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About this photograph

Creator
David Walbert
Date created
August 2, 2007
Location
Fort Raleigh National Historic Site, Roanoke Island, North Carolina
License
This photograph copyright ©2007. Terms of use

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reconstruction of earthen embankments of Fort Raleigh

Size: 1024×683

A reconstruction of the earthen fort built by the first European settlers of Roanoke Island in 1585.

The fort is the only structure from the Roanoke settlement whose location has been located exactly. After intensive archaeological studies and excavation from 1936 to 1948, National Park Service archaeologists had found enough evidence of the original moat to justify reconstruction in 1950. Among the many artifacts recovered during excavation were a wrought iron sickle, an Indian pipe, and metal counters used in accounting.

The fort, which orignally commanded a good view of the sound, was reconstructed in the same way it was built in 1585. Workers dug out the moat along its original lines, throwing dirt inward to form a parapet that enclosed approximately 50 feet square. The forst was essentially a square with pointed bastions on two sides and an octagonal bastion on the third. It is conjectured that the settlement’s houses would have been built near the road leading from the fort entrance.