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Apparent Slave Cemetery Uncovered On Fla. Island

Florida Slave Cemetery

By MATT SEDENSKY   11/10/11 06:06 PM ET   AP

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- A 19th-century cemetery, believed to hold the remains of slaves, has been uncovered at a former cotton plantation in Florida, archaeologists announced Thursday.

The discovery of six gravesites was made last year at the Kingsley Plantation in Jacksonville, but the announcement was delayed to allow for further research and to alert possible descendants of those buried there. It brought a sense of accomplishment to those who spent years finding the site and a surge of emotions to those whose ancestors were enslaved there.

"The word emotional almost seems not powerful enough," said Johnetta Cole, director of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African Art and a descendant of the Kingsley family. "I wept. This is not ordinary; this is not an everyday experience."

A team led by James Davidson, a University of Florida anthropologist, worked with just two vague century-old leads to find the site, which was described as being adjacent to a giant oak tree. Once Davidson found the graves, a smattering of clues helped determine they were, in fact, apparently those of slaves.

Square-cut nails in the coffins helped pinpoint the fact that they were from the 19th century. Five-hole buttons and brass coat buttons narrowed the time frame even further. And measurements on the skeletal remains indicated they were likely those of Africans rather than Europeans or Native Americans.

None of the materials ever left the gravesites, though, out of respect for the dead.

"We were not going to exhume anybody, we were not going to collect any material," Davidson said.

The remains include a man who appeared to have died at around age 40, a woman who lived to 60 or older and three children. The age and sex of the sixth body was not determined.

Because there is little documentation of who was enslaved at Kingsley Plantation, identifying the remains and whether they have any living descendants has not been possible, the investigators said.

The gravesites are on Fort George Island, on land administered by the National Park Service in an area called the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve. No decision has been made yet on whether to pursue additional excavations to determine if other graves are located there. Nor has there been a decision made on whether to mark the gravesites.

Zephaniah Kingsley moved to Fort George Island in 1814 with his wife, Anna Madgigine Jai, who he purchased as a slave in Senegal. Historical records show she helped manage the plantation and, after she was freed by Kingsley, owned her own slaves. The couple is Cole's great-great-great-great grandparents.

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FrankInCarson
"Furtive movement" is just an excuse to kill...
04:39 PM on 11/15/2011
Please stop calling the "slaves". This term dehumanizes them, even in death. They were "enslaved persons". Likewise please refrain from the term "masters". This term implies nobility. They were "enslavers" and/or "kidnappers."
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akutan
Black Conservative
07:06 PM on 11/15/2011
I don't think the masters and slaves got your memo.
11:36 PM on 11/12/2011
Thanksgiving will be coming to
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Brenda Starr
Time is before us. Time is after us.
03:00 PM on 11/11/2011
This was an interesting read because lately I've been working on a documentary about old slave cemeteries. Many of these cemeteries are now landlocked and private property owners let them grow over and lock out the descendents. It's a big problem when people can't visit their loved ones and maintain graves. The slave cemetery subject is an incredibly interesting one and the part that the slaves played in our American History is huge. I'd like to see them have access to their history.
09:49 PM on 11/11/2011
They may have found a rock nearby and placed a marker there so they can come back and relocate it easy for study.
10:55 PM on 11/11/2011
No, that photo is not the cemetery in the story. There are no rocks there. It's a sandy barrier island in Florida. I've been there, and that photo does not depict the cemetery location.
02:54 PM on 11/11/2011
That AP picture is not a picture of the cemetery in the story, by the way. There are no stone markers like that at Kingsley.
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queenietoo
is making it happen
02:46 PM on 11/11/2011
If it were not for our African American Ancestors before us we would not be here to live and tell about it. There are so many untold stories and documents out their that have been passed down from generation to generation. I really wished the younger generation were more interested in the ancestors before them, then they would know just how strong of people we really are. There was never ever a reason to call each other what out ancestors was called back then. It was a insult then and it is an insult now by whoever says it. I don't know about some of you on here, but if you go back and look at the History of our people we were a race to reckon with. Our ancestors knew how to survive if they didn't how did we all get here? with all the mistreatment here we are still standing do yourself a favor and get a pen and paper and talk some of the elders in your family and write down all this important information before they leave this earth. It is so important that we pass on as much information to our children, sure we know about all the ancestry that was documented in the books, but do you know what your people contributed to your families?
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phillyangel74
an enlightened and united America
07:28 PM on 11/11/2011
Great post and so true. F&F'd
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queenietoo
is making it happen
08:32 PM on 11/11/2011
Thanks Phillangel74:) glad you enjoyed it
Republibaggers
google"bush obama deficit chart""gutsy call gates"
02:35 PM on 11/11/2011
A rock shaped like the state of Michigan?
02:32 PM on 11/11/2011
It is sad to think about the slaves. I hope some good can come from this. I hope people can trace their ancestors through this discovery.
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Dianne Jarreau
02:07 PM on 11/11/2011
When visiting the Princeton cemetery, most noticeably you are curious about the sarcophagus of Aaron Burr. Although his father, Aaron Burr,sr. was the second president of the university that was then a divinity school, the son is better known for having killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel. The street at the corner of the cemetery where Burr's sarcophagus is obvious was naturally enough named for Hamilton who was the son of a West Indian Merchant who traveled a lot. I was better informed by the biography of Colette,by Claude Francis and Fernande Gontier, Creating Colette. Her father was a sea-captain who mentions that the West Indian merchants arriving on the French Coast were smugglers who nonchalantly intermarried with the women of the French ports. In that account, Colette is likewise of African-American descent.
Late-comer,newspaper journalist and novelist, John O'Hara who drank at "21" when he lived at Quogue,Long Island,later moved to Princeton and wrote for the Trenton Times and is buried in an out of the way corner.
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02:07 PM on 11/14/2011
interesting info. will google :)
01:37 PM on 11/11/2011
Perhaps Johnetta Cole should pay reparations to slave descendents.

"after she was freed by Kingsley, owned her own slaves"
No-name-plz
Social Justice starts with giving me your money
02:03 PM on 11/11/2011
Shhh... only white people have ever done things like this. Our teachers say so , therefore it must be true and this was a misprint.
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Brenda Starr
Time is before us. Time is after us.
03:00 PM on 11/11/2011
Part of our history is that white people, too, were slaves. We called them "indentured servants".
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mszksg
(Let it be)^4
04:45 PM on 11/11/2011
So out of context.
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FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
03:49 PM on 11/11/2011
Ultimately, it was the Europeans who escalated and globalized the slave trade. Africans had no interest in building large boats and shipping their enslaved war and political victims into Europe across the Atlantic to North and South America.

It is those companies which made tremendous profits — many that are key players in business today — that should apologize. Just like bootlegging, these companies would not be what they are without the slave trade. The difference: un c rist an way that humans were demeaned and treated worse than dogs for centuries.
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Dianne Jarreau
06:41 PM on 11/11/2011
You left out the merchant go-between, the slave-trade buyer in Africa was an Arab, who indeed had small skiffs on the Red Sea and in the Mediterranean but had wonderful horses and camels for traveling the entirety of North Africa scattered with ruins of Greek villas along the sea coast, from which you could travel down to visit the Fan tribesmen with their indigo Blue robes and turbans and "blue lips" who traded with the people on the map included with the web-site posted. Checking the above posts, I owe one that I lost when writing to queenletoo who asked about the stories....
01:27 PM on 11/11/2011
What do you call illegals who work for rich people as nannies, etc???
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akutan
Black Conservative
07:07 PM on 11/15/2011
Employees!!!!
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01:25 PM on 11/11/2011
Not startling or surprising at all. The south and especially Florida (with its history of free Africans battling alongside native americans) has a wealth of remains.
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jamalc
Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!
12:41 PM on 11/11/2011
Well that was a depressing read. I came here expecting them to have found the fountain of youth
12:40 PM on 11/11/2011
I'm sure the Southern Baptists gave them a nice "Christian" burial when they threw the bodies in the hole. After all, this is the same freakishly authoritarian God-cult that justified the kidnapping, torture and murder of African human beings for hundreds of years and even exhorted their white supremacist adherents to revolt against the elected U.S. government in order to maintain the unspeakably barbaric and criminal system they actively promoted. They've got a lot to be proud of, don't they.

But they did "apologize" for their hundreds of years of despicable conduct just a couple of years ago, so I guess everything's OK now down south. Now they're just telling the retrograde, hypocritical zealots who sit in their blood-stained pews that they've got to work overtime to get the black man in the White House so that we can sail on back to the Dark Ages when white supremacy was their bread and butter.

Gee, these fascist Pharisees have come a long way since then, haven't they.
01:17 PM on 11/11/2011
chimsect

Seems your indignation is awfully narrow.

Slavery was a common and "accepted" reality among ALL RACES of HUMANS until the 18th and 19th centuries.

Your attacks on those claiming to be Christian is obviously shallow.
No-name-plz
Social Justice starts with giving me your money
01:41 PM on 11/11/2011
He's t'r;olling
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Aleks Hunter
Keep your greedy Mitt off our country!
01:44 PM on 11/11/2011
Not all slavery practices were equal.

In many societies many people volunteered for many different types of servitude for many different reasons. Often for a set period of time. And many slaves had opportunitiues to earn money to buy their freedom early. In times past it was a form of employment contract. Indentured service.

The chattel slavery concept where the slaves were the personal property of a person, and all the the slaves had were also property of the slaveowner was relatively uinique to the Americas.
No-name-plz
Social Justice starts with giving me your money
01:32 PM on 11/11/2011
Do you wake up everyday hating people for something they didn't do? Or are you a little off today?
12:39 PM on 11/11/2011
ah come on folks...if you want to split hairs to make your selfs look so good in others eyes.....we are all slaves of one sort or another...both to other people... and things..and they alll control you in some way....to very hurtful ways both mentally and physically...and you don't do a thing about it to correct it It seems the world would be a more pleasant place...if we spent more time in the present... as one person here commented here....working on ourselves....not forgetting the past......but using it as as guide post to not repeat it...but going on and learning from it...which by the way we are very poor at...we are too busy telling to other guy of his short comings and not working on our own...but where was I..this was supposed to be about cemeteries ...the old viking
01:19 PM on 11/11/2011
Mark

I hear this all the time, and mostly from those with more "left leaning" political views.

It is, however, a FALSE claim. It does nothing but confuse our ability to communicate clear concepts to start confusing slavery with desires for objects or conditions.

One is a matter of "legal ownership". The others of personal values.

I agree with what it is you are trying to say here. I only object to the use of the word "slavery" to describe it. This leads to to the ridiculous claim that we are "wage slaves" and such things as that.
04:46 PM on 11/11/2011
it seems any time you are indentured to some one or some thing that can control you with out your consent or controll beyound your will power ...you are a slave... it could be to some it is just semantics...to others it is reality...and as for machinary conpaired to slaves...some take care if it ..wash it grease it...give it maintniance...others park it in the fence row..and blow it off when they nee it a greasei t when it squicks and fix it when it brakes....the old viking...thanks for your thoughtull reply
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Aleks Hunter
Keep your greedy Mitt off our country!
01:27 PM on 11/11/2011
You gotta be kidding, right?

The chattel slavery in the Americas was as brutal as any the world had ever known. Slaves in the southern USA was not that different than the way the Khmer Rouge treated their victims. In the Carribean it was worse yet. No one of whom you claim you are a slave to will beat you to death for knowing how to read. Learn a little about the Tirangular trade and the concurrent Zanzibar slave trade and note the differences between the two.

Your post is like saying the holocost was no big deal, or the Khmer Rouge regime, or the Ukraniane "famine" or the China's "Great Leap Forward" and Cultural Revolution. These were all atrocities on colossal scales.
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checkmoot
We have met the enemy and he is us.
02:10 PM on 11/11/2011
Slaves were expensive. When you paid that much for a human being, you wanted to keep him healthy to work the land, the land you acquired by killing the Native Americans who used to live there. That was the "Holocaust".
04:55 PM on 11/11/2011
no I'm not kidding ! if you study hisrory and talk to the old ones in the south...you will find all kind of slave owners...some schooled their slaves..and others beat them...just like we today treat each other some in our leading bussiness do that to their employees..they just give them a few scekels to keep their mouth shut...knowing thy can't leave anyway..but it keeps them quite..when in reality thy have very little "freedom" just look around you with a critical eye and an open mind...do you have any experiance in other countries where this is more eveident than the way we mask it here in the USA
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Dianne Jarreau
12:36 PM on 11/11/2011
http://www.sciway.net/hist/chicora/gravematters-1.html

This is the website that another poster posted yesterday re: Charleston in the Carolinas. Use it for information on old discovered cemeteries and excellent advice on how to protect cemeteries in your community as there has been a rash of destructions that have taken place because of greedy realtors. Things to watch out for. It seems to me one happened lately in Illinois, in the last few years, and was a shocking disrespect based on greed and racism. We had a terrible incident about a year ago truly upsetting in which a child buried seven or eight years ago was stolen from the family burial plot. How do you imagine the mother felt?