Archaeologists have found two 250-year-old glass bottles filled with cherries at Mount Vernon—the historic landmark and first US president George Washington’s former plantation residence in Alexandria, Virginia (simply south of Washington, DC).
The bottles have been discovered beneath a brick ground from the 1770s throughout an ongoing, $40m renovation of the mansion. Manufactured in Europe and product of dark-green glass in shapes in style within the 1740s and 50s, they have been standing upright and sealed—maybe forgotten in a below-ground space for storing when the ground was constructed over them. The bottles have been opened at Mount Vernon’s archaeology lab in an effort to “assist stabilise the glass”, based on a press launch, and the cherries, suspended in liquid inside and full with stems and pits, “nonetheless bore the attribute scent of cherry blossoms”.
In an announcement, Mount Vernon’s principal archaeologist, Jason Boroughs, referred to as this a “vital archaeological discover. Not solely did we get well intact, sealed bottles, however they contained natural materials that may present us with useful perception and perspective into 18th-century lives at Mount Vernon. These bottles have the potential to counterpoint the historic narrative, and we’re excited to have the contents analysed so we are able to share this discovery with fellow researchers and the visiting public.”
Initially, archaeologists thought the bottles may include Cherry Bounce, a colonial-era drink made with brandy, cherries, sugar and spices that the Washingtons loved, based on The Washington Put up’s Michael E. Ruane. However researchers later determined these have been possible simply cherries saved in bottles for later use—the liquid might have been floor water that seeped in after the corks broke down.
“There are 18th-century accounts that speak about correct methods of preserving vegetables and fruit,” Boroughs instructed the Put up. “Probably the most frequent, particularly for berries, is to dry them as a lot as doable … put them in a dry bottle, cork it … after which bury them.” He added that the cherries have been possible harvested, bottled and saved (for consumption in the primary home) by a minimum of one of many tons of of enslaved individuals who toiled on the plantation.
The bottles shall be conserved beginning subsequent month, and their contents shipped to a lab for evaluation. They are going to go on show at Mount Vernon thereafter, as excavation continues—with a possible for extra such bottles of fruit to be discovered. The renovation undertaking is scheduled for completion in 2026, the 250th anniversary of the creation of the US.