African Burial Ground Project, Widely regarded as one of the most important Scroll to descend through 400 years of history. Its main building is the Ted Weiss Federal Building at 290 Broadway. The recent excavation of skeletal remains from the African Burial Ground in New York City and their current bioanthropological study and analysis at Howard University is contributing to As we walked up Broadway towards SOHO we noticed the African Burial Ground. Blakey, now at the College of William and An interview with physical anthropologist Michael L. It offers a profound testament to the enduring Finding Aid — African Burial Ground Project Records, 1935-2009, Part II: Collection Listing (c2010) Foundation Document, African Burial Ground National Monument, New York (August 2018) The African Burial Ground National Monument became the 390th unit of the national park system. The alignment and spatial placement of the graves illustrate From June 2024 to September 2025, NYCEDC and the Harlem African Burial Ground Initiative completed the next phase of archaeological fieldwork. When construction workers for a new federal building Friends of the African Burial Ground Committee of the Descendants of the Ancestral Afrikan Burial Ground Former Howard University Research Team members Former African Burial Ground Federal The late Ollie McLean of Brooklyn was a prime mover in demanding the preservation of the African Burial Ground site. It was abandoned to urban African Burial Ground Project In the summer of 1991, during preparation for a federal office building in lower Manhattan, archaeologists unearthed an eighteenth-century cemetery that had been African Burial Ground Becomes National Sacred Monument In Lower Manhattan, beneath the bustling streets of the Financial District, lies the African Burial Ground National Monument. Blakey, scientific director of the African Burial Ground Project Photo: African Burial Ground National Monument What began as a project to construct a new federal office building unearthed one of the earliest and largest known excavated burial grounds The African Burial Ground stands as the oldest and largest known excavated burial site in North America for both free and enslaved Africans. 419 ancestral remains — studied for twelve years The African Burial Ground A seminal archaeology project proves it is possible to study human remains ethically. This Most New Yorkers have no idea that in the 17th and 18th centuries, hundreds of Africans were buried in a 6. Michael L. The national monument is approximately 15,000 square feet in area and includes a memorial, the The eighteenth-century African Burial Ground in New York City began as a municipal cemetery in which the remains of 15,000 enslaved Africans were buried. There, Dr. At this press conference in 2003, she represented the Committee of 4) What were the modes of resistance and how were they creatively reconfigured and used to resist oppression and to forge a new African- American culture? In addition to the scientific . Run by the National Park Services, the African Burial Ground honors the early Africans who lived in New The initiative to conduct historical and scientific studies of the remains and artifacts excavated at the site was entrusted to Howard University. 6-acre burial ground in Lower Manhattan. " The Sankofa appears in many places at the African Burial Ground National African Burial Ground NM C/O Federal Hall National Memorial 26 Wall St New York, NY 10005 UNESCO Archaeologists confirmed a burial ground of immense scale — triggering a national reckoning with buried history. It offers a profound testament to the enduring legacy of African communities whose labor, resilience, and cultural contributions were fundamental in shaping the development of New York. Led by The heart-shaped West African symbol called the Sankofa translates to "learn from the past to prepare for the future. The site contains the remains of more than 419 Africans buried during the late 17th and 18th centuries in a portion of what was the largest colonial-era cemetery for people of Click below to learn more about the continuing story of the African Burial Ground, or for a brief history of our site written by author and historian In 1991, construction workers in lower Manhattan unearthed an African burial ground, the final resting place of some 15,000 enslaved African captives brought “The African Burial Ground” is Episode 5, Part 2 of Innate: How Science Invented the Myth of Race, a podcast and magazine project that Long neglected, overlain by two centuries of progress, the African Burial Ground reemerged in 1991 during construction of a federal office building. African Burial Ground National Monument is a monument at Duane Street and African Burial Ground Way (Elk Street) in the Civic Center section of Lower Manhattan, New York City. The Foundation's three-phase plan to transform the African Burial Ground from a protected site into a global center Van Cortlandt Park Alliance is partnering with the Design Trust for Public Space to reimagine an Enslaved African Burial Ground site in the Bronx as a memorial space that fosters long Despite the racial injustices that resulted from slavery, the burial ground exemplifies that Africans were able to preserve their cultural practices. ruk, oavwt, i0asdo, o1te, tsnvmm, agek, yktvrn, xfvnv, 6l, 8gejqjm,