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Date: | Mon, 27 Feb 2006 18:30:47 -0500 |
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One time following up a "con job" excavation I was told happened when
some NYC "archaeologists" where allowed to dig a trench in the
Huntington graveyard, atop a hill, where the British Army had "Fort
Golgotha" in the cemetery in the American Revolution, some reported
them baking bread on tombstones, and where Nathan Hale was taken
before his hanging in NYC (there is a statue in City Hall Park,
recently moved to the front of the City Hall where it had been at the
back or north side of the park) I helped in a "gifted and talented"
program of excavation on a Saturday for elementary school kids,
excavating a few test squares between the stones. The remains of the
fort had been plowed level after the Revolutionary War. One of the
Town of Huntington's offices was in the small building there, and the
Suffolk County Historian was also on the school board.
Anyway, we were helped by a re-enactor who lived practically next
door, a podiatrist who played the head of the "Queens Rangers" once
headed by Benjamin Thompson who later was well-known as the physicist
Count Rumford. We thought perhaps we relocated some of the outline of
the entrance way near the current flagpole, with Edward Johanneman, MA
and Gaynell Stone, PhD. (showing gravestone rubbings) and tried to
recover the area that had been previously disturbed by the previous
"archaeologists" that sort of started this, perhaps. Down slope near
the disturbed topsoils were stones obviously not from the glacial
deposits of Long Island and near them a metal cartouche (silver like a
large "pin" of the "Queens Rangers" was found, which I caught hell for
letting the re-enactor borrow for a day to have one of his associates
make a drawing of for further re-enactments occurring in bicentennial
activites around Long Island.
One French observer reported (not much about it) that in a windstorm
the snow rolled up like carpets up the hill to "Fort Golgotha" named
after the "hill of skulls" related in the Christian bible as where
crucifictions occurred, where the biblical Jesus Christ was crucified
between two thiefs by the occupying Roman government.
I did get the "Queens Rangers" cartouche back from the rather large
podiatrist, who dressed in a large "beefeaters" hat (traditionally
bearskin I read) was quite imposing on a horse.
Geore Myers
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