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The Mount Royal Site
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Inscription. Mount Royal has been a
favored location for people to live for thousands of years. Archaeological
sites include a Native American burial mound, earthworks, village area, and
evidence of a British plantation, as well as the remains of a Spanish mission
occupied by the Timucus Indians. British naturalist William Bartram visited
Mount Royal in 1765–1766, and again in 1774. His description of the large
mound, fields, earthen causeways and an artificial pond was published in 1791
and is one of the earliest accounts of an Indian mound in North America.
Bartram’s plan of the mound was later published in 1848 by newly formed
Smithsonian Institution. Archaeologist Clarence B. Moore excavated the mounds
in 1893 and 1894. Moore found human burials with hammered and embossed sheet
copper ornaments, polished stone tools, pearl and shell beads, and decorated
ceramic vessels. The copper ornaments are similar to those found at
Mississippian sites in Georgia, Alabama and Oklahoma and date between 1000
and 1500 A.D. Archaeologist B. Calvin Jones’ salvage excavations at the
village site in 1983 and in 1994–1995, revealed evidence of six structures.
These buildings contained Spanish artifacts and were probably part of the
Mission of San Antonio de Anacape (1587–1675).
Erected 1999 by The Florida Department of State. (Marker Number F-411.) Marker series. This marker is included in the William Bartram Trails marker series. Location. 29° 26.61′ N, 81° 39.15′ W. Marker is near Welaka, Florida, in Putnam County. Marker is at the intersection of County Route 309 and Fort Gates Ferry Road, on the right when traveling south on County Route 309 |
Thursday, May 29, 2014
May 29th Then three miles down the road to the Mt Royal Site
This marker is pretty much in the middle of not so much...... This is another of the William Bartram Trail Markers....
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