[175] Ibid., fig. 3, type 5, shows another example.
[176] All other Jones seals from T.N. 30 and T.N. 31 were stamped from combinations of single-letter matrices. See fig. 6.
[177] A similar though slightly smaller neck came from T.N. 16, and a square base, probably from an ordinary case bottle, was among the surface finds. Another example is illustrated in Noël Hume, "Excavations at Rosewell," p. 181, fig. 11, no. 13.
[178] Noël Hume, Archaeology in Britain, p. 108.
[179] Colorful beads of this character were frequently used as Indian trade goods and are found in Indian graves in Virginia and elsewhere. A long-established legend that beads were manufactured at the Jamestown glasshouse is without archeological evidence. Although many beads have been found on the shores of the James River near Jamestown, there is reason to suppose that all those of European form were imported.
[180] See Hughes, English, Scottish and Irish Table Glass, p. 195 and fig. 134.
[181] C. G. Holland, "An Analysis of Projectile Points and Large Blades," appendix to Clifford Evans, A Ceramic Study of Virginia Archeology (Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 160, Washington, 1955), p. 167.
[182] Ibid., p. 171.
Contributions from
The Museum of History and Technology:
Paper 54
THE "POOR POTTER" OF YORKTOWN