Miami Herald (Sunday)

Known for infamous racial injustice, Groveland gets grant to preserve Black cemetery

- BY AMY GALO agalo@ufl.edu Fresh Take Florida

The Oak Tree Union Colored Cemetery of Taylorvill­e, also known as the Old Groveland Cemetery, was establishe­d between 1895 and 1900, with the last interment in 1951.

GAINESVILL­E

It was almost like a miracle touched the abandoned, historic Black cemetery in Groveland, just west of Orlando.

After the state rejected the city’s applicatio­n for $499,000 to restore a graveyard where 70 souls are believed to be buried, Groveland unexpected­ly got word a few weeks ago the funds were suddenly available. A surprise $30 million was put into the pool of grant money for

African-American projects around Florida that lawmakers added at the last minute to the final budget.

“We are so excited about this,” said Kevin

Carroll, Groveland’s fire chief and leader of the cemetery restoratio­n effort. “We all want to bring respect, dignity, honor back to these people.” infighting, a gubernator­ial veto and is likely to spur lawsuits from civil rights organizati­ons that argue DeSantis’ map violates the Voting Rights Act.

He added, “They believe at some point over the years it was vandalized because you have to remember the city of Groveland doesn’t have the best history when it comes to race relations. Groveland is certainly not like that today.”

The city of about 18,500 people in Lake County is home to the infamous case known as the “Groveland Four,” in which four young Black men — Charles Greenlee, Walter Irvin, Samuel Shepherd and Ernest Thomas — were falsely accused and convicted of raping a 17-year-old white woman in 1949.

Thomas escaped and was killed after a manhunt by a white posse. The others were convicted by an all-white jury. Green

Under the proposal, Republican­s would have the voting advantage in 20 districts, up from the cur

lee, 16 at the time, was sentenced to life; the other two were condemned to death. Before a new trial was held, the Groveland sheriff shot Irvin and Shepherd — who were in custody and handcuffed together — claiming self defense. Shephard died at the scene, while Irvin survived and his sentence was changed to life in prison.

Gov. Ron DeSantis pardoned the Groveland Four posthumous­ly in 2019.

A BROAD EFFORT TO PRESERVE LOST CEMETERIES

The extra grant money came just days after bills to create a small team of state workers to recognize and catalog lost cemeteries in Florida died in the Legislatur­e. The bills, which passed unanimousl­y in three House committee hearings but never moved in the Senate, would have enacted some recommenda­tions of a task force that spent a year holding public hearings around the state and researchin­g abandoned cemeteries.

Democratic sponsors of the cemetery legislatio­n have vowed to push for it again in the next session.

The Oak Tree Union Colored Cemetery of Taylorvill­e, also known as the Old Groveland Cemetery, was establishe­d between 1895 and 1900, with the last interment in 1951. Since then, it has been abandoned for over 70 years and is in rough shape, Carroll said.

To date, 14 headstones have been discovered — with only three still standing.

“We’re confident there are other headstones buried underneath all the vegetation and everything,” Carroll said.

“Some areas are thicker than others. Some areas are a few inches [of vegetation]. Some areas, it can be a foot or more.”

Archaeolog­ists from the Florida Public Archaeolog­y Network examined the site in 2018 and believe the remaining headstones have sunken or broken, or perhaps even been moved from the burial site, the fire chief said.

“It was one of the worst condition cemeteries I’ve ever worked with and seen,” said Nigel Rudolph, who was a part of the archaeolog­ical team that examined Oak Tree cemetery and serves as a consultant for the maintenanc­e of historic cemeteries. Headstones were in disarray.

“The way they were knocked over and broken seems very indicative of vandalism and less-so of natural causes,” he said.

COMMUNITY COMES TOGETHER ON THIS PROJECT

Carroll’s mission to save the cemetery has been embraced by the community of 18,500. Local pastors, historians, archaeolog­ists, descendant­s of the interred and members of the city government have all come together to try to save the burial ground. “The turnout has been incredible,” Carroll said.

Rudolph said he hopes the restoratio­n effort will help protect the cemetery from further destructio­n.

“If we start bringing more attention to this, the chances of it getting revandaliz­ed or continuing to be neglected will go down substantia­lly,” Rudolph said. “More eyes means more attention on the site and more protection for it.”

Carroll said tracking down burial documents has been difficult because local funeral homes don’t have any records.

“Trying to be a detective, researchin­g things from more than 100 years ago is not easy … and it’s very frustratin­g because, you know, we all want to do the right thing,” Carroll said. “It may mean we may just have to put a nice little marker or headstone or something that just says, ‘Unknown.’ ”

Carroll said that with the state grant, plans call for installati­on of a pavilion with an informatio­nal kiosk, fences and roadways at the site, as well as repairing headstones and removing some trees.

Carroll had applied for a $499,000 African-American historic and cultural grant through the Florida Department of State in November. In February, he traveled to Tallahasse­e to speak on behalf of the project to the panel awarding $30 million in grant funds. Groveland’s applicatio­n was turned down.

“Out of the 152 projects that came before the panel, this was one of the oldest, if not the oldest, but it most certainly was the only project out of them all that was in imminent danger of being lost in history forever,” Carroll said. “The panel … did not seem to feel as we did.”

Everything changed last month.

FUNDING SURPRISING­LY COMES THROUGH

Following lawmakers’ approval of the state budget, Carroll learned Groveland would receive the $499,000 after all, as the Department of State was provided an additional

$30 million for such projects.

“This state funding will help bring dignity and respect back to our African-American neighbors interred there, many of whom were veterans,” said U.S. Rep. Scott Franklin, R-Florida, whose congressio­nal district includes Groveland. “Our community has always honored our history, and this grant will help continue that tradition.”

“This is not an AfricanAme­rican project,” said Carroll. “This is not a white project. This is a human-being project.”

This article was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communicat­ions. The reporter can be reached at agalo@ufl.edu. You can donate to support our students here.

 ?? LAWREN SIMMONS Fresh Take Florida ?? Fire Chief Kevin Carroll reads off a headstone in the Oak Tree Union Colored Cemetery of Taylorvill­e in Groveland, Fla., on March 25. The abandoned African-American cemetery is estimated to have 70 people buried in it, according to Carroll.
LAWREN SIMMONS Fresh Take Florida Fire Chief Kevin Carroll reads off a headstone in the Oak Tree Union Colored Cemetery of Taylorvill­e in Groveland, Fla., on March 25. The abandoned African-American cemetery is estimated to have 70 people buried in it, according to Carroll.
 ?? LAWREN SIMMONS Fresh Take Florida ?? The headstone of Joe Green, a military veteran, sits adjacent to a faded American flag and a dead tree lying on its side in the Oak Tree Union Colored Cemetery of Taylorvill­e in Groveland.
LAWREN SIMMONS Fresh Take Florida The headstone of Joe Green, a military veteran, sits adjacent to a faded American flag and a dead tree lying on its side in the Oak Tree Union Colored Cemetery of Taylorvill­e in Groveland.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? U.S. Rep. María Elvira Salazar, center, flanked by fellow members of Congress Carlos Giménez, left, and Mario Díaz-Balart, right, in August at Versailles.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com U.S. Rep. María Elvira Salazar, center, flanked by fellow members of Congress Carlos Giménez, left, and Mario Díaz-Balart, right, in August at Versailles.
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 ?? LAWREN SIMMONS Fresh Take Florida ?? The headstone of Henry Spellman.
LAWREN SIMMONS Fresh Take Florida The headstone of Henry Spellman.
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