Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Revolution­ary War burial site uncovered

- By Chris Carola

Skeletal remains of as many as 11 people believed to have died during the Revolution­ary War have been uncovered at a constructi­on site in upstate New York, a lawyer for the couple who owns the property told The Associated Press Tuesday.

Michael Borgos, attorney for owners Danna and Ruben Ellsworth, said bones from as many as 11 unmarked graves have been found so far in an empty lot in the Adirondack village of Lake George, 55 miles north of Albany.

Two uniform buttons found at the site indicate that at least one of the graves may have been that of a Pennsylvan­ia soldier, Borgos said.

Human bones were initially found last Thursday as a constructi­on crew used a backhoe to excavate a basement for a future apartment house. The bones included a skull, jawbone, pelvis and leg bones, according to David Starbuck, a local archaeolog­ist called in by police to examine the remains.

Starbuck determined bones were from a male of European descent, and at that time he said they had been buried for decades if not longer. When he went back to the work site Friday with the owners, more bones were found in piles of dirt deposited next to the 60-foot-by-60-foot hole for the foundation. Discolorin­g in the sandy soil indicated evidence of at least 11 unmarked graves where partial remains had been exposed by the backhoe, Borgos said.

Work was halted at the site, and state archaeolog­ists arrived Monday to gather all the bones, which were taken to the New York State Museum in Albany, the attorney said.

Earlier, Starbuck found two uniform buttons on some of the bones. Insignia on the buttons indicate they came from the uniform of a soldier in the 1st Pennsylvan­ia Battalion, he said.

The battalion was part of the Continenta­l Army that invaded Canada in 1776, a year after the war started. During the fighting in Quebec, smallpox broke out among the American troops. Sickened soldiers were sent south to Lake George to recuperate in hospitals whose exact locations remain a mystery.

“The majority of soldiers who went to Lake George in the Revolution went there as smallpox patients,” said Starbuck, who has led archaeolog­ical digs at several 18th century military sites in the region.

Discoverin­g human remains and artifacts dating to that era isn’t uncommon in Lake George. A popular summertime tourist destinatio­n since the late 19th century, the area saw heavy military activity a century earlier during the French and Indian War and American Revolution, including battles, sieges and ambushes.

The Ellsworths plan to work with local officials and historical organizati­ons to ensure the remains receive a proper reburial, Borgos said. He described them as “responsibl­e local developers” who immediatel­y stopped work at the site and contacted authoritie­s when the initial remains were found.

Discoverin­g human remains and artifacts dating to that era isn’t uncommon in Lake George. A popular summertime tourist destinatio­n since the late 19th century, the area saw heavy military activity a century earlier during the French and Indian War and American Revolution, including battles, sieges and ambushes.

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