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18 th Century New York

African Burial Ground. 18 th Century New York. African Burial Ground Burial # 6. Plan view of burial sites at the New York African Burial Ground showing the location of excavated burials (419). Research questions: culture & power, not race (see Perry and Blakey pp. 49-50).

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18 th Century New York

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  1. African Burial Ground 18th Century New York

  2. African Burial Ground Burial # 6

  3. Plan view of burial sites at the New York African Burial Ground showing the location of excavated burials (419)

  4. Research questions: culture & power, not race(see Perry and Blakey pp. 49-50) • What are the cultural and geographical roots of the individuals interred in the African Burial Ground? • What biological characteristics and cultural traditions remained unchanged and which were transformed during the creation of African American society and culture? • What was the physical quality of life for Africans enslaved in New York City during the colonial period and how was it different from the quality of life in their African homeland? • What were the modes of resistance and how were they creatively reconfigured and used to resist oppression and to forge a new African American culture?

  5. Cluster Diagram based on concentrations of trace elements found in teeth and other sourcessuggests many adults were African born while children were American

  6. Strontium isotopes

  7. Burial 101

  8. Burial 340 waist beads

  9. Detail of Southeast section of the New York African Burial Ground showing the location of excavated burials 371 377 375 383 365 335 & 356 340

  10. Burial 375

  11. African Labor • Skeletal Traumas • Dental enamel hypoplasia • High Lead levels • Hypertrophy/ Enthesopathies • Lipping (sexed) Promotional Illustration for New Amsterdam, 1623

  12. Burial 25: gunshot trauma

  13. Burial 323: Autopsy Victim 1788 Doctor’s Riots Usually, the students had contented themselves with ripping open the graves of strangers and negroes, about whom there was little feeling; but this winter they dug up respectable people, even young women, of whom they made an indecent exposure.

  14. Plan view of burial sites at the New York African Burial Ground showing the location of excavated burials in color

  15. African Burial Ground Research and Recommendation Reports http://www.africanburialground.gov/ABG_FinalReports.htm

  16. Changes in the burial of Africans in Early New York ‘That after the Expiration of four weeks from the dates hereof no Negroes be buried within the bounds & Limits of the Church Yard of Trinity Church, that is to say, in the rear of the present burying place & that no person or Negro whatsoever, do presume after the terme above Limited to break up any ground for the burying of his Negro, as they will answer it at their perill’ Trinity Church Vestry Minutes, October 25, 1697 (cited in Perry et al 2006:42)

  17. St. Paul’s colonial cemetery in modern New York City

  18. Plan view of burial sites at the New York African Burial Ground

  19. Common burial position at African Burial Ground

  20. Copper alloy straight pins replicas

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