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Hallowed Ground
An investigation of
old grave sites in New England is unearthing hard truths about yankees
and slavery
Even though the midday sun
is high in the sky, my companions and I can hardly see the headstones
lying half-hidden in this dense Connecticut forest. Warren Perry
(left) is an anthropologist at Central Connecticut State University in
New Britain. Gerald Sawyer (right) is working on a doctorate in
archaeology from the City University of New York (CUNY), where he is
also a graduate instructor. For the better part of three years now,
they have been studying scores of humble grave sites scattered across
my family’s ancestral lands here in the rolling countryside near New
London. These are the resting places of slaves who died more than two
centuries ago.
As we walk from site to
site, Sawyer, a tall man wearing jeans and sporting a ponytail, keeps
up a running commentary. "Those cairns," he says, pointing toward
mounds of rocks piled high in an oval shape, "are more like burial
markers found in Guinea, West Africa, than anything in this country."
He speculates that the mounds might represent traditional African
burials, whereas the rounded headstones we just examined may designate
the grave sites of slaves who became Christians. When I ask how people
from Africa were able to survive our harsh Connecticut winters, Perry
answers, "A lot of them didn’t."
As the recent furor over
Yale University’s close ties with slaveholders in the 1700s and 1800s
made clear, many Americans are just beginning to understand that for a
long time slavery was as ubiquitous in the North as in the South. The
first African captives arrived in Massachusetts in the middle part of
the 1600s. A century later, there were more slaves in New York City
than anywhere else in the colonies except Charleston, South Carolina.
Despite the fact that Quakers condemned slavery in Philadelphia as
early as 1693, there were at least 3,000 slaves in Pennsylvania by the
mid-1700s, and Connecticut had more than 5,000. Although it’s
uncertain how many there were overall in New England, slaves at one
time may have made up as much as 5 percent of the total population in
Connecticut and 10 percent in Rhode Island.
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