Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 1
Archaeologists Uncover 18th-Century French Bake House in Connecticut, Finding Burned Gunflint
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 1

Archaeologists Uncover 18th-Century French Bake House in Connecticut, Finding Burned Gunflint

1 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jul 1

Summary

  • Lebanon, Connecticut archaeologists uncovered a well-preserved 18th-century bake house on the town green, confirming the long-suspected site where French troops baked bread during the Revolutionary War.
  • A burned gunflint found on the excavation’s last day tied the site directly to the war era, while most other finds were sparse—mainly late-18th-century ceramics, pipe fragments, bottle glass and animal bone.
  • The dig was the first modern excavation of the bake house after an undocumented 1896 exploration; researchers said the foundation appears largely intact and semi-permanent, built with a stone base and brick oven elements.
  • Ground-penetrating radar suggests the oven may have been part of a larger complex, and archaeologists plan more testing this fall to identify the structure’s style and map surrounding features.
  • The find feeds a broader Lebanon project tied to the nation’s 250th anniversary, highlighting the scale of Revolutionary War activity there and the role of Rochambeau’s French forces in the American victory.

Insights

Beyond feeding soldiers, how does this French bakery's discovery reshape the story of America's fight for independence?
Will Lebanon's Town Green become a permanent archaeological site now that a French army bakery has been found?
What secrets of 18th-century baking might this Revolutionary War oven reveal to modern artisan bakers?