New Smyrna Celebrates: Smyrnea Settlement Sites
For as long as my mind can recall, I have considered cake to be a festivity fundamental. Birthdays, graduations, weddings, anniversaries, retirement parties, baby showers – cake should accompany any day of joyful celebration. New Smyrna Beach is prepping a HUGE celebration on June 16th. “Why?,” you might wonder. The city has existed for 250 years. We have much to commemorate!
As previously promised, I am embarking on a digital
cake-making, candle-lighting venture with all who would like to
join. New Smyrna’s archaeological heritage over the past three centuries will
serve as the cake ingredients. Each candle, when “lit,” will represent one
story, as told through archaeology, from each century.
To begin celebrating this city, we must venture back
to the late 18th century (the late 1700s). We travel to a time when the British
occupied Florida. Spanish control of St. Augustine and Florida floundered by 1763.
Countless British men, women, and children entered the colonial streets of St.
Augustine. The British government, and many wealthy individuals, considered
Florida to be a vast land bloated by untapped resources, economic opportunities,
and agricultural prospects. The potential to create an enterprise allured to Dr.
Andrew Turnbull, a Scottish physician. Under his direction, the Smyrnea Settlement
– a precursor to New Smyrna Beach – came into being.
Turnbull’s Smyrnea Settlement was a joint endeavor.
Turnbull (left), Sir William Duncan, and George Grenville (right) combined their land grants
(which amounted to a whopping 101,000 acres) and financial resources to develop
a settlement in East Florida. The group, with Turnbull’s guidance, chose New
Smyrna Beach.
Florida Memory provides this 18th century portrait of Turnbull. William Hoare painted Grenville in 1760. |
The voyage to Florida began in April 1768 and was not
without casualties. Over 100 people perished at sea, leaving 1,225 men, women,
and children to establish Smyrnea. Turnbull’s Settlement dismally failed after
11 years. During those years, those who had emigrated endured high death rates,
food shortages, crop failures, and – according to some testimonies – abuses imparted
by overseers and, on occasion, Turnbull.1 Settlers also experienced
agricultural successes, especially with indigo, and developed an innovative
canal system.
Dr. Daniel Schafer, professor emeritus at the
University of North Florida, has intensively studied British plantations and settlements
in Florida. His interest in Smyrnea has significantly increased knowledge and
understanding of the Settlement. Schafer traveled to England and Scotland,
visiting archives and collecting historical documents
relating to the Settlement. Official correspondence, informal letters, receipts
and bills, and other documents provide information about life at and the people
of Smyrnea.
Archaeologists Dr. Roger Grange and Dorothy “Dot”
Moore have scrupulously studied the Smyrnea Settlement for over 20 years.
Modern development prompted local archaeologists, and the City, to investigate
the buried past. Their archaeological investigations enable us to “light” our cake’s
candle. To celebrate Smyrnea, which was the largest British settlement attempt
in the New World, we focus on two sites: The First Turnbull Settlement House
Site and the White-Fox Site.
The First Turnbull Settlement House Site -- an apt
name for the first Smyrnea-era site discovered in New Smyrna Beach. While
investigating land slated for development on US1, Dot Moore noticed hewn
coquina on the ground surface. Over the course of a year, Dot, Roger, and 50
volunteers excavated a settler’s house and two other associated buildings.
Excavation revealed a house, the foundation and floor of an 18 square foot
building, and the base of a bread oven. All of the structures incorporated
coquina as an architectural element.2 Similar to present day
townhouses, internal walls separated the settler’s house into two living spaces.
Unfortunately, artifact collectors seeking objects for their private
collections damaged much of this site.
Dr. Roger Grange digitized a map of
the First Turnbull Settlement House Site. The map
includes the location of all three
structures as they appeared in the excavation units.
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Investigations at the White-Fox Site occurred in 2001.
Dot, Roger, and an invaluable volunteer labor force again excavated a house. Archaeologists
noted that an internal wall also divided this structure; however, this home was
split into two rooms, not two residences. The crew also found a large oven,
also made of coquina. The oven was probably large enough to produce enough
bread for most settlers who resided in town. (You can see part of this site!
The oven base is on display at the New Smyrna Museum of History.)
Dorothy Whitner Backes' conceptual depiction of the White-Fox site oven.
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Piecing together the past is a process. Understanding settler’s
lives and experiences requires attention to numerous types of data and
information. Archaeologists who study Smyrnea rely on architectural features,
such as the hewn coquina, and artifacts to tell the Settlement’s stories. Close
attention to context enables artifacts – objects made or used by humans – to provide
significant information to archaeologists.
Although Minorcans, Greeks, and Italians comprised
most of the Smyrnea population, their possessions were few. Turnbull purchased,
transported, and imported innumerable supplies for the settlers. Most of these
objects were of British origin. Settlers used agateware, slipware, creamware,
and other English style ceramics. People smoked tobacco out of kaolin pipes. Wrought
nails held homes and other structures together. Buttons and buckles reflect
British styles and preferences.
This Staffrdshire slipware-style
posset cup was found, relatively intact, during excavation. Archaeologists
mended the broken pieces. The cup
is currently interpreted at the New Smyrna Museum of History.
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May you find this cake indulgent and delectable. If
“lighting” the first candle has sparked your curiosity, consider partaking in
New Smyrna Beach’s upcoming 250th celebration. The event will take place at Old
Fort Park from 9am to 4pm on June 16th. The park will feature areas that
highlight New Smyrna during the 1700, 1800, and 1900s. An Archaeology Discovery Station will be present in each century. Explore
archaeology of the 1700s. Engage yourself by playing Puzzles of the Past. Challenge yourself to mend a piece of the
past.
Savor this slice of cake. (If you prefer to enjoy
more of the 1700s, see the recommended reading list below). Tune in
Monday, June 11th, for a second serving!
Notes
1. For many years, individual
testimonials regarding abuse at Smyrnea went unquestioned. Archaeologists and
historians are starting to reexamine these documents and the archaeological
data. It is possible that underlying political divisions influenced the content
of the testimonies or the investigative process.
2. Coquina is a naturally occurring
sedimentary rock unique to Northeast Florida. Coquina can be, and was, quarried
and used to build structures.
Recommended
Reading
Beeson, Kenneth H., Jr.
2006 Fromajadas and Indigo: The Minorcan Colony
in Florida. The History Press, Charleston.
Grange, Roger T., Jr. and Dorothy L. Moore
2016 Smyrnea Settlement: Archaeology and History
of an 18th Century British Plantation in
East
Florida. The New Smyrna Museum of History, New
Smyrna Beach.
Grange, Roger T., Jr.
1999 The
Turnbull Colonist’s House at New Smyrna Beach: A Preliminary Report on
8VO7051. The Florida Anthropologist 52(1–2):73–84.
2011 Saving
Eighteenth-Century New Smyrnea: Public Archaeology in Action. Present Pasts
3:52–58.
Griffin, Patricia C.
1991 Mullet
on the Beach: The Minorcans of Florida, 1768-1788. University Press of
Florida, Gainesville.
Text by Sarah Bennett, New Smyrna Museum of History
Images courtesy of Roger Grange (unless otherwise noted)
Logo by Shok Idea Group
Logo by Shok Idea Group