With all of the debate about traffic, impact on
But not for Jules Jackson, an indigenous peoples’ advocate. She says there should be no development anywhere near known burial sites or where Native American artifacts have been found. “There is no compromise. It’s about basic respect and decency,” she said. “It’s a human value issue.”
Once a find has been made, she said, other remains are likely to be nearby. “You can never be sure an area is 100 percent clear,” she said.
Over time, she said, many sites in the
Hundreds of Lewes residents were expected to turn out for a public hearing Thursday, Sept. 10, before county planning and zoning commissioners on a request by LT Associates to rezone a parcel to commercial along
Another public hearing is scheduled at 6 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 29, before county council. Frank Kea, spokesman for developers LT Associates, says extensive research has been done throughout the area, and there are no archaeological sites on the
That is not the case elsewhere on the parcel known as the Townsend property.
Finds over the years
Parcels along
One was so significant back in the 1950s that the renowned Smithsonian Institution had 50 Native American remains removed from the property. The remains are at the Natural Museum of American History in
The housing projects, approved by county officials, will be built on
Kea said the areas where artifacts were found will not be designated, at the request of state archeologists, but will be left undisturbed in a natural state. The same was done with the area where the 50 human remains were found back in the 1950s.
Kea said the areas are unmarked to keep out trespassers and amateur archaeologists. Kea said it was two amateur archeologists who were trespassing that discovered the site back in the 1950s.
He said it has not been uncommon for people to trespass on Townsend land in search of artifacts.
“The area was one of the largest indigenous settlements on the East Coast,”
She said one could only wonder what would have occurred and what action would have been taken if the remains had been of a European settlement.
One of the major sites, known as the Wolfe Neck site, was nominated in 1976 for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places.
According to a report filed by state archeologists, excavations at the 132-acre site along the
“The early occupation of the site was apparently a small seasonal camp. The later occupation may have been a more permanent village,” the report concluded.
That’s more than 2,100 years before Dutch explorers landed near present-day Lewes, the first Europeans to touch
The site was not included in the National Register.
The entire island is preserved as part of
“It’s been brought to the forefront and they are staring to take it seriously,” she said.
The chiefs of the
The long-standing lack of interest in indigenous sites is not surprising to