This report documents Midwest Archeological Center fieldwork at the historic Mustill site located at
Lock 15 in the Cascade Locks area of the Ohio and Erie Canal in Akron, Ohio. Located in southern
Summit County, this area consists of a series of locks that raised the canal's waters over the height of land
separating the Lake Erie and Mississippi basins. Historic research indicates that the Mustill family, originally
from England, lived and operated a store at the western side of Lock 15 from about 1834 into the
early twentieth century. Little is known about the earliest years of their occupation, which is better documented
after about 1850.
The archeological fieldwork and subsequent data analysis documented here resulted from a partnership
between the National Park Service's Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area (now National Park),
the Cascade Locks Park Association, the Ohio Department of Transportation, the Metroparks Serving
Summit County, and the City of Akron to restore the historic house and store located on two small lots at
Lock 15. These are believed to be the oldest frame structures still standing in Akron. The Midwest Archeological
Center fieldwork was related only to the proposed actions of a National Park Service restoration
team that would result in ground disturbance across the property. Additional development work
(trails, restrooms, parking, and other components), conducted by the Ohio Department of Transportation
and Metroparks Serving Summit County was archeologically examined by others.
Midwest Archeological Center fieldwork focused on evaluating archeological resources along proposed
underground utility routes, where house restoration would impact the terrain, and where reconstruction
of the store's historic porch and Meat Market additions was expected to impact the soil around the
building. As a result of our fieldwork, conducted in three phases in 1998 and 1999, a large nineteenthcentury
artifact assemblage was collected, several features were preserved in place, and the original,
pre-1853 Mustill residence was tentatively identified. Other contributions of the project include a reassessment
of the stratigraphic sequence recorded by previous researchers and the documentation of considerably
more depth than previously supposed. Little of significance was found near the Mustill House, but
significant features and artifact deposits were investigated along all facades of the Mustill Store.