Potteries of Trenton Society Makes Trenton's Industrial Ceramic History Available on the Web

A shout out to our friends at the Potteries of Trenton Society (POTS), who have been working to make information on Trenton’s industrial ceramic industry available on the internet.  POTS’ website (www.potteriesoftrentonsociety.org) has recently undergone a major overhaul and redesign with a view to making it more user friendly and technologically capable of hosting the Trenton Potteries Database.  This database contains historical information and stories about the pottery industry and associated history. Organized by geographic location, each entry includes information on a pottery's location, owners, products and years in operation. Where available, historic maps, advertisements, maker's marks, photographs and engravings are included in the database. 

On April 17, POTS, together with the Bard Graduate Center and the New Jersey State Museum, presented their annual ceramics history lecture. Dr. Laura Microulis, Research Curator at the Bard Graduate Center in New York City, discussed “Trenton’s Majolica Mania”. The lecture is available for viewing here.

The Randolph Friends Cemetery – Respecting a Final Resting Place

This winter Hunter Research completed an archaeological investigation at the Randolph Friends Meeting House Cemetery in Randolph, Morris County, paving the way for a new parking lot and pathway.  The extraordinarily well-preserved frame meeting house, built circa 1758, is New Jersey’s oldest extant colonial wood-frame Quaker meeting house and the oldest standing structure built as a house of worship in Morris County.  The Randolph Friends Meeting House & Cemetery Association have embarked upon a project to provide some much needed parking on the property within the bounds of the cemetery on the site of a former wagon shed.  Although no grave markers stood in this section of the cemetery, there remained a possibility that graves were present, as Quaker burials typically went unmarked up until the mid-19th century.

Archaeological investigation began with a ground-penetrating radar (GPR) survey conducted by Dr. Tim Horsley. This work identified over 70 anomalies interpreted as potential grave shafts within the limits of the proposed parking lot and associated pathway.  A grant was obtained from the Morris County Historic Preservation Trust Fund to support archaeological “ground truthing” of the geophysical findings. In January of 2021 a Hunter Research field crew, assisted by an excavation contractor who has worked with us for over 30 years, carefully opened up three large trenches within the parking lot and pathway footprints. After removing the topsoil and scraping off the surface of the underlying subsoil through a combination of machine and manual excavation, a total of 43 potential grave shafts were exposed as rectangular outlines with a different soil color, many of which correlated with the GPR anomalies identified by Dr. Horsley.

Identifying a grave shaft does not necessarily mean that anyone is “home,” so to speak.In an effort to determine the presence, depth and condition of human remains within these grave shafts, ten were selected for exploratory excavation.Of these, nine were confirmed to be grave shafts through the presence of human and/or coffin remains.Unfortunately, the survival of skeletal material was poor; most burials had less than 25% of the skeleton remaining, due largely to the slightly acidic soils.Despite this poor preservation, shroud pins and even burial shroud fragments were identified.Of the nine burials, five were judged to be those of children.The skeletal remains were not removed, but instead exposed, documented in place, and carefully reburied along with any associated grave goods. These investigations have provided useful insights into late 18th- and 19th-century Quaker burial practices while giving the Association the information they need to design their parking lot and pathway without impacting the cemetery’s residents lying in repose.

Hunter Research Gets Its Just Awards

We are proud and privileged to be the recipient of two of the state’s 29th Annual New Jersey Historic Preservation Awards announced last Friday, February 19, in a virtual ceremony streamed live to the region’s preservation community. 

One award was for archaeological mitigation performed on the site of the recently completed Honors Living-Learning Center at Rutgers Newark.  This project entailed the excavation, analysis and reinterment of more than 300 sets of human skeletal remains recovered from the former Halsey Street Methodist Episcopal Cemetery in downtown Newark.  Joining us as part of the winning team were Rutgers, RBH Group, and Monmouth University anthropologist Hillary DelPrete.  More information about this project can be found in a previous news post here

The other award was for Hunter Research’s participation in a team led by architects Clarke Caton Hintz and heritage tourism consultant Cheryl Hargrove, which conducted a statewide visitor readiness study of Revolutionary War sites in New Jersey for the Crossroads of the American Revolution National Heritage Area.  The study was undertaken in preparation for the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution and involved analysis of 150 historic sites. The full report can be downloaded here.

A full list of Hunter Research’s past awards can be found here.