San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Alamo battle is looming over status as cemetery

- By Scott Huddleston STAFF WRITER

A local Native American group is bringing a new battle to the Alamo, filing a legal notice declaring it to be on an abandoned or unknown cemetery.

That could delay the $450 million project to restore and enhance the sacred Texas shrine.

And the American Indians in Texas at the Spanish Colonial Missions may go even further: The group launched a fundraisin­g campaign to file a federal lawsuit alleging discrimina­tion in the way city, state and nonprofit officials are guiding the project.

“We feel like we’ve exhausted all of our efforts,” said Ramón Vásquez, executive director of the group.

He said new guidelines on the handling of human remains unearthed during the planned restoratio­n were developed without consulting his organizati­on, whose members are descendant­s of indigenous people who lived — and likely were buried — in this area well before the 1836 Battle of the Alamo.

“We would have never agreed to these protocols,” Vásquez said, including a prohibitio­n of DNA testing and exclusion of lineal descendant­s from having a say on the treatment of recovered remains.

The new guidelines authorize the Alamo to get a court order to remove human remains if found and, if necessary, rebury them elsewhere in “an appropriat­e location,” in consultati­on with property owners, the Texas Historical Commission and an archaeolog­ical advisory committee.

But there’s no guarantee that process would include input from the American Indians in Texas or the San Antonio Missions Cemetery Associatio­n, two affiliates of the Tap Pilam Coahuiltec­an Nation, which counts

1,000 members nationwide with ties to 10 indigenous nations in Texas.

City and state officials say the Texas General Land Office and nonprofit Alamo Trust Inc. crafted the guidelines with input from other Native American groups.

“The GLO and Alamo Trust worked on a human remains protocol that seeks to respect the cultural significan­ce of the site and to acknowledg­e the legal requiremen­ts associated with the treatment of human remains when, and if, they are discovered,” Deputy City Attorney Edward Guzman said.

Whether the Alamo sits on a legally protected cemetery is a key issue as plans for the restoratio­n proceed. The local tribal groups believe it does; city and state officials disagree.

The issue can be confusing because the word “cemetery” has several different definition­s in state law.

In May, the Texas Historical Commission approved a Historic Texas Cemetery designatio­n for a large portion of the Alamo grounds and the plaza that is mostly symbolic. The designated boundary was a compromise between competing proposals from the Land Office and the Missions Cemetery Associatio­n.

The state agency wanted to include only the Alamo chapel; the cemetery associatio­n sought designatio­n of a much larger area, well beyond Alamo Plaza. In the end, the commission opted for an area that was bigger than the state wanted but smaller than the associatio­n requested.

Regardless of size, the historic cemetery title doesn’t have a major impact on the Alamo project.

But with the legal notice, the local Native American group is claiming the area is an abandoned or unknown cemetery as defined in the Texas Health and Safety Code.

If that stands, it would trigger a series of regulation­s regarding the handling of human remains that is more in line with what the local Native American groups believe should be done.

Guzman said the notice could delay the whole project and preservati­on of the Alamo’s missionera structures.

“The greatest concern is that archaeolog­ical work that is necessary to preserve the Alamo church and Long Barrack may not be approved or implemente­d in a timely manner, because the constructi­on of ‘improvemen­ts’ on the ‘cemetery’ property might be restricted by law,” Guzman said.

‘Right to control’

The state’s Health and Safety Code includes prioritize­d lists of people to contact with the “right to control” dispositio­n or provide consent to remove remains from legally protected cemeteries.

When there are no surviving immediate relatives, the law gives authority to individual­s “in the next degree of kinship” and “the cemetery organizati­on operating the cemetery.”

City and state officials and at least one business owner are disputing the Native Americans’ claim that the Alamo is on a cemetery.

They argue the notice was not filed by a legal deadline. The code requires an abandoned cemetery be recorded in county property records within 10 days of discovery. But documentat­ion of burials in the area has existed for decades, even centuries, dating to the 1700s.

Those opposing the legal notice note it didn’t contain an accurate legal descriptio­n of the property where the groups say a cemetery is located, and that the notice doesn’t include “sufficient evidence” that there’s a cemetery at all.

They also contend that the cemetery associatio­n has no legal authority over any part of the Alamo; state law gives the Land Office “exclusive jurisdicti­on” over all of the Alamo complex that also applies to Alamo Plaza, through a lease with the city, Guzman said.

The legal notice also declared that the Hipolito F. Garcia Federal Building, Emily Morgan Hotel and the block around the hotel are on an abandoned cemetery.

Dr. Nora Walker, who owns a building just east of the hotel, also filed a letter of opposition.

“We believe that the notice is faulty due to its filing outside the mandated time frame and other technical errors, and should have no real effect on the land,” Guzman said. “However, this notice could function in a similar manner to a cloud on title. It would place limitation­s on property owners’ decisions regarding surroundin­g businesses, and probably affect property values.”

Vásquez said it’s important for the city, state and Alamo Trust to conduct a complete study of the area, including archaeolog­ical “test pits” and archival research, to determine the confines of the cemetery he knows is there.

“Then you’d have a true footprint,” he said.

Heated debate

Few things can create confusion or start a controvers­y as quickly as discovery of a human bone fragment, a skull or even a lone child’s tooth at the historic mission and battlegrou­nd.

A partial skull unearthed in 1979 by archaeolog­ists at the Alamo set off a widely publicized tug-of-war.

The Daughters of the Republic of Texas kept the skull in storage. But Catholic officials and the InterTriba­l Council of American Indians wanted it reburied in a religious ceremony.

The Daughters, under strict instructio­ns from the historical commission to keep the skull, got clearance several years ago to give it to UTSA’s Center for Archaeolog­ical Research.

Restoring and enhancing the Alamo on a large scale is certain to involve a lot of digging in sensitive areas. The public-private project to build an Alamo museum at the site will lower the ground level in Alamo Plaza by at least 18 inches, delineatin­g the mission-fort’s historic footprint.

Even without lowering the plaza, it’s possible — some say inevitable — that archaeolog­ists and constructi­on crews will unearth human bones or fragments during the project.

More than 1,000 people, including indigenous inhabitant­s of the Mission San Antonio de Valero, as well as Spaniards, Canary Islanders, Mexican soldiers and possibly Tejano Alamo defenders from 1836, are thought to have been buried in the area.

Today’s plaza is about 2 feet above the historic surface. But much of the soil below has been dug up and stirred about since the 1870s, for installati­on of water, electrical, phone and gas lines and storm drains, as well as the 1930s Cenotaph. Any known discoverie­s of human remains may not have been publicized. Human bones could have been covered over, or moved aside.

That adds uncertaint­y about what lies below the flagstone, concrete and asphalt. No archaeolog­ical investigat­ions have been done throughout most of the plaza.

‘Almost crippling’

The local Native American groups aren’t the only ones to have criticized the 17-page protocol developed by the state and Alamo Trust for handling human remains.

Archaeolog­ist James “Jake” Ivey, who led the team that uncovered the skull in 1979 and is an expert on the Alamo’s subterrane­an assets, is worried that prohibitio­n of DNA testing, presented in the protocol as “destructiv­e analysis,” eliminates opportunit­ies to learn more about the famous site.

The document states that “visual analysis” will be the only means to determine cultural affiliatio­n.

“I agree with the need for appropriat­e and respectful treatment of Native American remains, and I think it’s a good idea to have tribal representa­tives involved in the overview of the archaeolog­ical process at the Alamo,” Ivey said. “However, the rules and regs presented in this document will be almost crippling to any archaeolog­ical investigat­ion when — not if — human remains are found.”

Ivey said the DNA-testing prohibitio­n will feed a false history, leaving remains of Spanish friars and soldiers collective­ly identified as local indigenous people.

Despite the traditiona­l story of the 1836 battle that nearly all the fallen Alamo defenders were burned on funeral pyres, Ivey believes some of the Tejanos may have been buried along with Mexican soldiers.

“The most restrictiv­e element of the protocol is the basic assumption throughout that all remains are Native American until proven otherwise,” he said.

In 1935, human remains were found near the roots of trees removed for constructi­on of the federal building in the plaza. It was thought they were from 37 Mexican soldiers who died in the 1836 battle.

But then-Archbishop Arthur Drossarts believed the remains were Catholic burials of indigenous people of the mission, much older than the 1836 battle. He prevailed and had the remains interred in San Fernando Cemetery

No. 2.

When the remains were exhumed nearly 60 years later, researcher­s supported Drossarts’ theory, determinin­g through visual analysis that they were male, female and child American Indians. The number of individual­s was estimated at seven or more identified through bones, and eight or more through teeth.

It’s in the details

The Land Office and Alamo Trust see DNA testing as crossing an ethical line. It also is “unlikely to provide any more certainty about the deceased’s existence other than their ethnicity,” the Land Office said in a statement.

“You’re actually destroying the sacred burial,” said Alamo CEO Douglass McDonald, who reports to the Alamo Trust. “We have sought in these policies to follow ethical standards that are higher than what the law requires.”

The new guidelines for handling remains are far more detailed than the one-page protocol the Daughters had when they were custodians of the Alamo. That document stated that any unearthed remains would be studied in place, whenever possible, then “reinterred and the work routed around the area.”

But unlike the new protocol, the DRT’s guidelines recognized the American Indians in Texas as one of three cultural groups to be consulted when human remains were found.

The new guidelines require an appointed “tribal monitor” be present during excavation­s of human remains.

The protocol provides that “appropriat­e parties” will be invited to attend and possibly lead or participat­e in reburial ceremonies. The local Native American groups aren’t considered “appropriat­e parties” under the guidelines.

The protocol is vividly detailed. Archaeolog­ists handling remains must wear unbleached cotton gloves and wrap remains in an unbleached muslin cloth for storage in the Alamo collection­s vault, illuminate­d by a soft light and maintained at 68 degrees, with relative humidity between 50 and 60 percent.

Any photograph­s taken of exposed burial sites will be converted to hand-drawn depictions, then destroyed. Gloves and storage boxes used to handle remains will be burned.

Alamo Trust, which oversees daily operations at the site and execution of the protocol, has said the plan is a “living document” that will be revised “as unique situations are encountere­d.”

Protocol falls short

In citing objections to the guidelines, Vásquez said they fall short of other projects that included lineal groups and tried to identify descendant­s to consult about the fate of human remains.

He noted the Fort Bend Independen­t School District recently announced that remains of 95 people discovered at an abandoned late-1800s cemetery at a constructi­on site last year would undergo DNA testing for historical documentat­ion before they are reburied. Most of those individual­s are believed to be African-American and part of the state’s notorious convict-leasing system.

In San Antonio, Christus Santa Rosa Health System worked with Vásquez after the remains of more than 70 people buried in an 1800s Catholic cemetery were uncovered at its downtown children's hospital during work on a prayer garden.

Most of the remains were reinterred where they were found with a Native American and Catholic ceremony, and the project was redesigned to avoid disturbing the graves.

The city also “put to rest” a planned overhaul of Milam Park, which is next to the hospital and sits on San Antonio’s old Protestant cemetery, Vásquez said.

While the controvers­y over the cemetery designatio­n threatens to become a political football, the local Native Americans and others believe that all remains are sacred, no matter how small, and deserve to be treated with respect.

During 2016 archaeolog­ical digs for the Alamo project, a child’s tooth was found on the west side of the plaza. It was given a ceremonial burial by Tap Pilam. In Coahuiltec­an culture, every fragment of human remains is considered sacred, GTI Environmen­tal stated in an Alamo archaeolog­y report for Vásquez’s group:

“All inanimate and animate objects have a life force with a life span, then dies, and is buried where life ceased to exist, even something as small as a tooth.”

 ?? Billy Calzada / Staff file photo ?? A video showing indigenous and mestizo people of Texas is projected on the Alamo chapel during Luminaria in 2009.
Billy Calzada / Staff file photo A video showing indigenous and mestizo people of Texas is projected on the Alamo chapel during Luminaria in 2009.
 ?? Mike Fisher/Staff artist ?? Cemetery controvers­y A previously unreleased map prepared by an engineerin­g company in 2017 identifies areas (shown in red below) that have a “high potential” for existence of human remains buried in the 1700s and early 1800s. The map is based on discoverie­s made during constructi­on projects or archaeolog­ical digs from 1920 to 2016. Some of the areas are outside the state-approved Historic Texas Cemetery designatio­n. A local Native American organizati­on is seeking a comprehens­ive study to better identify human remains in and around the mission.
Sources: Texas Historical Commission, Pape-Dawson Engineers
Mike Fisher/Staff artist Cemetery controvers­y A previously unreleased map prepared by an engineerin­g company in 2017 identifies areas (shown in red below) that have a “high potential” for existence of human remains buried in the 1700s and early 1800s. The map is based on discoverie­s made during constructi­on projects or archaeolog­ical digs from 1920 to 2016. Some of the areas are outside the state-approved Historic Texas Cemetery designatio­n. A local Native American organizati­on is seeking a comprehens­ive study to better identify human remains in and around the mission. Sources: Texas Historical Commission, Pape-Dawson Engineers
 ?? United Press Internatio­nal file photo ?? Archaeolog­ist Anne Fox displays a skull found during a 1979 excavation on the Alamo grounds.
United Press Internatio­nal file photo Archaeolog­ist Anne Fox displays a skull found during a 1979 excavation on the Alamo grounds.
 ?? William Luther / Staff photograph­er ?? This picture from 2015 was taken from a much lower elevation and from the rear of the Alamo chapel, which is in the lower left quadrant.
William Luther / Staff photograph­er This picture from 2015 was taken from a much lower elevation and from the rear of the Alamo chapel, which is in the lower left quadrant.
 ?? Courtesy of the Institute of Texan Cultures ?? This 1931 photo of Alamo Plaza was taken by the San Antonio Light’s Jack Specht from a blimp. The front of the Alamo Chapel can be seen in the center.
Courtesy of the Institute of Texan Cultures This 1931 photo of Alamo Plaza was taken by the San Antonio Light’s Jack Specht from a blimp. The front of the Alamo Chapel can be seen in the center.
 ?? Bob Owen / Staff file photo ?? In 2017, Christus Santa Rosa Health System worked with Ramón Vásquez, center, when remains were found on its property.
Bob Owen / Staff file photo In 2017, Christus Santa Rosa Health System worked with Ramón Vásquez, center, when remains were found on its property.

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