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Subject:
From:
Matt Matternes <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 8 Jan 2013 17:46:52 +0000
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Linda:

Last year, New South Associates completed the relocation of a Plantation era through Early 20th Century African American Cemetery (The Avondale Burial Place) for the Georgia DOT.  The site was located in southern Bibb County (Georgia) and addressed a cemetery that likely formed as a small plantation/large farm burial ground and continued use after Emancipation.  Some of our results will provide perspectives that should be relevant to your lines of research.  The project has a web site (http://www.avondaleburialplace.org/) that provides an overview of the project.  The report can also be downloaded from there.  Go to the News Section and scroll to the bottom to find the appropriate links.  

Please contact us directly if you have any specific questions.  

Hope this helps!

matt
Hugh B. 'Matt' Matternes, PhD, RPA|Senior Mortuary Specialist
New South Associates, Inc.
6150 East Ponce de Leon Avenue, Stone Mountain, GA 30083
Office: (770) 498-4155 Ext. 114|Cell: (678) 209-8603
http://www.newsouthassoc.com


________________________________________
From: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY [[log in to unmask]] on behalf of Linda Derry [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2013 12:22 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Plantation Cemeteries

I would love to hear from others working in the old antebellum cotton belt in the U.S. about cemeteries on big plantations.

Up to this point I've been working mainly with graveyards within the boundaries of former towns or villages, but am now turning my attention to some nearby plantations, and am repeatedly finding that logging, farming and/or road crews have "relocated" gravestones into ravines, separating them from their original graves.  After much thought, I toying with the idea of trying to help these relatively intact grave markers find their way back to their graves -- especially after reading some wills with heartfelt instructions about the construction and care of these same burial places).

So, I am wondering if anyone on  HISTARC can recommend some literature  that contains discussions of a predictive model that speaks about the relationship of the family cemetery relative to the "Big House."

  Because of the task at hand I'm talking here mainly about the plantation owner's family burial ground  but I would also like to hear if there is some predictability in the location of the burials of enslaved inhabitants of these plantations)

Any incidental knowledge based on experience would also be appreciated.  Mostly, I am wondering if there a consistent relationship between the two (mansion and burial ground), or not?

I know there are survey archaeologists out there in the South that that have noticed a pattern, and am hoping you will answer my question.

Linda Derry
Site Director
Old Cahawba
719 Tremont St.
Selma, AL 36701
ph. 334/875-2529
fax. 334/877-4253
[log in to unmask]

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