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Kremlin denies blowing up dam, blames ‘Ukrainian sabotage’ instead
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Natalia Abbakumova, Ellen Francis
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CNN
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US F-16 fighter jets caused a sonic boom across the Washington, DC, region Sunday as they scrambled to reach an unresponsive aircraft that ultimately crashed in Virginia, officials said.
A US official said the F-16s did not shoot down the aircraft and that it is typical for the Federal Aviation Administration to call in jets if someone is flying unsafely.
The pilot of the civilian aircraft was unresponsive as the F-16 fighter jets attempted to make contact, according to a news release from the Continental US North American Aerospace Defense Command Region.
The F-16 jets were “authorized to travel at supersonic speeds,” which resulted in the sonic boom heard in the Washington, DC, area.
The F-16s used flares “in an attempt to draw attention from the pilot,” the release added.
The civilian aircraft, a Cessna 560 Citation V, was intercepted by the NORAD jets around 3:20 p.m. and ultimately crashed near the George Washington National Forest in Virginia.
“The pilot was unresponsive and the Cessna subsequently crashed near the George Washington National Forest, Virginia,” the release said. “NORAD attempted to establish contact with the pilot until the aircraft crashed.”
Four people were on board the aircraft, which overshot its planned destination by 315 miles before crashing, sources familiar with the investigation said.
Search efforts were still underway by state and local authorities Sunday evening, Virginia State Police told CNN.
State police were notified around 3:50 p.m. of a possible aircraft crash in the Staunton/Blue Ridge Parkway region, the agency said.
Nothing has been located at this time, it added.
The National Transportation Safety Board said on Twitter it was investigating the crash.
The military aircraft caused a sonic boom heard across the Washington, DC, metropolitan region.
“We are aware of reports from communities throughout the National Capital Region of a loud ‘boom’ this afternoon,” DC Homeland Security & Emergency Management said on Twitter.
There is no threat at this time, the agency added.
Earlier, the FAA said in a statement that a Cessna Citation crashed in southwest Virginia Sunday.
The aircraft took off from Elizabethton Municipal Airport in Elizabethton, Tennessee, and was bound for Long Island MacArthur Airport in New York.
The aircraft crashed into a mountainous terrain in a “sparsely populated area”, according to FAA.
The US Capitol Complex was placed on “an elevated alert” when the small aircraft flew near the area on Sunday afternoon, according to a statement from US Capitol Police.
“This afternoon, our officials were working closely with our federal partners to monitor an unresponsive pilot who was flying an airplane near the National Capital Region. The U.S. Capitol Complex was briefly placed on an elevated alert until the airplane left the area,” the statement said.
The US Secret Service said they did not alter their posture for keeping President Joe Biden secure after the incident. Biden was golfing at the Andrews Air Force Base golf course near Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.
The incident “had no impact on Secret Service,” spokesperson Anthony Guglielmi said in a Sunday statement.
The President has been briefed on the incident, according to a White House official.
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MANASSAS, VA—Claiming that the gift was simply a gesture of kindness rather than an ethics violation, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas stated Friday that there was nothing wrong with a wealthy donor renting out an entire D.C.-area water park just for him. “One friend is allowed to treat another friend to a nice, relaxing day of wet and wild fun in the sun, aren’t they?” said Thomas from the middle of a cozy tube floating down SplashDown’s lazy river, explaining how much easier it was to enjoy all 13 acres of northern Virginia’s largest water park when there were no lines or other people sharing the attractions. “Harlan Crow and I go back many years, so there’s nothing unusual or nefarious about him paying $600,000 for them to open up before their season has even started and attend to my every whim to make sure I have a total blast. Show me in the bylaws where I’m violating a condition of my employment by riding the Tropical Twister as many times as I want with no wait. Plus, Neil and Sonya are going to be so jealous when I go back to work with a solid tan and a belly full of free ice cream.” At press time, Crow had reportedly tipped a teenaged pool attendant $1,500 to carry Thomas up the wooden stairs at Pipeline Tower so he could go for another ride.
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A person wielding a baseball bat attacked two staffers inside the Virginia office of Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) on Monday morning after asking for him by name, the member of Congress said.
Both victims, who were not immediately identified, were taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries while the suspect was taken into police custody, Sgt. Lisa Gardner, a public information officer with the Fairfax City Police Department, told HuffPost.
“Right now, our focus is on ensuring they are receiving the care they need,” Connolly said in a statement. “The thought that someone would take advantage of my staff’s accessibility to commit an act of violence is unconscionable and devastating.”
Gardner said officers were called to Connolly’s office at 10:49 a.m. over an active assault. Connolly was not at the office at the time of the incident, she added.
The suspect, who was not being immediately identified, was not known by police in the city of Fairfax, Gardner said.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Election officials in Virginia have announced plans to withdraw the state from a bipartisan effort designed to ensure accurate voter lists and combat fraud — but that also has been caught up in conspiracy theories spread since the 2020 presidential election.
When Virginia formally withdraws later this year, it will become the eighth Republican-led state to leave the Electronic Registration Information Center, known has ERIC, since the group was targeted in a series of online stories last year that questioned its funding and purpose. Former President Donald Trump has been among those calling on Republican state officials to leave.
Virginia Elections Commissioner Susan Beals, in a letter sent Thursday to ERIC, listed several reasons for the decision to end the state’s membership. That included the recent state departures, incomplete participation by Virginia’s bordering states and “increasing concerns regarding stewardship, maintenance, privacy, and confidentiality” of voter information.
Virginia was one of the founding members when ERIC was formed in 2012, an effort promoted by then-Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell.
“In short, ERIC’s mandate has expanded beyond that of its initial intent — to improve the accuracy of voter rolls,” Beals wrote. “We will pursue other information arrangements with our neighboring states and look to other opportunities to partner with states in an apolitical fashion.”
Virginia joins Alabama, Florida, Iowa, Louisiana, Missouri, Ohio and West Virginia who have either withdrawn or notified ERIC that they plan to do so. Texas election officials have said they are working on an alternative data-sharing effort but have not provided a notice of withdrawal.
ERIC uses data-sharing among member states to identify voters who might have moved out of state or died and should be considered for removal from a state’s voter rolls. It also flags instances of potential double-voting — ballots cast in more than one state by the same voter — that are then used to investigate potential voter fraud.
Beals, a former local election official, was appointed as state elections commissioner last year by Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin. She previously served as an aide to Republican state Sen. Amanda Chase, who since the 2020 election has become a prominent promoter of Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud.
There is no evidence of fraud or manipulation of voting machines in the 2020 election. Reviews in multiple states, including ones controlled by Republicans, have upheld the results and affirmed Joe Biden’s win. Dozens of judges, including several nominated by Trump, also rejected his claims.
In a statement, Chase praised the decision and claimed, without evidence, that ERIC was “used for insidious and nefarious purposes to include an abuse of power in controlling our elections.”
Democratic state Sen. Adam Ebbin said he was disappointed in the decision to withdraw from the system.
“The net result is we won’t have a tool to make sure our voter rolls are as accurate as they could be,” said Ebbin, a member of the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee. “It’s less accurate without as many state partners to verify information.”
One conspiracy targeting the system claims that billionaire philanthropist George Soros funded it. While the data-sharing system did receive initial funding from the nonpartisan Pew Charitable Trusts, that money was separate from funding provided to Pew by a Soros-affiliated organization that went to an unrelated effort, according to ERIC’s executive director, Shane Hamlin. The system has since been funded through annual dues by member states.
Hamlin said in an emailed statement that the group “will continue our work on behalf of our remaining member states in improving the accuracy of America’s voter rolls and increasing access to voter registration for all eligible citizens.”
With no national voter registration clearinghouse, ERIC is the only data-sharing program among the states. It was started in 2012 by seven states and was bipartisan from the beginning, with four of the founding states led at the time by Republicans.
The system has been credited in Maryland with identifying some 66,000 potentially deceased voters and 778,000 people who may have moved out of state since 2013. In Georgia, officials said nearly 100,000 voters no longer eligible to vote in the state had been removed based on data provided by ERIC.
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Cassidy reported from Atlanta.
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A Virginia police officer was hit by an out-of-control car that went speeding through a median, across the opposite lane and into a car that the officer had pulled over as well as the police cruiser.
The police officer jumped out of the way and managed to avoid the initial collision, but was brushed in the legs in a scene captured by his dashcam.
“The officer was struck and nearly killed,” the Fairfax County Police Department wrote on Facebook.
The footage shows him pop back up, call for help and check on the drivers of the other vehicles. The officer, who was not named, suffered only minor injuries, which Fairfax County Police Chief Kevin Davis called “miraculous.”
Davis said at a press conference that the speeding car, a 2018 BMW M3, was estimated to be traveling at above 120 mph when it lost control at a slight bend in the highway.
“It was going way too fast,” Davis said. “It was a rocket, and then it became a missile.”
The department said the 17-year-old driver and his two passengers also suffered minor injuries, as well as the driver of the car that had been pulled over.
“Parents and guardians should consider using this video as an opportunity to have a conversation with their teen drivers about how their driving behavior can affect the lives of others,” the department said in a news release.
Davis added that parents should be mindful of the kinds of cars they give their young motorists.
“The car involved in that collision yesterday was a whole lot of car ― a whole lot of car ― for an inexperienced driver,” he said.
The teen driver, who was not named, was charged with reckless driving, which is a misdemeanor.
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The City of Virginia Beach declared a state of emergency after a tornado moved through the area Sunday and damaged dozens of homes, downed trees and caused gas leaks.
City officials said it’s unclear how many homes had been damaged but they estimated between 50 and 100, after the tornado touched down just after 6 p.m., CBS affiliate WTKR-TV reported.
“Based on the debris signature on radar, damage reports, and videos of the storm, we can confirm that there was a tornado,” the National Weather Service in Wakefield, Virginia said in a tweet.
City Manager Patrick Duhaney declared a state of emergency Sunday night.
Much of the damage had been reported in the area of River Road and N. Great Neck Road. It also includes Upper Chelsea Reach and Haversham Close.
There were no immediate reports of injuries.
Virginia Natural Gas responded to several homes with gas leaks and Dominion Energy was reporting just under 1,000 outages early Monday.
Great Neck Road will remain closed between Cox High School and the bridge at Adam Keeling Road until further notice to allow for emergency and debris management work to occur, the city said.
Crews will be out at 8 a.m. Monday to begin cleaning up streets.
Three schools were closed Monday due damage from the storm, the school district said.
As a result of the severe weather, the Something in the Water festival in Virginia Beach announced all events for Sunday, the third day of the festival, were canceled.
“No one wants to make this call, but we cannot predict nor negotiate with the weather tonight. It is our responsibility to ensure public safety above all else,” Duhaney said.
The severe weather in Virginia Beach came after thunderstorms, hail as large as golf balls and at least one confirmed tornado hit Florida on Saturday.
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Christina and Robert Burris, the parents of a high school student in Spotsylvania County, Virginia, attended a November 2021 school board meeting for a particular reason: to complain about “33 Snowfish,” a novel about homeless teenagers who escape sexual abuse.
The 2003 book, written by Adam Rapp, could “traumatize” teenagers with its “shocking” content, the couple alleged.
The school board responded immediately. With one member not present, the board voted 6-0 to remove “sexually explicit” books from school libraries.
“We should throw those books in a fire,” said board member Rabih Abuismail, lamenting that public schools want kids to read more about “gay pornography” than about Jesus Christ.
Another, Kirk Twigg, said he’d like to see the books before burning them, “so we can identify within our community that we are eradicating this bad stuff.”
Residents of Spotsylvania County, a fast-growing area halfway between Richmond and the nation’s capital, soon voiced their displeasure over the board’s move, prompting it to quickly reverse the decision.
But the battle over book access wasn’t over.
Mark Taylor, the superintendent of Spotsylvania County Public Schools, last month proposed shuttering all school libraries in the district. Doing so would be a crucial cost-cutting move, he argued, noting that the school system was facing a $21.8 million funding gap. (After county officials approved a budget in April, the shortfall came out to be $10 million.)
Just days after Taylor suggested shutting down school libraries, he announced that 14 books — including “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison and “All Boys Aren’t Blue” by George M. Johnson — would be removed from their shelves, saying they had sexually explicit content.
When a parent in Spotsylvania County challenges a book, it triggers a formal review process by a committee that includes parents, teachers and others. The 14 books removed from libraries had already been deemed acceptable by book review committees.
But Taylor has argued that the removal is justified by a Virginia law requiring schools to notify parents of “sexually explicit” content in instructional material.
“Our recent decision to remove 14 sexually explicit books from the library does NOT prohibit teachers from including them in classroom assignments with parental notification in accordance with applicable law and policy,” Taylor noted in a lengthy statement to HuffPost, adding that the district doesn’t have the resources to review all 390,000 books in school libraries for explicit content.
“In the space of one week, we found ourselves with the threat of the library being closed and books being pulled from the shelves,” Kassie Gregorio Palmer, a parent who runs a Facebook page about Spotsylvania public schools, told HuffPost.
“Prior to this, we were a well-respected school district,” Gregorio Palmer added. “My fear is that this is the new normal.”
It’s a familiar story. Conservative parents, sometimes backed by right-wing activist groups, have been objecting to books found in schools across the U.S., including in Pennsylvania, Florida and Missouri. The challenges and bans have led some educators to consider limiting the resources they make available to students, and surveys have found that the conservatives culture war is contributing to a national teacher shortage.
“At first, I didn’t think that [conservatives] were trying to gut public schools,” Gregorio Palmer said. “But more and more these days, I just don’t see how they’re not.”
Taylor said his school district was “standing up for parental rights.”
“I am a big proponent of civil liberties,” he said. “I am particularly concerned about the civil liberties of parents and their right to choose whether or not their children are exposed to sexually explicit materials in contravention of Virginia law. … Our top priority is the safety and well-being of the children entrusted to us.”
State law requires that schools have libraries on-site, so it would be hard to enact the closures that Taylor proposed. But his suggestion raised alarm in Spotsylvania about what educational resources may end up on the chopping block.
“Even during stressful budgetary seasons, removing or defunding libraries or librarians undermines the very core of learning,” said a statement from the Central Rappahannock Regional Library, a public library system that serves Spotsylvania and the surrounding area.
“We … urge the School Board to reject this possibility to ensure that Spotsylvania County students continue to benefit from the strongest educational system that can be provided.”
Spotsylvania County Supervisor Chris Yakabouski, meanwhile, said that closing school libraries was a “pretty stupid” idea.
Taylor has been a controversial figure since becoming a nominee for the superintendent role, which opened last year after the school board fired then-Superintendent Scott Baker — a former regional superintendent of the year and teacher of the year — “without cause.” Spotsylvania residents were baffled by that decision.
At the time, parents alleged that Taylor had made racist and homophobic posts on social media, and that he had suggested parents remove their children from public schools.
Taylor, who also worked in local government in another county, came with no background in education other than home-schooling his own children — one of whom cited her negative experience with his teaching to ask the board not to appoint her estranged father.
“For many, many years there was very little to do with any kind of textbook learning,” Jael Taylor wrote in a letter to the board. “To this day, I still feel like there are a lot of holes in my education.”
The next school board budget meeting is currently scheduled for Monday, and it’s unclear what the board will do to address the funding gap. But the fact that the superintendent would propose closing libraries amid a faux outrage over books has left local residents worried about the state of public schools.
“Even if they don’t close the libraries, it doesn’t mean they’re supporting a strong public school system in Spotsylvania,” Gregorio Palmer said. “Everything is still not fine.”
Need help? Visit RAINN’s National Sexual Assault Online Hotline or the National Sexual Violence Resource Center’s website.
If you’re a teenager who has run away from home or a teenager who is thinking of running from home, or if you know somebody who is, visit the National Runaway Switchboard or call 1-800-RUNAWAY.
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Rep. Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.) said Tuesday that she’s been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, impacting her speaking and walking.
“If there’s one thing that Democrats and Republicans can agree on, it’s that Parkinson’s disease sucks,” Wexton, 54, said in a video on Twitter on Tuesday, World Parkinson’s Day. “Today, on World Parkinson’s Day, I’m here to tell you that I’ve come to learn this firsthand. And that’s because I’ve learned that I, too, have Parkinson’s, or what some people call PD for short.”
Parkinson’s disease is a “brain disorder that causes unintended or uncontrollable movements” that progressively gets worse, according to the National Institutes of Health. Some 500,000 people across the U.S. have been diagnosed with Parkinson’s, but up to that many others may have it without receiving a diagnosis, according to the NIH. Public figures such as actor Michael J. Fox and boxer Muhammad Ali (who died in 2016) are among those diagnosed with the disease.
Wexton said the disease has affected her speech and gait.
“You may notice I speak more quickly now. It also has affected how I walk and keep my balance,” she said.
Caroline Brehman via Getty Images
Wexton added that she is maintaining a positive attitude, and is being supported by her friends and family.
“What Parkinson’s is not is an untreatable disease, a cognitive impairment, or a death sentence,” she said. “So, please! You are welcome to empathize, but don’t feel sorry for me.”
Wexton said she remains committed to her constituents and hopes to continue working for years to come.
“I chose to come forward today, on World Parkinson’s Day, because I want to bring about as much good from this diagnosis as I can, and I look forward to doing just that here in Congress,” she said.
Wexton was first elected to her House seat representing Washington’s Virginia suburbs in 2019. Before that, she was a domestic violence prosecutor and served in the Virginia House of Delegates for five years.
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The mother of a 6-year-old boy accused of shooting and seriously wounding his first-grade teacher in Virginia is facing criminal charges, prosecutors announced Monday.
While the boy will not be charged in connection with the Jan. 6 shooting, a grand jury returned an indictment charging the mother, Deja Taylor, with felony child neglect and misdemeanor recklessly leaving a loaded firearm as to endanger a child, Newport News Commonwealth’s Attorney Howard Gwynn said. Taylor is making arrangements to turn herself in later this week, her attorney said.
“Every criminal case is unique in its facts, and these facts support these charges, but our investigation into the shooting continues,” Gwynn said in a statement on Monday.
He has also petitioned for a special grand jury to investigate whether any security issues may have contributed to the shooting.
Abigail Zwerner, the 25-year-old teacher, filed a $40 million lawsuit after she was shot in the chest and hand at Richneck Elementary School. Zwerner needed four surgeries to recover.
Zwerner family
The boy used his mother’s gun, police said, which had been purchased legally.
Family members said the gun was secured. They also noted the 6-year-old boy suffers from an “acute disability.”
According to Zwerner’s lawsuit, the boy’s parents did not agree to put him in special education classes where he would be with other students with behavioral issues.
“There were failures in accountability at multiple levels that led to Abby being shot and almost killed. Today’s announcement addresses but one of those failures,” Zwerner’s lawyer said after Taylor was indicted. “It has been three months of investigation and still so many unanswered questions remain. Our lawsuit makes clear that we believe the school division violated state law, and we are pursuing this in civil court. We will not allow school leaders to escape accountability for their role in this tragedy.”
Zwerner accuses the school of gross negligence for allegedly ignoring multiple warnings on the day of the shooting that the boy was in a “violent mood” and had a gun. The Newport News School Board, former Superintendent George Parker III, former Richneck principal Briana Foster Newton and former Richneck assistant principal Ebony Parker are named as defendants. The superintendent was fired by the school board and the school assistant principal resigned in the wake of the shooting.
“The special grand jury will investigate to determine whether additional charges against additional persons are justified by the facts and the law,” Gwynn said in a statement. “If the special grand jury determines that additional persons are criminally responsible under the law, it can return additional indictments.”
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Jill Biden wants the White House’s annual Easter Egg Roll to be about more than just coaxing hard-boiled eggs across the lawn to a finish line.
A teacher for 30 years, the first lady is again turning the annual tradition into an “EGGucational” experience. A variety of stations on the South Lawn and Ellipse will help teach thousands of children about farming, healthier eating, exercise and more, the White House announced on Thursday.
In a nod to Biden’s “EGGucation” theme, NASA sent a souvenir wooden White House Easter egg to the International Space Station for the astronauts to help teach students about gravity.
About 30,000 people, most of them children, are expected to participate in the festivities in nine waves between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on Monday, the White House said.
Participants include military and veteran families, caregivers and survivors, including those from the USS Delaware and the USS Gabrielle Giffords. Both Navy vessels are sponsored by the first lady. Tickets for the general public were distributed through an online lottery.
Monday’s egg roll will be the second hosted by President Joe Biden and the first lady. The event was not held in 2021, Biden’s first year in office, because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The American Egg Board is continuing its longtime sponsorship this year and donating about 30,000 eggs that were hand-dyed by a North Carolina farm, said Emily Metz, board president and CEO.
Inflation, an outbreak of bird flu and increased demand for eggs during the holiday baking season combined to send egg prices skyrocketing last year. Metz said the donation of 30,000 eggs is a fraction of the 100 billion eggs that are produced and consumed yearly in the United States.
“It’s a really important, time-honored tradition for our farmers to participate in,” she said in an interview. The White House Easter Egg Roll dates back to 1878.
The egg board is also donating more than 5 million eggs to food banks nationwide in the weeks leading up to Passover and Easter to help with holiday meals, Metz said.
And this year for the first time, the hard-boiled eggs used for the traditional egg roll and egg hunt on Monday will be composted afterward and used to fertilize gardens and parklands throughout the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia region, Metz said.
Various cartoon characters, children’s book authors, celebrities and athletes, including former Olympic gymnast Dominique Dawes and actress Halle Bailey, who starred as “Ariel” in Disney’s “The Little Mermaid,” and others will roam the White House grounds during the event.
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Three men whose graves were found at the original site of one of the nation’s oldest Black churches were members of its congregation in the early 19th century, a team of archaeologists and scientists in Virginia announced Thursday.
The First Baptist Church was formed in 1776 by free and enslaved Black people in Williamsburg, Virginia’s colonial capital. Members initially gathered in fields and under trees in defiance of laws that prevented African Americans from congregating.
The church’s original brick foundation was uncovered in 2021 by archaeologists at Colonial Williamsburg, a living history museum that now owns the land. The excavation of graves began last year in partnership with First Baptist’s descendant community.
More than 60 burial plots have been identified. Thursday’s announcement confirmed what oral histories had long told — that previous generations were buried on the land before it was paved over in the 20th century.
“Now we know they’re ours — they’re ours,” church member Connie Matthews Harshaw said Thursday. “Those people under that soil are of African descent. We go from there.”
Three sets of remains were chosen for examination. They underwent DNA testing, bone analysis and the evaluation of archaeological evidence that was found, including 19th century coffin nails. The wood from the hexagonal coffins is long gone.
Only one set of remains could provide adequate DNA, which can indicate race, said Raquel Fleskes, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Connecticut who conducted the analysis.
Those remains belonged to a Black man between the ages of 16 and 18 who stood 5 feet, 4 inches tall. His grave contained a clothing button that was made from animal bone and still carried some cotton fiber, said Jack Gary, Colonial Williamsburg’s director of archaeology.
The young man’s grave appeared to be marked by an upside-down, empty wine bottle. His coffin was likely moved from a previous location based on the large number of nails — possibly used to reinforce the coffin — and the jumbled way his bones came to rest.
The young man’s teeth indicated some kind of stress, which could have been malnutrition or disease, said Joseph Jones, a research associate with William & Mary’s Institute for Historical Biology.
“Childhood health is a pretty good indicator of a population,” Jones added.
Michael Blakey, the institute’s director, added that few African Americans in Williamsburg were free at the time.
“It either represents the conditions of an enslaved childhood or far less likely — but possibly — conditions for a free African American in childhood,” Blakey said.
The two other sets of remains belonged to men between the ages of 35 to 45 and possibly older, based on the analyses of their bones and teeth.
One of them stood 5 feet, 8 inches and was possibly the oldest of the three. His remains were found with a copper straight pin that likely bound clothing or a funeral shroud.
The other man stood 5 feet, 7 inches and was buried in a vest and trousers. His leg bones indicated the repetitive use of certain muscles, suggesting the heavy labor of someone who was enslaved.
The graves in Williamsburg are among Black burial grounds and cemeteries that are scattered throughout the nation and tell the story of the country’s deep past of slavery and segregation. Many Black Americans were excluded from white-owned cemeteries and built their own burial spaces, often as a form of resistance.
Descendants are working to preserve these grounds and cemeteries, many of which are at risk of being lost and lack support.
“All over the country there has been reckless disregard for African American bodies,” said Harshaw, of First Baptist.
“We are now becoming an example to the rest of the country,” she said. “We’re getting interest from everywhere, with people saying, ‘Wait a minute, how do you guys do this?’”
The church’s original meeting house was destroyed by a tornado in 1834. First Baptist’s second structure, built in 1856, stood there for a century.
But an expanding Colonial Williamsburg museum bought the property in 1956 and turned it into a parking lot.
The museum tells the story of Virginia’s late 1700s capital through colonial-era buildings and interpreters. But it failed to tell First Baptist’s story.
Founded in 1926, the museum did not tell Black stories until 1979, even though more than half of the people who lived in the colonial capital were Black, and many were enslaved.
In recent years, Colonial Williamsburg has boosted its efforts to tell a more complete story, placing a growing emphasis on African-American history.
The museum plans to recreate First Baptist’s original meeting house on the land where it once stood, said Gary, the museum’s director of archaeology.
“A big part of that is to commemorate the space where the burials are located,” he said.
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