Bethel Burying Ground Project

Bethel Burying Ground Project

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Bethel Burying Ground, a National Historic Site, faces neglect, damage

Posted by Terry Buckalew on February 1, 2016
Posted in: Newspaper Articles, Uncategorized. Tagged: African American burial grounds, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

Stephan Salisbury, CULTURE WRITER, Philadelphia Inquirer

POSTED: Monday, February 1, 2016, 1:07 AM

The lost 19th-century graveyard established by Richard Allen, founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and utilized heavily by the city’s black community until shortly after the Civil War, has been named a National Historic Site by the federal government.

The existence of the graveyard had been forgotten until rediscovered by a historian a few years ago and designated a city landmark in 2013.

Bethel Burying Ground now joins a handful of city graveyards – Christ Church Burial Ground, Old Swedes’ Church Cemetery, Mikveh Israel Cemetery, the Woodlands – on the national register.

Most important, the designation earlier this month puts the graveyard in the national spotlight at a time when the Queen Village site, beneath Weccacoe Playground, remains contested ground, caught between conflicting interests of neighbors, historians, the black community, church officials, and an up-to-now uncommunicative and lethargic city bureaucracy.

Even as national importance has been certified, some community leaders and preservationists are alarmed by reports that the city is about to begin construction on the playground, possibly imperiling the historical integrity of the burial ground.

The graveyard, beneath about a third of the three-quarters-of-an-acre playground in the 400 block of Queen Street, is owned by the city. More than 5,000 18th- and 19th-century African Americans are buried there, members of the city’s and nation’s “founding generation,” in the words of Richard S. Newman, director of the Library Company of Philadelphia and author of Freedom’s Prophet, a highly regarded biography of Richard Allen.

The city had agreed to renovate Weccacoe before the burial ground was rediscovered through the research of independent historian Terry Buckalew.

Officials of the Queen Village Neighbors Association and Councilman Mark Squilla said that they have been recently notified by the city that work on the playground is about to commence.

No renovations have begun, however, and no construction plans have been filed with the Philadelphia Historical Commission.

Seeking to allay concerns, city Managing Director Michael DiBerardinis said Thursday that construction is not imminent.

“Mayor Kenney and I are currently in discussions with various stakeholders regarding the planned renovations at Weccacoe Playground and the development of a memorial at the burial site,” DiBerardinis said in an email. “A construction date has not yet been set for the playground renovations. We look forward to providing more information regarding this important project as those conversations progress.”

Even if construction did begin, officials contended, it would not directly affect the Bethel ground.

Planned work includes “new play equipment, a spray park, new seating and trash receptacles, repairs to the perimeter fence, renovations to the portion of the tennis court not located over the burial ground, and a garden to manage storm water,” according to a December email from Everett Gillison, then-Mayor Nutter’s chief of staff.

A substantial portion of the graveyard lies beneath a Weccacoe tennis court; some graves are little more than a foot from the surface.

Former city Managing Director Joe Certaine, a leader of an ad hoc group, Friends of Bethel Burying Ground, is scheduled along with several others to meet with Mayor Kenney and DiBerardinis on Monday.

Certaine, not happy with the process so far, argues that the city, owner of the site for more than a century, has ceded decision-making to local neighbors and officials at Mother Bethel AME Church, Richard Allen’s home base at Sixth and Lombard Streets. The cemetery “needs to be treated as a taxpayer-owned historic site” belonging to the whole city, he said.

The city has failed to consider the broad historical relevance of Bethel, Certain said.

“Until the public understands the historic value that this site represents to the African American community, nothing positive will be done to protect and preserve it,” he said.

What particularly rankles Certaine and many others is the presence at Weccacoe of a large community building, constructed in the 1920s and expanded in the 1970s. It sits on a concrete pad directly over the heart of the burial ground and is now used as office space by the neighbors association.

Certaine and many others consider the building and its toilets an unseemly desecration of sacred ground.

Michael Coard, attorney and leader of the Avenging the Ancestors Coalition, says, “You move the playground. You move the bathroom. You treat it as hallowed ground. That’s just respect. The city is allowing the ancestors to be desecrated.”

But the Rev. Mark Tyler, Mother Bethel pastor, believes that the community center potentially could be part of an interpretive plan informing visitors – and children using the playground – of the significance of the cemetery.

And he points out that demolition of the building poses its own threats to the historic area.

Councilman Squilla and leaders of the neighbors association agree with Tyler, arguing that both playground and burial ground can coexist in close proximity.

“There are plans for the playground, keeping in mind the sanctity of the burial ground,” Squilla said. “There will be meetings determining the next step.”

In the meantime, Buckalew, the historian whose work rediscovered the burial ground and who has now identified about 2,400 people buried there, is concerned with the structural integrity of the community building.

He said that, in the last 18 months, a crack has appeared, running from roofline to the ground and extending out onto the asphalt west of the building. A new roof-to-ground crack was noted last week on the building’s south side.

Buckalew, a retired facilities manager at the University of Pennsylvania, believes that the cracks are the result of “settling.” In other words, the graves below are collapsing and the ground is sinking. (Archaeological studies have noted other sinking areas above the cemetery.)

“I’m very concerned about water seeping through the cracks and down into the graves,” said Buckalew.

“We need an engineering study of the whole site.”

Such a study has been requested for nearly three years, but has not been done so far.

“You need an engineering study to proceed safely,” Buckalew said.

(To read stories of those buried at Bethel Burying Ground, many of them children and infants, visit Buckalew’s website devoted to the research: bethelburyinggroundproject.com)

ssalisbury@phillynews.com

215-854-5594

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20160201_Bethel_Burying_Ground__a_National_Historic_Site__faces_neglect__damage.html

Three-month-old Melvina Guye died this date, January 28th,in 1848 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground

Posted by Terry Buckalew on January 28, 2016
Posted in: On This date, Uncategorized. Tagged: African American burial grounds, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

Three-month-old Melvina Guye died this date January 28th in 1848 of Pneumonia and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. She was the only child of Amos Guye and his spouse (name unknown). Amos work as a waiter while Melvina mother was occupied as a washer of clothes. They lived in a 9’X9′ room at 28 Burd’s Court, now Alder Street.

Alder Street

Alder Street is bet. 10th & 11th Sts. and Locust & Spruce Sts.

The physician who signed the death certificate is asking the Bethel Church sexton to please provide, free of charge, a coffin to bury little Melvina as the family is poor and cannot afford one.

Nineteenth century African American wash woman

 

 

 

Bethel Burying Ground Placed on National Registry

Posted by Terry Buckalew on January 18, 2016
Posted in: It's a fact, Uncategorized. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American History, African Methodist Episcopal Church, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Leave a comment
 From Joe Certaine: January 14, 2016
 

Friends:

Earlier today we learned that Bethel Burying Ground has been placed on the National Park Service Registry of Historic Sites.
This is a tremendous achievement and a major step in our ongoing effort to protect and preserve this publicly owned historic site. Five thousand Black Philadelphians who formed and protected the existence of our community are interred underneath the grounds of Waccacoe Playground in the Southwark community of Philadelphia.
We will soon schedule an event to thank all of those who have been helpful in our effort to achieve this important goal. Our struggle is not over. We still must impress upon the administration of Mayor Kenney the importance of this taxpayer owned historic site and the need to protect and preserve Bethel Burying Ground as a major historic asset of the City of Philadelphia. 
Congratulations to the Friends of Bethel Burying Ground Coalition. Please keep up the pressure until we can achieve our goal of a permanent, protected, undesecrated, resting place for our ancestors in the African Diaspora.  Well done.
Jemadari

A list of those that died this date, December 8th, and were buried at Bethel Burying Ground

Posted by Terry Buckalew on January 8, 2016
Posted in: On This date, Uncategorized. Tagged: African American burial grounds, AME Zion, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

The abbreviation “us” = “unspecified.” All years of death are from the 1800s. Ex: 9 Jan 25 = 1825

The data is laid out in this order: name; age; gender; cause of death; date of death; additional information.

  1. Johnson, Unspecified; 3 weeks; m; Catarrh Fever; 8 Dec 46; father, H. Johnson.
  2. Jones, Sarah: 54 years; f; TB; 8 Dec 47; resided, 20 Washington Street.
  3. Kerr, Unspecified: 0; us; stillborn; 8 Dec 22; father, George Kerr.
  4. Legs, Unspecified: 10 days; u; Fits; 8 Dec 22; mother, Lettia Legs.
  5. Luster, Thomas: 21 years; f; Typhoid Fever; 8 Dec 47.
  6. Matthews, James H.: 1 year; m; Fever; 8 Dec 47.
  7. Needes, London: 5 years; m; Fever; 8 Dec 24.
  8. Rollings, Eliza: 21 years; f; TB; 8 Dec 52; married.
  9. Tillman, Daniel: 5 years; m; TB; 8 Dec 24.
  10. White, Mary: 24 years; f; Typhoid Fever; 8 Dec 29.

Seventy-year-old Netty Butler died this date, January 5th, in 1848 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground

Posted by Terry Buckalew on January 5, 2016
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

Netty Butler

Netty Butler, 70, died this date, January 5th, in 1848 of burns. The coroner officially stated she “accidently burned to death.” Ms. Butler was one of the 64 in Philadelphia during 1847-48 whose death was reported to be from burns or scalding.* She rented a room in a building on Allen’s Court which was next to Bethel Church (now “Mother Bethel”). The houses on Allen’s Court belonged “to the estate of the late Richard Allen,” according to an article in the January 31, 1848 edition of the Public Ledger. That same article reported a devastating fire to several buildings in Allen’s Court several weeks after Ms. Butler’s death. The fire started a block away and “gale” type winds blew the embers to the rooftops of Allen’s Court. This would have put the conflagration within yards of the church itself!

Allens court (1)

This 1865 map of the 6th and Lombard area shows the location of Allen’s Court (#1) and Bethel Church (#2). The name, Allen’s Court was changed to Alford St. in 1858. The structure titled #3 is the AMEZ church, “Big Wesley.” 

*Susan E. Klepp, The Swift Progress of Population: A Documentary and Bibliographic Study of Philadelphia’s Growth, 1642-1859, p. 265-68.

A stillborn baby was born to Mary Ann and William Griffin on this date, December 23rd, in 1850 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground

Posted by Terry Buckalew on December 23, 2015
Posted in: On This date, Uncategorized. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

Griffin

A stillborn baby was born to Mary Ann and William Griffin on this date, December 23rd, in 1850 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. The Griffins lived at 172 Locust Street. He was employed as a waiter. I cannot locate any further information on Ms. Griffin. Astonishingly, out of those that have been identified so far the Griffin baby is one of 83 other stillborn children buried at Bethel Burying Ground. The exact number maybe 200+. Overall approximately one-third of all those buried at BBG were two-years-old and younger. 

Sixty-eight-year-old John Alleneese died this date, December 19th, in 1848 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground

Posted by Terry Buckalew on December 19, 2015
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

JA

John Alleneese, 68, died this date, December 19th, in 1848 of heart disease and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. Formerly enslaved in Maryland, he purchased his release for $500. John and Rachel Alleneese had three children in their late teens when he died according to the 1847 African American Census. They had two daughters, Mary Jane and Rachel, Jr. according to the records of the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society. Two of the women in the household worked as cloth washers and one as a dressmaker. John is reported at his death as a “tradesman” It may have well been a dealer in shoes since he was once employed as a bootblack and his son was listed as a shoemaker according to the 1847 Census. John was a Freeman and a member of the Grand Temple Lodge. 

PIN IMAGE

 The Alleneese family lived at #2 Little Pine Street, now 502 Addison Street, which is within sight of Mother Bethel AME Church.

Fifty-year-old William Charles Young died this date, December 11th, in 1852 and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground

Posted by Terry Buckalew on December 11, 2015
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

YOUNG

Mr. William Charles Young, 50, died this date, December 11th, in 1852 of Tuberculosis and was buried at Bethel Burying Ground. He worked as a porter in a store likely near the family’s home at #5 S. Pine Street in the Moyamensing District of the city just south of the 5th and South Streets area. The Youngs had five children, 2 of which attended the St. Mary’s Street School and one other attended the Lombard Street School. The Youngs paid $5 a month for rent, according to the 1847 African American Census, which would have been one week’s earning for Mr. Young. 

Mr. Young was born in Delaware and had resided in Philadelphia for the last 27 years. His death certificate is signed by the prominent African American physician, civil rights activist and Bethel Church member Dr. J.J.G. Bias. 

Latest Revised Bethel Burying Ground Name Directory

Posted by Terry Buckalew on December 8, 2015
Posted in: Bethel Burying Ground Name Directory. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

Presently, there are 2,490 individuals identified out of the approximately 5,000+ buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

To view the Directory please click on –

https://bethelburyinggroundproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/bethel-burying-ground-name-directory.pdf

On this date, November 28th, there were 14 individuals who died and were buried at Bethel Burying Ground thru the decades

Posted by Terry Buckalew on November 28, 2015
Posted in: On This date. Tagged: African American burial grounds, African American cemeteries, African American History, archaeology, Bethel Burying Ground, Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Richard Allen. Leave a comment

Gloria Dei (1)

Of the surviving records, there are fourteen individuals that died on this date, November 28th, from 1812 to 1848 and were buried at Bethel Burying Ground.

NAME            AGE     CAUSE OF DEATH           DATE OF DEATH

 Black, Elizabeth: 2y; decay (malnutrition); 28 Nov 1829

Gills, Susan: 19y; child bed (giving birth); 28 Nov 1844

Hodson, Unspecified: 6y; cause of death not reported; 28 Nov 1819; father, James Hodson

Lyttle, Lydia A.: 70y; Palsy (stroke); 28 Nov 1842

Matlock, Unspecified: 0; male; stillborn; 28 Nov 45; mother, Mrs. Matlock   

Matney, Priscilla: 60y; f; Heart Disease; 28 Nov 1848; resided, 169 South 9th Street

Mikes, Mary: 90y; old age; 28 Nov 1845   

Moore, William: 30y; Typhus Fever; 28 Nov 1820

Parker, Unspecified: 0; stillborn; 21-28 Nov 1812

Shise, Susan: 4y; Whopping Cough; 28 Nov 1821

Stevenson, Gill: 5y; Drowning; 28 Nov 1824. (Official cause of death was “Drowned in sink.”)

Syphaa, Elizabeth: 26y; Inflammation of the Breast; 21-28 Nov 1829

Unspecified, Unspecified: 6y; gender and cause of death not reported; 28 Nov 1819

Watkins, Maria: 45y; Pneumonia; 28 Nov 1821

 

 

 

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