WUAL APR Weekend Edition Saturday
“No Stone Unturned: Preserving Slave Cemeteries in Alabama” An APR news documentary
Alabama Public Radio | By Pat Duggins
Published November 4, 2022 at 7:07 PM CDT
Alabama voters head to the polls next week for the midterm elections. One ballot item would abolish slavery in the state. The vote takes place one hundred and fifty seven years after the thirteenth amendment ended the practice nationally. Historians say many of the estimated four hundred thousand enslaved people, who were freed in 1865, chose to live out their lives in Alabama. APR spoke to some of their descendants who say theyâre still dealing with the impact of the slave trade. The Alabama Public Radio newsroom spent nine months investigating one aspect of that. Namely, the effort to preserve slave cemeteries in the state. APR’s documentary is titled “No Stone Unturned.”
âI got all my equipment in the back of the Honda CRV. Howâs that for efficiency and good engineering?â asked Len Strozier during a quiet morning in a wooded area on the Black Warrior River, north of Tuscaloosa. He’s getting ready to go to work.
âIt all scissors out like that,â he said. The scissoring refers to a collapsible rig about the size of a grocery store shopping cart. It has big black wheels, a box on top with buttons and a small view screen. Thereâs another box down below.
âAlright, this is ground penetrating radar machine. This is two GPS machines,â said Strozier.
A radar antenna that looks for airplanes typically points up. Strozierâs antenna looks down. What interests him lies undergroundâŠ
Itâs just a matter of putting it together,â quips Strozier. He uses his equipment to scan for things like buried water pipes that are leaking. Thatâs about thirty percent of what he does. Today is how he spends most of his time.
Heâs looking for bodies.
âJust walking around, and thereâs one right there. Thatâs a casketed burial,â said Strozier after working less than a minute. âRight now, I see an air pocket where a body was buried in the ground. As the body is placed in the ground. If itâs not embalmed, or protected with a vault, it all breaks down, It degradesâŠdecomposesâincluding the wooden casket,â he observed.
Strozier runs Omega Mapping Services in Fortson, Georgia. APR news invited him to scan this two acre spot near Tuscaloosa. Weâre at the Old Prewitt Slave Cemetery. It was set up in the 1820âs by John Welch Prewitt, a local plantation owner. The one unmarked grave Strozier found was just for starter. A more complete total came later.
âIn less than thirty minutes, forty. Just walking around. Iâve seen forty burials out here,â said Strozier.
Thereâs a handful of tombstones and plain burial markers at Old Prewitt. Nowhere close to the number of graves Strozier found. This isnât just an issue involving the dead. There are the living as well.
âMy father drove us there,â said Patricia Kemp. âI was probablyâŠmaybe I want to say six or seven. Then, heâd drive to a place and heâd tell us what it is, or who they were. So, thatâs what I remember.â
As an adult, Kemp did some research and she thinks some of her ancestors are buried at the Old Prewitt Slave Cemetery. By that time, the burial yard was disappearing as trees and scrub brush took over. At one point, Alabama listed Old Prewitt as one of the state’s most endangered places.
âKnowing that that cemetery is there, and it is just dwindling away, itâs just being washed away. Itâs just thrown away,â said Kemp. âItâs like taking my grandfather, my great grandfather, or father or my mother and knowing that theyâre buried there, and just trashing them.â
Old Prewitt isnât the only slave cemetery in Alabama.
Researchers from the University of Alabama in Huntsville say up to two hundred slaves rest here, at the Mount Paran Cemetery just south of the Tennessee border. That doesnât count the estimated ten thousand enslaved people believed to be buried nearby in Huntsville.
âI was able to find my great great grandfather listed,â said Ollie Ballard. She thinks that ancestor was one of them. He was enslaved in Huntsville in 1842.
âHe was on the Longwood Plantation,â she said. âAnd, we found his name, and then his sonâs nameâŠCaswell, and Caswell, junior. And, we were able to follow him to his death.â
But, that doesnât mean Ballard can visit her great, great grandfatherâs grave site. Sheâs not sure where that is. There are oral histories told by family members and the few records Ballard could find– but thatâs all. And if youâve never heard a story like that before, we met someone who has.
âAll the time, all the time. That isâŠthat isâŠone of the most outrageous,â said Ethel Alexander. Sheâs with the Birmingham African American Genealogy Group, the largest of its kind in the state. She says even if family members find the cemetery where their enslaved ancestors are buried, questions often remain
âThey may not see anything but a rock,â Alexander observed. âThey may not see nothing but tree. You know, youâre not going to be to say âoh, thereâs my grandfatherâŠgreat, great, great slave.ââ
Back at the Old Prewitt Slave Cemetery in Northport, Alabama– Len Strozier has been doing some thinking. His preliminary scan with ground penetrating radar showed forty unmarked graves. So, now heâs ready to make an educated guess about what he calls unmarks.
âI would say there would be at least two hundred unmarks, in this acre and a half, at least that, without a doubt,â said Strozier.
Each of these unknown burial sites can represent a mystery to a family somewhere. But, you donât have to have an ancestor buried at Old Prewitt to be involved. For exampleâŠTuscaloosa native and former world heavyweight boxing championship Deontay Wilder.
The parking lot at the Tuscaloosa Tourism and Sports Commission is especially busy today. Onlookers form a ring around a life sized bronze statue, still covered with a black tarp. The chatter seems divided between the art work and the man who posed for it.
Former world heavyweight boxing champion Deontay Wilder is from Tuscaloosa. He still lives here. Wilder made the rounds in the VIP room just before the statue in his honor was to be unveiled. Some fans talked about his five years as champ. Others focused on his ninety three percent knockout rate. APR news was there for something else.
âTo go down there, you can like feel the energy and the power of it,â said Wilder.
During a quiet moment, Wilder talked about visiting the Old Prewitt Slave Cemetery. It wasnât a long trip. Wilder lives almost next door to the burial site. He says he didnât know about it when he moved in his new home in Northport. But, he soon did.
âYou know how when you move into an area, and the neighbors come and greet you with pies and cakes,â said Wilder.
Instead of dessert, Wilderâs neighbors brought something else
âFor me, I got greeted with important information. I got greeted with historic information and stuff like that,â recalled Wilder.
That included stories about Civil War plantation owner John Welch Prewitt and the slave cemetery he set up in Northport in the 1820âs.
âItâs amazing to know that I have an untended graveyard, I literally mean on the side of me. It doesnât spook me out or nothing like that,â he said.
âI don’t know that a whole lot else stands out about him as except as a slave holder and a plantation owner,â said Doctor Joshua Rothman, of John Welch Prewitt. âOther than that, he’s a very wealthy man and kind of the late antebellum period.â
Rothman is head of the history department at the University of Alabama. His area of expertise is slavery. And, heâs heard his share of stories about Prewitt, including the whoppers.
âSo the two that I’ve heard the most are that he enslaved 1000 people, and was the biggest slave holder in Tuscaloosa County. And there’s another story about there being like bars of gold buried on his property,â recalled Rothman.
Rothman says heâs not sure one way or the other about the gold, but the slave count was more like one hundred and fifty, not a thousand.
âWhat’s weird is that it’s a story people told them they like, but you can look at the census. And you can see it’s not true,â he said.
And if thatâs not enoughâŠ
âThereâs also the tale of a ghost walking on the site of the former home of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Prewitt,â read Allison Hetzel, of the University of Alabamaâs Theatre Department. This story comes from the Alabama state archives. Itâs from a folder marked ânegro folklore.â
“Mrs. Prewitt, affectionately known as âMiss Betsy,â by the negroes, would visit the cabins with simple remedies when any of the slaves were ailing. It is claimed that Miss Betsy still walks on rainy nights, basket on arm. That story being shared by many of the better educated white farmers,â read Hetzell.
âIf you tell yourself that story, and you genuinely believe it, then what is there to feel guilty about?â suggested Joshua Rothman.
âIt’s not a secret, for example, that there are a lot of stories that are have been told by white Southerners, over the course of many generations, trying to make slavery seem far less bad. And that’s a very different kind of story than descendants of enslaved people are likely to tell,â he said.
And telling that story can be difficult. Thatâs because whites also kept the records. For the families and volunteers trying to preserve slave cemeteries or find the graves of lost relatives, thatâs often where the trail goes cold.
Back at the Tuscaloosa Tourism and Sports commission, everybody crowds around for the unveiling of Deontay Wilderâs statueâŠ
âIt was a treat,â said the champ. Wilder wasnât referring to letting the crowd see his statue. But, rather the powerful experience of visiting the Old Prewitt Slave Cemetery.
âTo understand and know where you are, and what youâre setting your feet on, and what occurred in certain times of the years, that you donât nothing about,â Wilder said.
Wilder says heâs also ready to help out when it comes preserving Old Prewitt. Not everyone can call on a celebrity to do that. Most of the work to rescue slave burial sites is done by African American families or volunteers. And, their effort apparently faces obstacles not shared by their white neighbors.
Itâs check-in time at the Methodist Church in New Marketâ Alabama, near the Tennessee border. The paperwork is being done at table one. Volunteers at table two are handing out sausage biscuits. There was also a side order of personal storiesâŠ
âI was able to find my great great grandfather,â said Olley Ballard from Huntsville. âHe was on the Longwood Plantation. And, we found his name, and then his sonâs nameâŠCaswell, and Caswell, junior. And, we were able to follow him to his death.â
Ballard is hoping to find answers here today. Sheâs among one hundred people attending the twentieth annual workshop of the Alabama Cemetery Preservation Alliance.
Ballard says her great great grandfather was enslaved in Huntsville in 1842. The issue that brought her here today isnât who he is, but rather where he is now.
âIâm so glad you asked that question,â she said. âBecause he was on the Longwood Plantation. And so, Iâm thinking, and based on what my forefathers said to me. That more than likely that my great great grandfather was on that plantation.â
And thatâs possibly where heâs buried.
Todayâs workshop featured speakers on cleaning tombstones and repairing cemetery gates. Ballard is one of only two African Americans in the audience. Itâs not grave markers or gates that she came to talk about. Ballard is still working to find her great great grandfatherâs burial site. We met someone whoâs heard a lot of stories like thatâŠ
âAll the time, all the time. That isâŠthat isâŠit was one of the most outrageous,â said Ethel Alexander. She didnât attend the cemetery workshop. We sat down with her at her home near Birmingham where she went through notebooks on her own family tree.
Alexander is past President of the Birmingham African American Genealogy Group. Itâs the largest organization of its kind in the state.
â We werenât really human beings. We were chattleâŠc.h.a.t.t.l.e,â she observed.
Alexander is referring to the lack of records on kidnapped Africans. The U.S. Archives says the first census that counted former slaves as people was in 1870. Alexander says, before that, most records were bills of saleâŠ
âSay for instance, a planter, he dies, and they have to sell everything,â said Alexander. âThe first thing they sell are their slaves, and they were sold before the animals. So we didnât really have first names except the first names they would give you.â
You heard about Olley Ballard and her effort to find her great great grandfatherâs burial site in Huntsville. Ethel Alexander says even if Ballard finds the slave cemetery sheâs looking for, she may face another problemâŠ
âThey may not see anything but a rock. They may not see nothing but tree. You know, youâre not going to be to say âoh, thereâs my grandfatherâŠgreat, great, great slave,â said Alexander.
Back at the workshop of the Alabama Cemetery Preservation Alliance, Rusty Brenner is at work. He sells a spray called D-2. Itâs used to clean tombstones. Olley Ballardâs great great grandfather may not have a burial marker of his own, but she says his life is still worth remembering
âThey were landowners,â said Ballard. âEven though he was enslaved person in 1842, but 1903 he and wife owned one hundred and sixty acres of land. So, Iâm proud and I want to pass it along generation to generation.â
And Ballard has a plan to do that, whether she finds his grave site or not.
âAt presently, Iâm working with the city of Huntsville and a group to erect a memorial that honors the enslaved people in Huntsville,â she said. âWe have approximately fifteen thousand slaves and slaveholders, but we donât have a grant.â
Money is an issue that comes up a lot on preserving slave burial sites. Some cemeteries only need upkeep. Slave burial grounds often need something like archeology to identity whoâs there. Ballard says she hasnât had much luck finding money for that.
âMany of the grants want you to preserve something,â Ballard noted. âWell, you now weâre looking to preserve words and where they used to be. Theyâre looking for buildings.â
That situation may be changing, slowlyâŠ.
Members of Congress are considering whatâs known as the African American Burial Grounds Preservation Act.
âThere are so many sites in Alabama that are known and unknown,â said Alabama Democrat Terri Sewell. Sheâs a co-sponsor of the U.S. House version of that bill. The measure would enable the U.S. Park Service to create a burial site network. Sewell says it would also provide grants.
âHopefully, we can speed up the clean-up, but also really direct people on how about doing the historical investigation on the amazing people who are buried there,â said Sewell.
Having a good idea is one thing. But, the burial site legislation has been in committee for three years. It was just was re-introduced back in February. Sewell says thereâs nothing wrong with the bill itself.
âNo, it was just technical issues about the partnership between the National Park Service and the network, and some very important provisions I wanted to flesh out when it comes to the grants,â Sewell contended.
But, until a final vote is made in Congress, the descendants of slaves and newly freed blacks can only wait. Back at the Alabama Cemetery Preservation Alliance workshop, itâs time for the door prizes. Winners with the lucky numbers pick from items including a tombstone cleaning kit.
Even if Congress passes the African American Burial Grounds Preservation Act, Olley Ballard may not get the one thing sheâs looking forâthe exact location of her great great grandfatherâs gravesite in Huntsville.
âI know like to know that, definitely that this is location of Longwood Plantation. I would like to walk the grounds, touch the soil, and feel the presence of my ancestors. I would love to do that,â said Ballard.
And feelings like that are shared by others. Not just in Alabama, and not just in the south.
That wasnât the only story Ballard told that day. Huntsville had a cemetery for slaves and newly freed people. That land was sold to the city. Ballard says it got lost in the fine print.
âAnd so, they had a stipulation in the deed that the colored cemetery must be protected, but it was not protected,â she said. Huntsville built a parking deck on that spot. APR heard a similar story with a different ending..
âSo what happened was they were trying to widen this road Foothill Road in Bridgewater,â said Lorayn Allen.
âAnd the contractor looked up, and he says, Oh, my God, he said, there’s a cemetery up here,â she recalled. âHe says, âI think it’s a slave cemetery.â I donât know how he knew it, he just knew it.â
Allenâs slave cemetery isnât in Alabama. Itâs not even in the south. In fact, to talk with her about it, I had to fly coach. Bridgewater, New Jersey is about a half hour southwest of Newark Liberty International Airport. Itâs here that we found the Prince Rodgers Slave cemetery. Itâs wedged between two suburban homes on Foothill Road.
âPrince Rodgers was an amazing human being who was born here in 1815,â said Lorayn Allen. âHis parents were literally kidnapped by the Dutch and brought here for free labor.â
Allen formed a foundation to preserve the Bridgewater burial site. Raising money to preserve this slave cemetery is only part of that battle. The other is convincing her own grandchildren that slavery existed in New Jersey.
âThey call me Mimi,â said Allen. They say âMimi, for Godâs sake, we live in Somerfield, New Jersey.â I say, do you realize they still have Ku Klux Klan ramblings in certain areas over here? Everything that happened in the South happened here in the North. Make no mistake about it.â
Historians say eleven thousand enslaved Africans were in New Jersey at the time of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. The number grew from there.
âUm, but we’re looking about 12 and a half thousand in the year 1800, and about 80% of, um, Africans and African Americans in New Jersey at that point are in slavery,â said Doctor Jesse Bayker. He teaches at Rutgers University. Specifically, Bayker is with the Scarlet and Black Research Center. It focuses on racism against African Americans. New Jersey residents are often surprised when they hear about slavery in the Garden State. Bayker says one group in particular.
âWhen I talk to African Americans in New Jersey who are not fully aware of the depth of the history of slavery in this state, they are often upset that they haven’t learned it earlier, um, that they have been told, uh, their whole lives, that this was a Southern problem, but that New Jersey wasn’t like that, um, it shifts their perspective of their own home state,â stated Bayker. He says slavery in northern states has been talked about in academic circles for almost a century. But, itâs only been studied seriously since the 1990âs.
âNow it’s the question of, um, making sure that that trickle goes down to things like high school textbooks, um, and to, to students at an earlier age before they get to college,â said Bayker.
Back in the town of Bridgewater, it doesnât take long to find someone whoâs surprised about slavery in New Jersey.
Christopher Montefusco lives on Foothill Road.
âYeah, itâs crazy, to think New Jersey this far away. I was totally shocked, totally blown away,â he said.
Montefusco wasnât surprised I was here to talk about the Prince Rodgers Slave Cemetery. Itâs in his side yard. The tombstones are within view of the goalie net Montefuscoâs son uses for soccer practice.
âYou couldnât see any of the headstones, you couldnât see anything. So, I thought it was the neighborâs property,â he said.
Loryan Allen show us Prince Rodgerâs tombstone. Itâs is the largest in the cemetery. The names and dates are worn away and harder to read. Both that marker and the other smaller ones have parts broken off. Allen thinks it was local teenagersâŠ
âI guess they were drinking,â Allen speculated. âSo, they decided they were going to take the stones, and they literally lifted them up out of the ground and threw them all over the cemetery. They broke them in half.â
The upper left hand corner of Prince Rodgersâ grave marker is chipped off. Allen says it wasnât for a lack of trying.
âThey werenât able to get it out of the ground, but they were able to break it. They had to make an effort to break that stone,â she said.
Prince Rodgersâ slavery ended in 1839. A New Jersey law freed captive women at the age of twenty one and black men at twenty five. The cemetery that bears Rodgerâs name was officially dedicated last year. But Allen says, by that time, the name of the former slave was all over town.
âThereâs a ten acre complex right around the corner on Prince Rodgers Avenue thatâs named in his honor, and thereâs a shopping center, Prince Rodgers Shopping Center, and Prince Rodgers Avenue goes all the way to Bridgewater Commons,â said Allen.
But, Allen wants Rodgerâs stories to live on as well. He supposedly fought in the U.S. Civil War as a free man, and his descendants live in Bridgewater to this day. All of the families weâve met in this series have cemeteries and memories theyâre working to preserve. But that chance may be slipping away due to the passage of time. Thereâs also the issue of people, both white and black, who donât want to talk about racial issues including slavery.
A gentle rain was falling during our visit to the Old Prewitt Slave Cemetery in Northport, near Tuscaloosa. We began our series on preserving slave burial sites here. This two acre cemetery was set aside by plantation owner John Welch Prewitt in the 1820âs.
âObviously, there are very distinct rows,â said Len Strozier. He runs Omega Mapping Services in Fortson, Georgia. APR news invited him to use ground penetrating radar to do an underground scan of Old Prewitt. Strozier found forty unmarked burials within a half hour. He says he also noticed how they were buried.
âSomeone was managing this cemetery,â he observed. âAnd bodies werenât thrown out there like grass seed. They were meticulously, and the depths are pretty similar, too.â
âThe only reason any of us are here today, is because somebody came before us, and they really came before us,â said Patricia Kemp, who we met earlier in our program. She believes some of her ancestors are laid to rest at Old Prewitt.
âI want to where I came from. I want to know about slavery. I want to what they went through, because they went through a lot for me to be here,â said Kemp.
And answers like those may take more than ground penetrating radar.
âThereâs not going to be any body left in here. The bodyâs decomposed,â said Strozier. The hair, teeth, bone, is pretty much gone,â said Len Strozier. He says his equipment can confirm that someone is buried at Old Prewitt. But, it wonât reveal who that person is. Strozier says that would take clues uncovered by something closer to archeology.
âIt could be the sole of a shoe, it could be the handle off the side of a casket, it could be a button off a shirt,â he speculated.
And that kind of work will likely take time and money. Congress has been working for three years to pass the African American Burial Ground Conservation Act. If the measure becomes law, itâs supposed to provide grants for preservation. But there may be things that dollars canât buy. Getting people to talk about slavery, for one.
âYou know, our students often come into the classroom in college, uh, having not been exposed to the history of slavery in the north and especially the history of slavery in New Jersey,â said Doctor Jesse Bayker at Rutgers University. We spoke with him as APR visited the Prince Rodgers Slave cemetery in Bridgewater, New Jersey. Bayker says many of his students hear for the first time how eleven thousand slaves were held in the Garden State around the year 1800.
âIt’s a surprise to many of them that slavery was, uh, an important part of new Jersey’s early development of new Jersey’s economy,â Bayker stated.
Not only did New Jersey enslave Africans, but it was the last northern state to free them following the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. The subject of slavery became more than a topic of classroom discussion at Rutgers back in 2016.
A report released for Rutgersâ two hundred and fiftieth anniversary focused on the schoolâs own ties to slavery. An enslaved worker helped build the campus. Rutgersâ first President owned slaves. His family once held famed abolitionist Sojourner Truth. Jesse Bayker says the university is confronting its role in slavery, but not everyone in New Jersey is
âThe people who are uncomfortable with looking at that history or acknowledging it. I think they have their own journey, and their own road that they need go on to deal with the fact that weâre going to keep on talking about this,â said Bayker. âWeâre going to keep acknowledging this history. No, weâre not to sweep it away under the rug.â
And the hesitancy to talk about slavery may be complicating efforts to preserve slave burial sites both in New Jersey and here in Alabama. You might recall our visit to the Alabama Cemetery Preservation Alliance and its twentieth anniversary workshop north of Huntsville.
âYou can find the first name of enslaved people, the slaveholders,â said Ollye Ballard. We met her earlier in our series. The retired magnet school principal is working to find the burial site of her great great grandfather in Huntsville. She says records that identify slaves only with numbers or first names make it tough.
âIf it was you, it would just âPatâ and maybe age thirty seven. But, thatâs all the information you will have on them,â Ballard stated.
Her great great grandfather was enslaved in 1842. She says one thing sheâs tried is to talk with the families of former plantation owners for clues to his final burial site. But, getting the descendants of slaveholders to open up to families of the enslaved hasnât been easy.
âMany times when we make a presentation, we hear things like âI had nothing to do with that, that was long before,â Ballard recalled.
âThey’re not gonna say nothing, they just go, that’s where we buried him,â added Ethel Alexander. We met her earlier in our program as well. Alexander is the past President of the Birmingham African American Genealogy Group. Itâs the largest organization in the state that helps black Alabamians trace their roots. Alexander is researching her own family tree, so she says she knows the roadblocks and the frustrations.
âYou know, we there’s a lot of things we take that we don’t like to take, but we take it anyway,â she said. âBecause we just don’t have the strength to fight it. You know, but yeah, it’s frustrating. And it’s sad, and it’s hurtful.â
But, Alexander says that frustration involves more than just white people who donât want to open up. She uses her own family as an example.
âYes, we talk among ourselves,â Alexander confided. âWe do. And the way I’m talking to you may be a little different than the way I might talk with my dad, you know. And, he did not talk a lot. And,I was thinking about that. I think about that often because they never talked about growing up too much, and what was going on and all of that. That was always kind of not talked about.”
Itâs other people who may not to talk that has Alexander concerned. She says her family tree has a possible branch in Florida. Alexander doesnât know what kind of reception sheâll get when she goes looking for access to those burial sitesâŠ
âWhat can I do? You know what Iâm saying? Very rich people own it. It owned by this big company. What are they going to say? Would they going to help me get to it? Because I know itâs there. I scared theyâre going to sayâŠsorry.â
Voters in Alabama head to the polls next week for the November midterms. One issue on the ballot is whether to remove slavery from the State Constitution, 157 years after Congress banned the practice nationally with the 13th amendment. And all that uncertainty may be just one issue as Alexander, and others, work to make sure thereâs No Stone Unturned.
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