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FEBRUARY EXHIBITION ON THE BOWNE HOUSE
REVEALS NEW FINDINGS
ON HISTORY OF FLUSHING AND NEW YORK CITY
—Queens College Anthropology
Professor Led Student Dig of Queens Oldest House;
Free Public Program To Be Held February 10 at Flushing Library—
NEW
YORK, January 29, 2004 -- Queens College anthropology professor James
Moore, who, with his students, has conducted research and archaeological
digs at the Bowne House in Flushing—the oldest house in Queens,
and probably the oldest in New York City—has organized an exhibition
of their findings. Entitled New Perspectives on the Bowne
House: Archaeological and Architectural Research, 1997-2003,
the exhibition runs February 8-29 on the lower level of the Flushing
Library, 41-17 Main Street (corner of Kissena Boulevard).
The exhibition is in line with the educational mission of the Bowne
House Historical Society, which is engaged in a fundraising effort to
help preserve and restore the Bowne House. The house has fallen into
disrepair over the course of 350 years, and has been closed to the public
since 2000. Bowne House was built circa 1661 by John Bowne, a Quaker,
who settled in Flushing when New York was under Dutch rule. Bowne’s
famous defense of religious freedom in 1662 helped establish principles
which were later codified in the Bill of Rights.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places and designated a
New York City Landmark, the Bowne House is considered one of the best-preserved
examples of Anglo-Dutch architecture in the nation.
The exhibition gives the public an unprecedented opportunity to view
maps, historical documents, and research related to the Bowne House,
and some of the thousands of artifacts the team unearthed. These include
shards of early serving platters, teapots, porcelain cups, and a doll;
children’s clay marbles; Native American arrowheads; Delft tile;
an early-1800s silver religious medal thought to belong to an Irish
servant; and a high-caliber, unfired bullet cartridge from the 1860s,
which was turned over to the NYPD.
“While it is clear that we know little of Flushing in the 1790s,”
Moore says, “what is far more disturbing is that we know even
less of the period from the founding of Flushing in the late 1640s until
the eve of the American Revolution. Several events provide mileposts
for this history, but the daily life of the inhabitants is poorly grasped.”
It is precisely this kind of information about daily living of the house’s
inhabitants that emerges from the archaeological excavations carried
out by Moore and his students. To date, the group has uncovered an intact,
stone-lined, capped well that had been forgotten, a structure thought
to date back before the 1830s. Water was visible at the well’s
bottom. A cobble-paved area was discovered east of the yard, which Moore
said could have been an early greenhouse or barnyard paving. His team
also found a paved area at the west end (circa 1690s), on the Bowne
Street side.
“There was a hoist on the second floor–probably an area
for wagons to pull up,” says Moore. “This probably was a
kind of loading dock for Bowne, who was a merchant.”
The Queens College students also made a remarkable discovery when they
excavated in the kitchen. “We discovered that this section was
an addition and clearly structurally independent from the house,”
says Moore. “It was not the oldest section of the house, as had
been believed. We are now doing research to learn more.”
Excavation will resume in fall 2004 on the south side of the house,
says Moore, who expects the work to continue for several more years.
“Once the south-side work is done, then stabilization and reconstruction
of the house can proceed,” he explains. “No construction
work has taken place since the 1930s–and that work did more harm
than good. We need to stabilize, and then reconstruct. This is a multi-phase,
multi-year project.”
The Bowne House Historical Society, which has operated the house as
a museum since 1947, is seeking an affiliation with the Historic House
Trust of New York (HHT), and is in the process of transferring ownership
of the house to the City of New York. By partnering with the HHT, Bowne
House will be able to access the Trust’s conservation, maintenance,
and support services, as well as gain access to $700,000 in city and
state funds earmarked for Bowne House, pending affiliation with the
HHT.
Under an agreement with the HHT, the Historical Society must first raise
$700,000 in the form of written pledges to demonstrate its commitment
to the restoration. After the transfer is complete, the Bowne House
Historical Society will continue to own its collections and be responsible
for administering the educational programs of the Society. Moore’s
involvement in the restoration and stabilization project will ensure
that the historical and archaeological integrity of the house and property
are not compromised during the process.
“The Bowne House offers a unique opportunity to examine issues
related to social change in New York over the last 350 years,”
says Moore, an expert in examining the patterns of human settlement
in Queens from the 17th through 19th centuries.
Moore, who serves on the Board of Trustees of the Bowne House Historical
Society, will be one of four featured speakers during a free
public program to be held at the library on Tuesday, February 10, from
6 to 7 pm. In his presentation, “Putting People in the
House: Bowne House Archaeology, 1997-2000,” Moore will discuss
the archaeological significance of the Bowne House, detailing the discoveries
that he and Queens College students in his anthropology field course
have made while excavating there over the past six years.
Other speakers on February 10 include Professor Diana Wall (Anthropology
Department, City College and CUNY Graduate Center), who will address
“The Bowne House and the Archaeology of Greater New York”;
architect Page Ayres Cowley, who will present “The New Architectural
History of the Bowne House”; and Ms. Rosemary Vietor (President,
Bowne House Historical Society), who will give opening and closing remarks.
Wall, who specializes in the archaeology of New York City and has examined
the city during the Dutch and English colonial period, is the author
of Unearthing Gotham, the Archaeology of New York City (with
Anne-Marie Cantwell; Yale, 2001) and Touring Gotham's Archaeology
Sites (Yale, to be published in 2004). Cowley began her own architectural
practice in 1992 to focus on conservation and restoration of historic
properties. Her approach incorporates historic interiors, preservation
planning, and architectural history.
Moore will assist in developing the interpretive program for the Bowne
House once it reopens as a museum. This would entail putting into context
the archaeological finds and historical information discovered in order
to communicate information about the early Flushing settlement. For
example, Moore says, “The presence of enslaved African Americans
was much more pervasive than we thought.” He observes that the
first slave was brought to Jamaica, Queens, in 1657. By 1790, one third
of all Flushing households had slaves. African-Americans represented
about a third of the Flushing population, in line with their representation
in other parts of the city.
Although built about 1661, the Bowne House was expanded in 1669, 1680,
and 1695, and was occupied by members of the Bowne family and their
descendents up until the 1940s. Over nine generations of the family
were born and raised in the house.
In addition to John Bowne, the family included prominent businessmen,
such as Robert Bowne (1744-1818), the founder of Bowne & Co., the
oldest public company in the United States, who was also a founding
director of the Bank of New York, New York Hospital, and the American
Chamber of Commerce. Robert Bowne Minturn was a partner of Grinnell
and Minturn, owner of the famous clipper ship “Flying Cloud.”
Walter Bowne served as mayor of New York City (1829-1833), and both
Abraham Lincoln and Gerald Ford had Bowne forebears. Through intermarriage,
the Bownes are linked with the Parsons family, famous in horticulture
for the Parsons Nursery in Flushing, founded in 1838, which introduced
many European specimens in America. In addition, many members of the
Bowne family were ardent abolitionists, and Robert Bowne was a founder
of the Manumission Society in New York State. |