Hidden History: African American Cemeteries in Central Virginia
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In Hidden History, Lynn Rainville travels through the forgotten African American cemeteries of central Virginia to recover information crucial to the stories of the black families who lived and worked there for over two hundred years. The subjects of Rainville’s research are not statesmen or plantation elites; they are hidden residents, people who are typically underrepresented in historical research but whose stories are essential for a complete understanding of our national past.
Rainville studied above-ground funerary remains in over 150 historic African American cemeteries to provide an overview of mortuary and funerary practices from the late eighteenth century to the end of the twentieth. Combining historical, anthropological, and archaeological perspectives, she analyzes documents—such as wills, obituaries, and letters—as well as gravestones and graveside offerings. Rainville’s findings shed light on family genealogies, the rise and fall of segregation, and attitudes toward religion and death. As many of these cemeteries are either endangered or already destroyed, the book includes a discussion on the challenges of preservation and how the reader may visit, and help preserve, these valuable cultural assets.
Lynn Rainville
Lynn Rainville is Director of Institutional History and Professor of Anthropology at Washington and Lee University and former Dean of Sweet Briar College.. For over two decades she has studied the lives of exceptional, yet overlooked, Americans. This work has been supported by numerous grants and she has written five books (on Mesopotamian houses, African American cemeteries, Sweet Briar College, and Virginia’s role in World War I). She directs the Tusculum Institute for local history and historic preservation at Sweet Briar College.
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Hidden History - Lynn Rainville
HIDDEN
HISTORY
HIDDEN
African American Cemeteries
in Central Virginia
HISTORY
Lynn Rainville
University of Virginia Press
© 2014 by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
First published 2014
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Rainville, Lynn.
Hidden history : African American cemeteries in central Virginia / Lynn Rainville.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8139-3534-8 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8139-3535-5 (e-book)
1. African American cemeteries—Virginia—Albemarle County—History. 2. African American cemeteries—Virginia—Amherst County—History. 3. African Americans—Funeral customs and rites—Virginia—Albemarle County—History. 4. African Americans—Funeral customs and rites—Virginia—Amherst County—History. I. Title.
F232.A3R35 2014
393.93089'960730755482—dc23
2013017583
For my parents,
who instilled in me the
desire to explore
Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Finding Zion
2. Locating and Recording the Dead
3. The Accidental Museum: Gravestone Designs
4. Slave Cemeteries and Mortuary Rituals
5. The Network of Death: Funerals, Churches, and Burial Societies
6. Lost Communities of the Dead
7. Gravestone Genealogies
8. Connecting Communities through Their Burial Grounds
9. Commemorating and Preserving Historic Black Cemeteries
10. Cemeteries as Classrooms: Teaching Social History with Gravestones
Appendix: Gravestone Recording Forms
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Illustrations
1. Original Zion Baptist Church
2. Decorated concrete gravestone
3. Unusual concrete marker
4. Punctured stone
5. Egyptian-style obelisk
6. Uninscribed obelisks
7. Midnight Slave Funeral
8. A Plantation Burial
9. Inscribed slave gravestone
10. African American funeral
11. Funeral flowers
12. Inscribed gravestone of Katherine Lewis
13. Inscribed slave gravestone at Redlands Plantation
14. Gravestone of Lafayette Fletcher
15. Libation ceremony at the Sweet Briar Plantation Burial Ground
16. Graveside artifacts at the Mount Fair Slave Cemetery
17. Walnut Level Plantation Cemetery
18. Stone memorial at University of Virginia Slave Cemetery
19. Kitty Foster Memorial at University of Virginia
20. Displaced gravestones at Avoca Slave Cemetery
21. Grave of Rev. M. T. Lewis at Daughters of Zion Cemetery
Maps
1. Thompson Family Cemetery
2. Bowles Family Cemetery
3. Brown/Carr Family Cemetery
4. Burial sites at Mount Fair Plantation Slave Cemetery
5. Daughters of Zion Cemetery
Preface
In the spring of 2008 I received a series of phone calls and e-mails from an archaeologist who has spent dozens of hours mapping Virginia cemeteries with me. Leah and her husband, Joey, first noticed the damage when they witnessed a crew from the electric company driving machinery across the small cemetery located near their house in Crimora, Virginia. Apparently, while pruning tree limbs along some existing power lines near her house, a cleaning crew with a tractor and Bush Hog had severely damaged a historic black cemetery. Such an event is all too common, but it highlights the precarious nature of unmarked historic cemeteries.
This unnamed cemetery near Rock Mountain Lane was originally associated with the now demolished Wesley / Belvedere Chapel, a late nineteenth-century African American church once surrounded by a black neighborhood. Many of the original residents have long since moved on, leaving behind white newcomers such as Leah and Joey, and an elderly caretaker who felt powerless to defend the cemetery against the cleaning crew. Longtime neighbors remember the cemetery before the construction of Rock Mountain Lane. They believe that the road cuts right through it and that some of the graves must be under the asphalt.
The remaining monuments range from carved marble to metal funeral-home markers. The few inscribed stones date from the early twentieth century, with birth dates from the 1840s to the 1880s. One of these marked headstones belonged to a free black man, Napoleon Vena, who was registered in Augusta County in the 1850s. Freed African Americans were required to register annually with local authorities—a means of monitoring and restricting them, even when they were not in bondage.¹
When Leah noticed the Bush Hog parked among the markers, it had already damaged several stones and created deep ruts in the middle of the cemetery. Nearby stood the line of utility poles that had prompted the destruction. The electrical cooperative was focused on keeping the lines free of debris; the workers were just doing their job. Unfortunately, the gravestones were casualties of the operation.
In an effort to prevent more destruction, Leah and Joey planted dozens of pink flags to highlight the rows of graves, both marked and unmarked. Then they began their public relations campaign. Initially they hoped to convince the power company to pay for the damage done to the stones and clean up the site. Instead, they met resistance at every level, everything from a lack of acknowledgment of culpability to a flat-out denial of the cemetery’s existence. They spent a week placing unreturned phone calls to an employee of the power company. When they first observed the desecration, they contacted the Augusta County sheriff’s office (in Virginia, the destruction of funerary monuments is a crime). A deputy arrived at the cemetery and sent a message to a supervisor at the Shenandoah Valley Electric Cooperative (SVEC), who said that something would be done immediately. But the next workday saw the return of a pair of crew members, neither of whom had been told to cease their work. One of the men admitted to having seen the headstones they were running over; the other maintained that he’d never run over a cemetery in twenty years.
Leah called the power company again. This time she spoke with the manager of district operations. He repeatedly insisted that Leah was mistaken about the presence of a burial ground at any site where his crew would be working. She asked him what the procedure would be for getting the cemetery marked on the SVEC maps and was told that the company had no maps of the lines or poles that they maintain—contradicting Leah’s sighting of a nearby telephone pole tagged with a yellow label presumably indicating that the location had been designated as a cemetery.
Finally, Leah called 911 and reported a crime in progress, pursuant to the Code of Virginia, section 18.2-127. Her call was returned by a second sheriff’s deputy, who said that he would slip up there sometime.
He called her back about forty-five minutes later to say that he’d talked to the crew on the scene and that while the tractor was still parked on top of the gravesites, they had promised him they would move it later.
A week after her original e-mail, Leah left a message on my answering machine, sounding very frustrated and worn down. While she and her husband had spent dozens of hours trying to rally support to protect the cemetery, only a handful of groups expressed an interest in her mission. Her last sentence was I’m not sure why I should care about this cemetery any longer.
Leah’s concern is valid. Why should nondescendants or even the descendants themselves care about an abandoned, century-old graveyard? In today’s age of rising cremations, would it be better to use the land for something more practical and remove skeletal remains into European-style crypts, thereby reclaiming even more land from the dead?
Despite their initial discouragement, Leah and Joey persevered, and several other community members joined them in the battle to protect the site. Their e-mail campaign—distributed to the power company, the sheriff’s office, a local historical and genealogical society, an Augusta County district supervisor, the State Corporation Commission, U.S. Representative Bob Goodlatte’s office, some of the SVEC board members, three local archaeologists, two newspaper publishers, and an employee at the Department of Historic Resources in Richmond—in combination with repeated phone calls, finally prompted a response from the power company. The electric company agreed to clean up the cut brush they left behind from their initial clear-cutting efforts. The second step was to add the site to their maps so that it wouldn’t happen again. To improve community relations in the future, a supervisor looked into the breakdowns in communication among employees and contractors. Finally, the Virginia Department of Transportation placed no mowing
signs and bollards along the road’s edge to discourage intrusion by cars, Bush Hogs, or snowplows. And a local poultry farmer started spraying herbicide under the utility lines to decrease the need for SVEC crews to bring in heavy equipment.
In the end, Leah and Joey’s efforts paid off and helped prevent further destruction of the site. But it is unfortunate that they had to fight so hard to protect the funerary monuments in this small cemetery. Moreover, the lackluster response from the sheriff’s office and the initial stonewalling from the power company demonstrate just how difficult it can be to ensure a modicum of consideration and respect for these sacred sites.
My own study of historic African American cemeteries began by coincidence. As an undergraduate at Dartmouth College, I needed a paper topic for a class on gender and anthropology, and I wanted an excuse to collect data outside so I could enjoy the beautiful New England fall. Having just read the classic article by Edwin Dethlefsen and James Deetz on colonial-era death’s heads and grinning cherubs, I decided to study gender relations as evidenced by pronouns carved into gravestones.² I found that colonial New England husbands referred to their wives as consorts
and that women were almost always memorialized in reference to their relation to men (e.g., wife of
or daughter of
).³ The social identities of men were commemorated by reference to their occupations (e.g., Dr.
or Professor
). Their identity was defined independently of their marital status; they were almost never referred to as the husband of
their wives.
I enjoyed writing the paper but did not return to the topic until my senior year, when I decided to study gravestone variability for my honors thesis in anthropology. Borrowing one of the earliest Mac PowerBooks, I collected information from twenty-five hundred stones in the public cemeteries within one New Hampshire township. The thesis, titled Hanover Deathscapes: Attitudes toward Death and Community as Reflected in Cemeteries and Gravestones; An Archaeological Investigation of Mortuary Variability in Hanover Township, 1770–1920,
demonstrated that gravestones illustrate cultural themes, such as ideas about the family, religion, society, and attitudes toward death.
I went on to earn my Ph.D. in Mesopotamian archaeology, but when I was hired to teach at Sweet Briar College (one hour south of Charlottesville, Virginia), my interest in historic cemeteries was renewed. I was surprised to learn that the college was founded by the daughter of a slave owner and that the three thousand acres of the campus were once plantation fields. Several structures remained from the antebellum period, including a standing slave cabin. By the end of my first semester, I was beginning to ask questions. What was known of the antebellum African American community? Where were the other slave cabins that housed the dozens of enslaved people? Were there any artifacts remaining from their daily lives? And, of course, who was buried in the recently discovered slave cemetery?
As it turned out, my research into the Sweet Briar Slave Cemetery was the beginning of an ongoing project. More than ten years and dozens of cemeteries later, I have created a website to disseminate the genealogical and historical importance of these sites to the public and the academy and have written several articles in locally accessible journals, such as the local historical society magazine and the college alumnae magazine.⁴ My research includes archaeological investigations of cemetery sites (mapping and recording the aboveground features), recording all of the legible inscriptions from gravestones, conducting oral interviews with descendants, and archival research into enslaved and postbellum African American communities. Although my academic training is in archaeology, I do not excavate or disturb any human remains in my research; all of the information that I collect from Virginia cemeteries comes from aboveground artifacts.
I have come to view this work as an opportunity to bring the past lives of ordinary and exceptional African Americans into public and scholarly discourse. We cannot fully understand nineteenth-century Virginia history if we do not account for these people, who often made up more than 50 percent of a Piedmont county’s population between about 1830 and 1860. Their achievements and disappointments must be incorporated into local histories, and in turn they will help us to assess the impact of these families and communities on broader trends in American history. Cemetery sites preserve the voices of the past, telling of family intrigue, neighborhood relations, community history—even artistic skills.
This book presents more than a decade of research into more than 150 historic African American cemeteries in central Virginia, primarily focused on Albemarle and Amherst Counties, but also containing examples from a dozen other Virginia counties. It provides an overview of the rich mortuary and funerary traditions of African Americans between the late eighteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, using cemetery landscapes, gravestones, obituaries, wills, deeds, letters, family Bibles, and oral histories. It discusses how to locate these cemeteries, methods for recording cemetery features, and the challenges of preserving them.
In this book, I try to answer my friend Leah’s fundamental questions: Why are historic cemeteries important, and why should we care about them?
Notes
1. In the antebellum period, a small portion of Africans and African Americans avoided or escaped enslavement. In nineteenth-century records, these individuals were referred to as Free Persons of Color,
Free Negros,
or Free Blacks.
The last term will be used in this book.
2. Dethlefsen and Deetz, Death’s Heads, Cherubs, and Willow Trees.
3. A widowed woman was called a relict.
4. Rainville, An Investigation of an Enslaved Community
; Rainville, Saving the Remains of the Day
; Rainville, African American History at the Sweet Briar Plantation
; Rainville, Social Memory.
For the past two hundred years, various terms have been used to identify people of African descent living in America. In the archival records used in this study, those terms range from negro
to colored,
Afro-American,
black,
and today’s preferred terminology, African American.
This book follows the Chicago Manual of Style in printing the phrase without a hyphen even when used as an adjective.
Acknowledgments
I have been fortunate to receive advice and support on this project from numerous individuals. These enthusiasts ranged from descendents of individuals buried within the cemeteries that I studied to professional historians and archaeologists and from landowners to hikers. Since my work on historic African American cemeteries has spanned more than a decade, I cannot possibly list the hundreds of individuals who helped me along the way, but the following lists give a small sense of the community effort that went into the research behind this book.
I received generous financial support from the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and Sweet Briar College. These grants enabled me to hire assistants to help with the recording of gravestones and mapping of cemeteries. Some of these assistants include Derek Wheeler, Celine Beauchamp, Julie Solometo, Steve Burdin, Don Gaylord, Nathaniel Schwartz, Grace Miller, Laquisha Banks, and several Sweet Briar students, including Mandi Ponton, Dana Ripperton, Anne Mathias, Sasha Levine, Katharina Fritzler, Karli Sakas, Wendy Harder, Jodie Weber, Tiffany Meadows, Crystal Collins, Katie Miller, and Ashleigh Hawkins. Many other local residents volunteered their time to help read inscriptions and take photographs of gravestones.
I have had the pleasure of working with many descendent communities. These families generously shared family stories and photographs and helped me locate and identify historic black cemeteries. I spoke with descendents at most of the sites where I worked, but a few individuals took additional time to work with me in the subsequent research phases. These skilled family genealogists include Shirley Parrish, Shelley Murphy, Edwina St. Rose, Lenora McQueen, Sheila Rogers, Linda Johnson, Jackie Johnson, Jasper Eddie
Fletcher, Crystal Rosson, William Billy
Hearns, Liz Cherry Jones, Mary Reaves, Virginia Burton, Gene Burton, Jada Golden Sherman, Vickie Dean, and Bettie Fitch. I also owe a debt of gratitude to Julian Burke (now deceased) for the work that he led on transcribing African American death records and Martin Burks III for sharing information about area cemeteries and burial practices.
Many of the historic African American cemeteries discussed in this book lie on private land (often no longer owned by the families interred at the site). Thus I often relied on the hospitality of current landowners to get access to these sites. I am very grateful for the opportunity to visit sites located on land owned by the Hart family, the Carter family, the Douglass family, the Pflug family, Wilson Steppe, the Innisfree community, Wiley Martin, Alison and Mark Trimpe, Mario diValmarana, Jim Murray, Phyllis Ripper, and Peter Agelesto. In other cases, the descendants of white families who once owned plantations in the region shared with me their research, which helped me locate antebellum cemeteries, most notably Kevin Brown and Jeanne Brown.
The Charlottesville region is rich in historians and archaeologists. Many of these experts helped me track down archival leads and locate historic cemeteries, especially K. Edward Lay, Leah Stearns, Joey Combs, Ted Delaney, Mieka Brand Polanco, Alice and Jon Cannon, Sara Lee Barnes, Robert Vernon, Scot French, Sam Towler, Ben Ford, Steve Thompson, Margaret O’Bryant, Cinder Stanton, Gayle Schulman, Leni Sorensen, Fraser Neiman, Sara Bon-Harper, Jerome S. Handler, Reginald Butler, Steven Meeks, and Dede Smith.
In some cases I reached out to specialists to answer questions about specific topics. I am very grateful for the insights provided by Dr. Rebecca Ambers (associate professor of environmental science at Sweet Briar College, who helped me identify gravestone material), Rick Barton (for providing statistical assistance), Laura Knott (for giving me references about historic cemetery landscaping), and Tamara Northern (curator emeritus, Dartmouth College, for images of African obelisks). The staff at the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society, the Amherst Historical Society and Museum, and the University of Virginia Special Collections Library were extremely helpful.
Any remaining errors in the book are my changes to the professional and much-appreciated editing assistance from Jessica Mesman Griffith, Carrie Brown, Alice Cannon, Kathleen Placidi, Carolyn Cades, George Roupe, Jane and Roger Rainville, and Ian Freedman. I also very much appreciate the insight and suggestions provided by Lorena Walsh and two anonymous reviewers.
My husband, Baron, provided support and honest assessments of the various versions of the manuscript. My twin daughters were born during the editorial stages of this research and are rapidly proving adept at locating small stones sticking out from the ground. I hope to instill a love of graveyards and their histories in this next generation.
HIDDEN
HISTORY
1
FINDING ZION
On a crisp fall Saturday in 2008, following a lead in attempting to locate a Burton Family Cemetery,
I traveled down a rural Virginia lane to an African American church cemetery. When I arrived, I found the churchyard deserted, with only silent stone sentinels to note my approach.
The gravestones mark each life, often clustered into families, illustrating untold histories. I document each stone, one person at a time. Later, I will upload the photos and inscriptions to a website where I have collected six thousand other memorials from historic African American cemeteries in central Virginia.
I have visited over 150 such cemeteries in a multicounty area; of these, I have documented 118 with maps, photographs, and additional research. This includes more than six thousand individual stones, dating between 1800 and 2000. But many more unmarked or forgotten burials remain to be photographed and recorded. There is no good way to estimate the number of African American burials in Virginia between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, but we can review the census figures for one Virginia county and estimate the number of deaths per one thousand individuals per year. The U.S. Slave Census for Albemarle County, Virginia, illustrates that the enslaved population more than doubled between 1790 and 1860, from 5,579 individuals to 13,916;¹ the number of deaths would have paralleled this increase in births if it were a closed population with no out-migration. To the contrary, Albemarle County would have experienced in-migration from the Tidewater and out-migration to other southern states (especially Kentucky and Tennessee). Not knowing those migration figures precisely, we can crudely estimate that at least six thousand individuals (or approximately eighty-six per year) died in Albemarle County prior to emancipation while enslaved on a plantation or a small family farm. Only a fraction of their graves have been located.²
Another way to calculate the number of African American burials for a given time period is to search death certificates for the county and add up the number of reported deaths. In Virginia, death certificates were not officially collected until 1912. In Albemarle County, the Charlottesville African American Genealogy Group transcribed 8,088 death certificates for burials that occurred between 1917 and 2001. As a crude estimate of mortality, that translates to ninety-six burials per year over an eighty-four-year period. Hundreds of these individuals lie buried on family land in small, sometimes forgotten graveyards. Sometimes these bodies reemerge in surprising ways, as when an old cemetery is discovered because of a modern construction project. In other instances, remains are lost, forever buried under unmarked ground. We lose important pieces of local and family history when we allow these sacred sites to go unrecorded and disappear.
Origins
In 2001, I was hired to teach at Sweet Briar College, the site of a former plantation willed by its nineteenth-century owner to become a school for women. The college has retained much of its original agricultural land. Hundreds of historic and archaeological sites remain on the three-thousand-acre campus. The plantation owners’ cemetery was well known to the campus community. Every year students and faculty would march up to the plantation graveyard and lay flowers at the grave of the founder and her daughter, in whose honor the school was founded. Situated atop a high hill, containing tall obelisks and surrounded by a stone wall, this cemetery was hard to miss. But the resting place of the enslaved individuals who worked on the plantation had been lost to modern memory.
Fortuitously, a riding instructor at the college had spent years exploring the fields and, just before his retirement, announced the discovery of an unmarked cemetery, overgrown with brush. He had located the plantation’s slave burial ground. As the college proceeded with plans to erect a memorial, I mapped the cemetery and began researching the individuals who were anonymously buried under the gravestones; as is often the case in slave cemeteries, none of the markers were inscribed.
In my research of three dozen antebellum cemeteries, which include 406 individual slave gravestones, I’ve found less than 5 percent of the markers to be inscribed. There are a few explanations for this. A law was passed in Virginia in 1831 that made it illegal to teach free Negroes
or slaves how to read and write.³ We know from many sources that this law was not always followed, but if you were black and literate, carving a tombstone would be damning evidence to anyone who wanted to make trouble. The urge to carve gravestones is closely tied to a sense of individualism and the desire to know where each individual is buried. Yet within many enslaved communities, kin were forcibly separated through sales, inheritance, or death. Given the fragility of their family structure, these communities developed extended and multigenerational kinship connections to safeguard domestic ties. In antebellum slave graveyards we see this focus on family units rather than individuals in unmarked but uniform stones. These individual yet unmonogrammed grave markers of African Americans would not interfere with mourning practices that were aimed at remembering families. Moreover, this preemancipation tradition of uninscribed stones puts more importance on oral histories, which, among other details, pass down the location of burials from generation to generation. Native and African American communities are known for their centuries-long oral traditions. Our difficulty is in finding a living informant who has preserved such knowledge generations later.
While mapping the cemetery at Sweet Briar, I realized how easily it might have remained buried under leaves and fallen trees, forever lost to the living whose ancestors were buried there. Thankfully, the college realized that it, too, was close to losing a significant part of its history. When I began my investigation of the Sweet Briar site, I could find no existing studies of aboveground remains from slave cemeteries in America, so I attempted to locate another cemetery in Albemarle County, hoping to document what sorts of variations existed from plantation to plantation.⁴ I had no idea what to expect. Would there be any inscribed graves? Did descendants continue to visit the gravesites? Would it be easy to locate these 150-year-old sites on the modern, often modified landscapes of antebellum plantations?
I concentrated my search for African American cemeteries in central Virginia. Between 2001 and 2011, I visited burial sites, mapping and recording all the aboveground