Dig at Colonial battleground uncovers fort’s stone walls

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LAKE GEORGE, N.Y. — An archaeological dig at an 18th-century military site in the southern Adirondacks uncovered large sections of stone walls thought to have been constructed within a larger British fortification that was never completed more than 250 years ago.

LAKE GEORGE, N.Y. — An archaeological dig at an 18th-century military site in the southern Adirondacks uncovered large sections of stone walls thought to have been constructed within a larger British fortification that was never completed more than 250 years ago.

The excavations at the state-owned Lake George Battlefield Park recently wrapped up, with some work continuing to protect exposed walls by lining them with sandbags. During a six-week summer field school sponsored by the nearby State University of New York at Adirondack, about four dozen volunteers and students dug numerous pits in an area that was occupied by thousands of British and Colonial American soldiers during the French and Indian War.

Musket balls, gun flints and pottery pieces were among the artifacts found amid a 35-acre park that gets few visitors despite being located in the middle of a busy summer tourist town.

David Starbuck, the archaeologist who led the dig, said the most significant find was the intact stone walls buried in a bastion of Fort George, which the British never finished building.

In 1759, the commander of British forces in North America, Jeffery Amherst, ordered the construction of a large fort on rising ground near the lake’s southern end, the site of two previous battles. The British army engineer assigned to the task, James Montresor, also built the English fort at Crown Point on Lake Champlain.

With the British capture of the French fort at Ticonderoga in the summer of 1759, Amherst halted the work on Fort George. Only one corner bastion of the stone and earthen fort was completed, along with an interior stone building. The interior structure might have been part of an underground casemate, a chamber usually constructed underneath a fort’s rampart. A casemate could serve as a barracks or a place to store supplies such as gunpowder, and burying it would make it less likely to blow up during a bombardment.

The fort fell into disrepair after the war ended in 1763, but the bastion was used by the Americans when the Revolutionary War started. The British captured Fort George in 1777, only to lose it again after their defeat at Saratoga that year. The redcoats recaptured the bastion in 1780. What remains is a U-shaped, 20-foot-high grass-covered ruin of the bastion, with the interior sloping upward from the U’s open end.

Experts from the state historic site at Crown Point, where the ruins of the British fort still stand, viewed the uncovered walls at the Fort George dig and saw comparisons in the way the two fortifications were constructed, Starbuck said.

Another recent visitor to the site, former National Park Service archaeologist David Orr, called the Lake George site “just amazing” in terms of what’s being discovered from an often overlooked period of American history.