The discovery of at least 40 slave graves at a high-end country club in Florida’s capital city has sparked debate about how to memorialize the dead.
Rumors had swirled for decades about a dark history which had long lain buried under the club’s grassy knolls and manicured lawns until archaeologist combed the area with penetrating radars and sniffer dogs.
Over the years, neat rows of rectangular depressions along the 7th fairway deepened in the grass, outlining what would be confirmed this month as sunken graves of the slaves who lived and died on a plantation that once sprawled with cotton near the Florida Capitol.
The discovery of 40 graves — with perhaps dozens more yet to be found — has spawned discussion about how to honor those who lie in rest at the golf course. And it has brought renewed attention to the many thousands of unmarked and forgotten slave cemeteries across the Deep South that forever could be lost to development or indifference.
‘When I stand here on a cemetery for slaves, it makes me thoughtful and pensive,’ said Delaitre Hollinger, the immediate past president of the Tallahassee branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). His ancestors worked the fields of Leon County as slaves.
‘They deserve much better than this,’ said Hollinger, 26, who is leading a push to memorialize the rediscovered burial ground. ‘And they deserved much better than what occurred in that era.’
Wooden markers that had identified the graves have long since decayed. For years, golfers have unknowingly trod through the cemetery.
Leon County was the center of Florida’s plantation economy during the antebellum days and had the state’s highest concentration of slaves. Just before the Civil War, three of every four county inhabitants were human chattel owned by elite white families.
The Houstouns of Tallahassee was one such family. From the early 1800s through the Civil War, the family operated a 500-acre plantation. In modern times it has been parceled out to developers who transformed fields into an expanse of strip malls and residential neighborhoods, some sprouting stately homes.
A hundred years ago when the golf course was constructed there was certainly no technology to decipher what was or wasn’t here,’ he said during a recent visit to the country club.
There had long been talk among some Tallahassee old-timers about the long-gone plantation and its cemetery.
The stories piqued Hollinger’s curiosity. He dug into newspaper archives, where he found clippings dating back to the 1970s that mentioned the burial site.
He contacted city officials for help, who in turn reached out to experts, including the National Park Service.
That’s when Jeffrey Shanks, a park service archaeologist, took up the cause.
Earlier this month, after weeks of scanning 7,000 square meters of the golf course using ground-penetrating radar and two cadaver-sniffing dogs, Shanks issued his preliminary conclusion: The subsurface anomalies at the country club are indeed graves.
Shanks called the discovery a significant historical find because so many slave cemeteries are unaccounted for.
‘It’s a really serious problem,’ Shanks said. ‘It’s not just a Florida problem. It’s really a problem across the Southeast.’
It’s hardly a new issue. A Florida state task force two decades ago estimated that there could be as many as 1,500 unmarked and abandoned slave or African American cemeteries across the state. Some Florida lawmakers want to establish a new task force to address the matter.
‘We want to identify covered-up graves that have been built upon, or destroyed, or obliterated from history,’ said state Sen. Darryl Rouson, whose district lies in the Tampa Bay area. ‘Once identified, we’d like to do some type of memorial for those souls.’
Nationally, there have been discussions about establishing an African American Burial Grounds Network. Work is also underway on a national database to record the burial sites for enslaved Americans.
They were nameless on census records, and they are nameless and unremembered in death,’ he said.
In Leon County, there are only a handful of known slave burial sites — despite the scores of plantations that once existed in the area. Each would have had a cemetery for its enslaved.
‘It’s safe to say that there are thousands upon thousands of these graves in Leon County,’ Lammers said, ‘and hundreds and hundreds of thousands, if not millions, across the Southeast that remain unknown today.’
At the Capital City Country Club, there are no plans to exhume or disturb any of the rediscovered remains. But how the site will be memorialized is still up for discussion.
Hollinger, for one, wants to reroute golf carts and fence off the area so golfers won’t tread over the graves. He also proposes a small memorial that will recount, he said, the unvarnished history of the property — including how it profited from the labor of slaves.
He doesn’t want the history of these graves ‘to be prettied up’ or romanticized. ‘I want us to be accurate and truthful in the story we tell.’
Good read Met.
Play no more golf on that piece of property until that issue is rectified! the people that built you yours under the shackles and whip, not only should be recognized but should be honoured and RESPECTED in death since it was not affirmative in their lives! its the least you can do! we will see if in this case money is more important than history and respect! its actually a trial test for that white supremacist DeSantis!
Is this not the same thing that is happening in the Cockpit Country? The only difference is that the government and the opposition does not care about the enslaved burial sites being dug up and the bones being thrown away as garbage ( as long as the thiefing unpatriotic wretches are able to line their pockets ) Those burial sites that were discovered in the States, the authorities are looking to preserve them as historical importance and to pay due respect to the ancestors. Shame on you Jamaica. Is the Cultural Minister still intended on asking the UK to return artifacts to Jamaica? Are you looking to sell them if returned? Try and preserve our ancestors remains, that should be your starting point. No other artifacts are as important as the remains.
JESUS. DEAD HAV NO POWERS CAN I GET A WITCH GO WAKE DEM UP MEK DEM BRUK SOME RASS NECKS, AN YRS NONES NO WORTH NOTHING..PPL A JA A SELL LAND AN DASH WEY GREAT, GREST, GREAT GRAN FAMILY AT THE REQUEST OF THE BUYER