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Flatbush African Burial Ground

Coordinates: 40°39′01″N 73°57′22″W / 40.65028°N 73.95611°W / 40.65028; -73.95611
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Flatbush African Burial Ground
A sign on a chainlink fence designating the Flatbush African Burial Ground site, 2021
Map showing the location of Flatbush African Burial Ground
Map showing the location of Flatbush African Burial Ground
Map showing the location of Flatbush African Burial Ground
Map showing the location of Flatbush African Burial Ground
Map showing the location of Flatbush African Burial Ground
Map showing the location of Flatbush African Burial Ground
Location2286 Church Avenue, Brooklyn, New York City, NY 10007
Coordinates40°39′01″N 73°57′22″W / 40.65028°N 73.95611°W / 40.65028; -73.95611

The Flatbush African Burial Ground or FABG is the site of a historic African-American cemetery dating to the 17th century at Church and Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn, on land formerly owned by the adjacent Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church.[1][2][3][4]

History

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FABG area in T.G. Bergen map of 1855 Flatbush

Early Dutch settlers in the 1600s such as Leffert Pieterse, of the Lefferts family, owned enslaved people to work and use their agricultural knowledge to grow grain.[5] Farming was central to Kings County, modern Brooklyn, as the second-largest provider of produce in the country to the end of the 1800s, and the burials of slaves and later free people of African descent were largely segregated from their owners or white neighbors in the cemetery of the Flatbush Dutch Reformed Church.[6] Similar segregation of the Reformed Church burials in Harlem resulted in the Harlem African Burial Ground beneath the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's 126th Street Depot.[7] The first national census in 1790 counted every third inhabitant of Kings County as black and recorded almost 60% of white households owning slaves, with the amount owning slaves higher in the town of Flatbush.[8] Slavery in New York State was not fully abolished until 1827.[9]

One of the earliest cartographic references to the Flatbush African Burial Ground is an 1855 map by Teunis G. Bergen, showing the "Negro Burying Ground" to the northeast of Erasmus Hall High School, which Bergen attended. John Y. Culyer's Flatbush District No. 1 School (later Public School 90) stood on a portion of the site from 1878 until 2015, when the city-designated landmark was demolished due to structural issues. The site has been slated for development by the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development, with a request for qualifications for contractors being released in January 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic and ahead of online community workshops.[10]

Known Burials

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Phyllis Jacobs, born 1785, is recorded as being buried in the burial grounds in the late 1700s or early 1800.[4] Her burial is mentioned in the book titled: A Historical Sketch of the Zabriske Homestead, Flatbush, LI written by Peter Shneck and published in 1881.[4] In the book, Jacobs burial location is described as the Flatbush Burial Ground for "Colored People," East Broadway, Flatbush.[4]

A 110-year old "negro woman named Eve" who was owned by Lawrence Voorhes, and previously Lawrence Ditmas for 80 years, was "piously interred in the African burying ground of the village of Flatbush, attended by a great concourse of the people of colour" on Sunday, March 25, 1810. She was described as of strong intellectual capacity, modest and unassuming, lively and cheerful, and enjoying an almost uninterrupted health as she worked during the summer months "by her own choice" in a garden which she delighted in.[11]

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ King, Nelson A. (2021-07-01). "Flatbush Locals Celebrated Juneteenth With Art to Raise Awareness of African Burial Ground". Brownstoner. Retrieved 2021-08-20.
  2. ^ Meade, Elizabeth. Prepare for Death and Follow Me: An Archaeological Survey of the Historic Period Cemeteries of New York City (Thesis). CUNY Academic Works.
  3. ^ Historical Perspectives, Inc. (2021). Archaelogical Topic Intensive Study to Identify the Descendant Community for the 2286 Church Avenue Site (PDF) (Report). New York City Economic Development Corporation. p. 88.
  4. ^ a b c d Schenck, P. L (1881). Historical sketch of the Zabriskie homestead (removed 1877), Flatbush, L.I: with biographical accounts of some of those who have resided in it. Brooklyn: publisher not identified. ISBN 978-0-598-99582-7. OCLC 1046019507.
  5. ^ "Slavery in Brooklyn". Center For Brooklyn History. Retrieved September 4, 2021.
  6. ^ "Farming Brooklyn". Center For Brooklyn History. Retrieved September 4, 2021.
  7. ^ Feinman, Peter (2018). "Undoing the Whitewashing of Black History in New York". Institute of History, Archaeology and Education. Retrieved September 4, 2021.
  8. ^ White, Shane (2012). "Somewhat More Independent: The End of Slavery in New York City, 1770–1810". The University of Georgia Press.
  9. ^ Harper, Douglas (2003). "Emancipation in New York". Slavery in the North.
  10. ^ "The Project". Flatbush African Burial Ground Task Force. Retrieved September 4, 2021.
  11. ^ "Died". The Long-Island Star. March 29, 1810. Retrieved September 4, 2021.
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