Sunday, September 30, 2018

Tzadeikas?????????????? Identity of perfectly preserved black female found buried in an iron coffin in NYC is revealed to be 26-year-old who died from smallpox in 1851 and was laid to rest in church founded by first generation of free African-Americans


The secret identity of 150-year-old female body found buried in an iron coffin in an abandoned lot in New York City has finally been revealed. 
Construction workers in 2011 had been shocked when they discovered the human remains buried under an an abandoned lot in the Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens, New York.
The body, wearing a white gown and knee-high socks, was in such good condition they called 911, worried it could be a recent homicide case.

Scott Warnasch, then a New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner forensic archaeologist, told the New York Post: 'It was recorded as a crime scene. A buried body on an abandoned lot sounds pretty straightforward.'
But when forensic scientists took a closer look, they discovered that the body actually belonged to a young African American woman born before the Civil War who died from smallpox just a few years after New York abolished slavery. 
She was buried in the grounds of a church founded in 1830 by the first generation of free African-Americans after the state abolished slavery in 1827.
Now the identity of the woman has finally been revealed as Martha Peterson.
According to the 1850 Census of New York City, the first to list everyone in the population by name, age, sex and race, Martha worked and lived in the household of white coffin maker William Raymond, who had abolitionist leanings. 
He was a partner in the iron-coffin maker Fisk & Raymond - the same company that made Martha's iron coffin. 
She was the daughter of John and Jane Peterson, prominent figures in Newtown's newly created African American community, where she was found buried 150 years later.
Martha was 26 when she died from smallpox, and the iron coffin kept her in such an excellent state of preservation that the smallpox lesions were still apparent.
'The body was so well preserved that I would not have been shocked if the smallpox virus had survived,' said Warnasch. Thankfully, scientists confirmed the virus had degraded. 
She was dressed in a long white nightgown with a knit cap  and thick, knee-high socks. She was also buried with a hand-crafted comb.
A geochemist who analysed data from her teeth and hair found she had lived for years in the Northeast and ate a balanced diet.
A CT scan of her skull allowed experts to put together a recreation of what Martha would have looked like while she was still alive.
Her remains were given a second given a proper burial by the Saint Mark African Methodist Episcopal Church of Jackson Heights in 2016.
The iron coffin that kept her so perfectly preserved until construction workers accidentally plowed through it with a backhoe were used in the 19th-century to allow corpses to be sanitarily transported via trains and ship for burial, with the bodies remaining in almost pristine condition.
A new documentary, 'The Woman in the Iron Coffin,' premiers on Wednesday on PBS

1 comment:

  1. Back then in the day she was no 'African American' just a 'Negro'

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