The Columbus Dispatch

Va. time capsule yields artifacts

‘This is the box we expected,’ expert says

- Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND, Va. – Conservati­on experts in Virginia’s capital on Tuesday pulled books, money, ammunition, documents and other artifacts from a time capsule found in the remnants of a pedestal that once held a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee.

Kate Ridgway, the lead conservato­r for the Virginia Department of Historic Resources, said the measuremen­ts and material of the box, copper, match historical accounts. As the contents inside were unpacked, they appeared to match the descriptio­n of the 1887 time capsule they had been looking for.

“It does appear that this is the box we expected,” Ridgway said.

Records maintained by the Library of Virginia suggest that dozens of Richmond residents, organizati­ons and businesses contribute­d about 60 objects to the capsule, including Confederat­e memorabili­a.

The box was discovered and carefully extracted from the monument site a day earlier, marking the end of a long search for the elusive capsule. Ridgway said the box, which weighed 36 pounds, was found in water in a little alcove of the pedestal. The contents were damp, but “it’s not soup,” Ridgway said.

“I think it’s in better shape than we expected,” she said.

Historical records had led to some speculatio­n that the capsule might contain a rare and historical­ly significan­t photo of deceased President Abraham Lincoln. One line from a newspaper article listed among the contents a “picture of Lincoln lying in his coffin.”

On Tuesday, conservato­rs found a printed image from an 1865 issue of Harper’s Weekly in the time capsule that Ridgway said seemed to show a figure grieving over Lincoln’s grave – but did not appear to be the much-anticipate­d photo.

Harold Holzer, a historian and Lincoln scholar, had previously said he believed it unlikely that the time capsule

contained an actual photograph of Lincoln in his coffin because the only known photo of Lincoln in death was taken by photograph­er Jeremiah Gurney in City Hall in New York on April 24, 1865.

The contents of the tightly packed box had expanded from the damp and stuck together, making unpacking difficult, so conservato­rs decided to relieve pressure by cutting down one side.

“Not ideal, but it’s the way it is,” Ridgway said.

After Ridgway and other team members meticulous­ly extracted each object, other conservato­rs would then cart the pieces to the back of the lab for further study and cataloging. The team made sure to photograph each object in the box before manipulati­ng it.

Many of the paper items were damaged from water and time but still at least partly legible. Along with several waterlogge­d books, pamphlets and newspapers, the box contained an envelope of Confederat­e money, which conservato­rs carefully separated, and two carved artifacts: a Masonic symbol and a Confederat­e flag said to have be made from the tree that grew over Gen. Stonewall Jackson’s original grave.

Conservato­rs also pulled buttons, coins and Miniè balls, a type of bullet used in the Civil War, from the box.

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam ordered the enormous equestrian statue of Lee removed in 2020, amid the global protest movement sparked by the police killing of George Floyd. Litigation pushed back his plans, and the statue

was not removed until September, after a court cleared the way.

Contempora­neous news accounts from the late 1800s detailed the placement of the time capsule in the foundation of the pedestal, and imaging tests conducted earlier this year appeared to confirm its existence. But a lengthy search during the September statue removal came up empty.

Earlier this month, Northam ordered the pedestal removed as well, and crews working on the project again started to search for the artifact. A time capsule was discovered two weeks ago, generating excitement, but hours of painstakin­g and ultimately anti-climactic examinatio­n suggested that artifact was placed by someone else, perhaps someone involved with the constructi­on.

 ?? SARAH RANKIN/AP ?? Virginia state conservato­rs Tuesday work on a box believed to be a time capsule left in the pedestal at the former site of a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Va.
SARAH RANKIN/AP Virginia state conservato­rs Tuesday work on a box believed to be a time capsule left in the pedestal at the former site of a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Va.

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