Loading AI tools
Historic African American cemetery in Richmond, Virginia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The city of Richmond, Virginia has two African Burial Grounds, the "Shockoe Bottom African Burial Ground" (active 1799–1816), and the "Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground" (active 1816–1879). Additionally the city is home to several other important and historic African American cemeteries.
Of the several African American cemeteries in the city of Richmond, only the Barton Heights Cemeteries, Oakwood Cemetery, and Mount Olivet Cemetery (of the Maury and Mount Olivet Cemeteries) are actual cemeteries owned by the city of Richmond, and come under the oversight of the city's Cemetery Division. Barton Heights, and Mount Olivet are inactive cemeteries, burials are no longer made there. Oakwood Cemetery is still an active cemetery.[17]
Though the Shockoe Bottom African Burial Ground and the Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground were originally both municipal burying grounds, established, owned, and operated by the city of Richmond, they were both repurposed, and disposed of once they were rendered inactive. Repeatedly desecrated, both were made to disappear from the visible landscape, and also erased from memory. It is only recently that these two burial grounds have been rediscovered and re-acknowledged, the result of persistent advocacy. The city of Richmond has now reclaimed a portion of each of the two African burial grounds with plans in the works for memorization of both sites. In the case of the Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground, the city reclaimed through purchase 1.2 acres of the 31 acre burial ground in 2021.[18] And in January 2022, a small portion of the burial ground on N 7th St. was returned to the city as a gift. However the majority of the 31 acre burial ground remains divided between more than a dozen owners, and faces various threats, to include the DC2RVA high-speed rail project, the east-west Commonwealth Corridor, and the proposed widening of I-64, and various infrastructure projects. Neither of the two African Burial Grounds are zoned or designated as cemeteries. The Shockoe Bottom African Burial Ground is zoned as light industrial, and a portion of it lies beneath I-95. The various parcels of the Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground are zoned from Residential (Multi-Family) to Heavy Industrial, with roads, I-64, and CSX rail road tracks run through it, in addition to some unacknowledged portions of it having been incorporated into the Hebrew Cemetery. This is to say that neither of the two burial grounds are under the over site of the city's Cemeteries Division, as they are not classified as cemeteries.
A non-traditional place of interment, yet a place of interment nonetheless, is Virginia Commonwealth University's East Marshall Street Well. VCU's Medical College (the Medical College of Virginia) engaged in the illegal practice of body snatching in order to supply its anatomy classes with cadavers for medical training of their students. The bodies were stolen from predominately African American graves. The main target of the grave snatchers or robbers, (also called resurrectionists) was the Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground. The remains were discarded in the well, when the anatomy professors and students were done dissecting and studying them. The well was capped around 1860, and later accidentally rediscovered during the construction of the Kontos Building in April 1994.[19][20][21][22]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.