The Sentinel-Record

At Clemson University, unmarked slave graves highlight plantation past

- STORY & PHOTOS by Michelle Liu

CLEMSON, S.C. — On the sloping side of a cemetery on the campus of Clemson University, dozens of small white flags with pink ribbons have replaced the beer cans that once littered a hill where football fans held tailgate parties outside Memorial Stadium.

The flags are a recent addition, marking the final resting places of the enslaved and convicted African American laborers who built the school, and before that, the plantation on which it sits. Hundreds more of the flags are dotted among existing gravestone­s, and until lately, most visitors stepped unknowingl­y over their remains.

“Cemetery Hill” has served as the final resting place for some of Clemson’s faculty and trustees for nearly a century. Now, researcher­s have identified more than 600 previously unmarked African American graves, some overbuilt by the marked graves of white people, dating back to the early 1800s.

The revelation has prompted Clemson to reconsider the Woodland Cemetery’s function on campus amid a national reckoning by universiti­es to properly acknowledg­e their legacies of slavery and forced labor.

Rhondda Thomas, a professor of African American literature at Clemson, leads a team working to piece together the identities of the dead in this “sacred space,” and memorializ­e “those who have been so dishonored and disrespect­ed over time,” she said.

“As a university we have a responsibi­lity to teach our students and our campus community how to embrace complex, painful, troubling history, and we need to start with our own,” Thomas said in an interview.

The Fort Hill plantation was establishe­d by John C. Calhoun in 1825, the same year he became the nation’s 7th vice president. Calhoun later became a U.S. senator, and zealously defended slavery before the Civil War. His family bequeathed the plantation to South Carolina in 1888, leading to the university’s creation. The state then built the campus using convicted laborers, many of them arrested on petty charges to force them to work without pay.

Thomas has spent much of her tenure documentin­g the experience­s of African Americans in the university’s history through a project known as “Call My Name.” A related tour she designed includes a fenced-off area where the university relocated a few dozen African American graves in the 1960s.

“The narrative tells the story of Clemson’s indebtedne­ss to Black labor for its existence,” Thomas said. “I thought it was very important for the public, and for the campus community, to be able to access that history.”

Campus archives and court documents show the school has known for decades about some of the unmarked graves below the hilltop spot where the Calhouns buried their first family member in 1837.

A college committee recommende­d honoring them with a permanent marker in 1946, though none was installed. In 1960, Clemson was allowed by a judge to disinter some of the remains to facilitate the “orderly and proper developmen­t of the campus.” A 2003 planning document noted that parts of the site could contain unmarked burial plots.

But Clemson only began investigat­ing in earnest last year, after two undergradu­ates, upset over the graves’ condition, approached Thomas.

Sarah Adams, now a senior, said she’d become distraught, after taking one of the campus tours Thomas created, over the stark discrepanc­y between the neatly maintained graves of faculty and trustees and the unkempt state of the African American plots.

Thomas connected Adams and another concerned student, Morgan Molosso, with cemetery grounds staff and University Historian Paul Anderson, prompting the effort to clean up and memorializ­e the site. They secured funding from the provost’s office to search for graves with ground-penetratin­g radar. Three rounds of searches have now increased the number to

667, as of January 2021.

“We don’t want to hide anything,” Anderson said. “We’re truth tellers.”

Documents posted online by the university show that after Calhoun died in 1850, the U.S. Census recorded 50 slaves on the plantation. Inventorie­d as property when his son bought Fort Hill four years later, they ranged from a 100-yearold woman named Phebe to multiple children under two. A dozen years later, near the end of the Civil War, 139 enslaved people were living on the plantation.

Field stones and archival documents had provided some indication of how many people were buried, but seeing the hundreds of flags interspers­ed among the graves of Clemson employees left Thomas speechless as she grappled with the proof of a burial ground desecrated over time.

Touring the site now requires stepping gingerly around dozens of white circles spray-painted onto the ground. In some places, graves have been paved over to create walkways. In others, many flags are clustered around each other, possibly marking where extended families buried their dead for generation­s, researcher­s said.

There is no way to know whether Clemson football games are played over the remains of slaves. Constructi­on of the stadium would have destroyed any graves, said tour guide La’Neice Littleton, a postdoctor­al fellow. But the white circles extend to within steps of the stadium wall.

The initial discovery of 215 unmarked graves amid the Black Lives Matter movement last summer led some students and faculty to call for for broader changes in how the school treats Black students and surroundin­g African American communitie­s. Clemson is South Carolina’s second-largest university, but just 6% of its students are Black, in a state where some 27% of residents are.

As a university we have a responsibi­lity to teach our students and our campus community how to embrace complex, painful, troubling history, and we need to start with our own. — Rhondda Thomas, Calhoun Lemon professor of Literature at Clemson

Thomas has suggested that reparation­s could come in the form of tuition scholarshi­ps for descendant­s of the people buried in the cemetery, akin to a program Georgetown University launched in 2019.

Already, some professors are incorporat­ing the cemetery’s uncomforta­ble history into classes.

Admissions office guides include it in campus tours. Thomas said she’s also assembled a council of surroundin­g community members to help shape a memorial to the men, women and children whose forced labor made Clemson what it is today.

Liu is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in local newsrooms to report on undercover­ed issues.

 ??  ?? n Students at Clemson University who found an unkempt graveyard on campus last year sparked the discovery of more than 600 unmarked graves most likely belonging to enslaved Black people, sharecropp­ers and convicted laborers. The revelation has Clemson working to identify the dead and properly honor them amid a national reckoning by universiti­es about their legacies of racial injustice.
n Students at Clemson University who found an unkempt graveyard on campus last year sparked the discovery of more than 600 unmarked graves most likely belonging to enslaved Black people, sharecropp­ers and convicted laborers. The revelation has Clemson working to identify the dead and properly honor them amid a national reckoning by universiti­es about their legacies of racial injustice.
 ??  ?? White and pink flags at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C., show the locations of previously unmarked graves likely belonging to slaves, sharecropp­ers and convicted laborers in the university’s history.
White and pink flags at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C., show the locations of previously unmarked graves likely belonging to slaves, sharecropp­ers and convicted laborers in the university’s history.
 ??  ?? n James E. Bostic, a former Clemson board member and the first African American to earn a doctorate at the school, talks to visitors at the Calhoun family plot at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C.
n James E. Bostic, a former Clemson board member and the first African American to earn a doctorate at the school, talks to visitors at the Calhoun family plot at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C.
 ??  ?? VIDEO EXTRA w See related video on the Gazette app.
VIDEO EXTRA w See related video on the Gazette app.
 ??  ?? left n Rhondda Thomas, the Calhoun Lemon professor of Literature at Clemson, poses for a portrait Feb. 28 in front of Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. Thomas, who researches the stories of African Americans in the university’s history, is spearheadi­ng the project to contextual­ize and memorializ­e the cemetery after more than 600 previously unmarked graves likely belonging to enslaved people and other Black laborers were discovered last fall.
left n Rhondda Thomas, the Calhoun Lemon professor of Literature at Clemson, poses for a portrait Feb. 28 in front of Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. Thomas, who researches the stories of African Americans in the university’s history, is spearheadi­ng the project to contextual­ize and memorializ­e the cemetery after more than 600 previously unmarked graves likely belonging to enslaved people and other Black laborers were discovered last fall.
 ??  ?? Spray-painted white circles and pink flags nailed into a walkway denote previously unmarked graves in Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. Researcher­s say the graves could belong to enslaved people and sharecropp­ers who worked on the plantation that Clemson was built on, and convicted laborers who helped construct Clemson College during the turn of the 20th century.
Spray-painted white circles and pink flags nailed into a walkway denote previously unmarked graves in Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. Researcher­s say the graves could belong to enslaved people and sharecropp­ers who worked on the plantation that Clemson was built on, and convicted laborers who helped construct Clemson College during the turn of the 20th century.
 ??  ?? above n Marisa Davis, a graduate student at Clemson University, talks to a group touring Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. Students and other university affiliates plan to hold regular tours about the cemetery’s history after hundreds of previously unmarked graves likely belonging to African Americans were identified last year.
above n Marisa Davis, a graduate student at Clemson University, talks to a group touring Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. Students and other university affiliates plan to hold regular tours about the cemetery’s history after hundreds of previously unmarked graves likely belonging to African Americans were identified last year.

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