDonald of Milford,
president of the 90-member Peter Pond Society and a Connecticut
Post sports reporter.
"We have two theories on who it might be," McDonald
said. "It could be Mary's daughter, and Peter's sister,
Charlotte, or Jedediah Pond."
Mary Pond had eight children, and Charlotte and Jedediah
were the last two, according to the family genealogy. Charlotte
died in June 1761, two months before Jedediah was baptized.
The only notation in the Pond family genealogy for him is
"D.Y.," for died young.
The second body is nearly 36 inches long and has a skull
with teeth, Bellantoni said, indicating that the child was
about age 3 at death.
The smaller body was wrapped in a shroud, the archaeologist
said. Although that material has long rotted away, several
copper "shroud pins" outlined its placement.
The larger body was buried in a small coffin. Bellantoni's
team found a small piece of the wooden box and several nails
from the coffin. Since the gender of either body can't be
determined, it is likely that one is Charlotte and the other
is Jedediah, researchers concluded.
So where is Peter Pond? McDonald said the explorer died
in 1807 in Milford, "and if he is not in the family
plot, I have no idea where his final resting place may be."
Pond, a Milford native, is credited with opening northwest
Canada to exploration, but was also charged with two murders,
McDonald said. The explorer was not convicted in either
case.
Members of Pond's company, the Northwest Fur Trading Co.
though not Pond himself
reached the Pacific Ocean before Lewis and Clark mapped
the American west on their famous trip, society members
said.
Pond died broke after squandering his profits from the
lucrative fur trade, McDonald said. The society would like
to erect a suitable grave marker for the explorer. The Ponds
are one of Milford's founding families and also have contributed
a state governor and a Revolutionary War hero.
Among the volunteers at the excavation Thursday was 15-year-old
Samantha Cox, who came from New Jersey to assist "Dr.
Nick." "I like to study different customs and
lifestyles and how things have changed," the aspiring
archeologist said.
Kathryn Etre, of Vernon, an archaeology student at Boston
University, was patiently sifting sand in a screen box,
a process that had already yielded several projectile points
sharpened pieces of quartz that had been used as arrowheads,
ax blades or other tools by American Indians.
The finds clearly indicate that local Indians camped on
what is now the Milford Cemetery, between Gulf and Prospect
Streets, said Etre and archaeologist Jack Rajotte.
It is not unusual to find items so old so close to the
surface, Rajotte said, since when graves are dug the soil
is disturbed and replaced so that the layers indicating
time are mixed together.
Frank Juliano, Milford bureau chief, can be reached at
878-2130.
$nbsp;
Connecticut Post
3rd child's body found in grave but
Peter Pond remains elusive
By DIRK PERREFORT
Saturday, August 23, 2003 -
MILFORD - Peter Pond's final resting place remains a mystery.
Archaeologists on Friday afternoon wrapped up an excavation
at Milford Cemetery, where locals hoped Pond was laid to
rest when he died in 1807.
The unmarked grave excavated was adjacent to the burial
plot of Peter's Pond's mother, Mary.
"Based on historical research and ground-penetrating
radar this spot was our best guess," said State Archaelogist
Nick Bellantoni. "Where he is now we don't have a clue."
Pond, a city native, is credited with opening northwest
Canada to exploration and was also charged with two murders,
although he was never convicted. Members of Pond's company,
Northwest Fur Trading Co., but not Pond himself, reached
the Pacific Ocean before Lewis and Clark.
Despite not finding Pond's body, archaeologists did unearth
three children buried in the grave.
William McDonald, president of the Pond Society and a Connecticut
Post sports writer, theorized that two of the bodies were
Charlotte Pond, Peter Pond's niece, and Jedediah Pond, Peter
Pond's brother.
The third child, found on Friday, could be that of Joel
Hepburn, according to City Historian Richard Platt.
He said that Susannah Hepburn, whose grave is next to the
one being excavated, had a son Joel, who died at a young
age in 1757.
There was very little left of the children's remains, which,
Bellantoni said, isn't a surprise.
"Because of the acidity in the state's soil most bodies
only last 200 to 300 years before becoming part of the earth,"
he said. "And children have bones that are less dense
so they decompose quicker. It's remarkable that there is
any bone left at all."
McDonald said not finding Pond was definitely a disappointment.
"We gave it a good try," he said.
"There are some other ideas I want to pursue."
Platt noted that it could be difficult to locate Pond's
body because many graves in the cemetery were moved when
railroad tracks were installed through the site.
"Mary's footstone is about seven feet away from her
headstone and on an angle," he said.
"It appears as though it is among the graves that
were moved."
Dirk Perrefort, who covers Milford, can be reached at 878-2130.

Digging for Peter Pond's grave
(Milford-WTNH, Aug. 22, 2003 6:10 PM) _ He fought in the
French and Indian War. In 1778 he had gone further west
in America than any other white man. But when Peter Pond
died in his hometown of Milford his grave wasn't marked.
This week, archaeologists went back in time and down in
the ground to search for Pond's grave.
Watch
the story by News Channel 8's Kent Pierce
It's a search party for a missing explorer. 18th century
adventurer Peter Pond was born and died in Milford, but
there's no gravestone.
For three days Dr. Nick Bellantoni, the state archaeologist,
and his team dug up a section of the Milford Cemetery near
where Peter's mother Mary was buried. On day two they found
an unmarked grave.
"What we started to get were coffin hardware and a
dark stain..." Dr. Bellantoni said.
You can see the pins that would have fastened the burial
shroud. The problem is, the outline is only big enough for
an infant.
However, at that child's feet was another body. You can
see teeth and the outline of a skull, but the skull is only
big enough for a four year old.
Then on the final day of searching, another grave.
"All organic remains were completely gone," Dr.
Bellantoni said. "Nothing other than a pattern of nails
that allowed us to outline the coffin."
But again, the outline was too small to be the fur trader
who went to Canada and gave directions to Alexander MacKenzie,
the first European to reach the Pacific by land, or the
Peter Pond whose maps convinced Thomas Jefferson to send
Lewis and Clark to explore the west.
"I guess we've learned that Peter Pond apparently
is not buried there," said Milford town historian Richard
Platt.
One problem is, just after Peter Pond died, they built
railroad tracks right next to the cemetery. Tombstones could
have been moved and graves could have been covered up."
"It's always been a shame that he never had a marker,"
said Bill McDonald, President of the Peter Pond society.
Two years ago, McDonald brought in ground-penetrating radar,
and discovered there were unmarked graves that might be
Pond.
"He has a big monument to him in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan.
Back in his own hometown, there's not even a headstone,"
McDonald said.
Town historian Dick Platt thinks two of the bodies found
are relatives of Pond. "So we still don't know where
the man was buried," he said.
"I'm coming away with more than I knew before,"
says McDonald, and he plans to keep looking for clues to
Pond's grave.
Coffin nails and a few teeth will be tested in labs, but
mostly the remains were left intact and the graves were
filled back in.
Finally, here are captions for the six attached photos:
Ppdig1: Among the early arrivals on the first day prior to
breaking ground next to Mary Ponds headstone are, from
left: Milford Cemetery director Ray Scholl, Kyle Kipfer, Barbara
Kipfer, Eric Conrad and Dr. Nick Bellantoni.
Ppdig2: Dr. Nick Bellantoni doing careful work about three
feet down on one of the three child burials that were found.
Small film canisters are for collecting some shroud pins and
coffin nails for later laboratory examination.
Ppdig3: Some of the close to two dozen participants who helped
out during all or part of the three-day project surround the
seven by seven-foot excavation. Yellow object in foreground
is generator-powered lighting provided by Milford Cemetery
Association.
Ppdig4: Close-up of first of three child burials found, about
17 inches long, most likely a premature infant. Black and
white numbers are for each of the many shroud pins found,
some of which may be visible in the image.
Ppdig5: Reporter Kent Pierce and cameraman J.P. Coleman of
ABC affiliate WTNH-TV Channel 8, New Haven, record the project
for a story that aired later that evening. Both did the two
other previous PPS stories for Channel 8. News Channel 12,
Norwalk, a local cable station, also did a story on this August
project.
Ppdig6: The excavation site has been well covered up at the
end of the three-day project in August 2003. From left: Jackie
Nadeau, Bill McDonald, Dr. Nick Bellantoni, David Cooke, Peter
Bass, Kathy Etre, Kristen Batis and Eric Conrad.
Au revoir,
Bill
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