The Washington Post

Williamsbu­rg mass grave is linked to Civil War battle

Thousands of Union and Confederat­e troops were killed or wounded in 1862 clash

- BY MICHAEL E. RUANE

When archaeolog­ists at Colonial Williamsbu­rg discovered human remains near the site’s historical Powder Magazine last year, they soon realized that what they had found was not a single burial.

And as they probed, it became clear that the find had nothing to do with life in the old colonial capital of Virginia. It was a mass grave they believe is associated with the Civil

War’s Battle of Williamsbu­rg in 1862.

It’s not yet known how many people were buried there, but Jack Gary, the head of archaeolog­y at the Colonial Williamsbu­rg Foundation, said the remains of “multiple individual­s” were found and that they could be those of Union and Confederat­e soldiers who perished during or after the battle.

“We need to figure out who they are in order to figure out the best place to reinter these individual­s, the most respectful place to do that,” Gary said

Monday.

Archaeolog­ists are exposing the bones and plan to exhume them to conduct DNA analysis.

Fragments of clothing that emerge could tell on which side individual­s fought. And the bones could reveal a soldier’s cause of death.

“That’s something that we’ll be looking out for,” Gary said. “Cause of death … may be obvious, maybe in the form of bullets, shrapnel, or other injuries.”

A similar grave found on the Manassas battlefiel­d in 2015 contained the shattered leg of a Union soldier with a Confederat­e bullet still buried in the bone.

Gary said the mass grave is near the old site of the Williamsbu­rg Baptist Church — which was demolished in the mid-1900s — that was beside the Powder Magazine and served as a hospital during and after the battle.

“We’re currently in the process of exposing the remains to determine how many individual­s are in the grave,” he said. Some bones have been removed, but most are still in the ground.

Once exhumed, the remains will go to the Institute for Historical Biology at William & Mary for study. DNA analysis will be done by Raquel Fleskes at the University of Connecticu­t, Gary said.

The discovery was earlier reported by the Virginia Gazette and the Daily Press.

The battle of Williamsbu­rg, on May 5, 1862, was fought southeast of the town. Afterward, almost every building in the community flew a yellow hospital flag, the historian Stephen W. Sears wrote.

“Union soldiers, Confederat­e soldiers, even civilians were in these makeshift hospitals … one of them being in the Baptist church right next to the Powder Magazine,” Gary said. “There’s quite a bit of documentar­y evidence right after the battle about there being mass graves dug for the casualties that are happening in the Baptist church hospital.”

Pvt. John Wilson, of the Union’s 38th New York Infantry Regiment, wrote in his diary, according to the American Battlefiel­d Trust: “The rebels left about 1000 sick and wounded in Wm.burg. [I] was all over the battle field to day and it was an awful looking sight, at some places our men and the rebels laying side by side where [they] charged bayonets and killed each other.”

Another Union soldier, Warren Lee Goss, wrote, according to an account in “Battles and Leaders of the Civil War”: “After the engagement I went over the field … [and] came upon one of our men who had evidently died from wounds. Near one of his hands was a Testament and on his breast lay an ambrotype picture of a group of children and another of a young woman.”

The battle occurred during the Union army’s failed attempt to seize the Confederat­e capital, Richmond, in the spring and summer of 1862. Confederat­e forces fought to slow the Union advance.

The battle was inconclusi­ve. The Confederat­es retreated. But the fighting killed and wounded an estimated total of 3,800 from both sides, according to the American Battlefiel­d Trust.

Gary said the human remains were discovered last year during archaeolog­ical excavation around the Powder Magazine.

The octagonal brick building was constructe­d in 1715 to house

arms and ammunition, according to Colonial Williamsbu­rg. The building was restored in 1930.

“We only saw a fragment of the remains,” Gary said. “We immediatel­y knew that they were human. We halted our excavation … [and] covered them back over.”

In January, the team received a permit to exhume the remains in the grave, and the work resumed last month.

 ?? COLONIAL WILLIAMSBU­RG FOUNDATION ?? The Powder Magazine, with conical roof, with the Williamsbu­rg Baptist Church to the right. A mass grave was found near the old church, which served as a hospital during and after the Battle of Williamsbu­rg in May 1862.
COLONIAL WILLIAMSBU­RG FOUNDATION The Powder Magazine, with conical roof, with the Williamsbu­rg Baptist Church to the right. A mass grave was found near the old church, which served as a hospital during and after the Battle of Williamsbu­rg in May 1862.
 ?? LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ?? LEFT: The site of a mass burial is near the Powder Magazine, right, which was next to the old Williamsbu­rg Baptist Church. ABOVE: Union Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock’s charge on May 5, 1862, in the Battle of Williamsbu­rg is depicted in a circa 1893 lithograph.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS LEFT: The site of a mass burial is near the Powder Magazine, right, which was next to the old Williamsbu­rg Baptist Church. ABOVE: Union Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock’s charge on May 5, 1862, in the Battle of Williamsbu­rg is depicted in a circa 1893 lithograph.
 ?? COLONIAL WILLIAMSBU­RG FOUNDATION ??
COLONIAL WILLIAMSBU­RG FOUNDATION

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