In the first,
no expectation that the investigators would find anything. When the archaeologists initially checked city
records, they were unable to find any indication that a building had been on the propery before
1886. We’re ecstatic about what we found,” said Robert K. Antozzi, the city’s coordinator for the courthouse
project. “Now we have a major expansion of the story of Fredericksburg, and that’s really exciting.Shortly
into the dig, the crew discovered a sandstone cellar wall — a clue that something was preserved below. When
they dug at another location, it found a brick wall flush against the sidewalk on Princess Anne Street,
which runs through downtown. fighting organizations and to funnel both lethal and nonlethal military
aid to the rebels. It should unite units of the Free Syrian Army, various militias and brigades in each
city and large groups of defectors. I certainly get the fact that your daddy’s Republican Party cannot
win relying singularly on white voters and evangelicals alone as critical as I believe those voters
are to a majority coalition,” Mr. Reed said. “The good news for conservatives is there are many of
those who have not always felt welcome in our ranks who share our values.This is a once-in-a-lifetime
chance,” said Mr. Kiser, 53, as Brynn Stewart, the project manager, nodded beside him. With the project
paused, the team raced to document what they concluded was the basement of a building set afire shortly
after the Battle of Fredericksburg. The timing was opportune because the battle’s 150-year anniversary is in December, and Fredericksburg has
been preparing to mark the sesquicentennial.