At Clemson, unmarked slave graves highlight plantation past

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At Clemson, unmarked slave graves highlight plantation past

Flowers adorn a fence marking an African American cemetery site at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, South Carolina on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
White and pink flags at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021 show the locations of previously unmarked graves likely belonging to slaves, sharecroppers and convicted laborers in the university's history. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
Marisa Davis, a graduate student at Clemson University, talks to a group touring Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
Rhondda Thomas, the Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature at Clemson, poses for a portrait in front of Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
James E. Bostic, a former Clemson board member and the first African American to earn a doctorate at the school, talks to vistors at the Calhoun family plot at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
A marker stands at the entrance of Clemson's Woodland Cemetery in South Carolina on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021, in Clemson, S.C. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
People at Clemson University's Woodland Cemetery stand on walkways built over the likely graves of slaves, sharecroppers and convicted laborers in Clemson, S.C., on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. Ground-penetrating radar testing has found more than 600 gravesites across the cemetery, some of which are now marked with pink flags and spray-painted white circles. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
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.(AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
People at Clemson University's Woodland Cemetery stand on walkways built over the likely graves of slaves, sharecroppers and convicted laborers in Clemson, South Carolina on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. Ground-penetrating radar testing has found more than 600 gravesites across the cemetery, some of which are now marked with pink flags and spray-painted white circles. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)

At Clemson, unmarked slave graves highlight plantation past

Flowers adorn a fence marking an African American cemetery site at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, South Carolina on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
White and pink flags at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021 show the locations of previously unmarked graves likely belonging to slaves, sharecroppers and convicted laborers in the university's history. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
Marisa Davis, a graduate student at Clemson University, talks to a group touring Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
Rhondda Thomas, the Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature at Clemson, poses for a portrait in front of Woodland Cemetery on campus in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
James E. Bostic, a former Clemson board member and the first African American to earn a doctorate at the school, talks to vistors at the Calhoun family plot at Woodland Cemetery in Clemson, S.C. on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
A marker stands at the entrance of Clemson's Woodland Cemetery in South Carolina on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021, in Clemson, S.C. 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. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
People at Clemson University's Woodland Cemetery stand on walkways built over the likely graves of slaves, sharecroppers and convicted laborers in Clemson, S.C., on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. Ground-penetrating radar testing has found more than 600 gravesites across the cemetery, some of which are now marked with pink flags and spray-painted white circles. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
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.(AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
People at Clemson University's Woodland Cemetery stand on walkways built over the likely graves of slaves, sharecroppers and convicted laborers in Clemson, South Carolina on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. Ground-penetrating radar testing has found more than 600 gravesites across the cemetery, some of which are now marked with pink flags and spray-painted white circles. (AP Photo/Michelle Liu)
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