Born: Unknown, United States (assumed)
Died: Unknown
Country most active: United States
Also known as: Unknown
The following is republished from the National Park Service. This piece falls under under public domain, as copyright does not apply to “any work of the U.S. Government” where “a work prepared by an officer or employee of the U.S. Government as part of that person’s official duties” (See, 17 U.S.C. §§ 101, 105).
Among the many African American families that moved to Washington were the Whitbys. In 1895 the Whitbys rented a house on a small parcel of land that had belonged to Isaac Shoemaker. According to the census, the family came from North Carolina. One part of the 1895 rental lists the family under the name Elijah Widby, but in the other part of the rental and in the 1900 census the family is headed by Sarah Whitby, probably Elijah’s widow. According to the census, Sarah Whitby worked as a laundress. She had nine children, and although she was herself illiterate, all of her children could read. Because the property was small and included only one house, archeologists thought it gave them a good chance to find the home of an identifiable African American family.
Archeologists suspected that the Whitbys’ house might be quite old. It was not small by the standards of the time, since it had two rooms and a stable, but its condition was listed as “poor” and it rented for the very small sum of $3 a month. Using the archeological evidence from the excavation of the cellar, the description of the house given in the rental (“tworoom”), and the DeLancey Gill drawings, an artist was able to reconstruct what the Whitby house may have looked like.
After taking a close look at the five-acre property where the Whitbys’ house should have been, archeologists noticed a depression in the ground close to a large walnut tree. They dug a small hole in the center of the depression. Underneath about half a foot of sod and recent fill they found bricks, corrugated roofing metal, and artifacts dating to around 1900. These finds encouraged them to go back to the site and do a larger dig.
Archeologists uncovered a cellar hole measuring about 10×12 feet, with stone foundations and a stone floor. More than 500 artifacts were found in the cellar. Most of the artifacts found in the cellar date to around 1900, but a few are older. These include two sherds of colonoware, a kind of pottery made by enslaved people before the Civil War.
The discovery of these types of artifacts confirmed the guess that the Whitbys’ house was quite old. It may have been built as far back as the early 1800s, and it was probably occupied by African Americans for many decades.
One of the most interesting things about this collection was how many buttons were found: 52. It is very unusual to find so many buttons in such a small excavation, and the buttons may be related to Sarah Whitby’s work as a laundress.
One of the buttons was inscribed “Saville Row,” the street where London’s finest tailors plied their trade. If this button really came from Saville Row, it shows that at least one of Sarah Whitby’s clients was very well dressed indeed.