Old Town (Franklin, Tennessee) Explained

Old Town Archaeological Site
(40WM2)
Map Type:USA Tennessee
Coordinates:35.994°N -86.9365°W
Location:Franklin, TennesseeWilliamson County, Tennessee United States
Region:Williamson County, Tennessee
Cultures:Mississippian culture
Architectural Styles:platform mounds, plaza
Architectural Details:Number of temples:
Embed:yes
Old Town Archaeological Site
Added:1989
Mpsub: (40WM2)
Refnum:89000159
Notes:Responsible body: State
Precolumbian:yes

Old Town is an archaeological site in Williamson County, Tennessee near Franklin. The site includes the remnants of a Native American village and mound complex of the Mississippian culture, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) as Old Town Archaeological Site (40WM2).

Background

Since the early days of settlement in Middle Tennessee, the "Old Town on the Big Harpeth River" has been a critical component of a common understanding of the area's prehistory.[1] The earliest archaeological investigations of the site were in 1868 by physician Joseph Jones, who was then Nashville's municipal health officer; his efforts were largely frustrated because much of the site's most significant mound was occupied by the owner's wife's flower garden, but he was able to find a frog effigy from part of the mound outside the garden. W.M. Clark mentioned the location in an 1878 publication, but no more substantial excavations were conducted until 1928: while building a bridge over Brown Creek at its confluence with the river, Williamson County road crews accidentally dug into a large burial ground, and a local man worked hard to record as much information about the site as possible. Since the late twentieth century, no substantial excavations have been conducted, but the owners have permitted the recovery of artifacts from small portions of the site when construction has demanded work on the periphery; among this work has been a project to place a water pipeline in 1984 and the 1991 renovation of the Thomas Brown House on the property.

Site description

The Mississippian culture village and mound complex is located at the confluence of the Harpeth River and Dolorson Creek on the Harpeth River branch of the Natchez Trace. Archaeological investigations of the 12acres site have uncovered artifacts dating from approximately 900 to 1450. In his book Aboriginal Remains of Tennessee, published by the Smithsonian Institution in 1876, Joseph Jones produced a detailed account of the site. The village area was surrounded by steep earthworks running in a 2470feet semicircle, portions of which were topped by a wooden palisade that is interpreted as having been intended as a protective fortification. Within the enclosure, the village area includes several large earthen mounds[2] a plaza and associated village areas. Jones described the mound grouping as including two platform mounds and two burial mounds.[2] Mississippian mound complexes such as the Old Town complex are thought to have been regional centers for civic and ceremonial activity, as well as serving as the permanent residences of ruling elites. The mounds are located within the embankments. The largest of the rectangular platform mounds, Mound A, was 112feet on its longer side by 65feet on the shorter side and 11feet in height. The second, Mound B, was 70feet by 65feet at its base and 9feet in height. Located across a plaza area was a 30feet by 20feet in diameter 2.5feet high burial mound.[2] The remaining burial mound is the location of the Thomas Brown House.

In 1984 and 1991, the Tennessee Division of Archaeology conducted brief salvage excavations at the Old Town site in anticipation of construction and renovation projects. The artifacts collected allowed researchers to place Old Town's primary period of habitation at between 1250 and 1450. Radiocarbon dating of charcoal uncovered from a prehistoric trash pit returned a date of 1214.[3]

Stone box graves

Burials at the site were of a type known as stone box graves. Jones opened up at least 50 examples during his investigations. In this type of burial, which was commonly used by Mississippian people in the central basin of Middle Tennessee, the dead were interred in shallow rectangular excavations lined with large thin slabs of limestone. A "nearly form-fitting" pit was dug to hold the person's remains, the bottom and sides were lined with appropriately sized rock slabs, the person's remains were laid inside, and the resulting box was covered with another stone slab.[4] [5] Most of these individual graves were located along the banks of the river and creek.

NRHP sites at location

A larger, 41acres, area was listed as the "Old Town Archaeological Site" on the National Register in 1989 as part of the Mississippian Cultural Resources of the Central Basin (900 to 1450) Multiple Property Submission.[6] "Old Town" also is a name given to the Thomas Brown House, built nearby to the mound complex site in the 1840s or 1850s,[7] "Old Town" is also reflected in the name of the nearby Old Town Bridge that carried the Harpeth River branch of the Natchez Trace over Brown's Creek.[8]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Smith, Kevin E. "Archaeology at Old Town [40Wm2]: A Mississippian Mound-Village Center in Williamson County, Tennessee". Tennessee Anthropologist 18.1 (1993): 27-44.
  2. Book: Thruston, Gates Phillips. Gates Phillips Thruston. 1890. The antiquities of Tennessee and the adjacent states, and the state of aboriginal society in the scale of civilization represented by them: A series of historical and ethnological studies. The R. Clarke Company. 39–40.
  3. Kevin Smith, "Archaeology at Old Town (40WM2): A Mississippian Mound-Village Center in Williamson County, Tennessee," Tennessee Anthropologist, Vol. XVIII, no. 1 (Spring 1993), pp. 27-44.
  4. Kelly McGuinness, Stone Box Indian Site, FranklinIs.com website, accessed April 2, 2010
  5. http://www.nativenashville.com/History/noelcemetery.htm Nashville's Native American History: Noel Creek Cemetery
  6. Tennessee Historical Commission,, January 31, 1989
  7. The Williamson County MRA gives a date of 1842; NRIS gives the date as 1846; McGuinness gives the date as "circa 1854."
  8. Kelly McGuinness, Old Town, FranklinIs.com website, accessed April 13, 2011