Bethel Burying Ground Project

Bethel Burying Ground Project

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The nine-month-old Jackson child died this date, June 22nd, in 1835 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on June 22, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

JACKSON

The nine-month-old Jackson child (gender not specified) died this date, June 22nd, in 1835 of “Summer Complaint” (Cholera) and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. The child did not have a death certificate and was only recorded on the burying ground’s weekly summary of those interred. The child’s father was Isaac Jackson and, according to the 1836 Philadelphia African American Census, he was employed as a “laundering dealer” and his spouse (unnamed) was employed as a laundress. It appears that they both worked in a family business. In addition to the deceased child, the Jacksons had two other children. All the children and one adult were born in Philadelphia. One of the adults was formerly enslaved and gained his or her liberation through manumission. The Census records reported that the family attended church services at Wesley AMEZ.

Screenshot 2018-06-21 08.52.41

The red arrow indicates the location of the Jackson family home in what now is known as the 600 block of Bainbridge Street in south Philadelphia.

According to the 1836 Census, the Jackson family lived on “Shippen Street below 7th Street,” what now is known as the 600 block of Bainbridge Street. Ten months previous to the Jackson child dying, Shippen Street was overrun by a large violent mob that destroyed two Black churches and thirty-seven homes of African American citizens on Shippen Street and the surrounding blocks such as Baker, Small, St. Mary’s and Bedford Streets. Several African Americans were killed and dozens horribly injured by white gangs with the names of Gunner, Punch, and Big Gun. There were pockets of resistance. However, they were quickly overrun. Black families escaped into other parts of the city or “trembled” in the back of dark cellars.* It is not known which path the Jackson family took. Ms. Jackson would have been 8 to 9 months pregnant with her aforementioned child.

Riot pic

In 1846, a census taker for the Philadelphia African American Census summed up his/her observation on African Americans living in the Jacksons’ neighborhood:

“On Shippen street between 7th & 8th there are some very respectable colored people but, for the most part, those miserable creatures are in the majority. There are in this vicinity not so many as in Baker street and other places but still the number is alarming there are many here who from necessity are very destitute and doubtless would do much better if an opportunity to do so was afforded but from the peculiar situations in which many are placed it seems almost a matter of impossibility for them to do better without the assistance of those in whose power it is to give them regular employment. Another great cause of the poverty of the paupers and the laborers is the vast and almost insurmountable rent rates, many who from being without employment this winter have had to pawn almost everything they possessed to keep up.”

The nine-month-old Jackson child was one of the 213 children under a year-old who died of Cholera in Philadelphia in 1835. Of the surviving death certificates for all of those buried at Bethel Burying Ground, 126 are recorded to have died from Cholera. The death rate among Blacks was twice that of whites.

unnamed

The child of Isaac Jackson was interred on a sunny day with light wind. The temperature reached 71 degrees at 3PM. 

 

*Macon (GA) Weekly Telegraph, 28 August 1834.

Sixty-eight-year-old Rachel Brown died this date, June 17th, in 1840 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on June 17, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

R BROWN

Sixty-eight-year-old Rachel Brown died this date, June 17th, in 1840 of ovarian cancer and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. Ms. Brown was a widow living with her adult children. In addition to Ms. Brown, there were five other family members. Four out of the six were born in Pennsylvania. Her oldest son was a seaman, according to the Philadelphia 1836 African American Census. There was another son occupied as a house painter. The Brown family worshipped at Bethel AME Church.

Bethel_AME_Church_

The Brown family lived on Little Oak Street, a dead end alley barely over the border from the city into the Southwark District in south Philadelphia. The modern map below shows the location of Little Oak (red arrow) and the location of where the educator and civil rights activist Octavius V. Catto lived and was assassinated (purple arrow). During the gruesome anti-African American riots of the 1830s and 40s, this area was a war zone. The crazed white mobs advanced through the neighborhood pillaging, burning and murdering any Black man or woman that was unlucky enough to be caught outside. Many Black families left the city and escaped by ferry to Camden, New Jersey. The small city police force was overrun often by gangs with the names of Rats, Killers, Blood Tubs and Bouncers.

Little Oak

Little Oak Street is now known as Kenilworth Street.

The day after Ms. Brown passed away “We had showers all day, until toward night when a splendid rainbow appeared and gave promise of future fine weather.” (Public Ledger, 19 June 1840)

download

Two-year-old Charles White died this date, June 15th, in 1846 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on June 15, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

record-image_S3HT-DCFS-Y5C

Two-year-old Charles White died this date, June 15th, in 1846 due to Hydrocephalus and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. According to the 1850 Federal Census, the child’s parents were Issac White (47 y/o) who was employed as a brickmaker and Eliza (39 y/o) who worked as a laundress. Both were born in the state of Delaware. At the date of their son’s death, they also were the parents of Louisa (10), Eliza, Jr. (6) and Harrison who was newly born. All the children were born in Pennsylvania.

The family lived in one room in a tenement on George Street for which they paid $3.31 a month.  George Street, now Samson Street, is in center city Philadelphia. The 1600 block of George Street, near Rittenhouse Square, was home to sixteen African American families with a total of eighty-five members, according to the Philadelphia 1847 African American Census. The list of their occupations reflected that the majority of them were in that area to service the local wealthy white families and the upscale restaurants they frequented. There were numerous male barbers, waiters, and coachmen, while the women in the families were employed as seamstresses, laundresses, and domestics. 

AA Coachman

COACHMAN

Robert Henri, The Laundress. 1916

LAUNDRESS

The cause of death for the two-year-old Charles White was hydrocephalus. The disease could be congenital or acquired. Which form of the disease the child had was not mentioned by the attending physician. The increase in central nervous system fluid pressing on the brain (“water on the brain”) almost always was fatal before the invention of modern anti-bacterial drugs and sterile surgical methods. The fatal increase of fluid on the brain could have been caused by numerous diseases including Mumps, German Measles, Meningitis, and Syphilis.

The White family buried their baby on an unusually “damp, raw, cold and cloudy” day in June. The following day the temperature would rise to 85 degrees. 

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Eighteen-month-old Mary Jane Coursey died this date, June 13th, in 1854 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on June 13, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, AME Zion, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

M J Coursey

Eighteen-month-old Mary Jane Coursey died this date, June 13th, in 1854 of “Convulsions” and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. The convulsions were only a symptom of the underlying disease that afflicted the child. Mary Jane could have suffered from a high fever, epilepsy or meningitis that all would have caused convulsions. Likely, the convulsions were from teething considering the child’s age. Nineteenth-century medical reports state that infants were more prone to disease at the time of teething.  Often, teething was reported as a cause of death in infants. Perhaps they became susceptible to infections when lancing was performed. Another explanation of teething as a cause of death is that infants often were weaned at the time of teething; perhaps they then died from drinking contaminated milk, leading to an infection, or from malnutrition if watered-down milk was given.

Mother and child (art)

In 1854, Mary Jane Coursey was one of the 151 children in Philadelphia between 1-2 years old that died from “convulsions.”

Mary E. and John W. Coursey, ages 18 years and 22 years respectively, were the parents of the young child. Mr. Coursey was employed as a waiter and Ms. Coursey worked at home. It appears from the 1850 Federal Census that the deceased child had a twin, John W., Jr. It seems that Ms. Coursey was either pregnant or had just given

birth to another child (Ellen M. ) around the time of Mary Jane’s death. Mr. Coursey was born in Maryland, while all the other family members were born in Pennsylvania, according to the Census.

Middle Alley (1)

 The family lived in Middle Alley which had the infamous reputation of having some of the worst housing in the city. The greasy cobblestoned thoroughfare of rickety, vermin-filled, firetrap wooden houses ran from 6th to 7th Streets and between Spruce and Pine Streets. The alley was home to the poor and destitute – Black and white. In June of 1854, a nearby street similar to Middle Alley was reported to be entirely covered in two feet of garbage. (Public Ledger, 20 June 1854)

Little Mary Jane Coursey was buried on a hot humid afternoon on June 14, 1854. At noon, the thermometer stood at 84 degrees with cloudy skies. Within two days, the temperature would rise to the mid-90s.

394

 

 

 

Update on Bethel Burying Ground Status

Posted by Terry Buckalew on June 12, 2018
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Dilapidated city building over the burial ground to be demolished. Go to – 

http://www.philly.com/philly/columnists/inga_saffron/queen-village-makes-room-for-memorial-to-a-historic-african-american-burial-ground-20180607.html

Seventy-three-year-old Philip Nelson died this date, May 31st, in 1850 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on May 31, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

NELSONSeventy-three-year-old Philip Nelson died this date, May 31st, in 1850 of Tuberculosis and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. Mr. Nelson was employed as a “Gentleman’s nurse,” according to the 1847 Philadelphia African American Census. He reportedly earned $20 a month and his duties would be similar to a personal attendant or valet. Mr. Nelson was a widower. However, below is who I believe to have been his son, William Nelson, and his family. The information is from the 1850 Federal Census. The initial “M” next to the gender category stands for “Mulatto.” 

NELSON FAMILY

(William Nelson 49 y/o – Blacksmith born in Virginia; Henrietta 43 y/o born in Maryland; Sarah 23 y/o born in Maryland; William 17 y/o born in Maryland; Ezekiel 15 y/o born in Maryland.)

Mr. Nelson’s obituary was published in the June 3, 1850 edition of the Public Ledger. Interestingly, the obit stated that Mr. Nelson “was of the family of the late Dr. Henry Claggett, of Leesburg, Virginia.” Claggett was a white slaver who had plantations in Virginia and Maryland, according to “Laws made and passed by the General Assembly of the State of Maryland in 1835.” Claggett had to get permission from both states to move his slaves from one state to the other. Basically, the obit is stating that the white enslaver was Philip Nelson’s father and Nelson was at one point enslaved. 

IMG-6159

At the time of Mr. Nelson’s death, one-in-four African Americans in Philadelphia were born enslaved.  (1847 Census)

Although Mr. Nelson died on the 31st of May, he wasn’t buried until June 4th. The funeral service was held at the Nelson family home on 8th Street between Catharine and Queen Streets, only three blocks from Bethel Burying Ground. Mr. Nelson’s obituary stated that, while suffering the long fatal course of Tuberculosis, he “. . . bore the last with Christian patience and resignation.” Mr. Nelson’s coffin was carried to the small cemetery and interred at approximately 4 o’clock on a warm June afternoon.

Ebenezer gravestone

The eighteen-month-old son of William Blake died on this date, May 26th, in 1849 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on May 26, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

BLAKE

The eighteen-month-old son of William Blake died this date, May 26th, in 1849 of convulsions and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. The child’s first name was not recorded. According to the 1847 Philadelphia African American Census, Mr. Blake worked in a store that sold stoves located on 12th Street below Pine Street. Ms. Blake (unnamed) was employed as a laundress. There were a total of five in the family with one female child 15 years old or younger working as a cook, earning $2 a week. The fifth family member was identified only as “under 50.”  They all lived in one room at 54 Currant Alley for which they paid $7.20 a month.

Father and Daughter (1)

Currant Alley was a two-city-block long narrow thoroughfare that historian Roger Lane considered “one of the worst [streets] in Philadelphia.”* Ninety-six Black families lived in the densely packed alley with a staggering total of three hundred twenty-one family members, according to the 1847 Census. The Census also showed that the Currant Alley adults were solidly working class, having a wide range of laboring and domestic jobs to which African American men and women were restricted.

Welsh graveyard

On the day that the Blakes buried their child at Bethel Burying Ground, the dawn broke cool and overcast. During the day, the temperature never got above 59 degrees.

 

* “William Dorsey’s Philadelphia and ours . . .”

 

 

 

Thirty-six-year-old Eliza Dorsey died this date, May 22nd, in 1848 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on May 22, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

 

DORSEY

Thirty-six-year-old Eliza Dorsey died this date, May 22nd, in 1848 due to “Spasm of the Glottis” and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground on May 24th. She was a single woman who provided guardianship to three orphans – a boy and two girls – according to the 1847 Philadelphia African American Census. The children were “not taken care of by [their] parents” and Ms. Dorsey voluntarily took the children into her home. Ms. Dorsey was a laundress washing and ironing clothes and reported in 1847 that she earned $15 a month for her efforts. The family of four lived in one room in a building around the corner from Bethel Burying Ground, on “Fourth Street below Queen Street” for which Ms. Dorsey paid $7.50 a month in rent. The children were educated at Mrs. Emeline Higgins private school for African American children in Raspberry Alley. The school had been established for eight years in 1848.  

Mom 3 kids

At the time of Ms. Dorsey’s death, one Black family in four was headed by a female in Philadelphia. Currently, it is estimated to be over double that at sixty-eight percent nationally.

Ms. Dorsey suffocated to death, likely from severe asthma. There is no reason given as to why a physician didn’t visit the corpse of Ms. Dorsey until two days after her death. I could find no documents reporting what happened to the children in her care.

Mother

 

 

 

 

 

Current Bethel Burying Ground Name Directory

Posted by Terry Buckalew on May 21, 2018
Posted in: Bethel Burying Ground Name Directory. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

BBG Name Directory

One-hundred five-year-old Lydia Ann Garrison died this date, May 16th, in 1846 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

Posted by Terry Buckalew on May 16, 2018
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia. Leave a comment

L.A. GARRISON

One-hundred five-year-old Lydia Ann Garrison died this date, May 16th, in 1846 of “old age” and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. She had led a long life without leaving anything but a small documented trail. Ms. Garrison or her spouse Robin, who predeceased her, are not recorded in any local or federal censuses. They were not reported in any city directories that I could locate.

Old Woman

According to the Pennsylvania Abolition Act of 1780, if you were Black and lived in Pennsylvania before 1780, you remained enslaved. Ms. Garrison was already at least 40 years of age at that time. According to the law, your children would be enslaved until the age of twenty-eight. Therefore, it was only after 1810 that a substantial community of free Blacks gathered in Philadelphia. 

Out of surviving records, Ms. Garrison was not the oldest person buried at Bethel Burying Ground. There were two women interred who were older – one a 110-year-old and another 113 years of age.

Surviving city death certificates do not show any family members of Ms. Garrison buried at Bethel Burying Ground. Lydia Ann Garrison was interred on a warm day (68°) in May. It can be assumed she was of strong character and spirit.

IMG-5440 (1)

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    • Three dead as church wall falls on this date, May 1st, in 1841.
    • The ten-month-old Baby Colgate died this date, June 20th, in 1847, and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground.
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