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Adaptation and Innovation: Archaeological and Architectural Perspectives on the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake
Willie Graham, Carter L. Hudgins, Carl R. Lounsbury, Fraser D. Neiman, and James P. Whittenburg
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AT the close of the seventeenth century, the Chesapeake was a mosaic
of landscapes, building forms, and subsistence activities, layers
of cultural patterns imposed by adaptation and innovation. Whatever
the original intentions of the colonists and their London backers
who carved out the initial settlement at Jamestown, at the end of
the century the Chesapeake was unlike anything they might have previously
imagined. Certainly, it did not mirror old England, nor was much
in Virginia and Maryland like English settlements in New England.
A dependence on tobacco set the Chesapeake apart. So too did the
dispersed character of its plantations, separated from each other
along the region's rivers and broad creeks. Even the character of
its housing was unusual: almost all houses were made of timber and
raised by earthfast construction, a method found elsewhere but embraced
in the Chesapeake with a singular tenacity. Its growing dependence
on slave labor and the patterns of segregated house plans, yards,
and labor routines that emerged at the end of the century made the
Chesapeake still more distinctive.
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Historians have suggested two main
factors to explain the seemingly transitory character of the built
Chesapeake environment: the demographic chaos of the region's beginnings
as well as the continued instability that troubled it until the
second half of the century and the failure to create a diversified
economy. Edmund S. Morgan argued three decades ago, as did Cary
Carson and his collaborators in the early 1980s, that Jamestown's
boomtown character and the later dominance in the region of what
has been styled "impermanent architecture" bespoke shallow attachments
to the place and modest investments in its future.
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More substantial houses appeared only at the end of the century
with economic diversification, in particular the rising importance
of wheat production. These explanations for the seventeenth-century
Chesapeake's architectural impermanence, compelling as they are,
fail to consider other dynamic cultural forces.
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