
From June 1 through August 13, 1998, Cultural Resource Analysts’ personnel  completed phase II and phase III investigations at archaeological site  15Bb75 along the proposed U.S. 27/68 upgrade in Bourbon County,  Kentucky. These investigations were conducted at  the request of the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Previous  archaeological testing had recorded the existence of three buried  historic structures at this site. The first structure was identified as  the remains of William McConnell’s Homestead.
 
                                        
                                       The second was thought to be an  associated outbuilding, possibly a slave quarters. The final structure  was thought to be a later house perhaps associated with the John Ardery  occupation. However, this third structure was not investigated because  there was little evidence of its existence and it appeared to be located about 75 m outside the project area. Work by Cultural Resource  Analysts, Inc. focused on only the first two structures.
                                        
                                       The archaeological investigation of  15Bb75 provides important insights into life at an early settlement in  transition from a late frontier improvement to an upper middle class  farmstead. The analysis of artifacts such as faunal remains, ceramics,  window glass, nails, firearms, and architectural elements allowed  interpretations to be made about the changing daily lifestyles of the  families who lived at this location. The interpretations were enhanced  with information found in historic documents such as tax records, census records, and journals.
                                        
                                       The available archival data indicates  that William McConnell settled at this site during the late 1780s. He  was a relatively prosperous farmer who raised livestock and might have  periodically rented slaves. In building Structure 1 he made an important and recognizable statement reflecting his wealth, his ethnic  background, and his interaction with the values of the local Bourbon  County community. When he died in 1823, he left his “mansion house and  plantation,” as he called it, to his heirs. John Ardery, who married  William McConnell’s daughter Elizabeth in 1818, inherited the house and a portion of the land after McConnell’s death. Ardery also became a  prosperous farmer. He increased the size of his operation by purchasing  surrounding land and, through lease or purchase, he obtained an  increasing number slaves as his estate grew. By 1830 there were twenty  people living at the Ardery homestead including thirteen family members  and up to seven slaves. 
                                        
                                       Ardery and his family occupied the site until his death in 1853. In 1853, Lafayette Ardery, John Ardery’s son,  inherited the house and farm. Lafayette and Fannie his wife lived at the site until about 1871, when they purchased a more commodious house  closer to the county seat of Paris, Kentucky. By 1880, McConnell’s  Homestead, now abandoned, had burned: it was not rebuilt. During the 1880s, a tenant house was  constructed just west of the ruins of McConnell’s Homestead. Some of the building materials may have been scavenged from the ruins of the  earlier structure. This tenant house was probably occupied until the  1920s. It had been razed by 1936.