A team of volunteer archaeologists and anthropologists
are racing against the clock to excavate what may prove to be as many as 300
historic gravesites discovered during a residential construction project on
Arch Street in Old City in the last two weeks.
The graves and coffins, undoubtedly left over from the
310-year-old First Baptist Church burial ground between Second and Third
Streets, remain largely buried, coffins stacked three deep within a shrinking
island of dirt amid digging for a parking garage and foundation.
A few dozen coffins have already been removed. None has
been opened on site.
The developer, PMC Properties, hit a small snarl of bones
last November and agreed, after some consideration, to preserve and rebury
them.
But that small snarl proved simply a harbinger of a vast
residence of the dead that occupied the building site. Workers found the area
with the coffins on Feb. 20.
Work on that area then stopped. Archaeologists were
alerted.
On Monday, the developer gave the archaeologists until
Saturday to complete the removal. What happens after that is a subject of
trepidation for archaeologists.
Jonathan Stavin, a PMC executive vice president, said,
“We’re trying to be respectful of what is found there, bearing in mind that
this is an active construction site. PMC plans to assess the situation
Saturday."
Some archaeologists fear that chaotic removal by backhoe
may take place. Stavin declined to speculate on the ultimate manner of removal.
Anna Dhody, head of the Mütter Institute and a leader of
the archaeological excavation, said she
remained optimistic about the outcome.
Dhody said she put out "a call to arms" to
forensic specialists from Massachusetts to Maryland, and they began to assemble
Thursday.
"We decided somebody has to do something" about
the remains, she said. "These are our ancestors. This is our history. We
can learn so much from these bones — about the yellow fever epidemic in 1793,
the cholera epidemic of 1849."
"I've got a crack team," Dhody said. "I've
got the support of PMC." It's possible there are fewer than 300 remains.
"I think we can get it done by Saturday."
PMC had agreed to work with the Mütter Institute and
forensic archaeologists from Rutgers-Camden a few months ago to allow orderly
removal and study of what was thought to be a small group of bones for eventual
reinterment in Mount Moriah Cemetery in Southwest Philadelphia, where those who
had been buried at First Baptist were supposed to have been moved after the
cemetery was closed in 1859.
The Philadelphia Historical Commission has said it has no
jurisdiction in the matter, despite the fact that the burial ground, founded in
1707, lies squarely within the Old City Historic District. Commission director
Jonathan Farnham has said the Historical Commission has “no authority” to
regulate the historic remains, although he notes the commission has protected
the cobbled alley – Little Boys Way – a few feet away.
“This lack of jurisdiction is reflected in the historic
preservation ordinance explicitly limiting the Historical Commission’s
authority over so-called ‘undeveloped sites,’ of which this is one,” Farnham
said in an email.
Douglas Mooney, president of the Philadelphia
Archaeological Forum, a professional educational and advocacy group, called the
effort currently underway "salvage archaeology," where archaeologists
are racing time and backhoes in an effort to preserve history and historical
information.
The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, which
serves as the state historical preservation office, also says it has no
jurisdiction and no ability to intervene.
Mark Zecca, an attorney who formerly represented the city
Historical Commission as a divisional deputy city solicitor, called that
commission's claim of no jurisdiction "ridiculous."
The claim "completely ignores the remains as
historic and the cemetery as historic," Zecca said, adding that the ground
"is developed —it is just developed underground. [The commission] is
looking only at what is above ground. It makes no sense.”
Zecca said he believes the matter should be under the
auspices of Orphans' Court, a division of the Court of Common Pleas that has
jurisdiction over abandoned cemeteries. Stavin, of PMC, said, "We were
told the courts don't have jurisdiction." Calls to Orphans' Court late
Thursday were not returned.
Archaeologist Mooney said that "someone has to do
the right thing."
Stavin said his company was seeking to do the right
thing, which is why it has worked with the archaeologists and given them extra
time to allow for removals. He said his firm has "stepped up" its
effort "to help significantly" and has taken on the additional cost
of funding reinterment at Mount Moriah.
Mount Moriah already operates under an Orphans' Court
order regulating interments and removals, according to William R. Warwick, a
planner and architect who is helping Mount Moriah on a volunteer basis.
He noted that the First Baptist remains were supposedly
moved to Mount Moriah in 1859-60.
"Or so we thought," Warwick said. "Clearly
somebody didn't do the right job."
The impulse behind the desire to rebury was simple, he
said.
"Our thought was, 'Let's reunite the remains in that
plot,'" he said. "It could be there are families that are divided up
and the families need to be reunited."
Source; Philly.com
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