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67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

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  • #16
    Re: Thieves steal remains from Civil War-era graves

    Hallo!

    When the City of Celeveland expanded its underground parking garage complex, they unearthered what had been the cellars of Civil War and pre Civil War era working class houses.
    When claimed by the City after WWI, as slum renewal, the houses were essentially crushed, carted off, or pushed into the cellars.
    "Rediscovering" them, they were surprised at the amount of "every day life" cultural material left behind intact that was simply buried, and the archeologists were called in.

    However, shortly after the news media reported the find, thieves started a process of waiting for the day's worth of excavations to unearth the artifacts, and then broke through the skimpy cyclone fence to steal them away.
    Round-the-clock guards and police had to be brought in.

    Curt
    Curt Schmidt
    In gleichem Schritt und Tritt, Curt Schmidt

    -Hard and sharp as flint...secret, and self-contained, and solitary as an oyster.
    -Haplogroup R1b M343 (Subclade R1b1a2 M269)
    -Pointless Folksy Wisdom Mess, Oblio Lodge #1
    -Vastly Ignorant
    -Often incorrect, technically, historically, factually.

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    • #17
      Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

      THIS incident is so bizarre I had to read it twice as I was stunned that this was evidently known and seen by others at least 30 years ago!

      That makes this one helluva Ghost Walk doesn't it? When he popped the skull from a paper bag! With hair still attached! Who gets their rocks off by such macabre stuff????? And he was a "preservationist"?????

      Reading this I have to tell you all what popped into my head. This guy had that skull and looked upon it like Lt. Frank Haskell watching Pickett's Charge; "Magnificent, grim, irresistible"...

      Ahhh, Jeez; Unbelieveable!

      Mark Berrier
      North State Rifles
      Mark Berrier

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      • #18
        Creepy stuff, but more common than most think?

        One of the most unsettling things I can remember from my early childhood was what I found at the Hamilton County Fair after I had sneaked into the "freak show" tent. I can't really say if it was real or not, but right there in a coffin was a mummified Native American. I later studied southwestern Native American material culture as past-time and realized that the mummy was adorned with some pretty authentic looking stuff.

        There is also this insanely creepy, cluttered antique store in the hills near Fort Ancient, Ohio, where I once found cardboard boxes of human bones, Native American artifacts of all kinds, mammoth bones, and on a shelf behind the counter was a real human skull with a bullet hole in it. Written the top was "Skull of a Hun." I asked the shop keeper what that was all about and he said that someone in his family serving in World War One had sent it home as a trophy. THAT mystery was solved but I'm sure the other human remains and artifacts were either illegally removed from the Fort Ancient burial mounds, or perhaps looted from other mounds on the shop owner's property.

        My friend and I, who were stuck there in a winter snowstorm, continued through the shop out of curiosity but were pretty jumpy.....the walls and ceiling of the foyer were covered with dozens of opened and set animal traps, they had several stuffed "two-headed" animals, a working nickleodeon that featured an honest peepshow but also what appeared to be a modern depiction of a beating, there were two coffins against the wall outside, crates of US Army ammunition, a barn out back that we were told had furniture in fact that nothing but piles of old baby toys and sickles, sling blades, knives, swords, and scythes hanging from the ceiling. And to make matters worse, about ten feet away from this place was a very, very old cemetery that I later found out had some of it's contents missing. My buddy and I got the hell out of the there and took our chances with the blizzard.

        This macabre, horror-movie kind of stuff is probably more common that most people think. There are some pretty interesting people out there but also some with tastes and habits that are a little off...or just plain wrong. I really hope the proper authorities follow up on this and take down those who are responsible.
        Brian White
        [URL="http://wwandcompany.com"]Wambaugh, White, & Co.[/URL]
        [URL="https://www.facebook.com/pages/Wambaugh-White-Company/114587141930517"]https://www.facebook.com/pages/Wambaugh-White-Company/114587141930517[/URL]
        [email]brian@wwandcompany.com[/email]

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        • #19
          Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

          Well,

          Anyone that would pillage a cemetary or burial mound for the human remains makes them more of a ghoul than a collector in my book.I do not classify human remains as "relics".It certainly appears this was calculated and deliberate,not an "accidental" disturbance.While values vary some among individuals,I can honestly say if a "friend" were to show me a display of human remains as referenced,then it would be time to seriously evaluate the friendship.


          My .02
          Forrest Peterson

          Tater Mess
          Tater Mess Social Orchestra
          Missourah Shirkers

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          • #20
            Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

            Just to throw this on the 'perspective' pile, here's an article of a place I've visited many times since my youth. http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/mumm07.shtml
            Joe Marti

            ...and yes, I did use the search function...

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

              Originally posted by mtvernon View Post
              Just to throw this on the 'perspective' pile, here's an article of a place I've visited many times since my youth. http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/mumm07.shtml
              I've been there many times over the years, too. Interesting article. It seems a bit perverse to display the mummies in the way they do.
              Tristan Galloway

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

                Looted Troops' Remains to be Reburied

                Originally appeared in the Albuquerque Journal [Albuquerque, N.M.]
                January 3, 2008

                Toward the end of the Civil War, former slave Thomas Smith joined the 125th United States Colored Troops unit in Butler County, Kentucky.

                Within two years of his 1864 enlistment, he was dead at age 23. The surgeon listed the cause as inflammation of the bowels from cholera. He was a private at Fort Craig, N.M., an Army post along the Rio Grande south of Socorro.

                Well over a century later, a brown paper grocery bag containing the Buffalo Soldier's skull was handed over to U.S. Bureau of Reclamation archaeologists at a meeting in Peralta, with a Bureau of Land Management agent, a historian and a member of the medical examiner's office.

                "We're standing looking into this bag on the back of a truck. It appears to us to be of archaeological interest ... It had been identified by the looter as Thomas Smith, and this guy was a very good researcher," said Mark Hungerford, one of the archaeologists involved in a remarkable tale of looting, intrigue and ultimately deliverance for Smith and others buried at the cemetery.

                "It was a pathetic ending. That guy served his country," Hungerford said, "and here he is on this bumper."

                With that delivery in 2005, Hungerford and Jeffery Hanson, a fellow Bureau of Reclamation archaeologist in Albuquerque, were fully launched on a quest that has involved extensive archival searches, two archaeological excavations and laboratory analyses by federal agencies from Honolulu to Washington, D.C.

                The investigation will soon be chronicled in an hour-long documentary still in production.

                And come July 28, the remains of more than 60 people who died at Fort Craig will be reburied -- this time with pomp and ceremony -- at the Santa Fe National Cemetery.

                Following the looters

                The first glimmer of what the archaeologists were getting into came with word in the fall of 2004 about a mummified body that was in a private residence.

                "First, we think 'Who's got a mummified body?' " Hungerford recalled.

                He and Hanson set out for the Fort Craig cemetery site on Bureau of Reclamation property (the Fort Craig historical site is on BLM land), where they found unmistakable signs of looting. Next, they put in motion a contract for a cemetery survey using a ground- penetrating magnetometer to assess what might still be there.

                In April 2005, BLM special agent Noel Wagner got a tip about the dropoff of the skull on the Peralta property of Dee Brecheisen, a history enthusiast and researcher believed to have taken the skull and the mummified body of another buffalo solider 35 years earlier. Brecheisen died in December 2004.

                With archaeologists at hand, the bag containing the skull -- intact with hair and skin -- was retrieved, and law enforcement conducted a search of Brecheisen's by now mostly vacant home.

                "Now we know it's a reality," Hanson said of the looted remains. "Before it was just theoretical."

                The archaeologists were particularly interested in trying to find a cemetery plot map, because Brecheisen had told people that with it, he was able match up burial registries and determine whom he'd dug up.

                Army personnel at the fort between 1854 and 1886 were mandated to maintain such a map -- and sometimes criticized for the sloppiness of their record-keeping -- to keep tabs on who was buried there. The Army had exhumed remains in 1876 and reburied them at Fort Marcy in Santa Fe, and again in 1886, and reburied the remains at Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

                Hanson believed there weren't any bodies left in the cemetery.

                "(Reburial) was common in the West at the time after the Indian wars had ended," he said. "Forts were closed, Soldiers were moved and centralized into national cemeteries."

                Meanwhile, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Albuquerque was looking hard at a criminal prosecution, based on theft of government property or potential violation of archaeological protection laws, even though Brecheisen had died.

                To do that, "we had to have evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the skull that was retrieved was from Fort Craig," Hanson said.

                Focused on a potential criminal case, the archaeologists decided to conduct focused excavations -- not an easy undertaking given the soccer-field dimensions of the graveyard.

                They didn't know where to dig until an anonymous source offered to lead Wagner to a spot in the cemetery where a stake was marked, "Buffalo Soldier."

                "You can't make this stuff up," Hanson said. "That gave us a place to start digging."

                Emotional finds

                With an excavation team that included volunteers from the FBI, State Police and the sheriff's department, the archaeologists put in a trench -- an archaeological sampling technique.

                Initially, they found coffins with no bones and a handful of artifacts. Looters had hit every corner of the cemetery, leaving behind items over the years that became artifacts themselves: a 1973- vintage Pepsi can, plastic cigarette filters dating from the 1960s and a plastic cup featuring then-Baltimore Colts player Bubba Smith.

                Eventually, the sheer volume required diggers to bring in a backhoe. They took out about 23 coffins, a number of small finger and toe bones, and artifacts like leather shoes, buttons, bullets and cartridge cases.

                But no complete skeletons.

                Samples of those remains were sent to the Joint POW/ MIA Accounting Command in Hawaii, which is responsible for bringing back and identifying remains of service personnel from past conflicts -- though most are far closer in time.

                "It was within their mission, even though these Soldiers were from the 1870s and 1880s," Hanson said.

                The researchers were persuaded the skull was indeed that of Thomas Smith based on interviews with witnesses who'd seen documentation while Brecheisen was alive, but they weren't able to locate living relatives to compare the sample to.

                Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Katherine McCulloch decided there wasn't enough evidence to bring a criminal case against family members who had dismantled the estate or others who had been in Brecheisen's home and seen "museum quality" artifacts -- and the mummified remains of a second Buffalo Soldier -- and never reported it to authorities.

                Meanwhile, the remote sensing report suggested a likely 18 to 30 burials still in the cemetery.

                "That presents a management issue, since we know there's looting out there," Hungerford said.

                Hanson and Hungerford constructed an electronic slide show to educate management about what was there, and how much it would cost to excavate.

                BOR Public affairs specialist Mary Perea Carlson said it was a matter of getting supervisors on board with the reality "that these graves couldn't be protected where they where."

                By August 2007, an archaeological contract firm had been hired and was on site to excavate areas indicated by the remote sensing techniques. In two days, they had five bodies. At the end, they had over 60 full or partial human remains: 25 small children or infants, four women and 34 adult men. Bone analysis by a Bureau of Reclamation osteologist in Denver determined that five of the men and one woman were African-American.

                "I have to tell you, this was not fun," Hanson said. "One of the infant coffins came out with the studs intact. Whoever made that coffin took great pains with it."

                When it was opened in Reclamation's Albuquerque office, there was a mummified child with eyelashes, lips, combed hair, gown and tiny hands folded across the chest that held desiccated flowers.

                "As an archaeologist, you can isolate yourself from emotion, but with the children, it was aaahhh," Hungerford said, letting loose a deep sigh.

                'Nobody paid for it'

                Archaeologists then had plenty of human remains but no way of identifying them. The original plot map that Brecheisen had shown people over the years as he removed burials was nowhere to be found in government archives.

                "The archival police -- they actually have them -- are looking for that map. I wish them luck, because we have no clue where it is," Hanson said.

                There are positives from what Hanson has lectured about at archaeological conclaves as the "Incident at the Fort Craig Cemetery."

                Extensive, detailed photos and notations about the artifacts, bones and other remains will provide a wealth of information about medicine at a critical transition period, when procedures like hand- washing weren't common even among surgeons.

                The people whose remains were uprooted from the cemetery will be reburied in new handmade coffins at a national cemetery.

                The Fort Craig cemetery, now devoid of burials, has been backfilled, regraded and reseeded with native grasses.

                But the experience has been a bitter one for the archaeologists, who are angered by the lost dignity for the people taken from their graves and by the loss of any information about them -- and by the knowledge that those aware of the looting looked the other way.

                "There's no justification for taking human graves for any reason," Hanson said.

                To Hungerford, one of the tragedies is that a large group of people was forgotten by history, then their history was obliterated.

                "And nobody," he said, "paid for it."

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                Eric
                Eric J. Mink
                Co. A, 4th Va Inf
                Stonewall Brigade

                Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

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