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It's hard to believe it when you look at all the rocks
but Catoctin Mountain was once dotted with farms.
The most obvious remnants of those days are these
stone walls that run all the way through the woods here
up and down the mountain.
But if you look closely you can find other signs
You can find house foundations, barn foundations
farm lanes, trash piles, and many other things.
We also have written records of the people who lived up here
and photographs that were taken of these farms
in the 1930's when this land was acquired by the government.
Interviews were always done with people
who had grown up in the park in the 1970's.
So we know a lot about these hard scrabble farms
and the tough people who lived here.
The first farmers in the park were Germans
who came down from Pennsylvania in the late 1700's.
Digging around some of the old farm sites in the park,
our archeologists have found artifacts
going back 200 years.
So some of these farms were set up then around 1800
and people lived in them right down until 1936.
Up here on the mountain
people built out of the materials at hand
which meant for the foundations and the chimneys
and wood for the houses.
I'm sitting here in the stone cellar hole
of one of the oldest farms in the park.
There are artifacts lying on the surface too.
But most of them are from the time
the farms were abandoned in the 1930's.
To find early artifacts, archeologists have had to dig in the soil.
Digging at this spot,
they found artifacts going back to the late 1700's
so this is one of the earliest farm sites here in the park.
It was hard to make a living for farmers up here on the mountain
because there wasn't enough level land to grow a lot of crops.
So farmers did a lot of different things to get by.
A lot of the land up here was actually pasture
for sheep or cattle
that's [the reason for] all the stone walls
Many people had orchards up here.
Other people raised hunting dogs or rabbits or birds.
Some people did lumbering
although most people didn't have enough timberland
to make a living that way.
Even so, a lot of people
couldn't make a go of it just from farming up here
and they had to take jobs down in the valley
at least some parts of the year.
So it was a tough life up here.
But some people kept it up
right down until the land was bought by the government in the 1930's.