Tomaquag Rock Shelters Explained

Tomaquag Rock Shelters
Coordinates:41.4386°N -71.7756°W
Area:0.25acres
Added:August 12, 1977
Refnum:77000011

The Tomaquag Rock Shelters (RI-HP-1) are a prehistoric rock shelter site off Maxson Hill Road (formerly Burdickville Road) in Hopkinton, Rhode Island. The shelters are located under two east-facing granite outcrops in the valley drained by Tomaquag Brook. Nathan Kaye discovered the shelters in the late 1950s. Materials recovered from test excavations resulted in dating one shelter to 800 BC and the other to AD 800. Materials recovered include projectile points, stone knives, and evidence of stone tool construction. Both sites included evidence pointing to the presence of a fire pit.[1]

The shelters were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.

In 1982, Nathan Kaye gave the shelters to the State of Rhode Island. In 1996, the State Properties Committee entered into a "Park Use Agreement" with the Town of Hopkinton to preserve the shelter site. The Hopkinton Planning Board entered a requirement that the cultural aspects of the shelter be protected in a Master Plan agreement with the developers of a proposed solar farm across the road from the site on January 4, 2019.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NRHP nomination for Tomaquag Rock Shelters. Rhode Island Preservation. 2014-09-17.