A Woolen Mills Chinatown Archaeologists Journal
Week of June 7, 1999: Roasting Kettle?
By Anmarie Medin, M.A.
Rebecca has been writing a little bit about one of
our more interesting finds. Weve been calling it a
roasting kettle because it was designated that on
the 1891 Sanborn map. [Note: this map is
in PDF format, which requires the downloadable free Adobe Acrobat
Reader.] We have researched a variety
of sources and found no conclusive evidence for why
this structure was called that. Historian Connie
Young Yu thinks the Sanborn mapmaker may have come
by when the Chinese were cooking for a festival.
Depending on the time of year, the kettle could
have been used to cook communal dishes that were
important for celebrating certain festivals. She
remembers her father traveling to Watsonville to get
a vegetable dish important to eat during Chinese New
Year celebrations. If you have any stories or ideas
on how this roasting kettle was used, tell
chcp.info@gmail.com.
Finding and Eexcavating the Kettle
When we saw the two roasting kettles depicted on
the Sanborn map, we knew we wanted to excavate them
in order to understand their use by the Woolen Mills
community. The kettles were located between the
buildings and the river, near the backyards of
residential buildings. Our research indicated no
other archaeologists had excavated or described such
a phenomenon, so we were quite interested in what we
might find. We used the historic Sanborn maps to
figure out where exactly to dig. Once we knew where
the city blocks lay, we mapped in both kettle
locations. The area behind Sanborn Block #2 was
extensively disturbed during construction of the
1950s era Taylor Street bridge, and no
archaeological deposits survived in that area. We
moved over to the area behind Sanborn Block #1 and
tried our luck. We started digging with the
backhoe and very quickly found some bricks. We used
the backhoe to remove the overburden, i.e. the dirt above the structure, and then switched to hand
excavation so we could be more careful.
What We Found
Archaeologist Bryan Mischke excavated around the
structure and eventually exposed a round brick
structure resting on a flat brick floor. The floor
is made up of brick laid end-to-end in 11 rows of
side-to-side horizontal brick. A cylindrical brick
structure rests on this brick floor. The kettle
mentioned by the Sanborn mapmaker may have been a
cast iron pot suspended above this brick structure
or a cast iron wok. The structure consists of
bricks laid side-to-side, ends to the center,
fanning out to create a circle. The top portion was
disturbed, probably during road construction. The
bricks were constructed with a mouth, an opening
left in the bottom and capped by a flat metal bar,
for cleaning out ash and debris.
Bryan found three posts spaced around the brick
floor (at the corners) that are probably remnants of
a shade awning over the structure. In the dirt
around the bricks we found a great deal of large
mammal bone. The inside of the brick round feature
was filled with ash, sandy soil, and many artifacts
such as broken ceramics, more bone, and glass. As
Bryan continued to dig down, he came across a cast
iron pipe running across the cylinder and ending
inside it with an elbow pipe joint turning up at
its end. The end of the pipe going into the brick
was bent and broken and it was impossible to see if
the pipe had once been connected to something else.
We thought the pipe might have been for a gas-fed
burner to do the actual cooking, but it was not on
the bottom as one would expect for more efficient
cooking. In addition, there was a large quantity of
ash around the kettle and downslope towards the
river that was the residue of cleaning out fires.
(See Week of May 17 about how people threw out their
trash.)
Research Continues
We are now researching this archaeological feature
to gain a better understanding of how it was used.
Connie is reviewing literature on
Chinese communities to find references to roasting
kettles or community cooking areas. The
archaeologists are reviewing excavation reports on
other Chinatowns to see if anyone else has described
a similar feature but given it a different name.
Again, if you have any stories or ideas on how this
roasting kettle was used, please respond to
chcp.info@gmail.com. We can use the help.....
Back to Week of April 26, 1999: Is Archaeology Glamorous?
Back to Week of May 3, 1999: Surprises and Ceramics
Back to Week of May 10, 1999: Field Photos
Back to Week of May 17, 1999: Uncovering a Sense of Place and Space
Back to Week of May 24, 1999: Fieldwork Wraps Up
Foward to Week of July 26, 1999: Lab Work in Progress
Check back for periodic updates.
Working with Caltrans are archaeological consultants from the firms of Past
Forward, KEA Environmental, Inc., Foothill Resources, Inc., PAR
Environmental, Inc., and the University of California, Chico.