ARCHAEOLOGY —
For the last
ten years, Professor Sherene Baugher has offered a three course
sequence in archaeology and the cultural landscape. The three
courses also involved community outreach and service-learning.
Professor Baugher and her students work as partners with community
groups in research-
ing, excavating, and uncovering the past. Students
engage in archaeological field and laboratory work, library research,
and interviews with community members. Past projects have involved
working with the Native American community in excavating a Cayuga
Indian village near Trumansburg and a Tutelo site south of Ithaca.
After success with these two projects, the Friends of Robert H.
Treman State Park and the park staff encouraged Professor Baugher
and her students to become involved in both the documentary history
and the potential archaeological sites of Enfield Falls. Between
1998 and 2003, a total of 238 Cornell Students undertook archaeological
fieldwork and laboratory work at two sites in Upper Robert H.
Treman State Park.
Three years of archaeological work at the Park has revealed a
rich history. In addition to the physical evidence of
buildings and artifacts, some of the former residents of Enfield
Falls or their descendants enthusiastically shared their family
histories with the archaeologists.
(click image for larger view)
HISTORY OF ENFIELD FALLS — The rural hamlet of Enfield Falls
no longer exists. However, house foundations, wells, roads and
even garbage pits lie buried one or two feet below the present
ground level of Robert H. Treman State Park. Throughout the nineteenth
century, the town of Enfield was primarily an agricultural settlement.
In 1864, for example, eighty percent of the town’s land was devoted
to agriculture. Within this rural setting, farmers traveled to
the hamlet of Enfield Falls for supplies, to sell their products,
and to take advantage of its mills. The first building in Enfield
Falls was a sawmill erected in 1812 by Benjamin Ferris. In 1817,
Isaac Rumsey built the town’s first gristmill to grind the grain
of local farmers. The water that powered the mills came from Five
Mill Creek, also known as Enfield Creek. The first gristmill burned
down in the 1830’s, but Jared Treman replaced it with another
gristmill that operated from 1839 to the end of the nineteenth
century. Jared Treman’s mill is listed on both the National Register
and the State Register of Historic Places and serves as the Park’s
Mill Museum.
By 1866, Enfield Falls consisted of the sawmill, the gristmill, several homes, a general store, a blacksmith shop,
shoemaker, a cooper, and a tannery. The Enfield Falls Hotel was also located here. The hotel provided meals and rooms for tourists eager to visit the Five Mile Creek’s beautiful gorge and Lucifer Falls. After the Civil War, various tourist guides featured the hotel.
(click image for larger view)
In
the early twentieth century, Robert Treman became interested in
the scenic qualities of Enfield Falls. Treman began buying up
property within the hamlet, including his purchase of the old
gristmill built by his uncle Jared Treman. Once most of the property
in Enfield Falls was acquired, Robert and Laura Treman donated
387 acres to the State of New York in order to establish the Enfield
Glen Reservation. The hamlet of Enfield Falls was slowly transformed
into an attractive state park first by State Park employees in
the 1920s and then by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930’s.
Most of the nineteenth century buildings were removed. Only the
grist mill and the miller’s cottage were kept as reminders of
the site’s former history.
This exhibit, “rediscovering Enfield Falls” presents some of the artifacts from our archaeological excavation of two homes that once stood on these park lands: the Tryon House Site, home of one of the former owners of the Enfield Falls Hotel and the Duncan/Bower House Site, the home of the Duncan and Bower families. Their house was built atop the ruins of the town’s original general store.
Because the archaeological work is still on-going, future exhibits, tours of the site, and public lectures will continually update the public on our latest findings.