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Boston Globe - Saturday, October 4, 2003
COLONIAL AFRICAN-AMERICANS' REMAINS SET FOR REBURIAL
By: Tatsha Robertson, Globe Staff
NEW YORK - Anthropologists and archeologists determined that one grave
contained a young woman who had twisted, snapped wrists and a bullet lodged
in her ribs. In another was a man laid to rest with coins on his eyes, an
African custom. A third gravesite at the Colonial-era burial ground for
slaves and freed blacks in lower Manhattan belonged to a woman holding a
child in her arms.
The remains of 419 African-Americans who three centuries ago worked and
lived in the area will be reburied today in the same spot near Wall Street
where they were accidentally unearthed 12 years ago by federal workers
constructing an office building. A thousand people gathered in Wall Street
yesterday and followed five horse-drawn carriages that carried dozens of
coffins to the burial site at 290 Broadway.
Extensive research on that burial ground, what one federal agency called
"the most important urban archeological undertaking in the nation," has
provided a unique peek into the lives of enslaved African-Americans in the
Colonial North and challenged traditional thinking about slavery in cities
like Boston and New York.
Researchers have learned that the burial ground, which closed in 1794, is
part of a larger one that stretches five blocks and is encircled by the
State Supreme Court, the federal Courthouse, and City Hall. A total of
20,000 Africans or African-Americans are believed to be buried there, a
finding historians say proves that a much larger black population lived in
New York during the 18th century than previously believed.
"I was raised in New York, and, of course, my understanding of African
captivity in the North was there wasn't any," said Warren Perry,
archeological director of the African Burial Ground project. "It just didn't
happen here. This was the free, white North, and Africans were treated like
family.
"Well, the remains indicate they were not treated like family. These
skeletons have all kinds of trauma."
After the remains are lowered into the ground today at the end of a weeklong
commemoration in Washington, D.C., Delaware, and New Jersey, DNA,
photographs of the remains, and scores of artifacts found in the coffins -
waist beads, cowry shells, necklaces, and bracelets - will be examined for
years to come. A team of the nation's top anthropologists and archeologists
are reviewing an unreleased report by Howard University, which conducted
bio-skeletal research of the site.
"I have been in this field for 32 years as a historical archeologist, and I
don't know of any archeological site more important to the United States,"
said Michael Trimble, archeological director for the US Army Corps of
Engineers.
Several blocks away, Perry, a professor at Central Connecticut State
University, and a small team of archeologists, were cataloging small pieces
of pottery found at the burial ground. Perry, who is African-American,
became involved with the project in 1991 when he was a graduate student.
Then, there were only two black archeologists with doctorates in the nation.
(He said there are currently six.) Community leaders knocked on his door in
the middle of the night to ask for his help.
Back then, the federal government and the black community clashed. The US
General Services Administration, the organization overseeing the project,
temporarily stopped the construction of the office building after the
remains were discovered. Some African-American leaders contended that GSA
should have built the office building elsewhere. They pressured GSA to
conduct research, and also accused the organization of leaving them out of
important decisions and the research. In recent years, the relationship has
improved, and nearly every
Scientist involved with the project has knowledge of the African diaspora.
During the ceremony yesterday, David Dinkins, who was mayor at the time of
the discovery, said that in the 18th century, the burial site was not
considered part of New York City.
"Two centuries ago, not only could African-Americans not hope to govern New
York City, they could not hope to be buried in city limits," said Dinkins,
the city's first black mayor.
Specialists said the findings demonstrate how Africans evolved into the
African-Americans of today.
Anthropologists and archeologists now believe many of those buried in the
gravesite were born in Africa rather than North America. Perry said
scientists have matched DNA samples of people from Ghana and the Ivory Coast
to some of the remains. Some of the dead suffered from tropical diseases
they could have contracted only in the Caribbean or in other warmer
climates. At least 18 of the skeletal remains contained teeth that had been
filed in the same designs seen only in Africa, said Perry.
During the ceremony yesterday, Michael Blakey, the African Burial Ground
director, said the slaves had come from across Africa. They lived in
poverty, eating cornmeal and porridge, bread and lard. Most of them are
believed to have worked for fur traders and farmers. Historians believed
they helped build a protective wall in the area now known as Wall Street.
Perry emphasized that many were treated brutally. The face of the woman with
a bullet lodged in her side had been smashed. Perry said at least 70 percent
of the adults suffered a condition where the muscles along the neck area are
detached. He said the condition is usually seen in weight lifters or people
who consistently carry loads too heavy for them.
"We have lived and worked with these bones," Perry said. "I can't tell you
how many times we cried as we stood over them."
Copyright (c) 2003, Globe Newspaper Company
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