Thanks for the info, Graigfawr. Do you have the source for your information available?
Chances of it being used at this early date for marking animals are slim, since there are very few domestic animals in Jamestown during this period. The colonist are starving right before they backfill the well in which we found the pieces of graphite. According to our Curator, most of the pieces we find are marking stones, so the raw form of the graphite...pretty much in the same form it was removed in.
Do you know the earliest time in which they figured out its lubricant properties?
Thanks again! This is has been very useful.
-JRarchMAR12
Apologies - I overlooked your posting here.
The oft-repeated (but, I suspect, unverifiable) story seems to be that the Keswick deposit was first found by shepherds following a tree toppling in a storm / being struck by lightening and exposing lumps of graphite amongst its roots, and that the shepherds used this useful material to mark sheep until a well-informed gentleman saw what they were using and recognised it as graphite. This story is repeated in various popular works describing the deposit. No reference avialable I'm sorry, but I've certainly read it more than once. Whilst its plausible, it is hadrly verifiable. Someone with local knowledge of the deposit may be able to trace the occurrence of this story (or varients) back though Victorian and eighteenth century 'travels' and early guidebooks to the Lake District.
The earliest significant UK reference I have to graphite is in A.Rees 'The Cyclopaedia; or Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature', 39 vols, London, 1802-20, extracts pub. in 'Rees's manufacturing Industry (1819-20): a selection from 'The Cyclopaedia; or Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature', 5 vols, N.Cossons, ed, Newton Abbot, 1972 [all comments in square brackets are mine]:
"Plumbago ... [after a scientific description, and a referecne to a seperate article on pencil making - for which Keswick graphite was stated to be particularly suited, Rees comments] the brilliant charcoal of certain vegetable substances, more especially when formed by distillation in close vessels, possesses all the characteristics of plumbago: and the charcoal of animal substances, possesses characters still more pecularily resembling it ... [maybe you 'graphite' might be possibly actually be distilled plant or animal charcoal?]. This mineral is found in ... England, Scotland [Ayrshire is mentioned elsewhere], France, Spain, Germany, America [where???], &c. ... it is sometimes used to lubricate machinery instead of oil [my surmise that its use as alubricant came in the C19 is clearly incorrect] and to protect iron from rust [maybe to protect prestiege armour?]. The hearths and plates [i.e. fire-backs?] of chimnies and other utensils [fire-irons, not utensils that were used to cook or eat food], which appear very bright. owe their colour to plumbago. For this purpose Homburg long ago, viz. in 1699 [Rees was punctiluous in referencing material he obtained from earlier books; this reference does not mean that Homburg invented this use of graphite, just that this was the earliest direction found by Rees], directed 8lbs of hog's lard to be melted with a small quantity of water, with the addition of 4oz of camphor. When this last is used, the mixture is taken from the fire; and while it is yet hot, a small qunatity of plumbago is added to give it a leaden colour. When this is to be applied, the utensils must be heated to such a degree, that the hand can scarcely bear to touch them. In this state the composition must be rubbed on them, and afterwards wiped when the piece is dry [is this a plausible use for plumbago in the early C17 colonies?]. ... It is ... used to make razor strops [must have been a barber-surgeon in the colony?]. When kneaded with clay it makes excellent crucibles."
This article raises a number of potentially plausible uses for plumbago in the early C17, though how likely those uses were in early colonial America I leave to you to determine. The spread of occurrences of poorer grade graphite raises the probability that Keswick may not have been the origin of your finds. Clearly a chemical signature would be most desirable.
Do keep Aditnow informed on any progress!