From the AFT:
“Veterans at Revolutionary
battlefield dig find camaraderie”
(Volunteer trainer Bill Rose,
left, watches veterans Katherine Kuzmick and Bjorn Bruckshaw work at an
archaeological dig at the site of the Second Battle of Saratoga, Thursday,
Sept. 9, 2021, in Stillwater, N.Y. Veterans with American Veterans Archaeological
Recovery are searching for Revolutionary War artifacts at the Saratoga National
Historical Park this month.)
Military veterans who carefully
dug and sifted through clumps of dirt this month at a Revolutionary War
battlefield in New York did more than uncover artifacts fired from muskets and
cannons. The meticulous field work gave the veterans — some dealing with
post-traumatic stress disorder and physical injuries — a familiar sense of
camaraderie and mission. So while the archaeological dig at the Saratoga
National Historical Park produced evidence from the tide-turning Second Battle
of Saratoga, the teamwork behind the finds also benefited the veterans. “We can
all come together, share your battle stories, your deployment stories, and
share your love for the history of what you’re digging,” said Bjorn Bruckshaw,
of Laconia, New Hampshire, during a break on a recent hazy morning. Bruckshaw,
38, was part of a three-person crew that spent the morning digging small holes
at spots that set off metal detectors, then searching though the damp clumps to
uncover ... old nails, mostly. But the self-described Revolutionary War buff
was loving it.
(Veteran Megan Lukaszeski takes
part in an archaeological dig at the site of the Second Battle of Saratoga,
Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021, in Stillwater, N.Y. Veterans with American Veterans
Archaeological Recovery are searching for Revolutionary War artifacts at the
Saratoga National Historical Park this month.)
Bruckshaw, an Army veteran
injured in a roadside bombing in Iraq, is among 15 veterans taking part in the
dig through American Veterans Archaeological Recovery, an organization that
helps service members transition into the civilian world. While the group deals
mostly with vets with disabilities, their focus is on what participants can do
in the field instead of any injuries, said AVAR’s Stephen Humphreys. “In the
military you’re trained to be on time for everything,” Bruckshaw said. “So
transitioning into the civilian world is a little bit harder for a lot of
people. For me, it was a little bit difficult suffering from TBI (traumatic
brain injury) and PTSD from my combat injuries. But you have support groups
like these.” National Park Service archaeologist William Griswold said the team
is looking for artifacts that shed more light on the Battle of Bemis Heights,
or the Second Battle of Saratoga, on Oct. 7, 1777. The American victory over
British and German soldiers is credited with persuading France to lend crucial
support the fight for independence.
The battle also burnished the
heroic resume of future traitor Benedict Arnold, who was wounded in the leg and
is memorialized here with a monument to his boot. While maps and journal
accounts from the time describe troop movements during that fateful battle,
artifacts can pinpoint movements and provide a reality check. For instance,
historians know the British at Saratoga loaded their cannons with tin canisters
packed with iron balls, or “case shot,” that spread out like shotgun blasts.
Locations of the buried iron balls found here are being used to deduce more
precisely where the cannons fired from. “It’s a good way to check a lot of
these textual sources because in the fog of battle, people often make mistakes
or embellish things,” Griswold said.
(Veteran Tim Madere sifts through
dirt as part of an archeological dig at the site of the Second Battle of
Saratoga, Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021, in Stillwater, N.Y. Veterans with American
Veterans Archaeological Recovery are searching for Revolutionary War artifacts
at the Saratoga National Historical Park this month.)
Field work was first conducted
here in 2019, with supervision from the National Park Service’s regional
archaeology program. The American Battlefield Trust is a sponsor. Work was
interrupted by the pandemic last year, but crews with shovels and metal
detectors were back this month and wrapping up this week. “It’s partially about
the chase,” said veteran Megan Lukaszeski. “You never know what you’re going to
find. You could dig and you could find nothing, or you could dig and find the
most amazing things.” After retiring from the Air Force, Lukaszeski went to school
to study archaeology. The 36-year-old from New York has already taken part in
AVAR excavations to recover remains at WWII crash sites in England and Sicily
through the group’s partnership with the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency. She
plans to get her master’s degree and pursue archaeology professionally. For
others, the work is more a chance to learn about archaeology while having some
fun. Former Army Col. Tim Madere once hunted for weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq. This month, the 68-year-old sifted dirt through a screen in a hunt for
artifacts and shared laughs with other workers. The Savannah, Georgia-area
resident said he has gotten over most of his PTSD, but believes you can never
totally get rid of it. He sees this sort of field work as a good way for people
to manage it. “You hear their stories and then you tell yours so that we kind
of get a better appreciation of what all these Americans did to protect the
United States,” he said. “So it’s good to see other people, and they’re doing
well.”
^ I have always enjoyed to the
Saratoga Battlefield (the turning-point of the American Revolution) ever since
I was a little kid. This work means a lot because it is such a interesting
place and it is helping Veterans. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.