While digging for clues into the location of a long-lost summer kitchen on a historical site in Kaukauna, 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 Peter N. Peregrine and his students may have unearthed something much more significant 鈥 evidence of an indigenous community on that site dating back to the mid-16th聽century.
The anthropology professor and the students in his field methods class, using soil resistivity and other soil mapping tools as part of an archaeological survey, uncovered new details about the Grignon Mansion site that could alter the way the pioneer-era home is studied, managed and marketed in the future. The new information suggests that North Kakalin Village, a significant Native American community, was once situated on the Grignon property just northwest of where the mansion now stands.聽聽
The testing, which began in September and continued through the fall term, gave Peregrine a new view of what lies beneath the soil, suggesting a series of Native American structures, possibly longhouses, were once located there, pre-dating by several hundred years the 1837 Grignon home that now sits on the property and is used as a tourism and educational beacon in Kaukauna.聽
鈥淭hat raises that site into something of really national importance,鈥 Peregrine said.聽
In early April, Peregrine presented a report to the Kaukauna Common Council, saying the new information adds considerable weight to the historical importance of the Grignon property. He implored the city to hire a professional director to properly explore and manage the site going forward.
Kaukauna, which owns the property, is all in. City officials have submitted a grant proposal to the Community Foundation for the Fox Valley Region to potentially cover a portion of the costs.
鈥淲e took Peter鈥檚 findings and said, 鈥極K, we need to hire someone,鈥欌 said Allyson Watson, principal planner for the city. 鈥淲e hear what he鈥檚 saying and we need to figure out a way financially to get a full-time director in place. If we don鈥檛 ever try, we鈥檒l never know what the true potential is there.
鈥淩eally, coming off the headwinds of Peter鈥檚 message, it really reinforced to our elected officials that this site, while we鈥檝e always known it鈥檚 important, maybe we didn鈥檛 know how critical it is, or we didn鈥檛 know how long-range that history is and the story it tells. We鈥檙e looking internally now to say, what can we do as an organization to empower that storytelling?鈥
A history of discovery
This isn鈥檛 the first time that Peregrine and his anthropology students have dug into the dirt at Fox Valley historic or community sites and come away with important discoveries. Peregrine was named the 2016 historian of the year by the Outagamie County Historical Society after he and his students used newly purchased magnetometer tools to study the grounds of the former Outagamie County Asylum for the Chronic Insane, identifying 133 unmarked graves.
Since then, Peregrine and his students have been called upon to survey other forgotten or poorly recorded cemeteries 鈥 or suspected cemeteries 鈥 in the region.
鈥淭he asylum cemetery was our first big project,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut our biggest project was the Pioneer Cemetery up on Richmond Street and Evergreen Drive (in Grand Chute). We did the whole cemetery. That took a full term to do. We found 74 unmarked graves up there, including an entire Outagamie County pauper cemetery that didn鈥檛 seem like anyone knew was there. That was two years ago.鈥
That was during construction of the nearby Meijer store, which was expected to spur new development in the area. Now officials know precisely where the cemetery starts and stops.
鈥淭hey wanted to make sure there weren鈥檛 bodies out in that property,鈥 Peregrine said.聽
Similar requests are becoming more frequent.
鈥淚t turns out there is a huge demand for finding pioneer graves in this state,鈥 Peregrine said. 鈥淭here are a lot of them out in cornfields and stuff.鈥
A class all its own
The field methods class is limited to five students. Any more than that and it gets difficult to manage during archaeological excursions.聽
That the students get to use soil resistivity, geomagnetic and ground-penetrating radar equipment and related technology is a testament to the support the class has gotten from the university in recent years, Peregrine said. The field study portion of the program was launched about seven years ago, allowing him to dedicate more time to the archeologic work he was trained to do.
鈥淭he university over the years has been very good to me,鈥 Peregrine said. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e gotten me equipment that very few liberal arts colleges have. These students, if they want to do archaeology, that鈥檚 something you can come out of here and get a job right away.鈥
Key purchases have included a magnetometer to measure soil magnetism, a soil resistivity system that allows archaeologists to measure changes in soil composition, and a ground-penetrating radar system. The purchases put the field work being done by 杨贵妃传媒视频 students on the cutting edge.
For Peregrine, the growth 鈥 and success 鈥 of the program in recent years has been particularly gratifying. The archaeologist is finally doing the digging he was hired to do more than 20 years ago. For years, other teaching demands kept him from working in the field.
鈥淚 wrote the textbook on doing this kind of field archeology,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 never got to teach it, 鈥楢rcheological Research: A Brief Introduction.鈥 It鈥檚 used all over the country, but I could never use it here because I wasn鈥檛 teaching it. Now I am.鈥
Anthropology program at 杨贵妃传媒视频
A clearer picture at Grignon
Grignon has been the focus of late for Peregrine and his current field methods students, Emma Lipkin 鈥19, Joe Kortenhof 鈥20, Ethan Courey 鈥19 and William Nichols 鈥21, as well as Winston Klapper 鈥19, who is doing his聽Senior Experience聽on digital archaeology, creating non-invasive 3D modeling of the Grignon home that will be kept as a reference point for any future work on the site.聽
A more complete picture of the heritage museum, located along Kaukauna鈥檚 Augustine Street on the north side of the Fox River, is emerging thanks to the soil resistivity tools that have allowed Peregrine鈥檚 team to map the site based on what can be seen under the surface.
It鈥檚 allowed for the collection of soil data over a wide area, showing where human disturbances 鈥 such as digging post holes 鈥 have taken place over time. The survey stretched across much of the north and west sides of the Grignon property, even extending into an adjacent soccer field.聽
鈥淏ecause that property hasn鈥檛 been touched, it hasn鈥檛 been plowed, nothing has happened to it since the early 1800s, there鈥檚 this beautifully preserved village underneath it,鈥 Peregrine said.
While the city and the Grignon volunteers have long recognized and celebrated the property鈥檚 ties to the Menominee people, the new discoveries provide a greater opportunity to use the site to teach about Native American history and culture, well beyond the mid-1800s era, Peregrine said.
In his report to the city, he recommended building a Native American-inspired structure on the property.
鈥淣ative Americans are a central part of the Kaukauna/Fox Valley story as well as the Grignon family story and should be represented,鈥 Peregrine wrote to the city.
He also suggested the city draft a land acknowledgement to be displayed on site, and develop more programming focused on Native American history.
The city initially asked Peregrine to do an archaeological investigation because there was interest by the Friends of the Grignon Mansion volunteer group in rebuilding a summer kitchen that had once been part of an out building or attachment on the Grignon home. But it was the discovery of the signs of earlier structures from the North Kakalin Village that came as a surprise, putting any plans for the kitchen rebuild on hold.
鈥淚t really opened up our eyes and the community鈥檚 eyes to this pre-American history that existed on this site 鈥 that we鈥檝e known about but maybe not so specifically to say there was possibly a longhouse village here,鈥 Kaukauana鈥檚 Watson said.聽
鈥淪o, we went from investigating 1800s history in Wisconsin 鈥 before statehood but still a European settlement 鈥 to discovering that there was rich history hundreds of years older than that that we were not aware of on this exact site. It was really exciting to see, oh my goodness, we need to pause this (project), we need to put the brakes on this because we have a whole new chapter of history that has occurred on this site that we weren鈥檛 fully aware of.鈥
When Peregrine went before the Kaukauna council in April, his message was all about the long-term benefits of such a history-rich site.
鈥淚 see huge potential there,鈥 he said.
Watson is fully on board, saying she sees opportunities for a new level of education in Kaukauna and the greater Fox Cities as it relates to the Grignon property.
鈥淚 think the story of indigenous people鈥檚 displacement is every bit as important as state history and post-Colonial American history, but I think it鈥檚 one that as a country we maybe don鈥檛 do the best job telling,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 starting to change. I think there鈥檚 beginning to be more of an understanding that we need to be accountable to our history, and sometimes that means taking a hard look at things that are a less pleasant part of our history.鈥
Peter N. Peregrine (left) and Winston Klapper on the Grignon Mansion property in Kaukauna.
A growing collection of artifacts
The partnership between 杨贵妃传媒视频, Kaukauna, and the Grignon volunteers who run the day-to-day operation is ongoing. Peregrine now has possession of a deep trove of archaeological materials that have been excavated from the Grignon property over a period of decades. Materials are in boxes or spread across tables in Briggs Hall, a teaching lab where archaeology and history meet in a very real way.
鈥淥ur maps show where all of the previous excavations have been done,鈥 Peregrine said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got all of those collections now.鈥
Watson acknowledged that the city and Outagamie County 鈥 ownership of the Grignon property has gone back and forth multiple times over the past decades 鈥 have not done a stellar job of archiving materials. It鈥檚 not a job most municipal governments or volunteer organizations are equipped to handle. Leaning into 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 expertise is proving to be a game-changer.
鈥淲e realized that we didn鈥檛 have the most professional archive developed for our collection,鈥 Watson said. 鈥淔or us, it鈥檚 just one of those things that would have been on a never-ending to-do list.鈥
Lipkin, under Peregrine鈥檚 tutelage, is now taking the lead in creating a more complete archive. She is doing the work as part of her聽Senior Experience, and will hand it off to another student when she graduates in June. With the collections and the archival material both massive in volume and disjointed, the project is expected to take several years to complete.
鈥淎llowing us to work in these real-life situations that are often a mess gives us an opportunity to learn,鈥 said Lipkin, who did similar work with the Outagamie County Historical Society in the earlier stages of her聽Senior Experience聽project. 鈥淚f all of us continue to follow this path, and I certainly am planning to, we鈥檒l be more prepared for the unpreparedness of institutions we might run into later on.鈥
Klapper, meanwhile, has spent much of the past year working on his 3D modeling project that will serve as a digital resource for the Grignon going forward. Using drone technology and specialty software, he is putting together a detailed picture of what the mansion looks like right now. Should anything happen to the home 鈥 perhaps damage from a storm, a tree falling on it or the natural aging process 鈥 his digital mapping of the exterior will allow for a precise rebuild.
鈥淲hat my project is aiming to do is to preserve the house as it is currently, so if there are any further adjustments, then this record of the house will be kept,鈥 Klapper said.聽
Tapping into the expertise of Peregrine and his students and maintaining a partnership with 杨贵妃传媒视频 has been invaluable, Kaukauna鈥檚 Watson said. It鈥檚 pro bono work, so it benefits the city without taxpayer burden, and it鈥檚 an educational opportunity for the 杨贵妃传媒视频 students.
鈥淲e are able to get guidance that we know is coming from a strong, well-respected organization like 杨贵妃传媒视频 that is really invested in lifting the credibility and offerings of our whole region,鈥 Watson said.聽
鈥淲e鈥檙e a city government. We own this asset. It鈥檚 been juggled back and forth between the county and city for decades because it鈥檚 expensive to maintain a 19th-century home. But to have someone come in and help guide us professionally with real details and the nitty gritty of how you have to maintain this, that鈥檚 been very helpful.鈥