Beyond a Reasonable Doubt

In order to identify the remains of James Fort, the
Jamestown Rediscovery team needed to do two
things. First, find a fortification that matched the
descriptions in the documents and, second,
prove the fortification dates to the first decade of
the 17th century. Artifacts from the first shovelful in
the first square dated to the right time period. The
first season of excavation uncovered the south palisade
line of the fort as well as a trash pit dating to
1610-11. The second excavation season focused on
following the palisade line to the west, but the line
soon disappeared in an area affected by seawall
construction or Confederate fort construction. By the end
of the 1995 season the main goal was to locate a corner
of the fort east of the area already uncovered. In
December the remains of the curved east bulwark were
discovered. Finally, in the late summer of 1996 the east
palisade line was located. The two sides of the fort came
together at 46 1/2 degrees, the exact angle the
reported dimensions of the fort would create. This, in
connection with the large number of early artifacts,
ruled out the possibilities that it could be anything
other than James Fort. September 12, 1996 was declared
James Fort Day and the announcement that the fort was
found was made at a press conference by Governor George
Allen. Come join us as we continue to uncover
"The Buried Truth" on our quest to understand and interpret America's birthplace.