Archaeological research at Glen Fount’s historic component focused on the several razed buildings at the core of the plantation. These included the “Big House” residence and nearby outbuildings behind it: the Wash House, Meat House, Soap House, Milk House, and Carriage House. Two razed brick residences set apart from the Big House complex were originally inhabited by enslaved workers, but after Emancipation were occupied by farm laborers, servants, and boarders, including at least one schoolteacher.
Excavation of a small, brick-lined cellar in the floor of the West Slave House, and in the domestic midden around both slave houses, recovered direct evidence of schooling-related activities there. Fragments of hand-held slate chalkboards were found, along with slate pencils and leads and ferrules from wooden pencils. These materials were concentrated in the cellar fill, suggesting that the former slave residence later saw use as a schoolroom.