South Carolina
Related: About this forumAt Clemson, unmarked slave graves highlight plantation past
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) On the sloping side of a cemetery on the campus of Clemson University, dozens of small white flags with pink ribbons have replaced the beer cans that once littered a hill where football fans held tailgate parties outside Memorial Stadium.
The flags are a recent addition, marking the final resting places of the enslaved and convicted African American laborers who built the school, and before that, the plantation on which it sits. Hundreds more of the flags are dotted among existing gravestones, and until lately, most visitors stepped unknowingly over their remains.
Cemetery Hill has served as the final resting place for some of Clemsons faculty and trustees for nearly a century. Now, researchers have identified more than 600 previously unmarked African American graves, some overbuilt by the marked graves of white people, dating back to the early 1800s.
The revelation has prompted Clemson to reconsider the Woodland Cemeterys function on campus amid a national reckoning by universities to properly acknowledge their legacies of slavery and forced labor.
Read more: https://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/ap_news/us/at-clemson-unmarked-slave-graves-highlight-plantation-past/article_f2cbfcf0-f8ab-58bd-b687-b369e7b2bea2.html
Buckeye_Democrat
(15,045 posts)... a little speech about it, then declare it's a settled matter.
Thanks for posting that story.
TexasTowelie
(116,873 posts)I won't be surprised if Clemson refuses to acknowledge the history of the graveyard.
SCantiGOP
(14,256 posts)Hardly sounds like a coverup
hlthe2b
(106,390 posts)Maybe it is time for their own to be uninterred and buried elsewhere so that the graves of former slaves can be appropriately recognized.