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Volunteers needed for Garfield Farm Museum's archaeological research

Garfield Farm Museum in Campton Hills is looking for volunteers to help with archaeological research this June.

Hours will be 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays through Sundays, June 12-16 and 19-23, at the museum, 3N016 Garfield Road.

Under the direction of James R. Yingst, director and chief archaeologist of Chicago-based Heartland Archaeology Research Program, and a research associate in archaeology at Garfield Farm Museum, work is focused on understanding the lives of the 1830s-'40s farmers settling in Northern Illinois.

Registration is currently open.

Individuals enrolling for a minimum of 40 hours receive a complete orientation, structured training involving rotation through the activities of shovel excavation, screening of excavated soil for artifact recovery, and washing of recovered artifacts.

Participants who successfully complete 40 or more hours will receive certificates documenting hours of training and supervised experience in historical archaeology.

Volunteers who cannot commit to 40 hours are also welcome and will receive informal orientations and participate in tasks needed during their hours of participation.

The Garfield Farm Museum archaeology program accepts adult volunteers and volunteers of ages 14-17 with written parental permission. Volunteers under 14 years old must be accompanied and supervised by a responsible adult at all times. Garfield does not recommend participants younger than 8 years of age.

Last year, the main cellar to the log house was excavated and a smaller cellar was discovered. The two cellars provide a northeast to southwest orientation of the building that served as a home for two families.

The Culbertson log house/Garfield log tavern stood in the fork of the Chicago/St. Charles Road that branched northwest to Sycamore and southwest to Oregon, Illinois.

Culbertson originally claimed 440 acres of land that he improved with a log house, a dug well, and 30 acres under cultivation by mid-1841 when he sold the claim to Timothy Garfield for $650.

The Garfields immediately saw a lucrative opportunity in establishing an inn to capture the business of the numerous farmers hauling wheat past their house to Chicago's port.

To register as a participant, to visit the excavation site, or to financially contribute to the effort, call the museum at (630) 584-8485, email to info@garfieldfarm.org or write to P.O. Box 403, La Fox, IL 60147.

Garfield Farm Museum is on Garfield Road, off Route 38, five miles west of Geneva.

Visit www.garfieldfarm.org or www.facebook.com/GarfieldFarmMuseum/.

Last year, archaeology volunteers at Garfield Farm Museum in Campton Hills excavated the main cellar to the log house and discovered a smaller cellar was discovered (foreground). Courtesy of Garfield Farm Museum
A watercolor from the 1800s shows the log house at Garfield Farm. The continuing archaeology work is focused on understanding the lives of the 1830s-'40s farmers settling in Northern Illinois. Courtesy of Garfield Farm Museum
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