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Bedford Village Archeological Site

Site 36BD90
Reconstructed building in Old Bedford Village.jpg
Reconstructed Euro-American building on the site
Bedford Village Archeological Site is located in Pennsylvania
Bedford Village Archeological Site
Bedford Village Archeological Site is located in the US
Bedford Village Archeological Site
Location On the grounds of Bedford Village in Bedford Township, Bedford County, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 40°2′31.2″N 78°30′38.4″W / 40.042000°N 78.510667°W / 40.042000; -78.510667Coordinates: 40°2′31.2″N 78°30′38.4″W / 40.042000°N 78.510667°W / 40.042000; -78.510667
Area 4.75 acres (1.92 ha)
NRHP Reference # 84003102
Added to NRHP June 4, 1984

The Bedford Village Archeological Site (36BD90) is an archaeological site in central Bedford County, Pennsylvania, United States. Located in Bedford Township north of the borough of Bedford, it was once occupied by a Monongahela culture village. Today, the site is the location of Old Bedford Village, an open-air museum.

The Monongahela village once located at the site was composed of circular houses surrounded by a , an arrangement common in such villages. It was built at the highest point of a terrace along the Raystown Branch of the Juniata River, above the marshy areas of the river's floodplain. This location is atypical for the Monongahela culture, whose bearer typically settled in upland areas for defensive purposes. The villagers' houses were similar to those in other settlements; one house in the village is known to have been of a diameter of 7 metres (23 ft), like those in many other Monongahela villages. Based on archaeological evidence, it is believed that the site was occupied for a short period of time — perhaps two generations — at some point between the years 1250 and 1600.

After European settlement of the area, the hardwood forest at the site was cleared and the area was farmed for many years. Agriculture ended at the site in the mid-1970s, when the Bedford County Redevelopment Authority received a federal grant to construct a living history museum at the site. The resulting attraction, known as Old Bedford Village, was built in 1975 and 1976.

Before the creation of Old Bedford Village, the site was locally known as a source of artifacts, but no wider attention was paid to the site's archaeological potential until after the museum was established. Testing at the northern portion of the site in 1977 revealed evidence of a village from the Monongahela period and of pre-Monongahela occupation dating back to the Late Archaic period. In the summers of 1979 and 1980, Pennsylvania State University conducted much more extensive excavations at different locations in Old Bedford Village, revealing stockade trenches around much of the site.


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