L'Hermitage Slave Village Archeological Site

Address Restricted, Frederick, Maryland. County/parish: Frederick.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places January 29, 2008. NRIS 07001450.

1 contributing site.

Also known as:

  • 18FR792 (Best Farm)

From Wikipedia:

L'Hermitage Slave Village Archeological Site

L'Hermitage Slave Village Archeological Site is an archaeological site near Frederick in Frederick County, Maryland. The location, within the boundaries of Monocacy National Battlefield, was the site of l'Hermitage Plantation, founded about 1793 by the Vincendière family. The Vincendières are believed to have been former Haitian landowners who had fled the Haitian Revolution to the Catholic-leaning state of Maryland. L'Hermitage was notable during its time for its size, brutality and for the large number of slaves on the property.

The site was the subject of an archaeological excavation by the National Park Service in the summer of 2010 which focused on the structures on the site, believed to have been slave cabins. The Park Service had acquired the area in 1993 as part of an expansion of the battlefield site, and conducted preliminary investigations in 2003. The location became known as the Best Farm, and many of its structures remain extant as part of the battlefield's landscape.

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