TODAY, THE libations for
what may have been the nation's oldest privately owned African-American
cemetery that was not part of a churchyard will be heaven-sent, rather than
man-made.
A prayer and libation
ceremony to honor some 5,000 people buried at the rediscovered Bethel Burying
Ground in Queen Village that had been set for today has been postponed - but
supporters of the burial ground continue to fight for the honor they believe the
sacred site deserves.
"This is probably
one of the most important African-American memorials or monuments we have in
this town," said Joe Certaine, spokesman for the Friends of Bethel Burying
Ground.
The prayer service was
to be an opportunity "to reconnect spiritually with the ancestors buried
there and an opportunity to say a public prayer over the 5,000 souls buried
there," Certaine said.
The burial ground - now
beneath part of the Weccacoe Playground on Lawrence Street between Catharine
and Queen - was purchased by Richard Allen, the founder of Mother Bethel AME
Church, in 1810. In the late 1890s, the city purchased the cemetery, which had
been filled to capacity with six to seven layers of bodies on top of each
other, historian Terry Buckalew said.
The Friends of Bethel
Burying Ground announced its formation last month after archaeological studies
in November revealed that thousands of people were buried beneath a portion of
the playground adjacent to Queen Street.
Buckalew pushed for the
studies after learning three years ago that the city's Parks & Recreation
Department was planning major playground renovations.
Buckalew said at first,
the city seemed ready to go ahead with renovations despite knowledge of the
burial ground. That's when he filed paperwork to get the site onto the city's
Register of Historic Places.
"This was the first
time a group of free African-Americans purchased land that was not attached to
a church," Buckalew said. "That was in April 1810. It's quite a
legacy."
He and other supporters
are also trying to have the burial ground listed on the National Register of
Historic Places.
Jeff Hornstein,
president of the Queen Village Neighbors Association, said the neighborhood
also supports protecting and commemorating the burial ground.
"When we first
learned about the burial ground, I was excited," Hornstein said, adding
that he thought it was "outrageous" there wasn't already a historic
designation there. "I'm living half a block away from perhaps the most
important black graveyard in the country."
Hornstein said for the
last two years, the position of the Queen Village group has been that the
renovations should not disturb the burial site and that the ground's history
should be told.
The burial ground runs
underneath about a third of the playground, including a small community center
and about 20 percent of the tennis courts.
Duncan Spencer,
president of Friends of Weccacoe Playground, proposed that the neighborhood
give up the tennis courts, and instead use the space for soccer.
Hornstein said there
isn't much controversy over the grounds, because all are in agreement that the
site should be honored.
"There's no fight
here," he said. "The city has been managing this process very
well."
But Certaine and
Buckalew said the issues aren't as close to resolution as some may think.
"We want that
building gone," Buckalew said of the community center. "There are two
public toilets. . . . There's no reason you should have public toilets over
graves."
Hornstein said he would
prefer to keep the community center because it is the only public space in the
area. He said he had also hoped to renovate the building and turn it into a
tutoring center for neighborhood children. Now, he said, he would also like to
see part of the center include historical information about the burial ground
and those laid to rest there.
The Rev. Mark Tyler,
pastor of Mother Bethel, at 6th and Lombard streets, said he had not been
scheduled to take part in the prayer service today. He said he declined to
participate because he hadn't been included its planning. "I am open to
planning a shared remembrance or prayer service . . . provided we are at the
table together doing the planning," Tyler said.
Tyler said descendants
of Richard Allen have no problem with a playground being adjacent to the burial
site.
The burial-ground group
made some headway after meeting earlier this month with Mayor Nutter's chief of
staff, Everett Gillison, and other city officials, Buckalew said.
After that meeting, he
said, the Water Department agreed to either block off or replace a water line
that supporters feel is threatening the burial ground.
"There is a large
water main under Queen Street that was put in 1835 that is very close to the
bodies," he said. "It has to be shut down or a new pipe put in. The
city wouldn't want the bones of those buried people washing down Queen
Street."
Certaine said he is most
concerned that the city takes charge of the historical site.
"This is serious
Philadelphia history and African-American history," he said. "It has
to be treated that way by a city administration that is responsible for the
property.
This news was brought to my attention today. 5,000 persons, that's amazing. day trip tues, find this all out. yes, this is major history.
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