This story reminds us that globalization is nothing
new. It has occurred since human
populations began inhabiting the four corners of the globe. Re-blogged from: HERE
By: Feb
21 2013
How did
a Roman brick from the British Isles get to Washington state's Fort Vancouver?
Back in 1982, the bricks in question had been
examined by an archaeologist named Karl Gurcke who specializes in the
identification of bricks. "The only bricks that come near to matching this
type in size are the so-called 'Roman' bricks," Gurcke wrote in a report
on excavations at Fort Vancouver. This suggested that the "type may indeed
be Roman in origin," and that they were "shipped over from England."
Converse tested the presumed Roman bricks, using a
process called neutron activation analysis, which allows scientists to
determine the elemental components of a material. Bricks made from different
clays and at different times show particular chemical signatures, so she could
compare bricks from the Fort to bricks from Endland. "They tested very
well like Roman bricks from England," Bob Cromwell, an archaeologist at
Fort Vancouver told me. "It is still a hypothesis, but the data is all
pointing in that direction: the size and the elemental analysis compares very
favorably with definitive Roman bricks."The answer: the mercantile empire of the Hudson's Bay Company, a commercial entity substantially older than the United States, having been incorporated in 1670. The Company controlled the entire Pacific Northwest under a local company official known as the Chief Factor. Although after 1818, the region was nominally under the shared control of the U.S. and Britain, the only real western power was the Hudson's Bay Company, and the only real resources it could draw on came from its global network of trading ships and outposts.
Fort Vancouver was the seat of the Company's west
coast operations. It was established in the winter of 1824-1825 on the banks of
the Columbia River, a few miles north of what would become Portland, Oregon.
With the Willamette and the Columbia right there, it was like setting up shop
at the intersection of two major highways. But despite the great location and
abundant resources of the region, they didn't actually have the equipment or
know-how to do a lot of things.
While there were roughly 25 Native American tribes
in the region, there were not any brickmakers among them, which meant there
weren't any bricks. So, the Hudson's Bay Company, which ran the Fort, had to
order them from a world away.
"You can certainly bring over brickmakers to
look at the local lays and the Columbia River silts are great for making common
brick. But at the time, when they are out there establishing their post, if
they want some brick for their chimney, there just isn't any," Gurcke
said, when I reached him at his job with the Park Service in Skagway, Alaska.
"So they ship them from, in this case, England. We do have some records of
them shipping bricks very early from England."
It often took two years for the bricks to reach the
Fort, which is one reason that many brickmakers sprung up in later decades.
Converse, in fact, found several spots in the Willamette Valley that could have
provided bricks to Fort Vancouver in later decades as settlers arriving via the
Oregon Trail figured out that the little city was a good market.
But those are hard stories to tell, as Converse
discovered, because the early brickyards have long since been built over with
houses and TGIFriday's. She can prove that many bricks at Fort Vancouver were
made from Willamette Valley clay, but it's hard to say more.
It's almost easier to tell the global story than it
is to tell the local one because the strangeness of the material can be
pinpointed more easily. For example, the mortars that were used to cement
bricks together were made from Hawaiian corals.
"They had a trading station at Oahu, harvesting
coral, and shipping it here," Cromwell said. "We have bricks with
this coral mortar still adhering to it. They would break up the coral, mix it
with sand and water and you'd have an instant mortar."
And none of this is to mention "the
Village," which sprung up outside the Fort and housed up to 600 people
from all over the world including "English, French-Canadian, Scottish,
Irish, Hawaiian, Iroquois, and people from over 30 different regional Native
American groups." They learned to speak Chinook Jargon, a mixture of
Chinook, English, and French. Every once in a while, Cromwell told me, people
from other European nations would show up, too, or a few Japanese sailors would
come by after having been shipwrecked.
So to make a lowly chimney in some house in the
employee village near the Fort, you might have Roman bricks, mortared together
with Hawaiian coral, and built with the labor of a Portuguese worker or an
Iroquois visitor. Globalization! And it was the middle of the 19th century:
Mark Twain was still a child.
What's fascinating, too, is that this story can be
told with an almost unthinkably mundane object, the common brick, which turns
out to be uncommon if you look hard enough.
"At a glance, bricks appear all alike, yet upon
examination, they can exhibit a frustrating degree of variation. Unbranded
bricks in particular provide an unsatisfying ratio of information gained to
curation space occupied, and many excavated bricks went unrecorded,
uncollected, and even discarded," Converse notes in her master's thesis,
with just a note of despair. "Yet bricks have a story to tell if we can
coax it from them, and contain potential information regarding the development
of industry, trade networks, construction techniques, resource utilization, and
even attitudes and status."
And sometimes, they tell you a story about a
mischievous cat whose imprint traveled all the way around the world, then ended
up in a museum. Which I learned about because Cara Tramontano tweeted it after
words started going around about another cat who left his imprint on a
southeastern European scribe's work from March 11, 1445. (Author's note, that story can be found HERE.)
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