Posted on April 27, 2010

Arlington Graves Cover Black City

Jesse J. Holland, Taiwan News, April 26, 2010

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Few [tourists], however, head downhill [from Arlington Cemetery] to a quiet corner near the Iwo Jima Memorial.

Down here, there are no memorials to ancient battles, no ornate headstones honoring long-dead dignitaries. There are only rows of small unassuming white tombstones, many engraved with names like George, Toby and Rose.

They are the only visible reminders that part of the nation’s most storied burial ground sits atop what used to be a thriving black town–“Freedman’s Village,” built on land confiscated from Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee.

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Parks said he remembers his grandfather repeatedly bringing him to the cemetery as a child to explain the bond. Parks’ great-grandfather, James Parks, lived in Freedman’s Village and other locations around the cemetery after being freed from servitude to the Lee family.

“I was sitting on this wall gazing out over the cemetery and all of a sudden I got it,” Parks said. “Our DNA is intrinsically intertwined in this property, integrated in this property. The spirits of my ancestors continue to exist here in this property, so I find like my grandfather, I now come here for strength, I come here to commune with them.”

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The Civil War leaders of the federal Union buried dead soldiers on the property in hopes that Lee would never want to return, and Parks’ ancestor dug the very first grave near the Freedman’s Village burial site. The federal government turned some land about half a mile (800 meters) north of Lee’s mansion into a town specifically for freed slaves, referred to as contraband, who had nowhere to go.

Freedman’s Village was no ramshackle camp. At its height, more than 1,100 former slaves lived in a collection of 50 one-and-a-half story duplexes surrounding a central pond.

Although the town was supposed to be temporary, the freed slaves put up churches, stores, a hospital, mess hall, a school, an “old people’s home” and a laundry–to make a life for themselves.

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Living in Freedman’s Village wasn’t free. Workers with government jobs on nearby farms or those doing construction were paid $10 a week, but half their salary was turned over to the federal government to pay for running the town. Everyone else who lived on site was charged between $1 and $3 rent.

Dignitaries from around the nation came to see–and sometimes stay–with residents. The most famous was Sojourner Truth, the fiery black abolitionist and preacher, who spent about a year at Freedman’s Village as a counselor and teacher.

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Life was difficult. Virginia residents resented the villagers, and threats were made against their lives.

Freedman’s Bureau record show that on July 27, 1865, an Army assistant commander ordered “the arrest of W. J. Miner (white man) near Freedman’s Village for threatening the lives of colored people, collection of unjust claims” and other crimes. There’s no indication an arrest was ever made.

Eventually, the village site, with a spectacular view of the nation’s capital and the Potomac River, became more and more desirable for development. Despite impassioned protests from the freed slaves, the federal government paid the residents $75,000 for the buildings and property, and tore down the town in 1900.

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Saving the city would have been a “gift to the American people to remember the struggles which seem like was a long time ago, but 150 years is not that long ago,” Sherlock [Thomas Sherlock, historian at Arlington National Cemetery] said.

When the villagers dispersed into nearby cities and towns, many brought along bits and pieces of Freedman’s Village.

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William Syphax was elected to the Virginia General Assembly. After Rowe’s great-grandfather, blacksmith William A. Rowe, left Freedman’s Village, he became the first black policeman in Arlington County, Virginia, and later held other county posts, Rowe said.

“They were very instrumental in setting up Arlington County when they moved out,” Rowe said.

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Originally, Freedman’s Village residents were buried with the word contraband on their gravestones.

“As time went on and the headstones started to deteriorate and they were being replaced, the historian saw fit to give them the honor they were due and affirmed their status as civilians,” Parks said.

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