Documentation of Boot Hill Cemetary - Investigation of FL State Reform School juvenile abuses, USF, 2012
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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA Erin H. Kimmerle, Richard W. Estabrook, E. Christian Wells, and Antoinette T. Jackson Forensic Anthropology Laboratory University of South Florida Department of Anthropology 4202 East Fowler Avenue SOC 107 Tampa, Florida 33620 www.icfahr.usf.edu Erin H. Kimmerle, Ph.D. Associate Professor and Forensic Anthropologist Richard W. Estabrook, Ph.D. Archaeologist E. Christian Wells, Ph.D. Associate Professor and Archaeologist Antoinette T . Jackson, Ph.D. Associate Professor and Cultural Anthropologist With Contributions by: Forensic Pathologists Dr. Laura Hair and Dr. Leszek Chrostowski, (Hillsborough County Medical Examiner's Department); Fire Investigators Christopher Stone and Al Alcala, (Tampa Police Department); and USF Integrative Biology Dr. Gordon Fox and Jamie Gluvna. Research funded by: USF Office of Research and Innovation, CAS Research and Development Grant and private donations through the USF Foundation. To Cite: Kimmerle EH, Estabrook R, Wells EC, Jackson AT. 2012. Documentation of the Boot Hill Cemetery (8JA1860) at the former Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys. Interim Report, Division of Historical Resources Permit No. 1112.032, December 10,2012. TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE Sl;MMARY ................................................................. .. .......... .. .......... .. ............... 3 HISTORICAL BACKGROL~D: THE ROAD TO REFORMA TlO>; .................. .. ......... ... ................. 5 ERA OF SEGREGATION I" TilE NEW SOUTII UNDER JIM CROW .............. .. ... ........ .. .. ............... 6 CREATI:\G REFORM-STARTING A REFORM SCHOOL .............................. .. .......... .. ............... 8 RESEARCH DESIG>; A>;D METHODS ..................................................................................... 18 STRLCTURI:\G A FR.<\MEWORKFOR INTERPRETATIO>; AND ANALYSIS ..... .. .......... .. ............. 22 DEIINING TIlE CEMETERy ........................................................................ .. .......... .. ............. 23 11_ _ . • _ _ • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ • ARCHAEOLOGICAL FrELD RES1;LTS: GPR AND TRENCHI:\G ........ .. ........ .... .......... .. ............ .34 1_.5_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1. ._...... . - ..• . ESTIMATING TilE NUMBER 01 DEATIIS AND EXPECTED BURIALS ...................................... 47 _------------------- 5 _ _ _ Zl_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ • _1_1_- • ........... --------------------------------_ ----------------------_ INILUE"ZA AND P"EUMONIA OLTUREAKS • 1918 A"D 1932 ........... ........ .... ........ .... ............. 85 TRE>;DS IN MORBIDITY & MORTALITY ....................................... .. ........ .... .......... .. ............. 91 CONVICTED CASES OF HOMICIDE ....................................................................................... 93 VARL<\TlON IN REpORTI:\G ................................... .. .......... .. .......... .. .......... .. .......... .. ............. 98 RLCOMME"DATIONS lOR FUTURE WORK ............ .. .......... .. .......... .. .......... .. .......... .. ............. 99 BIBLIOGRAPHY .............................................................. .. ...................... .. ......................... 100 ApPENDIXES ...................................................................................................................... 107 A) HAIR L, CHROSTOWSKI L. OCTOBER 18,2012. EXPERT OPINION ON MEDICAL REVTEWOF DEATHS AT THE FORMER ARTHUR DOZIER SCHOOL lOR BOYs. B) STO"E CM, ALCALA A. OCTOBER INVESTIGATION. C) Fox G, GLUVNA J. OCTOBER 15, 2012. FIRE ORIGI" AND CAUSE 10, 2012. A>;ALYSIS OF TREE RING DATING. lntcrim Rcport on Boot Hill Cemetery 11 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS COD DC FDLE FIS GPR GPS ]JOC NFYDC PRTDE Cause and/or Circumstances of Death Death Certi ('icate Florida Department of Law Enforcement Florida Industrial School for Boys Ground Penetrating Radar Global Positioning System Jackson Juvenile Offender Center North Florida Youth Development Center Prison Rehabilitative Tndustries and Diversified Enterprises Tnc. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 12 EXECt:"TIVE SU\1MARY: This interim report provides a summary of the archaeological and historical investigation into the creation and initial identification or graves at the Boot Hill Cemetery in Marianna, Florida to date. The Florida State Reform School, also known as the "Florida Industrial School for Boys" (FIS) and most recently as the "Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys", first opened on January 1, 1900 on 1400 acres of land. Children were committed to the school for criminal offenses, such as "theft and murder," but the law was later amended to identify minor offenses including "incorrigibility", "truancy", or "dependency," which propelled the school to become the largest training and refom1 school in the country at the time. Originally, the school housed children as young as five years old, including both males and remales who were segregated by race. Daily activities including dormitory assignments and work and school responsibilities were dictated in the context of a system that racially classified people as "white" or "colored". Beginning as early as 1901, reports of children being chained to walls in irons, brutal whippings, and peonage surfaced. During the first 13 years of operation, there were more than six state led investigations. A recent investigation in 2008-09,2009 by the Florida Department or Law Enforcement (FDLE) into the deaths that occurred at the school, reported 81 school-related deaths from 1911-1973. It was reported that 31 of these boys were buried on the school's grounds, while others were shipped home to families or buried in unknown locations. An area designated as "Boot Hill Cemetery" was established on school property in the early days of the school. Recorded burials in this location occurred from 1914-1952. Located on the north side or the school, the side designated as the "colored" side, the cemetery was positioned in a small, elevated clearing immediately adjacent to the school's garbage dump (OPS location 30° 45' 59''N, 85 ° 15' 43"W, Jackson County, Township 4 North, Range lOW, Section 4). The cemetery today is marked by 31 white metal crosses, and is surrounded by a wire perimeter. Grave markers and delineation of the cemetery grounds were constructed in the early 1960s and again in the mid-1990s, long after the interments were made, in efforts to mark or commemorate the burials. However, the markers do not correspond to the actual interments, as burials were not originally marked. Very little documentation about the history or the cemetery or who is buried there exists, and the exact locations of individual burials were never docun1ented. Even at the time that recorded deaths occurred (dating back to 1914), multiple investigations and reports summarized different accounts of who died and the surrounding circumstances. Therefore, uncertainty, speculation, and folklore regarding these deaths arc prevalent today. Many family members and witnesses believe children died under suspicious or questionable circumstances. Given the lack or existing documentation (and the incomplete recording of information), many questions persist about who is buried at the school and the circun1stances surrounding their deaths. Historic cemeteries arc among the most valuable cultural resources for documenting community heritage, and provide an important means to understand past events. Florida Statutes (Chapters 267 and 704.08) provide protection for them, and mandate the rights or families to have access. Therefore, the purpose or this research project was to conduct an initial field survey of the Boot Hill Cemetery, and research the history of the site and variables surrounding the deaths to determine the number, location, and identity of graves to the largest extent possible. In 2012, a pedestrian survey and mapping of the Boot Hill Cemetery along with associated archival research on the history of the cemetery was undertaken with the permission Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 3 of the Department of Environmental Protection to accomplish the following objectives (permit number 112.023, Division of Historical Resources): I) Register, document, and map the cemetery as currently demarcated; 2) Identiry existing and any additional graves through multiple remote sensing and archaeological methods, such as ground penetrating radar (GPR) and soil chemistry; 3) Research the site's history, creation, and use based on archival research and ethnographic interviews; 4) Research primary and secondary sources to determine who is buried in the cemetery and the morbidity and mortality patterns ort hose who died; and 5) Establish irthere was one or more burial areas at the school. To accomplish these objectives, multiple methods were employed, including those primarily used by forensic anthropology, archaeology, and cultural anthropology. Historical imaging and archival research was supplemented with ethnographic interviews of family members and lom1er students and employees, remote sensing, soil chemistry, and archaeological excavation. Through the course or this investigation, a number or outside experts were also consulted in the areas of forensic pathology, fire investigation, and integrative biology. Historical imaging and archival research was supplemented with interviews of family members and former students and employees, remote sensing, soil chemistry, and archaeological excavation. Through the course of this investigation, a number of outside experts were also consulted in the areas or forensic pathology, fire investigation, and integrative biology. As a result or this investigation, a record or 98 deaths was found in historical documents, including boys aged 6-18 years and two adult staff members. These deaths occurred between 1914-1973. However, state records regarding cause of death and school ledgers are only public record for the years prior to 1960. Therefore the scope of this investigation was 1900-1960. For this period, records indicate that 45 individuals were buried on the school grounds between the years l 914-1952, 31 bodies were shipped to other locations /or burial, and 22 cases do not have recorded burial locations. Throughout, the historical records are incomplete and ol1en provide conflicting infom1ation. The cause and manner of death for the majority of cases are unknown. Infectious disease, fires, physical traun1a, and drowning are the most common recorded causes of death when a cause of death is recorded. Other mortality patterns show trends among the boys that died including deaths following attempted escapes from the school (n= 7), a high number of boys who died within the first three months or being remanded to the school (n=20), and inconsistency among those who were issued death certificates. Archaeological fieldwork shows an estimated minimun1 of 50 grave shafts in the area of Boot Hill and the surrounding wooded area. It is possible that additional graves and/or burial areas are present given the practice of segregation and number of cases that arc still unaccounted. Recommendations for further research and preservation of the site arc also discussed for recognizing the historical significance or human and civil rights issues in Florida in the area orjuvenile justice and the rights or families to have accountability and transparency as important aspects or restorative justice. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 4 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND: THE ROAD TO REFORMATIOl'i The State of Florida opened its first juvenile center as the Florida State Reform School on January I, 1900, which remained in operation until it was closed on June 30, 2011. The institution was originally located on 1200 acres or land south o/'the town orMarianna in Jackson County, Florida and grew to 1400 acres over time as additional land was purchased. From its inception, the institution was supposed to be a "school" not a "prison", and the boys who were co1mnitted were "students" rather than "inmates". This dichotomy proved conceptually sound but, in practice, difficult to maintain. Throughout the school's early history a multitude of narratives seem to contradict the "school" and "student" locus or the institution. These contradictions resulted in many reform measures to the school itsetr, from its practices or child labor and corporal punishment to its very name. In order to understand the nature and circumstances of those who died at the school, it is important to understand why boys were committed to the school, the use of a convict-lease and peonage systems of corrections rather than prisons during this time, and the early practices of the school itself. Originally, children were committed to the school alter criminal conviction, though this changed to include minor offenses such as "incorrigibility" and "truancy". Additionally, many children were committed to the school not having been charged with a crime but as wards of the state and orphans. The school housed children as young as five years old including both males and females. Over the course of time, the name changed as did the demographic structure of children c01mnitted there: Florida State Reform School (1900-1913); Florida Industrial School for Boys or FTS (1914-1957); Florida School for Boys (1957-1967); and the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys (l 968-201 l ). In the beginning, the school was managed by a superintendent who reported to Board of State Directors or Commissioners, a five member group appointed by the Governor. Chapters 4565 and 5398 of the Laws of Florida required that the Board submit reports on the condition and progress of the school. The Superintendent also wrote reports in the form of Biennial reports that were submitted to the Board. Only a limited number or these reports were found during this investigation, ranging in time From 1901-1935. Demographic and f'inancial information does not consistently appear in any detail except in a few of the recovered documents dating 1908, 1911, 1913, 1926-1935. However, the numbers of deaths in these reports are typically not the same as listed in the school discharge and record ledgers and tend to underreport the total number. Due to over-crowding a second campus was opened in Okeechobee in 1955. Staff from the Marianna campus went to work at the Okeechobee campus where they instituted the same policies and practices. An additional facility also opened on the Marianna grounds, the Jackson Juvenile Offender Center (JJOC), which was a maximum-risk facility for children convicted of felonies or violent crimes and together these facilities constituted the North Florida Youth Development Center (NFYDC). Nearly all of the documented deaths and the documented burials on the school's grounds occurred during the FTS years (l 914-1957), which may be a reflection or availability or the historical documents From that time for review combined with the lack or documents From earlier periods in the school's history. Throughout this report the institution is referred to as the "school'' or "FIS". Until 1968, the school was segregated into two completely separate campuses or "departments" for "white" and "colored" students. Throughout this report, the terms "white" and "colored" are used when necessary following the documentation practices used in historical Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 5 records and the school documents consulted. Spatially, the south school was for "whites" and was called "No. I". The north school was for African Americans and other "races" [ or students identified as non-white] and was referred to as school "No. 2". Attendance ledgers show that for many boys who may have had mixed ancestry or Latino backgrounds (i.e., Spanish surnames such as Fernandez), administrators were less sure or where to place them, and would transfer boys between the two schools. This is because race is a social construction with no biological association that uniquely identifies one race at the exclusion of all other races. Arbitrary markers used in an attempt to classify people by race often change depending on who is making the decision or attempting to draw lines defining features or characteristics that place a person in particular racial category at the exclusion or another. ERA OF SEGREGATION IN THE NEW SOUTH Ul\UER JIM CROW To understand the creation and development of the school, it is important to contextualize the laws and practices at the time with regard to a lack or prisons, the convict lease system, and segregation. Following the death or Ossian Hart (1821-1874) who served as Governor or Florida from 1873 to 1874, gains for freedmen (freed blacks) secured after the Civil War in 1865 during the period known as Reconstruction began to be rapidly eroded. Hart was a refom1 minded Republican Governor who had openly opposed succession and championed rights for freedmen to the disdain of the opposing Democratic Party. The Democratic Party during this period of Florida's history was focused on ensuring white power and control and negating civil rights for blacks, especially freedmen. Hart's death signaled a decline orthe Florida Republican Party and an eventual shift in control of Florida's state government to the Democratic legislature (Brown 1997). By 1895, laws enacted by a Democratic controlled legislature in Florida as well as elsewhere throughout the South resulted in complete oppression of blacks under restrictive laws known as Jim Crow that mandated segregation at every level (sec: Litwack 1998; Wilkerson f 2010 ; Williamson 1984; Woodward 1951). Kevin Boyle (2004) in his book, Arc <. Justice, wrote: Florida was one of the first southern states to require blacks to ride in separate railroad cars. And the legislature made it a crime to teach black children and white children in same classroom. As the Democrats made it more and more difficult to be black, whites became more and more detem1ined to assert the power or their race. So they piled prohibition on prohibition. Blacks couldn't be buried in the san1e cemeteries as whites. They couldn't eat in the san1e restaurants. They couldn't ride in the front of streetcars. They couldn't drink from the same drinking fountains. Whites also segregated their workplaces. Blacks could be servants and farm laborers, of course, and they could work in the turpentine and lumber camps, where most whites didn't want to go. But whites claimed the vast majority or jobs for themselves. They also demanded privileges that superiority conferred. They expected blacks to step off the sidewalk when a white person approached. They insisted that blacks keep their eyes downcast when they spoke to whites. They demanded that blacks call them 'sir' or 'ma'am', though they would not dream or reciprocating. They felt free to level any Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 6 insult, to inflict any injury, without fear of reprisal. Jim Crow taught the great mass of southern whites to sec ordinary places and everyday interactions as sacred and to protect the sacred with the profane (Boyle 2004:56). Segregation permeated every aspect of life in Florida and throughout the US South until the passing of the Civil Rights Act in 1964. No understanding of the Florida State Reform School over the course of its history can be understood without consideration of the impact and implications of segregation, particularly those relating to criminal justice. By the end of the 19th century, Florida did not have prisons but relied on the convict lease system to house and maintain individuals convicted of'crimes. This system placed men, women and children together into labor camps. Typically individuals arrested were taken to the courthouse for trial and imposed with fines. The number of people arrested rose significantly in the later part of the l 91h century. ln his book, One dies, Get Another, Mancini (1996) wrote: "Vagrancy was a widespread 'offence' in the South throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, one that frequently led to outright peonage, but in Florida it was most pervasive." Many laws were created or used during this time, such as the vagrancy laws as a means to obtain labor. Mancini wrote (1996;188): "Florida had 208 prisoners in January 1883, 291 two years later... There were 530 convicts in 1895 and 1,071 by 1904. There can be little doubt that part of the growth can be attributed to the assiduous enterprise of the labor agents whom Dutton hired to pay the fines of vagrants and transport them to the stockades." More than 90% of these men were African American (Mancini 1996; 189). Local business owners from the timber, phosphate, citrus, cotton and other industries would pay the fees or lease convicts from labor agents who had control of the individuals for a period of time (often one year or more). The labor agent was responsible for the housing, food, and maintenance of the individual who would work to pay off the court fees, housing, and other expenses incurred for their care. The business owners would ollen contract with labor agents to use this labor in their business or subcontract the labor to other industries. Despite the men who ran the convict lease progran1s not being sworn law enforcement, they could legally discipline convicts in their care and even legally shoot and kill convicts that tried to escape. The convict lease program labor camps became notorious for deplorable conditions, the spread of infectious disease, and deaths due to brutal treatment such as flogging. ln 1899 a House investigative committee reported the convict labor camps were "a system or cruelty and inhumanity" (Mancini 1996;19 I). One foreman was reported to have" ... beat men that died ... some would be so badly beaten that they could not lay on their back for weeks" (Mancini 1996;191). Typically, deaths that occurred were undocumented and underreported. The dead were often buried in folk burial grounds at the edge of fields without markers. ln some cases, small wooden crosses were used. According to Mancini (1996;193), a turning point came when a 16 year old, whose autopsy report stated"Death from Torture", died in 1887 from a whipping received in a convict labor camp. Public attention over this death and others at the can1ps grew as did demands for reform and that children be taken out of the convict lease system. Calls for reform grew louder with the publication of J.C. Powell's, The American Siberia (1891) which described the brutal conditions of labor camps. lt was in this environment that the idea for a reform and training school in Florida developed. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 7 CREATll\"G REFORM-STARTll\"G A REFORM SCHOOL The Florida reform school was created through "An Act to Provide for the Locating and Erecting a State Reform School, and to Appropriate Money Therefore" (Laws or Florida Chapter 4565, sec. I signed into law June 4, 1897). The objective in creating the reform school was to provide a safe and productive alternative for juvenile offenders away from the convict lease system. According to the Laws of Florida (1897, Ch. 4565, sec. 4, 108) the purpose was to create: . . . a reform school where the young offender of law, separated from vicious associates may receive physical, intellectual, and moral training, be refom1ed, and restored to the community with purpose and character fitting for a good citizen, an honorable and an honest man with a trade or skilled occupation fitting such person for self-maintenance. The law called for the purchase of 350 acres of land to construct "a reformatory school for the employment, instructions, and refom1ation orjuvenile olfonders." Section 9 or the law mandated that only children between the ages 10-16 years who had been convicted or a misdemeanor or felony be admitted. Sentencing was not to be less than 6 months nor more than 4 years. The students included both males and females, white and colored children. Boys and girls were housed together however two separate facilities were built for the segregation of the colored students from the white students. Segregation at the school included all living, dining, educational, religious, and work related activities and continued until the late- l 960s. Gubernatorial candidate and State Senator William H. Milton was instrumental in getting the institution brought to his hometown of Marianna and collected more than 1200 acres and $1400 in donations as several towns competed to build the school in their community (Fib>ure 1 ). The 1200 acres was substantially more than the 350 acres mandated by the State for the school. W.H. Milton was the grandson of John Milton, Florida's Governor through the Civil War. Combined, the Milton family gave more than $200 and 40 acres to bring the school to Marianna, more than any other donor or family and continued to play important roles at the school in various administrative positions for decades to come, including positions of Superintendent and President of the Board. The first Biennial report (Feb. 14, 1901) from Superintendent Walter Rawls to the Board of Directors stated that there had been thirty child inmates with an average of twenty children at a time (5 white boys and 25 negro boys and girls), with sentences ranging from 6 months to 4 years, according to the law. In the earliest years, the school was funded by state appropriations, a $50.00/per child fee paid by the county that sent the child to the school, as well as money raised through the farm and business activities of the school. State appropriated funding came from the Convict Lease Program, for example, $250/pcr inmate was provided in 1907 (Lundrigan 1975:70). Early on, the appropriations and resources were inadequate to meet the demands or the school. This lack or resources helped ruel numerous crises and aflected the educational, developmental, and disciplinary practices of the school. School officials quickly began to clan10r to the legislators for changes to the length of sentencing, determination of parole, and reason for commitment presumably due to the financial impact these factors had on the school's funding and revenue. For example, Superintendent Rawls wrote (1901). "The sentences of those serving six and eight month tem1s have expired, and they were discharged without having derived any perceivable Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 8 , t "\11I ,\V\.\ rl.ClIlIl),\ ... .. , .....~ '_._' ;"" r _._. L£GEND _""""'''bl .0;:.- ~'::/-, .. I ..C ..... ' - :!:':.~::~ ~ ~. l '---P L .. l' L No. I Figure 1. Map of the Florida Industrial School property (1947). Map obtained from Florida State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Administrative Records). This is the only map recovered among the instructional documents that shows a cemetery. It is pictured here at the north school. benefit. Such short sentences do not give them much in reforming habits and building characters. " Subsequently, the Board of Directors, under leadership of Hon. W. H. Milton, issued a report requesting that the law be amended to allow longer sentences and that the length of the sentence be turned over to the discretion of the managers of the school, rather than the courts. Another request for a legislative change came again on April 7, 1903 when Milton asked Governor Jenkins to authorize that " .. .incorrigible children be sent, without conviction, for an indefinite period, leaving the term to be fixed by the management (House Journal 1903)." In both instances, these requests were honored and as a result, the school's number of enrollment began to increase drastically. The term of sentencing also changed from 6 months-4 years to "21 years old or as determined by the court". This change in law and policy seems to indicate that financial incentives were underlying motivating factors to create a reform school and draw juveniles into the system. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 9 Superintendent Rawls wrote to the Board of Managers again in 1906 about low enrollment stating that the school only had twenty inmates and that "having so few inmates makes the crop come in slow; I fear we will not finish gathering the corn by January (letter December I, 1906). Tn the same year (1906), Governor N.B. Broward's wrote to the State Legislature that: " ... we get large returns at present for the hire of convicts, we should spend a reasonable sum of it to reform the Juvenile offenders. The needs of the State Reform School... be made really a reform school and not a Juvenile prison: and that such labor and work as is imposed upon its inmates be imposed with a view oCtheir industrial training ... rather than a means of revenue ... " Despite this sentiment on the part of Gov. Broward, letters from Board President Milton continued with requests for longer sentences and increasing the number of boys committed to the school along with suggestions on how the school could increase revenue (1907 leller to Hon. Broward): "Tr the school were to purchase a sufficient number or callie, it could run a dairy rarm to advantage, as there would be a good local demand ... " Milton goes on to point out that there was already sufficient goods and farm products to meet the needs of school and that this excess could be sold for profit. In order to continue to increase the number of students at the school, the Board of Managers suggested eliminating the $50.00 fee paid by the counties to send a child to the school. Lundrigan writes (1975:79): 'The managers are thoroughly convinced that the $50.00 which the law requires to be paid for the maintenance of each child, committed by the county from which he is cotmnitted, works an injury to the school; and advises the repeal or amendment of this section. Our reason being that the counties have to pay $50.00 lor each child sent to the school while ir such child were sent to the state prison, instead or being an expense, the counties would receive the amount paid under the State Law for the hiring out of the child as a convict, or would get the benefit of the work of the child in county during his term of commitment, thus in the desire for the elimination of county and court expenses of the child convicted is lost sight or." In the 1907 Biennial Report, the Board aq,'1les that if a child were sent to the State Prison, the county would benefit $250.00, but under the current system the county was instead paying $50 to the reform school and therefore had no incentive to commit boys to FIS rather than prison (Lundrigan 1975:79). With the elimination or the county and court rees, the number or inmates did increase substantially. Tn 1907, there were 45 inmates (30 were colored) though 18 escaped (all colored). By 1908, one year later, there were 102 inmates, a more than 50% increase over the prior year (Letter from Superintendent Belch to Board of Managers, 1908). Belch further reports that at this time there were 200 acres under cultivation and that more than $2,000.00 in profits were made from the sale of bricks, timber, cotton and the boys' labor. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 10 Lundrigan (1975:34) wrote about the original intention for creating the school versus the harsh reality of its practices during the first half of the century: "The intent of the lawmakers must be presumed to have been entirely honorable. Records remaining in existence, however, show that an enornlOUS gulf" existed between benignly worded intent and actual practice." Children sent to the reform school continued to be hired out for labor in addition to working the farnl and industries of the institution itself. Financially, the Convict Lease Program, which provided a vehicle for the State to rent out inmate labor to private interests was very profitable for the State of Florida. By 1913, revenues from the program were over $3,000,000 and children as young as 10 years were hired for labor with adult prisoners to work in phosphate mines and turpentine and cotton f"arnls (Lundrigan 1975). Between the years 1903-1913, six legislative investigative committees were formed to investigate the school and found that children as young as five years were in irons and chains, children were hired out for labor, unjustly beaten, and without education or proper food and clothing (Lundrigan 1975). Furthermore, throughout this time, financial and administrative records were not well maintained at the school, persistent problems from inadequate medical care, a lack of" educational instruction, and unsaf"e living conditions were written about in the repeated State investigative reports. Below are a f"ew examples: • 1903: "we found them in irons, just as common criminals, which in the judgment of your committee, is not the meaning of a 'State Reform School' .... We have no hesitancy in saying under its present management it is nothing more nor less than a prison where juveniles are confined (Letter to Hon, Frank Adams, President of" the Senate Crom legislative investigation committee, June 1, 1903)." • 1909: The school rooms were in very poor condition and without desks; the inventory as listed in the Biennial Report was greatly f"alsified, the President oCthe Board of" Managers had accrued large debts and was detaining boys past the age 18 years (up to 20 years), presumably for labor (Lundrigan 1975). • 1911: Report of" Special Joint Committee on the State Reformatory (House Journal) found that Superintendent Morgan "at times unnecessarily and brutally punished, the instrument of" punishment being a leather strap f"astened to a wooded paddle". The committee further said the school was more like a convict canlp, without care for the sick, poor ventilation, overcrowding, and inadequate food. They wrote, 'The Negro School impressed your cotmnittee as being more in the nature of a convict camp, than anything else we can think of... " • 1913: The health conditions were very bad and one member of the Board would not accept the Biennial report (Lundrigan 1975). Additionally, the Governor called for a medical report which subsequently came from Dr. N .A. Baltzell, a local physician who was hired to serve as the school's physician. In an appendix to the Biennial Report of the Board of" Managers of" the Florida State Reform School, (1913 House Journal p. 1010), Baltzell reported that "the general health of" the school for the entire has been unusual, that is, excellent. Some conditions have not changed, nanlely overcrowding particularly on the colored side." Boys at this time were overcrowded and slept two to a bed, or four on bunk beds which only provided for "200 cubic inches of air space per boy, though the Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 11 national standard called for 600 cubic inches" (Lundrigan 1975). Baltzell's report also stated there were 170 inmates at the school (50 were white and all male except for two girls, and the rest were colored). He recommended that the "infirm and imbecile" children not be sent to the school in the future as they needed special care. As a result of the 1913 investigation, the superintendent resigned and the State Legislature passed Chapters 6446 and 6529 which appropriated more money to the school, built a separate school for girls, and changed the institution's name. Modifications were also made to the dormitory on the south or white school for safety in the event of a fire. It was also stated that the Board should "inaugurate and maintain simple and practical industrial training and institute a system of merits/demerits and that no one shall hire out any of the boys for any purpose." (In Lundrigan 1975). Ethnographic interviews, casual conversations, and participant observation conducted by Lundrigan in the 1970s and by this research team between January and August 2012 revealed that, despite the mandate from the Legislature, boys did continue to be hired out for labor well after this timeframe. Legislative reform initiated in 1913 did not end the challenges facing the boys and staff at FIS. Between 1913 and 1919, there were seven superintendents and more than 28 deaths among boys. In 1914, Superintendent Bell, a convicted bank robber, was terminated following a fire that killed that 12 people. According to Lundrigan (1975) two year priors to the fire, Bell was convicted in Federal Court for stealing $50,000.00 from the First National Bank of Pensacola. He was 19 years old at the time and sent to serve two years at a Training School in Washington, D.C. Upon release, he was hired as the Superintendent of the Florida School for Boys. According to the final coroner's report, the victims were boys that had been locked in "dark cells" for punishment and no keys were available to release them when the fire broke out. Several years later, in 1921 Superintendent McClane and his assistant, Mr. Garrard, purchased hogs and land adjacent to the school using state funds, then cleared the land and began cultivating it with child labor from the school. The timber and products from the land were then sold back to the institution, presumably to aid with the fuel needs by the brick making plant. Ultimately, after the State had paid them $9,320.33 for wood, both were terminated. During the early years of the school's history, several industries contributed greatly to the development and revenue of the institution-most notably, brick making and publishing. In 1906, the school built a brick-making machine that produced more than 20,000 bricks a day, enough to sell throughout the community. Captain J.W. Kehoe ran the brick making business and had been one of the original donors who gave $50 to help bring the institution to the area. Originally, Kehoe made 60,000 soft red bricks as a "test" and found it successful. Evidence of the brick industry is evident today on the landscape where visits to the site revealed evidence of where clay deposits were dug on the south side of the school (Figures 2-4). Quickly, the school reported earnings from selling the bricks, as well as selling the timber, cotton, and the hiring out of child labor. The school-made bricks were also used to build many of the buildings that are still on the grounds today and were recovered in some of the burial shafts excavated at the Boot Hill Cemetery. Figure 2. School made bricks were found in several of the trenches dug in the Boot Hill Cemetery (USF 2012). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 112 Figure 3. Overview of southern end of south school, illustrating the brick making plant in the background (#9). Image originally published in The Light v. 3, no. 1. Figure 4. Bricks made by students were used to construct the buildings at the school. This building is the laundry/electoral building constructed in 1914. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 13 I The second notable industry arose when the school bought a printing press and created its first publication, a school newspaper called The Light (Figure 5). After the development of the printing department, nearly all paper materials for the State government in Tallahassee began to be printed at the school. The printing industry at the school quickly generated more than $250,000.00 in revenue. In a letter from Superintendent Vanlandingham (July 1, 1926) on the issue of constructing a printing plant, he wrote that it was: "First to train boys in good trades, in order that they may leave the school prepared to earn a living; second to do all of the State's printing at a saving to the tax payers." The school paper later changed its name to the Yellow Jacket and on October 11, 1930 the first paper under the new name was published. The Yellow Jacket had a circulation of more than 1700 papers and was the primary paper for the region in its earliest years. Several important articles about the grave yard and school deaths were reported in the Yellow Jacket, though not all deaths were reported there. Over time, the school became the subject of numerous theses and dissertations written by students from Florida State University who conducted research and ethnographic interviews with employees at the school (i.e., Morris 1949, Edwards 1968, and Lundrigan 1975). Today, these resources have been very valuable in providing documented first-hand accounts of events that occurred as early as the 1914 fire which resulted in twelve reported deaths. These documents were created with the approval and participation of various FIS superintendents at the time (i.e., Superintendants Davidson, Dozier, and Williams). As such, the students were provided access to institutional materials and contacts well beyond what is available today. The documents, in some cases (i.e. Edwards 1968), were transformed into training materials for the institution. Edwards' paper (1968) became the official narrative of the school and was used for many decades detailing some of the history of the institution, although it only discusses four specific boys who died at the school. The narratives and specific details about historical events printed in these sources are the same stories repeated today and overall have consistent themes. Figure 5. The printing crew called "The Light Force" (pictured left) helped create the first newspaper, The Light, as illustrated with some of the first editions in 1920. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 14 I For example, one consistent theme throughout these documents is that the school's early history was highly problematic but in contrast, by the 1940s and beyond, major reformations occurred and the school was finally able to live up to its original intent. Reformations included: racial desegregation and the hiring of black personnel, mental health treatment provisions, and plans/programs for helping youth integrate into the community. Lundrigan (1975:iv) wrote about the changes to the institution during 1946-1967, or what he refers to as "The Dozier Era": Black personnel were hired as teachers and houseparents for the first time in 1947; the Kiwanis Club "Marianna Plan" to help wards in their communities began; creation of the new Division of Child training School in 1957 also provided for the Okeechobee branch school which opened in 1959; a new "treatment approach" for emotionally disturbed boys was adopted; and by 1966 racial desegregation was accomplished. In an interview with Superintendent Arthur Dozier conducted by a graduate student from Florida State University (Morris 1949), Dozier described how the school had been transformed from a prison and labor camp into an industrial school (Figure 6). Dozier described the situation (as paraphrased in Morris 1949) as developing many of its policies and measures in reaction to runaways. He describes the lock-ups or "dark cells" used for isolation, bars on all windows and doors, and armed security guards who carried guns. There was also a school jail known as the "dark cell" where boys slept on planks without sunlight (Morris 1949:3). Dozier told Morris that these practices were abandoned and replaced with "sticks and belts" and an individual rating system which was implemented in 1931 (Morris 1949:4). Figure 6. Training manual and scrapbook ("A place in the sun") was used for publicity materials about the achievements and reformations of the school in becoming a training center. Both found in the Florida State Archives (Florida School for Boys, 1958; Florida School for Boys, Administrative Records). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 15 I Despite the overall reforms and new educational and developmental programs that were created in the 1950-1960s, and lead to significant improvements, the school was still subject to negative reviews from state investigative cotmnittees, congressional hearings, and public opInIon. Reports or brutal beatings, maltreatment, and isolation continued to surrace by employees or the school, psychologists, and politicians. In 1957, Miss Addie Summers was hired as media relations specialist to help combat the negative publicity. Her scrapbook (Figures 7-8), is full of articles published throughout Florida and nationally from this time (ca. 19571958) and is now in the State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Newspaper Clippings). The publicity is overwhelmingly negative with headlines such as "Boys volunteer for beatings to work the day out", "Airing Due to Beatings or Boys at Ideals School", "Hell's 1400 Acres", and "Spare the Rod." In 2005 men who were former students of the school came together and began to publish their stories about the abuse they experienced at the school and call themselves the "White House Boys". The information and experiences they shared prompted Governor Charlie Crist to order a special investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) in 20082009. Subsequently, several investigative reports by the FDLE and later the Civil Rights Division orthe Department oCJustice were issued: 1) Investigative Summary for the "Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys Marianna, Florida", Office of Executive Investigations (FDLE 2009, Case No. El-73-8455). This report is an investigation into the Boot Hill Cemetery to establish who owned the property during the time the cemetery was in use, to identily individuals buried in the cemetery, and to establish whether any crimes were committed relating to the deaths or those individuals buried at this site. 2) Investigative Summary for the "Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys Abuse Investigation" (FDLE 2010, Case No. EI-04-0005). Office of Executive Investigations. 3) Investigation of the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys and the Jackson Juvenile Offender Center, Marianna, Florida. United States Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, December 1, 2011. The current study or Boot Hill Cemetery rerers to the first report (FLDE 2009, EI-718455), which cites some of the sanle sources listed here. According to the FDLE report, a record of 81 deaths occurred and 31 boys were buried at the school. Through the course of the current study, the names of additional boys who died at the school were uncovered, as were details on many of the circumstances surrounding the deaths, the history of the institution in regard to its burial practices, and the locations or some orthe deceased. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 16 Figure 7. Newspaper publicity scrapbook by Miss Addie Summers, 1956-1968, ca. from the State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Newspaper Clippings). Figure 8. Inside example of the newspaper articles about school, 1956-1958, ca. from the State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Newspaper Clippings). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 17 I RESEARCH DESIGN AIXD METHODS The historical information and demographic data summarized here comes from a number of'sources including student theses and dissertations (Morris 1949 and Lundrigan 1975), internal administrative documents such as training manuals (Edwards 1969) and personal letters, discharge and inmate record attendance ledgers, legislative notes, biennial institutional reports, newspaper articles, court documents, coroner reports, newspaper articles, ethnographic interviews, and an investigative report by the florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE 2009, Case No. EI-73-8455). It is common that historical documents provide information that is inconsistent among varied sources or absent all together, and that was the case in this study. For example, it was common for the dates of death to differ by one or several days between the attendance ledgers and death certificates. Age and next of kin information also varied in some instances. In most cases, historical documents were missing or incomplete. Numerous original sources about a single event often varied, including the names and number of decedents. All efforts were made to cross-validate data though the use of' multiple sources. When di ff'erences were found but could not be reconciled through a third source, official sources (i.e. death certificates) were used rather than local sources (i.e. institutional documents). In cases of major discrepancies, such as the 1914 fire and 1918 Influenza outbreak, data from each source are explained in later sections of the report. Beyond the challenges of working with historical documents, numerous incidents that resulted in deaths lead to multiple investigations by the school, coroner juries, and state officials. In many instances, each of' the investigations lead to different conclusions, including the number of' deaths. Moreover, the school records are ofien in conflict with reports to the state about the number of deaths. Consequently, the number of deaths and the circumstances surrounding each incident were difficult to quantify. florida Public Statute 267.12 regarding public lands and property rclating to historical resources, allows the Division of Historical Resources to issue permits for excavation and surface reconnaissance on state lands to qualified institutions with archaeological expertise. We applied for a I A-32 permit for archaeological research at the Historic Boot Hill Cemetery in Marianna, Florida. To comply with that application, we were given permission from the Department of Environmental Protection to access the state lands on which the cemetery is located. The location of the actual interments at the school, are not known so they are treated as clandestine burials. Background research, ethnographic interviews, soil analysis, remote sensing, historic imaging, and archaeological methods were used to locate, document, and map the graves and provide an analysis of who is expected to be buried at FIS and the circumstances of their deaths. Graduate students at the University of South florida assisted in historical research, ficld methods, and post processing of data and other materials, including: John W. Powell, lll, B.S.; Meredith L. Tise, M.A.; Brad 1. Lanning, M.A.; Liotta Noche-Dowdy, B.S.; Ashley L. Humphries, M.A.; Melissa A Pope, M.A.; Richard Weltz, M.F.S.; Ashley Maxwell, M.A.; Beth Blankenship, B.A., and Cristina Kelbaugh, B.S. Fieldwork volunteers ['rom the Hillsborough County Sheriff s Office include Dan McGill, Jason Brando, Brannon Douglas, and Jake Becker. Several outside experts were also consulted. Three of the reports are attached in the appendices: a) Associate Medical Examiners for District 13 Dr. Laura Hair, M.D. and Dr. Leszek Chrostowski, M.D.; b) Tampa Fire Investigators Christopher Stone and Al Alcala; and USF Integrative Biology Dr. Gordon Fox and Jamie Gluvna. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 18 The specific methods used in this project include the following: 1. Research for possible clandestine graves or burial areas includes analyses of historical images, maps, land assessments, and soil analysis. These materials come From the United Sates Department or Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service; the US Geological Survey (USGS); the Map Library at the University of South Florida and the University of Florida; Florida State Archives; and Google Earth©. 2. The archaeological methods include remote sensing includes ground penetrating radar (GPR) and metal detectors. The site is mapped through the use or a Trimble 5600 Series Reflectorless Laser Total Station (electronic distance measuring device). Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) has been shown to be an effective and non-invasive remote sensing technique for mapping and documenting buried archaeological sites, including cemeteries (Conyers 2004). GPR was used to investigate the area in and around the Boot Hill Cemetery to try to better determine the extent of the burials. The surface geology of the area made this investigation somewhat problematic. Clays and loamy clays attenuate or absorb radar energy (Conners and Goodman 1994:53) making the use or GPR problematic in areas containing extensive anlOunts of clay. However, in this case, the mixing of the subsurface clays with the sandy loams from the surface allowed radar energy penetration to depths that allowed the grave shafts to be clearly detected. A Geophysical Survey Systems, Inc. (GSSI) SIR-3000 GPR system was used to collect spatial data. The GPR configuration included a 400 MHz antenna mounted in a three-wheel cart with distance calibration provided by an on-board survey wheel. Eight grids of varying sizes were used to collect the GPR data. The southwest corner of each grid was the starting point, or grid origin (0, 0). Radar data was collected at 50 em (20 inch) intervals both diagonally and horizontally across the grid using the "Quick 3D" function built into the SIR3000 firmware. The perimeters or the grids were staked at 1 m (3.3 reet) intervals and fiberglass survey ropes were used to establish and maintain the transect rows. A zigzag data collection strategy was used to avoid returning to a single starting point. The GPR time window for all grids was determined to be 60 nanoseconds (ns) and the GPR data was collected with the gain (electronic signal enhancement) added to the raw field data. Fieldwork lor this project was carried out over eight trips between 27 February and 16 November 2012. The crew consisted of Estabrook, Kimmerle and Wells (coauthors of this report), and the USF graduate students and volunteers from the Hillsborough County Sheriff's office listed above. Eight grids of various sizes were established throughout the area to investigate the extent of the subsurface anomalies encountered. Grid A was 26 by 30 meters; Grid B was 6 by 14 meters; Grid C was 6 by 9 meters; Grid D was 20 by 14 meters; Grid E was 14 by 12 meters; Grids G and H were 21 by 15 meters; and Grid I was 4 by 20 meters. Area F was the designation given to the area north of Grid E; this area was not intensively investigated, so there is no "Grid F." Individual radargranls were also collected in the area north of Grid B to further investigate anomalies discovered in this area. Grid B and the additional "Grid B Addition" radargrams were later re-collected as Grid D. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 19 Grid location and size was dependent on the areas that were cleared. Grid direction was dependent on the locations of the anomalies encountered. The initial grid (Grid A) was offset from the grid created by the metal crosses standing in the cemetery. Prior to data collection, the metal crosses and metal rencing was tagged, removed, and their locations preserved using 2-inch diameter PVC pipes cut to length. All crosses and rencing were returned to their original locations once the data collection was completed. Grids D, E, G, H, and I were cleared of small trees and understory vegetation by the trustees at the Jackson County Correctional Facility under the direction of Chief Wayne Lipford. Larger trees were allowed to remain standing. Only a very large oak tree in the south-central portion of Grid D caused some difficulty during the data collection. All of the GPR data grids were post-processed using GPR-Slice® software (Version 7). The GPR data were converted from their GSSI file format, regained, and processed through a low-pass (3x3) filter. These data are presented as individual time slices or as an animated sequence of time slices showing how the anomalies vary by depth. In the color ramp scheme selected, red indicates areas or greater density and blue shows areas or lower reflectivity. Yellow and green represent intermediate density grades. Red regions on the time slices represent locations that reflected more wave energy, and are therefore the strongest indicators of a subsurface anomaly. A Trimble XH-Pro GPS device was used to document the location of certain features within or near the grids, including metal crosses, rence posts, trees, and the lour corners or each or the grids themselves. Combining the GPS locations or these surrace reatures with the subsurface GPR data can be important when analyzing and attempting to interpret results of this investigation. Digital photographs were also taken of fieldwork in progress. 3. Soil analyses were used to prospect for burial locations. By physically and chemically characterizing soils in the cemetery area, the locations or burial shalls can be determined when compared to adjacent soils. For this analysis, the loll owing methods were used: color determination using Munsell Soil Color Charts, soil texture analysis using the gravitation method, hydrogen potential (pH) using digital electrodes, acid-extractable phosphate characterization using molybdate colorimetry, and soil organic matter using loss-on-ignition. 4. Demographic data were obtained Crom the attendance ledgers, death certificates, court documents located in the Jackson County Courthouse, and historical newspaper articles. Copies of the death certificates issued were obtained from FDLE and provide additional infornlation on burial location and the cause and manner of death. The FlS attendance ledgers (both sets) are currently housed at the Florida State Archives (.S2256, Vol. 1-7, 18-22, and 31). The years present, as rererenced in this report are based on commitment dates. Ledgers are segregated lor white and colored boys. The earliest entry dates for boys is 1912, though they are not systematically and fully recorded until after March 1919 at which time a roll call was taken and an inventory was made of all of the boys who were present or were known to have been discharged, paroled, or died. For many of the entries, the ledger states "Not Here 3/30/1919" and it appears that those boys' whereabouts at that date were unknown. There were two sets orJedgers maintained, the "discharge records" Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 20 ledgers which documented the names and number of boys present daily and the "record of inmates" ledgers that provide more information about the boys admitted such as the name, dates of admittance and discharge, dates of attempted escapes, charge or reason for admittance, parents names, sentencing judge, and county or origin. The latest records we were able to access were April 1960. Anything aller this date was not public record. Statistical methods were run in SPSS 20.0©. 5. Ethnographic and ethnohistorical research including, ethnographic interview, oral history, casual conversations, participant observation (such as site visits to the school and surrounding town and community), mapping, creation or a database or photographs, and archival work were carried out between January 2012 and November 2012 by USF raculty and graduate student researchers including the coauthors of this report (Kinmlerle, Estabrook, Wells, and Jackson) and Brad Lanning and John Powell. The ethnohistorical methodology incorporates anthropology's use of theory as a framework for organizing data and formulating analysis and the historic method for collecting, verifying, and organizing relevant material. The ethnographic methodology involves the direct collection or data From the field via observation or interactive participation with persons being interviewed. Additionally, preparation of documentation that was submitted to the USF IRE Board for approval was initiated by Kimmerle and Jackson with the hclp of Meredith Main, a USF graduate student. lRB approval of the research protocol for conducting oral history was secured. This approval will racilitate ongoing efforts to collect oral history and conduct ethnographic interviews with persons associated with the Dozier School including persons who attended the school, worked at the school, or had other relationships with the school such as through fanlilial or business connections. Although the list of persons who have been formally interviewed in conjunction with this stage or the project is underway, it is still in the early phases. Preliminary findings have shed significant light on power dynamics within the school system, disparities in access to resources, job assignnlents, and education across race; and the overall social-cultural landscape of the Dozier school and surrounding community both historically and presently. The day to day activities, simple routines that included sleep, school, work, leisure, family visits, and meal time all ran by the clock. Interviews with former employees and residents of the school are starting to expand upon daily rituals, routines, and expectations. They also show how daily routine in the case or the Dozier School served to mask other routines and rituals such as a punishment and surveillance, which was a constant threat for all boys. Preliminary ethnographic research underscores the difficulty in recruiting and interviewing persons that have suffered severe abuse or witnessed such acts because emotions generated by the shame, guilt, fear, anger, and powerlessness of such an unsettling experience are often the primary focus orthe interview. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 21 STRUCTURIIXG A FRAMEWORK FOR INTERPRETATION AIXD ANALYSIS This is a mixed/multi-method research study drawing upon forensic anthropology, archaeology, and cultural anthropology to document the Boot Hill Cemetery and the former Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys and associated communities. Theories and methods oj' archaeology of the contemporary present (Buchli and Lucas 2001), as well as theories and methods of cultural anthropology, including the ethnographic method-aimed at interpreting the present-are useful in this application. Developing interpretations at this intersection of approaches to knowing equips future generations with dynamic and expanded ways of talking about history. Jackson (2011) stresses the importance oj' retrieving subjugated knowledges as a critical aspect oj' any project focused on transcending the status quo and critiquing power in the construction of race, gender, class, and practices of criminalization and punishment for example. Although subjugated knowledges can be found within the historical record, they can also be embodied within individuals and communities that have typically been ignored or disproportionately represented as peripheral (Collins 1991; Foucault 1980). Interviewing former residents oj' the school and their J'amilies as well as former workers and others can expand infomlation about people, processes, and daily activities at the school and challenge long-held characterizations and reveal untold stories that could help shed light on burial sites/practices and punishment methods that can bring closure to fanlilies and educate those in positions of authority over youth in state custody and care presently and in the future. Methodological questions posed by archaeologists, such as those focused on what is sometimes called "the "archaeology oj' the contemporary past" compel scholars to uncover or make visible what has previously been lefl out or ignored-to address the "absent present" (see Buchli and Lucas 2001; Wilke 2001). Just as it is critical to include oral history and ethnographic interview to reinterpret the cemetery at the former Dozier School, so too is the importance of incorporating archaeological tools and methods that make available knowledge that cannot be spoken-graves, building remains, tools, bone fragments, and soil samples-but invite discussion. Going forward, the research on Boot Hill Cemetery could invite discussions aimed at extending the dialog on race and racialization to include segregation, punishment and reformation at the fomler Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, Florida. For exanlple, refer to the work of Orser (2007) who uses material culture findings/excavations such as the archeology of a crowded Irish tenement in New York, to look at the concept of racialization and to show how itmnigrants negotiated discrimination in their new home country. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 22 DEFIIXING THE CEMETERY One of the initial primary tasks was to determine how people used and accessed the cemetery prior to 1960. Among the boys for whom burial location was recorded in either the school ledgers or on death certificates, the locations are listed as: "Florida Industrial School", "Industrial Cemetery", "FIS Cemetery", "Buried by Institution", or "Industrial School Cemetery". However, no cemetery name or specific location for the cemetery is provided among these sources. The first reference to the name "Boot Hill" appears in the school newspaper, The Yellow Jacket in a 1936 article titled, "Boot Hill: Burial Ground for Those Who Were Slow On the Draw". This article was a story about the Boot Hill cemetery in Dodge City, Kansas, and does not reference any deaths or burials at FIS. H appears that this article may have been the basis for the cemetery on the hill of the north compound to begin to be referred to as "Boot Hill" by the boys who were committed to the school. The name "Boot Hill" appears in The Yellow Jacket again in December 1947 in an obituary written for the school peacock, Sue. Edwards (1968) also writes in regards to the peacock and cites the obituary in his training manual for the school, "She lies on 'Boot Hill' beside the bodies or several other orMarianna's deceased' (Edwards 1968:36). Edwards further wrote (1968:36): Several boys have been buried at "Boot Hill" but the most exact number and the identification of them is unknown .... At the last count there was 31 graves there ... When the present day superintendent, Lenox Williams, was the director or the colored campus, he had the Boy Scouts clean up and maintain Boot Hill. He was also responsible for the making of 31 cement crosses and having them placed on each grave. Former student Johnnie Walthour (Interview May 9, 2012), who was at FIS from 19511952, helped dig the grave or Billey Jackson, a 13 year old Afiican American boy who died in 1952. According to an interview with Mr. Walthour, he and Jackson had become fiiends in the months prior to Jackson's death, mainly as Walthour would defend Jackson from bullies. He stated that from the dining hall on the north campus, one could look up the hill and see the cemetery placed on the hill top which he said everyone referred to as "Boot Hill". Access to the cemetery was on a field road to the east ofthe dining hall, which ran North- West to the cemetery (Figures 9 and 10). According to Walthour, access to the site was a tractor pulled cart (Figure II). The boys would pile into the back to drive around the rarm or up to Boot Hill. Walthour further described the cemetery as large and situated in a wide open field. He said that none of the graves had markers but that there was a fence and gate leading into the area and depressions in the ground's surface were observable indicating older graves. In addition to Jackson, Walthour stated that there were two more deaths during his time at the school that resulted in burials on Boot Hill. One funeral he witnessed when he saw people at the burial ground From the dining hall and the second runeral he participated in by helping to dig the grave for a colored boy whose name he did not remember. Note that we did not find a written record of any deaths during this time other than Jackson. However, two additional deaths and burials at Boot Hill in 1951-52 were confirmed in a second interview with a former student, Woodrow Williams (Interview November 8, 2012) and may be evident in a photograph obtained from the State Archives. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 23 Williams (Interview November 8, 2012) stated that he was at the funeral of Billey Jackson and remembered him because he was small, always getting bullied and had been missing prior to his death. Both Walthour and Williams believe that Jackson was beaten prior to being hospitalized before his death which may have contributed to his death. Further discussion of these interviews occurs later in this report with regard to Jackson's death. A photograph (Figure 12) obtained from the Florida State Archives is noted as "ca. 1950s possible memorial". Neither Walthour nor Williams recognized anyone in the photograph nor did they remember a large crowd or photographer at Jackson's funeral. If there were additional deaths and burials at FIS in the early 1950s as described, this photo may be from one of those funerals. What Walthour remembered most vividly he said was the box, a coffin in the back of the cart coming up the hill and the men putting it into the ground at Jackson's funeral (Interview May 9, 2012). Walthour said that there was a minister present, but did not recall Jackson's family as present and wasn't sure if he had a family since he had never discussed them with Jackson. Figure 9. Picture of north department. The road going north to Boot Hill Cemetery is positioned on the East side of the dining hall. Digital image found via the Florida Memory Project, Image Number LC397, original transparency damaged. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 24 I Figure 10. Dining hall on north campus from construction through modem times, dating 1936, 1950, and 2012. Note that this is the eastern side looking towards the west. The east side of the building was later modified when an addition and door was added. The road going north to the Boot Hill cemetery was just east of this end of the building, but is currently grown over with kudzu and vegetation. Images from the Florida Memory Project, Image Number Pr24649 (top); Florida State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Photographs, Box 2 FF 23) (Middle); and USF (2012). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 25 I Figure 11. "Boys riding in tractor and trailer to work in fields, ca. 1950s", from the State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Photographs, Box 1 FF 7). Walthour described this type of tractor and trailer as the means of transport for farm work and access to Boot Hill Cemetery for Jackson's funeral. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 26 I Figure 12. Image obtained from the Florida State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Photographs, Box 1 FF10), labeled as "ca. 1950s possible memorial or funeral service". The two witnesses who attended Jackson's funeral did recognize the people in this photo or remember any pictures being taken. Both men said that were two other burials at Boot Hill in 1951-52. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 27 I In a witness interview with the FDLE (Investigative Report NV-16, EI-73-8453), former superintendent Lenox Williams states the first markers erected in the cemetery were white cement crosses. Williams had them constructed at the school in 1961-1962 to commemorate the burials and delineate the graveyard as a cemetery. Prior to that time, the cemetery had not been maintained and no markers existed. The school's Boy Scout Troop was charged with the task of making and erecting the crosses as well as maintaining the cemetery. According to Williams, the location and number of crosses were based on "rumors of deaths and indentations evident in ground". Williams further stated, with regard to the number of crosses, that it was "better to have too many than too few." According to the FDLE report, in 1980-1990s, PRIDE (Prison Rehabilitative Industries and Diversified Enterprises Inc.) farmed this area and destroyed a portion of the cemetery during land clearing. In 1996, Superintendent Danny Pate ordered replacement crosses and that the cemetery be cleaned and maintained. The 1960s cement markers were then piled in a wooded area near several large trees. Thirty-one replacement metal crosses were erected in rows to again commemorate the graves. Note that these crosses were placed in rows where the 1960s crosses had been (Figure 13). The crosses implemented in 1996 by Superintendent Pate are still present Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 28 I Figure 14. Image of discarded cement crosses found during an FDLE investigation. Twenty· eight crosses were recovered piled in a wooded area adjacent to where the markers are located today. These images come from the FDLE report (2009). today (Figure 14). Their locations were based on depressions in the ground and "folklore" about the number of children buried there (FDLE 2009). During the course of its investigation, the FDLE found two piles of discarded cement crosses (20 yards apart from each other) 30 yards north of the cemetery. Thcsc crosses were broken but could be reconstructed into a minimum of 28 crosses approximately 48 x 18 inches in sizc. Tn 2008, FDLE had the crosses removed Irom the sitc. During the course of the current investigation, additional cement cross fragments were found throughout the eastern wooded area and buried just below the ground surraee. The earliest written documentation or the specific location of a cemetery on the school property that we found was a topographic map (1947) and a survey map (1952). Both of these historic maps (Figures 15) outline a cemetery (not named) on the north campus in the area of today's Boot Hill cemetery. A small structure is evident just north of the cemetery on the 1952 map, which was locatcd through our field investigations and is today the rcmnants or a water pump (Figure 16). ====-==== In an interview with former employee Buddy Matthis (Interview September 25, 2012), the northern burial ground was called "Ccdar Hill" by cmployces when he went to work at thc school in 1960. He recalled seeing the grounds grown over by kudzu with crosses knocked over. He helped clear the area and crect new crosses. Today, the northern cemetery is surrounded by cedar trees. The dates of the trees are unknown. Efforts were made to date the trees by USF biologists however dating was not possible, refer to the Appendix. Interim Report onlloot llill Cemetery I 29 It is not clear if Boot Hill and Cedar Hill are the same location. There have been many reports of a second burial ground, separating white and colored boys. These reports put the burials for white boys on the south side or white school and there is a hill behind industrial buildings with planted cedar trees on the south side. This location is the only known place on the south campus with planted cedar trees. In contrast, many aspects of the farm on the north side are marked by planted cedar trees, in addition to the Boot Hill location. '0 ..~o ROAD CLASSIFICATION Heavy-du ty,_ __ Medium-duty o QIMORANGl E lOCATION </,AHC,OlANE Ughl-duty _ <Ii ,--,,!>If:. If! lANe Unimproved dIrt ...... ___ U_S. Route 0 _ ..<~ Stale Route COITONDALE EAST . FLA. N3045-W8515/7.5 1952 Figure 15. Topographic map of Florida Industrial School for Boys (1952) which marks the Boot Hill cemetery. Also note, the marker of small structure or building just north of the cemetery. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 30 I ligure 16. Cement slab, tiles, bricks, and plumbing confirm the presence of a water pump in an area that was once used for animals. Location is same as marked building on topographic map (1952) just north of marked cemetery (USF 2012). I _ _ ._n...__ • ___.._ -. • .. - - -.--- __ In Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 31 I _ Ovell Krell is the sister of George Owen Smith, a boy who died and was buried at FIS in January 1941. According to Ms. Krell, she along with her parents visited FlS in 1941, immediately following the discovery of Smith's body under a residence in Marianna. She said that they exited the Administration building along with Superintendent, Millard Davidson who showed them Smith's grave in small burial ground near a wooded area to the south. Ms. Krell describes this location on the south campus and states that there were two rows of graves in front of the woods. Smith's grave appeared as a fresh mound of dirt at the end of the row. The burial ground had no markers or crosses. There was no evidence that the graves were originally marked burials, as no historic markers, plot maps or inl'ormation about the specific burial locations have been l'ound l'or any location including Boot Hill. In an interview with a former student the school, Philip Marchesani (Interview June 2, 2012), he recounted having seen boxes of letters from parents inquiring about their children, letters to the children themselves, and maps of the school stored in the chapel. He stated that the maps were marked with two separate burial areas. In the course of the FD LE investigation, they did obtain boxes or letters ('rom ramilies Irom the chapel however it is not known whether such maps were recovered. Subsequently these materials have been destroyed and are therefore not available for review. ~~~11111111· - - Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 32 Figure 17. 1948 aerial photograph of the Florida Industrial School for Boys image obtained from the UF Digital Archive Library). The light rectangular area and red circle is an overlaid image obtained from Cox (2008) which highlights a marked burial area on the grounds of the south school, No.!. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 33 I ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIELD RESULTS: GPRAND TREIXCHING Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) proved to be a useful and accurate tool to locate burial shafls at this site, as was coni'irnled by soil chemistry and trenching. To display the processed radar data, a series or 30 horizontal or plan view timeslices were created lor each grid, which show depths from the ground surface to 2.7 m below ground surface. For all grids, each timeslice spans a depth of roughly 13-14 centimeters (em), and the timeslices overlap each other by 4 to 5 cm. For example, the first timeslice displays the depth from 0-13 cm, and the second displays 9-23 cm. Therefore, both timeslices are approximately 13 cm thick, and their overlap is 4 cm. All timeslices are displayed in the appendix to this report. The most inlormative timeslices generated lor the Boot Hill Cemetery where those associated with depths of .92 to 1.24 m below ground surface. The timeslices above this level (0 to 0.9 m below surface) contained tree roots and buried debris, especially in the formerly uncleared wooded areas. Ground disturbance from agricultural plowing, discing for planting crops, and clearing vegetation was also noted in the exploratory trenches. Levels below 1.25 m below surrace, especially Grids G and H, show clear indications or signal attenuation resulting Irom high amounts or clay and moisture in the soil. An evaluation of the combined timeslices from the .92 to 1.24 m levels included the grids designated as IB 11, 12, and 13. These timeslices were used to identify subsurface anomalies that the ground-truthing in the exploratory trenches has shown to be probable grave shafts or possible grave shafts. As shown in Figure 18, these data indicate the presence of 35 probable grave shalis and 15 possible grave shalis within the proposed cemetery boundaries (Table I). There are several large anomalies along the western proposed cemetery boundary. Although these anomalies have fairly large and reflective signatures, an exploratory trench (Trench C) excavated in this area failed to identify any evidence of grave shafts or possible grave shafts associated with these signatures. Rather, it is likely that those anomalies are associated with the historical road that provided access to the site, an observation supported by the current existence or rence posts and barbed wire marking that linear area. The cemetery appears to be roughly 23 m (75 reet) east/west by 30 m (100 11) north/south (Fi!,'1lre 19). The cemetery is oriented north-south with the graves oriented west-east. The cemetery appears to have established rows, with some evidence for lanes or separations between rows of graves. There is no indication of racial segregation or separation of the graves into different areas, suggesting that the cemetery is not segregated by race/ethnicity. Figure 19 shows the area north or the crosses as it is beginning to be cleared and alierwards. The red flags represent the areas GPR imaging shows anomalies consistent with burial shalls as detected in the field. Table 1. Minimum Number of Burials Estimated through GPR Analysis and Trench Data Probable Grave Shafts n=35 Possible Grave Shafts n-15 Minimnm Nnmber of Grave Shafts n=50 Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 34 ~ Possible_Graveshafts • Grid_points <} Metal_Crosses ~ Probable_Graves hafts _-:=~ o 2.5 5 ___ Meters 10 Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 35 Figure 19. Top: Wooded area north of marked cemetery, area beginning to be cleared to search for burials. Bottom: Flags mark areas of anomalies noted with GPR, probable grave shafts (USF 2012). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 36 I The existing fencing and metal crosses do delineate the southwest corner of the proposed cemetery boundaries. This area contained some of the most well-defined GPR reflections and the most pronounced disturbed exploratory trench soil profiles, especially those identified in Trench A. This suggests that the southern portion of'the cemetery is the most recent, and likely the area most commonly associated with burials when the original concrete crosses where installed in the 1960s. - • I II • II ~ I -I I I. I I .. I-I I. 1-'1 • I. II II I ! I-I I. I I I I iiiiiiiil "Cola" bottle fragments found in Trench A, Horizon B date from ca. early 1940s (Ellis and Wiseman, pers. comm). Table 2. List oCTdentil'ied Burial Shalls per Trench Trench Dimension Grid A B C D E F G O.Smx 2m O.Sm x Sm O.Smx 4m O.Sm x 9m O.Smx 2m O.Sm x 2m 0.5mx2m A BID A BID G "umber of Burial Shafts Observed in Soil Profiles 3 3 o 4 2 F Outside Grid A 1 Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 37 Boot Hill Cemetery Site Map , f'i" AWC6 ~catian I I I I ,, , I , ~, . •... , • , . o I 0- • : Marked Cemetery ~ ~ I I! I Trench C ! ~ Trench A t I I I I I I 30.766 I 85~ I ~ •• G ,, , • Mulberry Cedar Oak Other Tree Brick Cemetery Fence Fence Post Oak Stump • Cemetery Post ;J; GPR area [J *' @P2 , Road ... ... AC I Trench Pecan Trenc I , ...-e- .......... Trench F I I I I Mouth of RoadfTraii GPS Coord. I Grid • Depression F Depression Fence N i<t'~ \\ ~r' I , I o J 10 20 METERS Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 138 Figure 21. Excavated Trench A, differences in soil color and stratigraphy confirm GPR anomalies as burial shafts. Figure 22. Bricks stacked next to burial shaft in Trench D. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 39 I Figure 23. Close up photograph of brick fragments in burial shaft, Trench D. Figure 24. Trench F illustrating soil profile of burial shaft and brick fragments just below plow zone, approximately 20 cm deep. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 40 I Figure 25. "Cola" bottle fragments found in Trench A, Horizon B. Glass bottles date ca. 1917-early1940s (Ellis and Wiseman, pers. comm). Figure 26. Cement cross fragment found in Trench A, Horizon B. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 41 Table 3. List of Artifacts Retained for further Study Item Number 1 Type of Item Location Ceramic rim sherd Trench B 2 Nail U-shaped Trench B 3 Wood stick 30 cm long, possible rence Top 10 cm topsoil, Trench C 4 Glass clear, sharp edges, 3 x 3cm Top IScm or topsoil, Trench C 5 Brick Cragment Trench B, 149cm From South wall, IScm From West wall, 2Scm below surface 6 White, glazed pot sherd Trench B, 3Scm from West wall, 13gem from South wall, 22cm depth from surface 7 White, glazed pot sherd iron stone Trench B, llcm from West wall, 173cm from South wall, 3lcm from surface level 8 Charcoal 9 Charcoal 10 Charcoal Trench B, 67cm from South wall, lOcm from West wall, 28cm down between clay and topsoil Trench D, IIOcm (S-N) East wall, 43cm deep Trench D, 160cm (S-N) East wall, 39cm deep and on floor 11 Small brick Fragment Trench D, 140cm (S-N) on floor orEast wall 12 Brick area/row Trench D, extending from West to East wall at 4m, 18cm deep below surface 13 Small brick fragment Trench D, on north wall 14 Glass Trench D, on the floor below north wall, IScm (E-W) 15 Trench D 16 Brick fragments and nails, less than 7 brick fragments and 3 bent nails Brick and cement 17 Cement brick Ground surface ornorth woods under large oak Pump house Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 42 1_ _ -_A variety of physical and chemical analyses were conducted on soil samples from the cemetery to determine the extent to which observations made in the field regarding variations in the soil profile reflect actual compositional difrerences among soils. Specifically, the soil profile revealed a mollie epipedon with a defined A-B horizon sequence beneath Cross 7 and Cross 8. However, between the crosses, the horizonation is not evident, suggesting some foml of disturbance (figure 27). This observation was evaluated through analysis of six soil samples collected from areas directly beneath metal crosses (n=4) as well as between them (n=2). Analyses included color detemlination, soil texture analysis, hydrogen potential (pH), acidextractable phosphate characterization, and soil organic maller. II' the disturbed soil From between the crosses is compositionally distinct from those directly beneath the crosses, then there should be slight differences in color and pH between the disturbed and undisturbed contexts, higher clay percent in the disturbed soils, elevated phosphates in the disturbed soils, and higher soil organic matter in the disturbed soils. These expectations arc based on the premise that the disturbed soil between the crosses reflects mixing or A and B horizons. Approximately 100 g or soil were collected from defined A (.15 m below ground sur race) and B (AD m below ground surface) horizons under Cross 7 and Cross 8. In the area between the crosses (a mottled B horizon), where there was no definable horizonation apart from a thin, poorly developed A horizon, samples were collected at .25 m below ground surface from mottled soils. All samples were collected with a stainless steel trowel, cleaned with water between sample collections. Samples were placed directly into sterilized, phosphate-free plastic bags (Whirlpak), and transported to the Laboratory for Archaeological Soils Research in the Department of Anthropology at the University of South florida, Tanlpa. The bags were left open for 24 hours to air dry, and then sieved through a .002 m stainless steel mesh screen to remove rocks and organics. Soil color was determined with the usc of Munsell Soil Color Charts, observed in wet (1 g I I ml) conditions. Soil texture was determined using the gravitation method, where sediments were mixed with deionized water in specialized gravitation tubes and the separates (sand, silt, and clay) were allowed to settle at different rates. Hydrogen potential (pH) was determined on a 5.00 mg soil! 10 ml DI H20 solution using a calibrated, digital pH meter (with automatic buffer recognition and temperature compensation). Phosphates (P0 4 , P, and PeO,) were determined using molybdate colorimetry. for this analysis, a 2.0 g portion was selected from each sample and mixed with 20 ml or dilute Mehlich n acid. Samples were placed in test tubes and mixed on an orbital benchtop shaker at 200 rpm for five minutes. The sediment grains were then filtered out of solution and into a sterilized glass scintillation vial using quantitative-grade ashless (0.007 percent) filter paper and an acetonerinsed glass funnel. The contents of a Phos Ver 3 powder pillow were added to the solution and agitated until it dissolved (approximately one minute), and then allowed to stand for two minutes. A DR/890 colorimeter was used to quantiry the concentration or phosphates in solution. Oil organic matter was determined using the loss-on-ignition method. For this analysis, 10.00 g of the sample was placed into a porcelain crucible, dried in an oven at 100°C for 2 hours to drive off extant moisture, and then ashed in a muffle furnace for 1 hour at 550°C to incinerate the organic matter. Weights of the sample before and after the process were compared to determine the percentage of organic matter in the sample. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 43 Figure 27. Soil profile as exposed by the north-to-south trench, showing horizonation beneath Cross 7 and mottled soils adjacent to it (A = loam, B = silt loam, mottled soils = sandy loam). The results of these analyses appear in Table 4 and Figures 28-31. The results show slight color and pH differences between the disturbed ("shaft") and undisturbed soils ("cross"), although these are not statistically significant (Mann-Whitney, p = .36 for pH). However, from Figure 18, it is clear that the undisturbed soils have a much greater range of variability in pH compared to the disturbed soils. This is understandable given that pH in this plot reflects both A and B horizons for undisturbed soils. Soil texture does not appear to vary (Mann-Whitney, p = .64[sand], 1.0[silt], .62[clay]), and phosphates are only slightly higher in the disturbed soils (Mann-Whitney, p = 1.0[P04], .81 [P], 1.0[P20 S])' Again, these findings are expected, given the mixed nature of the disturbed soils, which retain the characteristics of both A and B horizons. Finally, soil organic matter is nearly significantly different between the disturbed and undisturbed contexts (Mann-Whitney, p = 0.06). Based on the results of these analyses, it is hypothesized that the disturbance between crosses 7 and 8 likely represents the burial shaft of a gravesite. If this hypothesis is supported for other areas of the cemetery through future investigations, then it would suggest that the crosses do not mark individual gravesites, and that the gravesites are adjacent to the marked locations. Table 4. Soil Analysis Results Sample BRC-Ol BRC-02 BRC-03 BRC-04 BRC-05 BRC-06 Notes Cross 8 Cross 8 mottled Cross 7 Cross 7 mottled Horizon Depth (em bgs) A 15.00 B 40.00 B 25.00 A 15.00 B 40.00 B 25.00 Color Sand (%) Silt (%) Clay (%) Texture 7.5YR3/2 46.67 46.67 6.67 loam 7.5 YR 5/8 43.33 56.67 0.00 silt loam 7.5YR3/4 53.33 33.33 13.33 sandy loam 7.5YR3/2 56.67 43.33 0.00 sandy loam 7.5 YR 5/8 46.67 46.67 6.67 loam 7.5YR3/4 40.00 60.00 0.00 silt loam pH P04 (ppm) P (ppm) P 2 0 S (ppm) SOM(%) 6.16 378.25 123.25 282.63 2.68 6.36 584.38 191.25 437.75 4.07 6.27 507.88 165.75 380.38 1.76 6.45 248.63 80.75 187.00 4.13 6.46 178.50 57.38 131.75 3.42 6.29 244.38 80.75 182.75 2.46 Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 44 .I:I P04 P OPlO5 r II j f II.. shaft creBS Group Figure 28. Boxplot comparing tex Lure (so il separates) between cross and shari so il s. ,------------------------------------, . ~ sa o Clay I ..... B Group Fi gure 29. Boxpl oL comparing phosphates between cross and sha I'! soils Interim Report on Boot Hi ll Cemetery 4S ." ::I ~ E3 :J: a. 6.2 6.1 6.1 eroe. shaft Group Figure 30. Boxplot comparing hydrogen potential (pH) between cross and shall soils. ,haft eros. Group Figure 31. Boxplot comparing soil organic maller between cross and shall soils. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 46 ESTIMATING THE Nl:MBER OF DEATHS AIXD EXPECTED BURIALS Considering all sources of information, it is estimated that there are a minimum of 98 documented deaths dating Crom 1911-1973 and reviewed here. Compiling a list oC boys who died at the school is not straight lorward. Throughout the school's history there were ofien multiple reports about various events that resulted in different conclusions and records are incomplete. Information on the burial locations were recorded for 65 of these individuals (34 burials at the school and 31 bodies shipped away) leaving the disposition of 22 cases unknown. Within the school ledgers, there is a record of only 49 deaths occurring at the school including eight burials at the school; 17 cases where bodies were shipped home afler death; and 24 boys without a listed burial location (Table 5). Additional sources oC information on the names and circumstances of boys who died include death certificates, biennial reports, newspaper articles, letters of correspondence and legislative notes. Discrepancies were further observed between what was written in the school ledgers and the official reports provided by the school to the State about the health and deaths of boys. Differences in the various sources of infomlation occurs in the majority oCthe reports and records that were recovered, including those records related to the fire in 1914, the Influenza outbreak oC 1918, and biennial reports reviewed from the 1920-50s. There are at least 12 deaths that are discussed in reports to the State but the reports do not list the boys' names. The reports, including legislative documents and biennial reports, list the death of an unknown "colored boy" in 1911 (cause of death unknown) and 11 "colored boys" who died in November 1918 Crom Influenza and were buried at the school. Since the reported death from 1911 is also a case where the name oC the deceased is unknown but it is cited in the FDLE (2009) report, we included it as well as the 1918 influenza cases in this analysis for consistency, particularly because the burials are also described as located at the school. The death of an "Unknown Colored Boy" in 1911 is the earliest reported date of death among the documents recovered. No school document discusses this boy's name, cause of death, or burial location. Subsequent Biennial reports ofien listed fewer deaths than what is listed in the school ledgers. For example, in the 1921-1923 report by Superintendent Knight, six deaths were reported in the summary tables. Only one of those deaths was discussed in the narrative of the report (as opposed to appearing only in the table within the demographic tables in the appendix) and was attributed to the Flu/Pneumonia epidemic that struck the colored campus in November 1921 (Figure 32). However, according to the school ledgers, seven deaths occurred in 1921, two oC which were attributed to pneumonia in March and April oC that year, and both oCthose boys were white (Table 6). Note also the discrepancies among boys who were issued DC and those for whom deaths were certified by a physician. Table 5. Smmnary Data for Number of Graves at FlS by Ancestry and Date According to Historic Records (n=98) Buried at Dates of Burials at Body Unknown Burial Ancestry School (n) School (years) Shipped (n) Location (n) White 16 1914-1941 15 6 Colored 18 1915-1952 16 16 Colored 1918* 11 1918 Influenza 0 0 Total 45 1914-1952 31 22 *Records indicate the 11 colored boys \\'110 died during this outbreak were buried at the school. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 47 In a second example of conflict between the deaths reported in the school's Biennial reports and the school's ledgers, the report from Superintendent Vanlandingham to the Board of Commissioners dated July 1, 1926 records a total of four deaths: two colored boys who died in 1925 and two more colored boys who died in 1926. However, according to school attendance ledgers, six boys died during this time frame (Table 7) including four colored and two white boys. Note that the deaths of the two white boys were not included in the Biennial report. Thomas Curry was one of these boys whose death was not included in the report. Curry was a white boy who died in 1925 after having escaped from the school. He died of blunt trauma. Curry was not listed in the report by Vanlandingham, nor does he appear in the FDLE report (2009). The ledgers with his name and death certificate appear in Figures (33-34). Curry was issued a death certificate (DC) by the Coroner from Chattahoochee, L.H. Sanders, which was certified by physician B.F. Barnes. The cause of death on the DC states, "Verdict of coroner's jury: came to his death from a wound on forehead: skull crushed from an unknown cause". The next of kin is listed as "unknown" but the body was shipped to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for burial. Figure 32. Excerpt from the 1921-1922 Biennial Report by Superintendent Knight to the Board of Commissions (page 4) discussing the health and death of boys during this time. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 48 I Table 6. List of Deaths in 1921-1922 as Indicated in FIS ledgers Year Name Ancestry Circumstances Age 1921 Arthur Williams * Colored 12 Unknown 1921 Wallace Ward White 16 Pneumonia 1921 Guy Hudson White 16 Drowning 1921 Sam Morgan* White Unknown "Accident" 1921 John Williams* Colored 15 1922 Schley Hunter** White 16 Pneumonia/Influenza 1922 Calvin Williams * Colored 15 Unknown Date of Death 2/26/1921 3/2/1921 8/14/1921 1921 7/9/1921 4/15/1922 12/3111922 *No death certificate issued. **Death certified by Dr. Baltzell. Table 7. List of Deaths in 1925-1926 as Indicated in FIS Ledgers Year Name Ancestry Circumstances Age 1925 Edward Fonders Colored 18 Drowning 1925 Thomas E. Curry White 15 Blunt Trauma 1925 Walter Askew Colored 12 Unknown 1926 Nollie Davis White 15 Pneumonia 1926 Willie Sherman Colored 15 Pneumonia 1926 George Johnson Colored 10 Pneumonia Date of Death 05/16/1925 12/1111925 12/18/1925 01130/1926 04/18/1926 08/03/1926 Figure 33. Record ledger entries, now in the State Archives, for Thomas Curry Note the date of death is in the "escaped" column of the ledger and the note afterwards indicates he died away from the institution (Florida School for Boys, Student Ledgers). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 49 I ou,. . ~ r -- .... -- - - ~_....._.:._I__._ -. .. I! ......~I ~ !if ~t._9~'- ... '.a. Figure 34. Image of death certificate for Thomas Curry. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 50 Summary of boys buried at school, shipped home or with unknown grave locations: • White boys/staIr buried at the school: twelve (12) burials documented in various sources as having died in the 1914 fire. The remaining lour (4) white boys died later in 1922 (Administration of Superintendent Knight) and in 1934-1935, 1941 (Administration of Superintendent Davidson). • Colored boys buried at the school: eighteen (18) documented as buried at the school, dating 1919-1952 and an additional eleven (I I) boys were buried at the school loll owing the 1918 Influenza outbreak. Note that records of burial locations within the ledgers were documented beginning earlier in time (1915) for white boys than for colored boys even though there were more colored boys at the school. • Bodies shipped away from school: records indicate 31 bodies were shipped home to families including fifteen (15) white and sixteen (16) colored boys, dating 1915 -1973. • Unknown burial locations: twenty-two (22) unknown burial locations including six (6) white and sixteen (16) colored boys who died between the years 1911-1935. A number of these boys died during the recorded influenza outbreaks and may have been buried with the others who died at these times on school grounds. Among the boys for whom burial location was recorded in either the school ledgers or on death certificates, the locations arc listed as "Florida Industrial School", "Industrial Cemetery", "FTS Cemetery", "Buried by Tnstitution", or "Tndustrial School Cemetery". Tn one case the death certificate just states buried in "Marianna, Florida" though the family was not in Marianna. No specific cemetery nanle( s) or locations are provided nor is there a record of whether the school used one or more burial areas during segregation. Interestingly, the burial location was unspecified for nearly three times more colored than white boys though all unspecified burial locations occurred prior to 1935. Furthermore, among the sample whose burial locations were unspecified, only three (3) were issued death certificates in 1932. The three boys lor whom there was a certificate issued all died of Tnlluenza and these deaths were certified by Dr. N. Baltzell, the school physician. The causes of death for the remaining nineteen (19) boys are undocumented. The specific nanles, ages, and circumstances of death by burial location for the boys in our sample arc summarized in the following tables (Tables 8-10). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 51 Table 8. List of individuals documented as buried at school (n=34 named, n=45 total) Date of Name Age Ancestry DC Circumstances Death 1111811914 Bennett Evans Adult White Fire No 1111811914 Charles Evans Adult White Fire No 11118/1914 Louis Haffin White Fire No 11118/1914 Joseph Wethersby 17 White Fire No 11118/1914 Walter Fisher White No Fire 11118/1914 Clarence Parrot White No Fire 1111811914 Lois Fernandez White Fire No 1111811914 Harry Wells White Fire No 11118/1914 Earl E. Morris White Fire No 11118/1914 Waldo Drew White Fire No 11118/1914 Clifford Jeffords 15 White No Fire 11118/1914 S. Barnett White No Fire Leonard Simmons 13 Colored Unknown 5/911919* No 1211211920 Nathaniel Sawyer 12 Colored Unknown No 2/2611921 Arthur Williams 12 Colored Unknown No 411511922 Schley Hunter 16 White Yes PneumonialInfluenza 12/3111922 Calvin Williams 15 Colored Unknown No 8119/1924 Charlie Overstreet 15 Colored Yes Anesthesia Tonsillectomy 5/16/1925 Edward fonders 18 Colored Yes Drowning 1211811925 Walter Askew 12 Colored Unknown No 1/3011926 Nollie Davis 15 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia 4/811929 Robert Rhoden 15 Colored Yes Pneumonia 10115/1929 Samuel Bethel 16 Colored Yes Pulmonary Tuberculosis 1/511932 Lee Smith 17 Colored Yes Traumatic Rupture of Lung 5/911932 Joe Stephens 15 Colored Yes Influenza 10/2611934 Thomas Varnadoe 13 White Yes Lobar Pneumonia 2/2311935 Richard Nelson 12 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia/Influenza 212411935 Robert Cato 12 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia/Influenza 3/411935 Grady Huff 17 White Yes Acute NephritislHernia 4/30/1936 James Hammond 14 Colored Yes Pulmonary Tuberculosis 7/15/1937 Robert Scinous 15 Colored Yes Knife Wounds 1/2411941 George Owen Smith 14 White EscapedlUnknown No 8/3111944 Earl Wilson 12 Colored Yes Blunt Trauma to Head 101711952 Billey Jackson Colored Yes Pyelonephritis 13 *1918 records indicate eleven (11) colored boys died of Influenza and were buried at the school. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 52 Table 9. List of individuals who have documented burials in locations other than the school (n=31). Date of :-'ame Age Ancestry DC Circumstances Death 1915 Scoll Martin Colored No Unknown 1915 Granville Rogers Colored No Unknown Colored No Unknown 1915 Willie Fisher 711911915 William McKinley Colored No Unknown 11125/1920 Alton Long 16 White Yes Pneumonia 7/2/1920 Henry Murphy 16 Colored No Sick/Died at Home 3/2/1921 Wallace Ward 16 White Yes Pneumonia 8/14/1921 Guy Hudson 16 White Yes Drowning 10/25/1923 George Chancey Jr. White Yes Malaria 6 18 White Yes Escaped/Blunt Trauma 12/1111925 Thomas E. Curry 813/1926 George Johnson 10 Colored Yes Pneumonia 15 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia 4/18/1926 Willie Sherman 5/23/1927 Ernest Mobley 15 Colored No Unknown 10/1411928 Moses Roberts 15 Colored Yes Malaria 10/19/1929 James C. Ansley 15 White Yes Fire 111711932 Oscar E. Murphy 15 White Yes EscapedlRun over by Automobile 2/1111932 Lonnie Harrell 14 White Yes Anesthesia Hernia 15 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia/Influenza 4/13/1932 Willie Heading 411411932 Sam Nipper 12 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia/Tnlluenza 4/1611932 Jesse D. Denson 10 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia/Influenza 5/1611932 DaryPender Colored Yes Lobar Pneumonia/Influenza l3 5/4/1949 Eddie Albert Black 13 White Yes Blunt Trauma to Head 111311954 Clarence Cunningham 12 Colored Yes Hemorrhaging Endothelioma 112511957 George Fordom Jr. 15 Colored Yes Endothelioma Sarcoma 4/4/1960 Robert J. Hewell 16 White Yes Escaped/Gunshot Wounds to Chest 9/1511961 Raymond Phillips White Yes Escaped/Gunshot to the Head l7 7/1011961 Edgar T. Elton 16 White Yes Dilatation Heart 1965 James Lee Fredere White Yes Escaped/Auto Accident 1966 Alphonse Glover White Yes Drowning 3/1511966 Michael Smelley White Yes Carcinoma/Died at Home l7 Colored Yes Drowning 1973 Martin Williams Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 53 Table 10. List ofbo:l:s for whom burial location is unknown (n=22 total, 1 is unnamed). Date of .'lame Age Ancestry DC Circumstances Death 1911 Unknown Name Colored Unknown No 2/2811916 Sim Williams 18 Colored Unknown No 5/2511916 Tillman Mohind 17 Colored Unknown No 1916 James Joshua Colored Unknown No 4/16/1918 Thomas Adkins 12 Colored No Unknown 10/6/1918 Lee Gaalsby 13 White No Escapc/U nknown 10/23/1918 George Grissam 6 Colored No ParoledlUnconscious 10/25/1918 Willie Adkins 13 Colored No Unknown 1114/1918* Uyod Dutton 14 White No Unknown 1116/1918* Ralph Whiddon 16 White No Unknown 1116/1918* Hilton Finley 16 White No Unknown 1118/1918* Puner Warner 16 White No Unknown ca. 1918* "Reported Died of Flu" Wilber Smith 10 Colored No 2/12/1919 Joe Anderson 17 Colored No Unknown 1921 Sam Morgan White No Unknown "Met Death by Accident" 7/9/1921 John H. Williams 15 Colored No 1214/1924 Clifford Miller 15 Colored Unknown No 4122/1932 Archie J. Shaw Jr. 12 Colored Influenza No 4/2111932 Lee Underwood 16 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumoniaiinfluenza 4/22/1932 Fred Sams 15 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumoniaiinfluenza 4/10/1932 James Brinson 12 Colored Yes Lobar Pneumoniaiinfluenza 3/16/1935 Joshua Backey 14 Colored Blood Poison No *1918 records indicate eleven (11) colored boys died ofInfluenza in November and were buried at the school. The other Flu related deaths at this time may be buried at the school as well. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 54 It is unknown why the burial locations for twenty-two (22) boys are undocumented between 1911-1934. Since school records prior to 1919 were incomplete as discussed elsewhere in this report, it is unknown whether there were more deaths that occurred prior to this time. However, based on the mortality structure orthe sample and the number orboys that died in the subsequent years, it is highly unlikely that there were not additional deaths prior to 1919. By January 1919, there was a record of 28 deaths within the school records or 16 if the fire victims are excluded as that was a single mass fatality incident and not indicative of the average mortality rate. During the subsequent nineteen year period, 1919-1936, there were 44 more deaths indicating the death rate rose 2.7 times. To account for differences in the size or the student population, given the increasing number or students at the institution, the mortality rate was calculated (enrollment statistics are provided in Lundrigan 1975). On January 3, 1920 there were 102 white boys and 211 colored boys at the school. Up to this date, there had been a total of n=427 white boys and n=705 colored boys cotmnitted to the School (n=I,132). By 1960, these numbers rose significantly. By January 6, 1960, there was a total n=336 white boys and n=326 colored boys at the School, though many more had already passed through the institution: white boys (n=3,53I ), colored boys (n=II,743), or a total or n=15,274 had been committed to date. Note the difference between the number of white and colored boys. In 1919, the percentage of deaths was 2.5% (2811132) or slightly less if the fire victims were excluded (1.4% 16/1132). However, the total frequency of deaths among the student population by 1960 was 0.62% (77/15274), which suggests that even as the student body grew in size the rate or death did not and therefore, the rate or death increase observed between 1919 and 1936 may be an artiract or under-reported deaths prior to 1919. Interestingly, several administrations had a higher number of deaths occur and also had the highest numbers of unknown burial locations which may be indicative of changing operational practices or administrative policies over time. During the administrations of Superintendents McClane, Boone, and Davidson there was a combined total of 41 deaths, 19, or 46.3%, or which did not have recorded burial locations. Superintendent M.S. Knight was elected to the position by the Board or Commissioners August 18, 1921 and served in that position until April 8, 1926. He had been employed at the Florida State Hospital (fomlally the Florida State Hospital for the Insane, which opened in 1876) in Chattahoochee. His daughter (Ola Robinson) and son-in-law (George Robinson) worked at FIS before and after Knight's tenure. Robinson was a farmer and supervisor and is listed on some or the death certificates as "undertaker" though he held different jobs and was brielly the Superintendent as well, following Knight. Note that there are several names which appear on the death certificates as informant or undertaker. Those listed as informants tended to be administrators and the undertakers, when it is listed as FIS, tend to be other employees who worked the grounds or in farming such as Charles Mayo or George Robinson. During Knight's tenure as Superintendent, nine (9) boys died. Six were buried at FlS (one white boy and five colored boys), two were shipped home and one was not documented. Tn 1922, Schley Hunter, a 16 year old white boy died and was buried at FTS. This is the first recorded burial at FlS since the 1914 fire and occurred under Knight's leadership of the school. As a point of comparison, the State Hospital which Knight worked at prior to FIS also had a large cemetery and its own mortuary. The State Hospital has a 27 acre burial ground divided into five cemeteries which is further organized into divisions, rows and plot numbers. The divisions are segregated by sex and ancestry and are contemporaneous but segregated for Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 5S white women, colored women, white men, and colored men (Hunt 2012). The divisions were often delineated by roads and fences, although today many have been disturbed by development. In a St. Petersburg Times story (AUGUST 16, 1976) titled, Florida State llo5pital cemetery: 'Jiicient. anonymous. the burial practices 01' the State Hospital are outlined which is a use luI comparison l'or the practices at FIS: CHATTAHOOCHEE - FIOtida State Hospital has enough need for an nndertaker to hire one fnlltime. The hospital has its own mortuary, fulltime funeral director, mortician and grave yard. The coffins are made on the hospital grounds. So are the tomhstones. The graves are dug by inmates trom the nearhy River Junction state work camp. There are about 6,000 graves at the cemetery 27 acres on a hilltop a couple of miles from the city. There is no sign, no official name and the gate is usually locked. The graves are of Chattahoochee patients who died over the past 45 years. Most of the tombstones carry no names, but a number that has meaning only to the few hospital officials with access to confidential patient files. The stigma associated with mental illness led to the confidentiality and numbers - not names - on the tomhstones. The coffins are made from medium- grade pine in the hospital carpentty shop, lined with white muslin stapled to the inside walls and painted hattleship gray. Ilospital officials have become highly efficient in disposing of their dead. One or two graves are always ready - even though there may be no body that particular day for them. When one grave is filled, another is dug a foot away. There are 6,000 graves at the cemetery - 27 acres on a hilltop. 11,ere is no sign, no official name and the gate is usually locked. Several dozen tombstones are neatly stacked in a work shed. Families of the patients can arrange bmial or leave it to the state, says ti.meral director Leonard Ilerring. There is no charge to the family, although it can voluntarily pay about $170. Last year, 216 patients died at the hospital. So far this year, 105 have died. About one third of them are buried in the hospital cemetery. There is a small chapel at the hospital morgue. Services can be arranged if the families want it. "We do it however they want," Herring said. "We just try to please the family. Most people seem real pleased. We get lots of letters." Funerals arc held on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays because that works out best for the prison labor, he said. The chaplain calls shol11y after 8 a.m. on each of the days to see if there are to be any funerals. Given the practice of segregation at the time and the standard operating practices of the State Mental Hospital from which Knight came, it seems unlikely that Knight would have buried Hunter (a white boy) among rows of colored boys. In 1924, Clifford Miller, a 15 year old colored boy, died 01' an unknown cause. Miller was also one out 01' nine boys that died during Superintendent Knight's administration. His death is the only one during this time that does not have a record of where he was buried, nor was a death certificate issued. Two other colored boys (Willianls and Askew) also died under Knight's tenure from unknown causes of death and were not issued death certificates. In all of the other six cases, either Dr. Baltzell or the coroner, L. H. Sanders, provided a cause of death and issued death certificates. This includes Thomas Curry who died oCblunt trauma aller escaping. The only other documented cases 01' white boys buried at FIS occur later during the administration of Superintendent Davidson in the years 1934-1935 (Thomas Varnadoe and Grady Huff) and in 1941 (George Owen Smith). In two of the three cases, the fanlily members of Smith and Varnadoe have provided interviews through this research project and both stated Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 56 they were shown burial areas outside of the Boot Hill Cemetery. In 1941, Superintendent Davidson personally showed the Smith family a grave on the South side or white school (refer to discussion on possible multiple burial areas), thereby demonstrating that the burials were not integrated and that multiple bunallocations existed. ._----- - The first death certificate that was issued in 1920 was certified by Dr. N.A. Baltzell, a local physician also employed by the school. After 1920, DC were not issued in 12 cases, including 2 white boys and 10 colored boys ranging from the years 1920-1941. Among boys for whom DC were not issued after 1920, only 4 have a cause of death listed in the ledgers, including fire, flu, trauma and blood poison (Table 7). a short time, that the bodies had to be reCrigerated until the coffins 1975)_ --- Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 57 • • =-:======~-::-=== - - George Owen Smith was 14 years old when he was sentenced to FIS for "auto theft" on 9/20/1940. According to his sister, Ms. Ovell Krell (Interview 2012), George escaped from the school and was caught and returned. In a letter he sent his family he said that as a result "he got what he had coming". Subsequently, on November 23, 1940 (Florida School for Boys, Student Ledgers: Vol. 4) he ran away again. On 1124/1941, his remains were found under a house in Marianna. A coroner's inquest and the sheriff's office responded. The cause and manner of death are unknown. There was no autopsy nor a death certificate issued. According to school authorities at the time, Smith was not autopsied because his remains were too decomposed. Superintendent Davidson, school employee Arthur Dozier, school physician Dr. Whitaker, the coroner, and sheriff's deputies examined the body. Identification of Smith's remains was based on dental records, the school uniform he was wearing, and the visual recognition of his hair by Mr. Dozier who stated that the hair found on the corpse looked like Smith (Jackson Courier 1941). an article titled, "Youth Body Found, Burial Here Friday" by the Jackson Courier (Vol. XIV, No.3, 1941) about Smith's death, it stated that the costs of transp Figure 35. George Owen Smith playing harmonic, ca. 1940. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 58 I Jt.O,n IDA iJl,NJ)USTRil:AL S(;~ OOL }IUD BOY, ~DA ..~,BlI . - , !\[[) fAl\~.HA. !R.Qll'IQA Jan Q-r y ~ B '" GQ Qr go;:! ~tlb~.l;l·l"Jda e~, 194 • .. ~ .i Flo- ida to ackno::l T'i1i5 ,~ d~~ e(j;1~ t i~L ~rour I G-'te l" of ot' (!:~nt d.a -~ ':I'1:"i tten -;-:1 th l'ijlg-::.rd t-o you s on,. -e nd. to :...d 'Vis a t .so fa:... t·: ~ h.a V~ b~ , 'in ilma blQ l'lo9'n ,'" ..::! inform;;!;. ion c once r ning' his '.l - 1'", a bou.ts I' .'0. g ~ t :.a o e to ·e i n tQuc- ~ i it ' ~ro, u just as abl e t Ol locate Georgi? and i n thG ~~n '. i l l ppl'e c , ~ te yottrr noti · _ in.g US 1. e Lately e ii:: ,1ve any :~·o I'd, from or c,oncC'I:'ning l.11.m+ g l Q!.d ",-'!e ar-~ v 'ry s.ir. ce :r.02- ty :,rours" ~.d. 7 _·~ '1 11 1,t!.'rd llids on s'Upe1' _'n ttilnd.;;n t Figure 36. Letter to Smith family about George O. Smith having gone missing from the school. The letter is signed by Superintendent Millard Davidson. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 59 I Sf. 11!uke's iEpistllpul ClIl,urt!J Yen. V. G. Lowery, R. dor MAIIlANNA. FLORIDA January 35th, 1941. RECTORY 212 We.l Lafoyett. Stz•• t ·· Mrs. George W. Smith, Auburndale, Florida. My dea.r Mrs'. emi tli.: - ,r well the love and 4evot10n 'of a mother's heart, I would 11ke 80 muoll tb be able to send. you 8ome',word of oomfort and oonsolation in this hOUr of your, great BorrOW. The .orrow in 1tsel! 18 hard. enough, but to MY. to be- 80 !&r a.wa,,; from your boy a.nd lIt&ve everYtb1ng to the oare and a~rangement of str&ngers, makes it doubly hard. Xn.w1~ 11'0'" that very reason I a.m an:X1ou8 to send you thi8 word of assuranoe that Mr ' Millard Davidson did all 1n his power to provide a 8uit&ble and Ohr1 sian burial for your son George. Mr. D&Tiaaon and all those in authorit '&11 the Flor1da Industrial Bohool for BOY8 feel th1s moat unfortunate ~pening .,err deeply, and 1t never would han oocurred had it been, in th ir powel' to pl'event U. ; , Fi Superintendant of 1n Marianna, and influenoe both he st, I would 11ke to tell you that Mr. Dav1dSon, the the Boy's Sohool, i8 an of!ioer ,in the Ep1soopal Ohuroh lv88 muoh intere.t and work in ,qarry1ng on this Ohristian _ and, als. throughout the Stat.' ~ I~ ': Seoond, that While he W&8 waitlng ;for your looal Presbyterian Minister to talk w1th you and Mr. Smith about th~. tragedy and to repG~t baok to him, he oa11ed me out to the Bohoo1, told me how troubled. he W&.8 about thi. untimely end to George'. life, how .orry he telt for you all, an4 that he wouldn't l'aTe ha4 1t happen for anything .! All sorts of investigations were oarried ' )n. and all day hs kept try1ng :to figure out just how 1t oould haTe happu' 1.. Every now and then he would refer to ' Geo~ge '. parents and how hard a bl " it DlUst be to you a.ll. H1aki"nd.eet thpughts and ooncern have oertainly bet 'n tor you in the 1088 of youtboy. Being Mr . Davidson's Pastor, and also haTing a fairly good knowledge of the School and '-the fine work they alte doing for 80 DI&n7 ot the boya in our State 1 ' I readily agreed to oonduot a lburia.l 'ssrvioe for , George. At about 3t30 o'olook Friday afternoon, the 34th,f' I oonduots' the burial servioe for Georg., in the presenoe of Mr. Davidson and members of' the statf , It was in the Burial Plot of the School. that is 'kept nioely oleane4 and oared tor, and will be looked after in the years to oome. Bo please know your son'. last rites were tenderly and oonsiderately performed. j I iruet this letter may bring you 80me measure of oomfort, for I oa.n assure you, you haTe the sinaere sympathy ot the members ot the etatt a.t the School and our best oitiaens here in Marianna. May God bless, help and oomfort you is my sino ere prayer for you and your8. /~ ~ 'a1"A~ !~~ Rfm'T.'I r. -, Figure 37. Letter to the Smith family from the rector at St. Luke's Episcopal Church regarding the burial of their son at the school. The letter was sent to the family after they attempted to claim his remains. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 60 on !U.'rl .... al _ '1I 1 .me ad\'1sed iI:1ie}' lhad llot I'll!od",edi my [ rot r" is Ib dy WiLd knew · otm~Q abol.l1; tb . inm ion, '. y pa ~s £UlJfi: m'i.\lcnt OlIIU@ CIl1i _ ' 0 and ~ l into Mr. David " oftk He ~o~d us hI.!: ,' rd! no rec:t::i\Jc IIDy callI from th . mi "st a sc L o Q'il) ' b~~ ·· ·· b~d beeD 'buried (. .' moon bef'o-re Ol!ll,' ani ~ Oddly.. it \lIM he '.• day he w. found . . lie was bm'ied fit 3,:3Op.nl., wit \ " OUI ' IlJf his being funnel '~lc.I~[ ed ma . ill d no~ evet'll been I!mbm.lmod-inl~ (~ . ~l .' G, W re ' el :d1.OWfI a ~h p' Le of dlrt"o c:elif f: '. al'!.d '. '" 'lli1dl ilihllt 'WlI:fI wh~' .ElilY brotJt. w burled. .nibrtJil.lla.t ly~ my parents d)[d nM Mve tiEl; mcan.'j. 'W _ye h ' oodly KCil\'medJ dl ' 0 ,"" I to our ' me towm so' \\ e 'had w' leave hdm b "ed Figure 38. Excerpt from the letter sent by Ms. Krell to the FDLE in 2008 about her brother's (George Owen Smith) death and what she was told occurred the night he ran away from the school. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 161 ---_.._-_.8-10 - •••••• ...• • • _ • died after having escaped from the school, and in two cases boys were paroled locally and brought bac_ ~"::!!=======·ii================~==~iiii==========ii~i~ i -. • - --..--. - ••••• -. -• ...s::: :::I o U ... Year of Death Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 62 I Ancestry White "Colored" 15.0 0 .0 Frequency - - Frequency . •_. • Additionally, both Schley Hunter and George Grissam had been paroled to local men when they became ill and were returned to the school for medical treatment, although it was too late in these cases and both boys died . • Report (January 1, 1921, through January 1, 1923, Biennial Report of the Florida Industrial School for Boys written to the Board of Commissioners of State Institutions), the boys were paroled locally and on October 23, 16 months after arriving at FIS, George was brought back • • • • • • • • • • Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 63 I • • Schley Huuter was admitted when 11 years old on 6/12/1916 and died over 5.5 years later on 04/15/1922. Hunter was charged with Delinquency and sentenced to FIS until "21 years old" from Lafayette County. He was paroled on 8/3111921 and later "Returned 4114/1922, very ill, rever 104", and subsequently died the next day. The death certificate was certified by Dr. N. A. Baltzell, the FTS physician who stated Pneumonia was the cause of death. Hunter was buried at the school cemetery. iiiiiiiiiiii .iiiiiiii Like George Chancey, a high number of boys died a relatively short time after arriving at FIS (Table 11). Data on the date of admission was present for 64 cases, among whom, 20 or 31.2% died less than 90 days afier arriving (20/64). Among these, 8 actually died within the first 30 days (nearly 40.0% or this group). Within this group, all but five were issued death certificates and two were autopsied. According to the death certificates: 7 boys died of infectious disease (pneumonia, tuberculosis, or malaria); 4 boys died of the result of trauma including gunfire and blunt trauma; one boy died following surgery, two from drowning, and one from pylonephritis. Without death certificates, the causes of death for the remaining children arc unknown. Note that originally the law stipulated incarceration between 6 months and 4 years but, as discussed earlier, this was changed afler school leaders lobbied ror ways to increase the number of boys sent to the school. Three boys died after four years of incarceration at the school (>1460 days) ineluding Bethel (1929), Hunter (1922), and Morgan (1921). Bethel and Hunter died of infectious diseases; the cause of Morgan's death is unknown. Figures 41-42 illustrate the trends of mortality upon entering the school. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 64 Tablc1!. Boys that Died Less than 90 Days after Arriving at FIS (n~20). Numher Date of DC Circumstances Name Age of Days Death Issued Thomas Aikins 12 44 4/16/1918 Unknown No Leonard Simmons 13 29 5/09/1919 No Unknown 3/211921 Wallace Ward 16 Yes Pneumonia 9 Guy TTudson 16 30 X/1411921 Yes Drowning 15 41 12/31/1922 Yes Unknown Calvin Williams George Chancey 6 23 10/25/1923 Yes Malaria Thomas E. Curry IX 25 1211111925 Yes Esca~e/B1unt trauma Walter Askew 12 23 12/18/1925 Unknown No Willie Sherman 15 20 4/18/1926 Yes Pneumonia Dary Pender 13 38 5/16/1932 Yes Lobar pneUlllonia/influenza Following anesthesia for a Lonnie Harrell 14 24 2/11/1932 Yes surgical operation Traumatic rupture of long after Lee Smith 17 68 1/05/1932 Yes falling of a mule 13 34 10/26/1934 Yes Lobar pneUlllonia/anemia Thomas Vamadoe Robert Cato 12 31 212411935 Yes Lohar ~neumoniaiinfluenza James TTammond 14 43 4/3011936 Yes Pulmonary tuherculosis George Owen 14 64 1/24/1941 Escape/Unknown No Smith Head injury, Earl Wilson 12 X/3111944 Yes 72 blows to the head Billey Jackson 13 1010711952 Yes 63 Pylone~hritis Escape/ "Gunshot wounds in Robert Jerald 16 13 4/411960 Yes chest inflicted by person or Hewett persons unknown" Alphonse Glover 10 Possible Drowning Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 65 Mean =348.47 std . Dev. = 438.182 N = 62 30 .0- >(,) 20 .0- s:::: GI ::::J c- ...GI II.. 10.0- 0.0 6 560 10~0 15~0 20bo 1 25 00 Number of Days in Custody Figure 41. Frequency of days in custody from date of admittance to death. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 66 A ncestry . V\lhite I "Colored" i5 6- .... § o 4- U 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 13 14 16 17 22 29 31 33 48 63 66 Number of Months in Custody Figure 42. Number of months in custody from the date of admittance to death by school group. The dashed red line is the 48 month mark which was the original maximum term set by the legislature for sentencing that was later changed to 21 years old, or the discretion of the Board of Managers. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 67 I Other examples of boys who died shortly after arriving at the school include: • Guy Hudson was a 16 year old white boy who was committed to the school on 7/15/1921 and subsequently ran away three times: July 18 th _19 th , 21 st_22nd , and 27 ili (caught the same day). Each time, he was caught and returned to the school. On the third attempt, Hudson appears to have run away with three other boys. One escaped and there is no record of him being caught or returning to FIS. The other two boys were paroled a year later. Hudson drowned 18 days after returning to the school, only 30 days after first arriving to FIS. His body was shipped home to his father for burial, according to his death certificate. • Alphonse Glover died 10 days after arriving at FIS. Very little is known about Glover as his death occurred in 1966 and the school and death records for him are not public record. In the school training manual, Edwards wrote (1968;46), "On August 13, 1966 student Alphonse Glover's body was found at the bottom of the swimming pool. He had been at the school only 10 days at the time of death. No one ever found out what had happened." It is unknown at this time if he was autopsied or presumed drowned. The cause and manner of his death are unknown. • Thomas Varnadoe at age 13 years was admitted to FIS along with his older brother, Hubert from Brooksville, Florida (Figure 43). They were charged with "malicious trespassing". Thomas died 34 days later on 10/26/1934. According to the death certificate, he died of pneumonia with a possible contributing cause anemia. Varnadoe's death was written about in the school newspaper, The Yellow Jacket ("Thomas Varnadoe Claimed by Death" The Yellow Jacket, November 3, 1934, Vol. V, No.3). The article states that he was in poor health for many years prior to his death and that the funeral was well attended by a large number of administrators and boys from the school. The family of Thomas Varnadoe, including their surviving brother (Joseph Richard Varnadoe) and nephew (Glen Richard Varnadoe), who is Hubert's son, were both interviewed through the course of this project (Interview September 4, 2012). The Varnadoe family disagrees with the account written in the school's Yellow Jacket. They state that Thomas was a healthy child and that his death came as a devastating shock to the family who was notified a week after the funeral about his death. Hubert, who was still incarcerated at the time, later told his mother that a minister, a grave digger, and himself were the only people at the funeral. He further told his brother Richard that Thomas was buried near a large tree on the school grounds. Figure 43. Image of Hubert and Thomas Varnadoe (age 3 years). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 68 I According to the school newspaper, Dr. C.B. Toombs, Pastor of 1st Presbyterian Church of Marianna officiated the funeral. Over the years, various members of the Varnadoe family attempted to contact administrators about Thomas' death and visited the institution on different occasions in order to visit Thomas' grave, though administrators could not actually show them his grave as the graves were not marked. On one visit, a school employee showed Glen Varnadoe the Boot Hill cemetery along with a second location and told him that based on time when his uncle died he was likely buried in a different location than the main burial grounds. Figure 44 shows the average yearly number of boys incarcerated plotted against the number of runaways. Data on the number of students and runaways comes from Lundrigan (1975) and begins in 1914 though school opened in 1900. Overall the trend for substantial inmate growth at the institution is evident. Many of the dips in the number of inmates follow events that also resulted in higher mortality rates. For example the population size decreases in 1915, 1921, 1927, early 1930s, and 1968-69. These dates are also notable because they follow the fire of 1914, several infectious disease outbreaks, and the end of segregation and corporal punishment (late 1960s). It is documented in legislative notes for periods that followed such events, and at times when the institution was over capacity and had more boys than resources to care for them, measures were taken to drastically reduce the number of boys such as releasing mass numbers of boys home to their parents, paroling boys for labor at nearby farms and businesses, or transferring them to other institutions. Legislative documents at different times from 1918 through the 1950s state boys were released in mass because the school lacked resources to care for the sick or was too over-crowded. However, several examples are provided where the Board attempted to release a significant number of boys at various times, upwards of 80-100 boys at once but families could not be located as the boys were dependents. ~ 800 -60 .00 "'tJ .,01) III >0 n 01) III ...0 ...:::s \ II- 600 40 .00 0 ...., ;0 GI ..Q I: E :::s ...:::s:::E } z ... '< III \t1 400 "-20 .00 /\ \ \ I / III 200 1910 \- \ \ .00 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 Year Figure 44. Number of total students over time plotted against the frequency of escapees. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 69 I Table 10. List of Boys that Died Following Escape Date of Name Age DC Death 10/611918 Lee Gaalsby 13 No Thomas E. Curry 15 12/11/1925 Yes Oscar Elvis Murphy 15 101711932 Yes George Owen Smith 14 1124/1941 No Robert Jerald Hewell 16 4/411960 Yes Raymond A. Phillips 17 9115/1961 Yes James Lee Fredere 1966 (n=7). Circumstances Unknown Blunt Trauma Hit by Car Unknown Gunshot Wounds Gunshot Wound Auto Accident Superintendent Fulford Knight Davidson Davidson Dozier Dozier Williams Following the Influenza outbreak in 1918, there are numerous ledger entries that state "Mother Carried Him Home". Whether or not these boys survived their illness once they were home is not known. There is one ledger entry later in time (1920) that does indicate Henry Murphy died after being furloughed home due to illness however his exact illness and the specific circumstances are not known, no death certificate was issued and the assumption is that he was buried at home by his f'amily. • Henry Murphy was a 16 year old colored boy who was admitted to the school on 10/23/1919. Murphy was sentenced for incorrigibility for a term of one year. Almost immediately afier arriving at the school he ran away on 111111919 and then returned twenty-eight days later. The circumstances of' his escape are not known. The ledger states "Died at home, furloughed to mother because sick". His home was Palm Beach and according to school records he died on 7/211920, less than a year after first being committed to FlS. The discharge ledgers provide a detailed accounting of'boys on a daily basis with a head count, including who was "received" or admitted to the school, "runaway", "returned", "paroled", "furloughed", "discharged", or "died". The record ledgers also list dates of escapes and returns to the school. Based on the record ledgers, data for runaways was surveyed but was so prevalent it was beyond the scope of this analysis to summarize. However, seven cases were found in which boys escaped and died (Table 12). Records indicate that among our sample, 17 or 26.5% had escaped at least once. Five of' these boys had escaped more than once and were returned to the school. Within these cases, ten (10) boys are white and six (6) boys are colored. In addition to Smith who was discussed previously, these boys also died after running away: • Lee Gaalsby was a 13 year old white boy who was committed to the school for delinquency on 4/2611918 From Hillsborough County. Gaalsby ran away on 10/611918 and died that day From an unknown cause. The ledger only stated that he escaped and died. There is no record of the cause of death or location of burial. • Thomas Curry was a 15 year old white boy who died on December II, 1925. According the school ledger, Curry was admitted to FIS on 11112/1925, twenty-nine days prior to his death. He had been sentenced to FlS for Delinquency from Dade County, "Until Further Notice by Court". He ran away from the school on December 10. The ledger entry states, "Killed on RR Bridge Chattahoochee, Fla." His death certificate Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 70 states the cause of death resulted from blunt traunla, " ... verdict of coroner [L. H. Sanders, Coroner1: came to his death from a wound to the forehead, skull crushed from unknown cause". The time listed between injury and death, according to the death certificate is 30 minutes, and is certified by Dr. B.F. Barnes ('rom Chattahoochee, FL. His location or death was River Junction, Gadsden County. His body was shipped to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for burial by an undertaker in Chattahoochee. • Oscar Elvis Murphy was a 15 year old white boy who died November 7, 1932. Murphy died afier escaping from the school. This was Murphy's third attempt to run away, the first time he returned by his own accord. However, the third escape shows no return date. The ledger states, "deceased died 10/7/1932 as result of auto accident". Murphy had been committed to the school for incorrigibility on 6/1 0/1932 for a period of "Until legally discharged". According to the death certificate, Murphy is buried in Oak Grove cemetery outside Wauchula in Hardee County. He was accidently hit by a car which fractured his right hip, the duration or the illness as listed on the DC states 2 days. He died in the Wauchula Tnfirmary. • Raymond Alex Phillips was a 17 year old white boy who was cotmnitted to the school 4/17/1961 for larceny from Alachua County until "legally discharged". Phillips died on 9115/1961 afler his second attempt to run away. Phillips first ran away 8114/61 and was returned on 9/9/61. Phillips again escaped on 9114/61 and died the next day due to a gunshot wound to the head. An Alachua County Sheriff's deputy shot Phillips who was apparently ruil1ling away from him during his escape. It is reported that the deputy tried to fire warning shots over Phillips' head when he was struck. • Robert Jerald Hewett was a 16 year old white boy who entered FIS on 3/22/1960 (Fi!,'1lre 45-47). The FIS ledgers confiml that Hewett was admitted and then on March 25 was temporarily released to the Jackson Hospital. He returned to PIS the following day on March 26 and then on April 2, he ran away. The ledger and death certificate indicate he died two days later on April 4. All ofthis information comes from the daily ledger, as the record ledgers far this time are not public record. Hewett's death certificate states the manner or death is "unknown" and the cause or death is "gunshot wounds in chest inflicted by person or persons unknown". Hewett was buried in Cypress Baptist Church next to his mother who had died two years prior. Witness accounts about the circumstances surrounding Hewett's death report that he was found shot with a 12 gauge shotgun. According to witnesses at the time, authorities believed Hewitt cotmnitted suicide but did not perf'ornl an autopsy or investigate the death. However, his family believed that he was shot by someone who came looking far him fallowing his escape. No other infomlation including a coroner's report, court records or police incident reports could be located through this investigation. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 71 In a report obtained through this study from forensic pathologists (Hair and Chrostowski 2012) who reviewed Hewett's case, they stated the following (refer to appendix for full letter: Hewett's death certificate is incorrect by today's standards: once a person dies due to gunshot wound( s) inflicted by another person, his manner of death is classified as homicide, i.e. "death from hands of other person, regardless of intent". Such classifications do not indicate "murder", "manslaughter" or other variations, which are of interest to the judicial system rather than medical examiner. Examination of RJ. Hewett's remains is recommended because if there was skeletal trauma, it would be possible to learn about the projectile trajectory, shedding a light on possible circumstances of the incident. ) .$16 0 ~.j16~ 1 il ? (> Ll .1/60 Figure 45. Discharge ledger, now located in the State Archives, showing entries for Robert Hewett who ran away and died in April 1960 (Florida School for Boys, Student Ledgers: Vol. 22). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 72 I Figure 46. Image of Robert J. Hewett's death certificate. Figure 47. Hewett was buried next to his mother who preceded him in death. He was buried by his father who had a death certificate issued. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 73 I Billey Jackson and Michael Smelley are not listed with the boys who died while running away from the school as no record of escape was listed in the school ledgers however the circumstances surrounding their deaths were reported by witnesses. People who knew these two boys have reported that they had run away ('rom the school and were caught and returned to the school. Tn both instances, witnesses state they believe the attempts l'or escape contributed to the boy's deaths. While there is a significant amount of data in the ledgers regarding escapes, it was not always recorded. For example, the first attempt of Smith to escape was not listed in the ledgers however correspondence between him and his parents, as well as information given to local newspapers following his death by school administrators, stated he had in fact escaped twice. • Michael Smelley was a 17 year old white boy who died 3/15/1966. His death certificate indicates he died of "carcinoma of the spine and lungs" about a year after his second incarceration at the school. Witnesses allege he was beaten severely following an attempted escape and that immediately alierwards he was unable to walk (Montgomery 2009). Several days later he was admitted to the Rail'ord prison hospital and later transferred to the Health Center at the University of Florida. Smelley had a history of "carcinoma" and prior to entering FIS in 1965 had a tumor removed from his spine. In spite of this, and the fact he was slightly mentally disabled, he was again sentenced to the school after allegedly stealing comic books and candy (Montgomery 2009). During Michael's first commitment when he was 12 years old, there is no record 01' escape. The files l'or his second commitment at the school are not public record and therel'ore not available for this study. Following Michacl's death, his family obtained counsel who tried to investigate whether the alleged beating contributed to Smelley's death. In Montgomery's 2009 investigation, he posed the question as to "". whether a blow or multiple blows to a spinal tumor could aggravate the tumor or cause paralysis or even accelerate the spread 01' the cancer and lead to early death?" (Montgomery 2009). Based on the questions and search for answers by the family and the fact we included other boys who died off the school grounds due to attempted escapes, furloughs or transfers, we included Smelley in this study and review of Smelley's case by forensic pathologists Hair and Chrostowski (2012, refer to Appendix l'or the lull review): The acceleration of the spread of a neoplasm by beating in not likely and very speculative. The hospital records available from the University of Florida does not indicate trauma. Our conclusion is that Smelley died a natural death, due to malignant neoplasm. This of course docs not exclude a possibility ol'being beaten; however, i I' a beating occurred, it cannot be linked with this person's cause 01' death. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 74 • Billey Jackson was a 13 year old colored boy who was admitted to the school on 8/8/1952 for theft and running away from home. Billey was charged and sentenced to the school with 16 year old Oscar Dixon. The boys were sentenced to "12 months or until legally discharged". The ledger entries stated "Deceased" for Jackson and discharged to mother on 4/2111952 for Dixon. Jackson died about two months after arriving at the school on 10/0711952 at the Jackson County Hospital (Fi!,'1lre 48). His death certificate states he died of "Pylonephritis" and the onset equaled 10 days. An autopsy was performed by Dr. Whitaker, the school's physician, although no copy of it could be located during this study. According to forensic pathologists who reviewed this case (Hair and Chrostowski 2012, refer to attached report in Appendix): Pyelonephritis is a foml of ascending urinary tract infection, which may affect one or both kidneys. It is usually associated with urine retention, and can indeed be fatal. The obstruction of flow initiating the pathology may result From a congenital condition, e.g. inadequate valve mechanism at the junction orthe ureters and the bladder, or obstruction orthe ureter(s) due to urolithiasis, i.e. kidney stones, or trauma. Two witnesses (Johnnie Walthour Interview May 9, 2012 and Woodrow Williams Interview November 8, 2012) stated that Jackson was "beat real bad" and "punched in the stomach" about two weeks prior to his death aller attempting to escape From the school for the second time. According to Walthour, Jackson escaped From the school twice and both times was caught and punished. Several days later, his stomach was distended and when Walthour asked Jackson what was wrong, he stated that they had "beat him real bad this time". Several days passed but Walthour had not seen Jackson and so inquired as to his whereabouts. Walthour was told that Jackson was in the hospital. About two weeks later, he learned Jackson died and that he would help dig his grave. Walthour and several fellow students piled into the back or a tractor drawn cart and rode up to "Boot Hill" where they proceeded to dig Jackson's grave. He stated that Jackson was buried in a coffin and that a minister and the few boys who helped dig the grave were present. Walthour did not remember family present at the funeral. In a second and entirely separate interview, Woodrow Williams also described Jackson and his funeral. Williams stated that a number of boys were present at Jackson's funeral which was located up on Boot Hill. He said that the burial ground was a large open field alongside a wooded area and that likely 30-40 depressions could be seen in the ground Crom prior burials. Williams said that he knew Jackson had run away and believed that his beating caused his death. Williams stated that at the time people did not openly talk about the death or what happened but that they knew he had been missing before he died. Also consistent with Walthour, Williams stated that there were several funerals in the years 1951-52 but the reason Jackson stood out was that he was so small and always had been picked on combined with the ract he had been missing. Neither Williams nor Walthour recognized the photo obtained Crom the state archives or a funeral ca. 1950s. If there was more than one burial in the early 1950s it could be possible this represents a funeral other than Jackson's. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 7S C£RTIF~.A~ OF 1D.~1l.;f , r 't 0 I. ~ .A Figure 48, Image of death certificate for Billey Jackson, Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 76 ._ ... _-- ... The most significant events that resulted in a high number of fatalities include the fire of 1914 and several outbreaks or infectious diseases in 1918 and 1934. The first record or any burial at the Florida Industrial School are newspaper articles and a telegram regarding the 1914 fire in which the dormitory on the south campus burned down (Figure 49). During .. - • - •• ~~-------------- - .thnographic interviews conducted by Lundrigan (1975) describe the fire and events following it with regard to the deaths and burials of the fire victims and I. -. .• • ----Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 77 Figure 49. Dormitory identical to the one that burned in 1914, located on the North School (photograph comes from The Light 1921, Florida State Archives). -- (Lundrigan 1975). - II - State Archives (The Light 1921, Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 78 -- --- - - Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 79 Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 80 Figure 50. Newspaper article listing casualties in 1914 fire, reprinted from the FDLE investigative report (2009). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 81 ., ' Figure 51. Newspaper article listing casualties in 1914 fire, reprinted from the FDLE investigative report (2009). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 82 • • .... --~============;;==; ;;~. crowded into the dorms" where they stayed until a new dormitory was built (Lundrigan 1975:106). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 83 - · not coroner's report lists 2 starr and 8 boys as deceased, including S. Barnett, whose name does appear in the cited newspaper report. The names or rire victims diller among the various reports. The coroner's report does not list Parrot or Haffin as decedents, but Haffin's name does appear in the Idaho Statesman as a casualty of the 1914 fire. Likewise, FDLE does not list Haffin or Barnett though they cite the Idaho Statesman where Haffin's name docs appear (Table 12). Table 12. List or Possible 1914 Fire Casualties and Source (n~12) Name Source and Comments Bennett Evans* Charles Evans • Cli fford Jeffords Earl E. Morris'· Harry Wells Joseph Wethersby Louis Fernandez Waldo Drew Walter Fisher Louis Haffin Clarence Parrot S. Barnett Coroner Report (1914) Idaho Statesman (1914) FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) Idaho Statesman (1914) FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) Idaho Statesman (1914) FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) Idaho Statesman (1914) Telegram sent to Mrs. Fred Wethersby FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) Idaho Statesman (1914) FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) Idaho Statesman (1914) FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) Idaho Statesman (1914) FDLE (2009) Idaho Statesman (1914) Idaho Statesmen (1914) FDLE (2009) Coroner Report (1914) * Both are adults (father & son employees of school). ** The Board of Manager report states Morris ran away. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 84 IIWLl:ENZAAND PNEl:MOIXIA OUTBREAKS 1918 AND 1932 The Influenza outbreak throughout the region in 1918 was devastating and the school was especially alTected. The conditions or the school Crom this time were described in several accounts. Dr. O.W. Klock a state physician who assisted with caring ror the sick boys issued a report about the condition of the school which prompted a state investigation and a response from the school's physician, Dr. N.A. Baltzell at the request of the Board. According to Edwards (1969), in October of 1918 Dr. Brevis was an attending physician and stated that, "he had found conditions bad, that all boys in the Negro quarters except 21 were sick, that they had no assistance in two days and that he was the only physician ... the hospital had been set up in the Dining hall". It was noted that the white students had escaped the epidemic as they had been quarantined. The dire conditions, large number of boys who were ill, and the lack of school administrators and staff to care for them led to the state investigation. In an interview with Rhyne (1968, In Lundrigan 1975: 110), Lundrigan wrote: Dr. Baltzell ... made hurried trips to the Rerorm School late one night to 'see about the boys,' alier spending a long and tiring day caring lor the influenza victims in town. At School No. 2 he found sick colored inmates ... lying about on the floor in total darkness. According to Lundrigan, the adult staff of the school abandoned School No.2 and the colored boys lor rear or contracting the illness which leli them without electricity or care lor days at a time. The State Board or Health sent Dr. O.W. Klock to assist at the school. Klock reported the dire situation he found which was later recounted in the Tampa Tribune (November 2, 1918 in Lundrigan 1975:111): ... conditions at the school are very bad; sewerage imperfect; no sanitary rules at all; screens broken; fleas by the thousands. There were thirty five cases or pneumonia and lack or medicine and lack or proper nourishment, no linen, boys lying under wool blankets, naked. With dirty husk mattresses on the cement floor. .. The condition was one of filth, body lice, improper food and no bathing ... The Superintendent has not seen a boy in four weeks according to attendants. The dinner of the well colored boys ... was hoe cake and bacon grease thickened with flour. The dinner or the white boys was rice and bacon grease gravy. One boy said he was flogged for refusing to cook peas full of womlS and that meat sent to the boys was kept until spoiled and then fed them and they all were sick. Lundrigan (1975: 112) cites the Report cf Committee cf Physicians on Conditions Growing Out (f Trjluenza Epidemic (1918:422), which states that "on the colored campus, out or 264 cases or influenza among the boys, there were only II deaths. These were Negro boys and although 68 out of 69 white pupils were afflicted with the malady, none died as a result." On November 6, 1918, the Daily Democrat published a press release from Dr. Baltzell, "Reform School Not Quite So Bad as Represented". This press release was sent to various newspapers in response to the claims made in Dr. Klock's report about the poor conditions ofthe school. Through this letter, the timeline and list or liltalities orboth white and colored students Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 8S are confirmed. Baltzell states that the outbreak began about three weeks prior to November 6, 1918. In total he says that there were 264 cases of inmates who were sick including both white and colored boys in addition to the staff. One female staff member died and the entire operations oCthe school were rendered incapacitated as a result oCthe outbreak. Tn response to the specific details in Klock's report, Baltzell states that the sanitary conditions orthe school were always in poor condition and generally lacking, the screen doors were in need of repair (although he never noted any fleas) and found that most boys came to the school in need of medical care. He too reported that the students were in great need of clothing, sanitation, and bed linens. Both reports by Klock and Baltzell arc in stark contrast to the data listed in the school's ledgers, which indicate only lour colored boys died or either non-Ilu related causes or From unknown causes and lour white boys died or unknown causes between November 4-8. or the eight docunlented deaths that occurred in 1918 according to the school ledgers (Table l3), one death was in April, not October-November when the epidemic struck and one additional nanle appears to be among those who died in the 1918 outbreak, although the death was not recorded until a year later and no specific date of death is given. Wilbur Smith appears in the 1919 roll call or the record ledger which states, "Reported to have died with Flu", however no year or date is given. Smith likely came to school in 1915 based on the placement of his name in the ledger which is generally chronological, but no date for admission or death is recorded, nor is the location of his burial listed. Thomas Aikius was a colored boy who died in April of 1918. The other deaths occurred in late October and early November. Willie Adkins, another colored boy, died October 25, several weeks ahead of the lour (4) white boys who all died within lour days. The separation or dates among colored and white students alTected may have been the result or segregation between the dormitories. Based on the dates four deaths occurred within one week, November 4-8, which is consistent with a flu outbreak. Additionally, three (3) deaths occurred after Baltzell reported a total of six (6) deaths for a minimum of nine (9) fatalities. The Biennial report states the entire "colored" campus was ill with subsequent problems with sanitation, although all of the deaths in November were white boys. Tl may be that the Ilu spread Irom the colored to white side or the campus, during this time. However based on the description or the conditions on the colored campus, one would have expected a higher nunlber of deaths anlOng colored than white students. It is also not known if the deaths were the result of the flu or other illnesses associated with the subsequent sanitation problems. In an interview with Donald Vickery of Marianna, Florida (July 12, 1972), Lundrigan reports that Vickery's rather was the head or the Colored Department during the 1918 epidemic and that the "bodies or the dead Negro boys were stored in the Relormatory's ice house while waiting for coffins to be built for them in the school's carpentry shop" (Lundrigan 1975:112). According to this interview, the eleven colored boys who died were buried at the "Boot Hill" burial ground (Lundrigan 1975: 113). Figure 52 is an image of the school's carpentry shop ca. 1950s (Florida School for Boys, Photographs, Box 2 FF 15). To cope with the situation, boys were immediately paroled home and no new boys were accepted. The Board tried to parole 100 boys to relieve overcrowding but the children did not have known fanlilies and were dependents of the State and thus had nowhere to go. It is also around this time that ledger entries such as "Mother carried him home" occur indicating some boys were paroled home ill, though the specific circumstances of these cases are not known. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 86 Figure 52. Carpentry shop at school No.1, ca. 1950s, from the State Archives (Florida School for Boys, Photographs, Box 2 FF 15). Tables 13. Deaths Listed as Occurring in School Ledgers for 1918 Runaway Date of Circumstances Name Age Ancestry Death Thomas Aikins 12 Colored 4/16/1918 Unknown No Lee Gaalsby Runaway, Unknown White 10/6/1918 13 Died George Grissam Colored 10123/1918 On Parole Chronic Gastritis 6 Colored 10125/1918 Unknown/Likely Flu Willie Adkins 13 No Llyod Dutton 14 White 1114/1918 Unknown/Likely Flu No Unknown/Likely Flu Hilton Finley 16 White 1116/1918 No Unknown/Likely Flu 16 White 1116/1918 RalJ2h Whiddon No PunerWamer 16 White 1118/1918 Unknown/Likely Flu No 10 Colored Unknown * Wilbur Smith No "ReJ2orted Flu" *Smith's name appears in 1919 with a reference to having died of flu, however no date is provided. The cases marked as "likely flu" is based on the dates of death and corresponding description of fatalities in physician's reports, but no actual cause of deaths are recorded. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 87 Of the eight documented deaths in 1918, according to school ledgers none have a listed cause of death other than Grissam who was a six year old boy. Grissam, along with his eight year old brother were paroled, but then returned to the school gravely ill. The information about Grissam's cause of' death is described in the FIS Biennial report (January I, 1921, through January I, 1923, Biennial Report of'the Florida Industrial School lor Boys written to the Board of Conmlissioners of State Institutions) but not in the ledgers which only states "Died" (refer to the earlier discussion of Grissam's death). The date and circumstances of his parole are unknown although he had been at the school sixteen months prior to his death. Based on the timing, general circumstances and descriptions in the physician's reports, it is presumed that Adkins, Dutton, Finley, Whiddon, Warner and Smith all died orthe Ilu or inf'ectious diseases associated with the outbreak and its consequences. • Puner Warner was sentenced and admitted to the school with two other boys, all three ran away together (Jas McKnight and Lenox Grayson) and were returned to the school. McKnight later went into the Army and Grayson was paroled a year later. There is no inlornlation as to Warner's cause of' death, but based on the timing it is likely related to the Influenza outbreak. A second catastrophic outbreak orTnlluenza occurred in 1932, during that year there were a total of 12 deaths (nine of which were attributed to Influenza and subsequent Pneumonia). Three other boys also died in 1932 but for other causes (Table 14). Death certificates were issued for 11 of the 12 boys that died. No death certificate was issued for Archie Shaw. Death certificates for nine of the boys list Influenza, with a contributing cause of lobar pneumonia and the duration of' the illness ranged From 4-9 days. The circumstances surrounding the other deaths during this year include accidently killed by a mule (Figure 53), anesthesia during a hernia operation, and run over by an automobile after running away from the school. • Archie J. Shaw Jr. was a 12 year old colored boy who was committed to the school lor larceny on 8/2/31 along with three other boys Irom Hillsborough County. Approximately eight months later he died on April 22, 1932 during that week there were several other Flu related deaths. Shaw was not issued a death certificate and his death was not certified, but the entry in the school ledger states his death was related to the flu epidemic. His burial location is unknown. The other three boys were paroled back to Tampa about a year later. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 88 Table 14. Deaths Related to Influenza, Pneumonia, and Other Causes in 1932 .'lame Age Ancestry Date of Circnmstances Death Lee Smith Colored 01/05/1932 "Accidently killed, mule ran away" 17 Death certificate states died of ruptured lung. Hernia, died in surgery 14 White 2/1111932 Lonnie Harrell Influenza, lobar pneumonia J ames Brinson 4/10/1932 12 Colored Influenza, lobar pneumonia 4/13/1932 15 Colored Willie Heading Influenza, lobar pneumonia 4/14/1932 Sam Nipper 12 Colored Tnfluenza, lobar pneumonia 10 Colored 4/1611932 Jesse D Denson Tnfluenza, lobar pneumonia Lee Underwood 4/2111932 16 Colored Presumed Influenza Archie J. Shaw J r. * 12 Colored 4/22/1932 Influenza, lobar pneumonia Fred Sams 4/22/1932 15 Colored Influenza, lobar pneumonia Joe Stephens 15 Colored 5/09/1932 Influenza, lobar pneumonia Colored 5/16/1932 DaryPender l3 Escape/death certificate states he Oscar Elvis Murphy 15 White 101711932 was run over by an automobile. *Cause of death is presumed based on tinting of death, however Shaw \vas not issued DC nor was his death certified, as the other cases were at this time. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 89 ---------0--------I it ~ Colored Lo es Life In n On FarlD of Tue day, J nath f Lee Smith, n ar old c lor d b y, which ,b ut thr u h an ident while r Inaking tb or way from fi Id during th dinner hour. Th on on of tw mules w n ·e slipp d off tch' ng hi :f ot in the h unable to ga a lurch furth r Figure 53. The institutional newspaper, The Yellow Jacket (January 16, 1932, Vol. II, No.8) contained this article about the work related death of Lee Smith. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 90 I TRENDS IN MORBIDITY & MORTALITY The very general mortality patterns as discerned from the records are discussed. Among the student deaths, only 44 were issued death certificates (26/60 colored boys and 18/35 white boys). Even when a cause or death (COD) is listed on the death certificate, such as "gunshot wounds in chest" - Based on information from available death certificates, six (6) boys were autopsied. Four of the boys were autopsied by Dr. C. Whitaker, the school physician. Dr. Whitaker was also present with the coroner and a sheriff's deputy at the home where George Owen Smith's body had been discovered. According to local newspapers, Dr. Whitaker believed the body was too decomposed lor autopsy and therelore no coroner's jury was established. Dr. Whitaker was employed at the school during the time Robert Hewett died (1960), although it unknown why no autopsy was performed. The two other boys who were autopsied outside of Jackson County died after running away and therefore were autopsied in the counties that the deaths occurred (Table 15). The cause and circumstance of deaths are completely unknown in about 34.5% (29/84) of cases. Approximately 20.0% or deaths among white boys are unknown, whereas nearly 44.8% or deaths among colored boys are unknown. Table 15. Autopsied Cases (n~6) Year Superintendent Decedent:"J arne 1944 Davidson Earl Wilson 1949 Dozier Eddie Albert Black 1952 Dozier Billey Jackson 1954 Dozier Clarence Cunningham 1957 Dozier George Fordom Jr. 1961 Dozier Edgar Thomas Elton Autopsv Physician CD. Whitaker, M.D. CD. Whitaker, M.D. CD. Whitaker, M.D. W.J. Hutchinson, M.D. S.A. Shaffer M.D. CD. Whitaker, M.D. Ruling Homicide Homicide Natural Accident Natural Natural Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 91 • ----~~==~============= - - -- • Ancestry . V\I1lite "Colored" ...s:: :::::J o U I Fire Trauma Drowninglnfectious Cancer Surgery Acute Unknown Dilation Healt Circumstances of Death Figure 54. Frequency of different categories of death. For the majority of individuals, there is no known cause of death. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 92 I CONVICTED CASES OF HOMICIDE Among cases with traumatic related deaths, three are documented homicides in which boys were killed by Cellow school boys. Tn all three cases, the ofCenders were prosecuted. Some oCthe original grand jury documents were obtained Irom the Jackson County Courthouse. Two cases were appealed and the subsequent eourt documents detail more about the events, autopsy findings and testimony of Dr. Whitaker, and other evidence presented at the trials. Robert Seinous "Stephens" Robert Seinous "Stephens" was a 14 year old white boy committed to the school on 9/311936 for breaking and entering. He was sentenced to two years or until legally discharged. Approximately ten months later, just after his 15 th birthday, Seinous was found dead on July 15, 1937. A death certificate was issued and certified by school physician Dr. Baltzell. It is unknown if an autopsy was performed as this information is left blank on the death certificate. According to the ledgers, Seinous was admitted with 16 year old John Bryant Irom Quincy and although Bryant was sentenced to a minimum 01' three years he was paroled to a guardian on September 2, 1937. According to the ledger, Robert's last nanle was "Stephens" and he was 16 years old when committed. The nanle Stephens also appears on the court documents, however his death certificate states "Scinous". The informant for the death certificate was C.M. Mayo (a yardman and nurse) employed at the school. Mayo's name appears on many death certificates Irom this time as the "undertaker". The only burial location on the death certificate states "Marianna, Florida". Since his mother was Irom Quincy, it is likely Robert was buried at the school cemetery, although this is not documented. The ledger further states that Robert was "Stabbed to death by another inmate Leroy Taylor". Robert's death certificate states the cause of death was "Knife wound following hemorrhage". According to records at the county clerk's office in Jackson County, Leroy Taylor was indicted of First Degree Murder but plead guilty to Second Degree Murder on November 30, 1937. The indictment listed Robert's name as "Robert Stephens". Eddie Black Eddie Black was a 13 year old white boy committed to the school 41111948 Cor Larceny lor a teml "Until legally discharged". Approximately a year later Black was lound dead on May 4, 1949. Black was autopsied by school physician Dr. C. Whitaker whose official cause of death was "Death by strangling, severe contusions of forehead." Black's body was shipped home to his family for burial in Pensacola. Frank Murphy and Avelardo Quevedo were convicted of the second degree murder of Black. According to a signed confession by Frank Murphy, he: ... got a knife From Avelardo and told Black to come with me. We went down under there, under the culvert at the laundry across the highway from the laundry and I grabbed him. I choked him down, and I stabbed him two times and left him .... l choked him down and then hit his head on the concrete. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 93 According to Quevedo's signed confession (June 2, 1949), Murphy told him that he had killed Black with Quevedo's knife in the following manner: Frank Murphy told me that Eddie Albert Black had caught him smoking and was going to tell on him and lor that reason he was going to kill him. When Frank came back he showed me my knife and there was blood on the blade and he said he had killed Black and told me how he did it. He said he choked him with his hands and when he was almost dead he stabbed him twice back of the ear. Note that the signed conressions and death certificate do not state the same cause or death. The death certificate states the following: "death by strangulation, severe contusions to forehead". An autopsy was performed by school physician Dr. Whitaker but makes no mention of any knife wounds or sharp trauma. On March 20, 1965, Frank Murphy filed a motion to "vacate and set aside judgment of conviction and sentence in case No. 863 upon the grounds they are void ab initio and in toto as is allowed and authorized under criminal procedure rule one." Tn Murphy's hand written letter to the court he stated that he and the victim had engaged in a fist fight which ended when both boys were exhausted. Later, Murphy returned to the area to look for something he lost. While awaiting trial, Murphy received a note from a fellow inmate that three witnesses saw him leave the area when Black was still alive, both the prosecutor and defense attorney were informed of the letter before the trial began. However, during the recess or the trial, SherifI' Ernst Barnes questioned Murphy alone about how he obtained the letter in jail. According to court documents (Murphy Y. Wainwright, 372 F. 2d. 942 5th Cif. 1967), "The sheriff is said to have made certain threats regarding the horror of dying in the electric chair and advised appellant that it would be the part of wisdom to enter a plea to second degree murder in the event such an opportunity was offered to him." Fourteen year old Murphy pled guilty for a life sentence, rather than face the death penalty. In his appeal, Murphy argued that the sheriffs actions, along with the ract his legal guardian (his sister as both parents were deceased) was not inlomled about his murder trial created a coerced, involuntary conression. On January 20, 1973, Murphy was awarded an evidentiary hearing (Murphy v. Wainwright 73 304 Civ J S). The evidence consisted of the testimony of Murphy and John Roy Smith who testified to the comments that were made by the sheriff. The court found that Murphy's confession was entered involuntary, granted a writ of habeas corpus and vacated his conviction. Interim Rcport on Boot Hill Cemetery 94 Earl Wilson Earl Wilson was a 12 year old colored boy committed to the school on 6/20/1944 for larceny Irom Polk County. Seventy-two days later on September I he was killed while detained in a 7' by 10' confinement collage along with eight other boys, ages 11-17 years. These boys had been held in the confinement cottage for varying lengths of time from several days to several weeks (Figures 55-56). Four boys were convicted of Wilson's murder: William Foxworth, Charles Bevels, Robert farmer, and floyd Alexander. According to the death certificate, Wilson was autopsied by Dr. Whitaker, the school physician and buried at the school. The death certificate states the cause or death was "Head Injury, Blows on Head". Note that the testimony or Dr. Whitaker about the autopsy findings conflicted with witness statements. See Foxworth v. Wainwright, 516 f. 2d 1072. 1074-1075 (5th Cir. 1975) : . Bevels v. State, Fla., 1945, 156 Fla. 159,23 So.2d 156. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 9S • II --. • ._- Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 96 · "1._. - Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 97 VARIATION IN REpORTING The discrepancies that occur in the documentation for burial location, the cause of death, and certification of the deaths by a physician or coroner are not limited to particular years or administrations and do not appear to be a matter of changing policies from one administration to another. The problem of under-reporting was not the only type of inconsistency found between school and state records. Practices during the Flu epidemic of 1918, also shows significant variation in the reporting and number of deaths. Reports vary as to the number and ancestry of boys who died, as well as the dates of their deaths in that year. A number of deaths appearing in the ledgers or other historical documents were not included in the FDLE report, which is why the total number of deaths that occurred differs among more recent reports. For example, William McKinley's name and the statement "Died" appears in the discharge ledger but does not appear listed in the full record ledger from the school, which is a common finding for the time period (pre-1919); therefore no other information is known about him (Figure 57). Several other differences were also found for boys whose names do not appear in prior reports: • • • • • • Louis Haffin, a white boy died 11118/1914 in the fire. S. Barnett, a white boy died 11118/1914 in the fire. William McKinley, a colored boy died from unknown causes on 7/19/1915. Thomas E. Curry, a 15 year old white boy died of blunt trauma on 12/1111925 after runmng away. Robert Jerald Hewett, a 16 year old white boy died of gunshot wounds on 4/4/1960 after runnmg away. Eleven (11) unidentified colored boys died ofInfluenza between November 6 December 31,1918. RID I DUSTRIAL SCHOOL FOR BOYS COLORED o I'- R SENTENCE EXPII<ATlON No , lIoy. Prnenr /C 9 t' . / 1 Figure 57. Discharge ledger, now located in the State Archives, showing name and record of death for William McKinley in July 1915 (Florida School for Boys, Student Ledgers: Vol. 18). Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 98 I RECOMMENDATIOIXS FOR Fl:Tl:RE WORK To date, historical and field based research has been completed at the Boot Hill Cemetery. Research began in 20 II. Fieldwork consisted of' eight weeks of' survey, OPR, trenching, and soil analysis. This work has been f'ocused on remote sensing and some excavation. Tn total, a minimum of 50 grave shafts have been identified, although it is not known if this represents all burials or some aspect of the cemetery. Therefore, based on our findings we recommend the following actions in the next phase of investigation: I. Additional ORP evaluation in the areas adjacent of'Boot Hill Cemetery; 2. Archaeological test excavations in the areas marked by OPR anomalies, especially on the east side of the cemetery, to define the boundaries of the burial area and its spatial relationship with adjacent landscape features (roads, historical buildings, etc.); 3. Horizontal clearing through mechanical excavation of the primary burial area to identify the exact number and locations of individual grave sites; 4. Exhumation and skeletal autopsy including f'orensic pathological, anthropological, and bioarchaeological analysis of' individuals Crom the cemetery to determine cause of' death and identification for re-interment; 5. Additional archival research of historical docunlents, maps, and photographs; 6. Additional interviews from families, employees, and other key stakeholders associated with the school's history. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 99 BIBLIOGRAPHY Bowles WS. July 1972. Marianna, florida. Interview 2. In: LundriganNG. 1975. Deveif.pment (fthe Florida Schoolsji)r Male Yout/jid {)fenders. 1998-1969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. Boyle K. 2004. Arc cfJustice - A Saga cfRace, Civil Rights, and Murder in the Jazz Age. New York: Henry Holt and Company, LLC. Brown C. 1997. Ossian Bingley Hart: Florida's Loyalist Reconstruction Governor. Baton Rouge and London: Louisiana State University Press. Buchli V, Lucas G. 2001. Archaeologies cfthe Contemporary Past. London: Routledge. Carper NG. 1964. The Convict-Lease System in Florida, 1866-1923. Ph.D. dissertation, florida State University. Citizens of Jackson County Donating Lands and Money for Location of the New Reform School. 1898. Letters, W.D. Bloxham Papers. P.R. Yonge Library at the University of florida, Gainesville, florida. In: Noel Gordon Catper, The Convict Lease System in Florida 1866-1823. Ph.D. dissertation. Collins PH. 1991. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge. Consciousness. and the Politics (f Empmverment. New York: Routledge, Chapman and Hall. Conyers LB, Goodman D. 1997. Ground-Penetrating Radar: An introduction for Archaeologists. Altamira Press, Walnut Creek. Edwards C. 1969. Training Manual, Florida School Cor Boys. Ellis G, Wiseman B. 2012. Cola bottle dating, personal communication. Fairfax J. 19 July 1966. NAACP attorney working on florida Schools Civil Rights Cases, correspondence Leroy Clark, legal counsel Cor the Singleton case. Jacksonville, Florida: Johnson and Marshall, Legal Files. FDLE. May 14, 2009. florida Department of Law Enforcement, Office of Executive Investigations. Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys Marianna, florida. Investigative Smmnary. Case No. EI-73-8455. FDLE. January 29, 2010. Florida Department oCLaw EnCorcement, Office oCExecutive Investigations. Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys Abuse Investigation. Investigative Summary. Case No. EI-04-000S. florida. 1905. Acts and Resolutions Adopted by the Legislature of florida. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 100 Florida. 1965. Annual Financial and Statistical Report, 1964-1965. By Arthur G. Dozier. Division of Child Training Schools, Marianna, Fla.: Class in Printing, Boy's School. Florida. 1913. Appendix to the Biennial Report oCthe Board oCManagers oCthe Florida State Ref'orm School. By Dr. N.A. Baltzell, M.D. Legislature, House: House Journal. Florida. 1907. Appendix to the House Journal. Legislature, House. Florida. 1907. Belated Report of the Marianna Board of Managers. Legislature, House: House Journal. Florida. 1920. Biennial Report of the Florida Department of Education for the Two Years Ending 30 June 1920. Department of Education. Florida. 1923-1925. Biennial Report ofthe Florida Industrial School for Boys. By M.S. Knight. Industrial School f'or Boys, Marianna: Class in Printing, F.r.S. Florida. 1925-1927. Biennial Report ofthe Florida Industrial School. By W.L. Vananlandingham. Industrial School for Boys, Marianna: Class in Printing, F.1.S. Florida. 1928-1930. Biennial Report of the Florida Industrial School for Boys. By Millard Davidson. Industrial Schooll'or Boys, Marianna: Class in Printing, F.r.S. Florida. 1913. Biennial Report of the Florida State Reform School. Legislature, House: House Journal. Florida. 1865-1869. Biennial Report of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. State Department oCEducation: vol. 3. Florida. 1900-1902. Biennial Report ofthe State Superintendent of Public Instruction. State Department of Education: Tallahassee. Florida. Board of Commissioners of State Institutions. Minutes. Book E: 27 November 1914; 5 January 1915; 18 December 1916; 18 October 1918; 4 November 1918; 14 November, 16 November, and 28 November 1918; 16 January 1919; 6 February 1919; Book F: 8 November 1919; 30 September 1920; 16 August and 22 October 1921; Book G: 30 July 1923; Book I: 24 September 1926; Book J: 31 July 1928; Book K: 15 January 1931. Florida. 1907. Concurrent Resolution No.5. Legislature, House: House Journal. Florida. Confidential Files at the Marianna and Okeechobee School f'or Boys. Form letter and letters gleaned from general correspondence. Florida. 1909-1910. Eleventh Biennial Report of the Florida Commissioner of Agriculture. Department of Agriculture. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 101 Florida. 31 AU!,'1lst 1968. First Annual Report to the Legislature. By Oliver J. Keller, Jr., Director. Department of Health and Rehabilitation Services: Tallahassee: Division of Youth Services. Florida. 190 I. First Biennial Report orthe Florida State Relornl School. By Walter Rawls, State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Florida Documents Tallahassee: Tallahassee Book and Job Print. Florida. 1905. Governor Broward's Message to the Legislature. House Journal. Florida. 1907. Governor Broward's Message to the Legislature. House Journal Appendix. Florida. 1901. Governor Jennings' Message to the Legislature. House Journal. Florida. 1905. Joint Cotmnittee Report on Marianna Reform School. Joint Committee on Marianna: House Journal. Florida. 1918. Message from House of Representatives. Legislature: Extraordinary Session, House Journal. Florida. 1918. Message of Governor Sidney J. Catts on Conditions at the Marianna Industrial School. Extraordinary Session: House Journal. Florida. 1913. Message to Florida Legislature. By Park Trammell. House Journal. Florida. 1915. Minority Report. By John W. Davis, Chairman. Legislature, Joint Legislative Cotmnittee Report ofthe Joint Legislative Cotmnittee appointed to visit the Florida Industrial School lor Boys: Report on the Fire, House Journal. Florida. 1918. Report ofConmlittee of Physicians and Conditions at Industrial School for Boys. Legislature: Extraordinary Session, Senate Journal. Florida. 1903. Report of First Special Investigating Cotmnittee of Marianna Reform School. House Journal: Legislature House. Florida. 1911. Report of Joint Investigating Committee. Legislature, House: House J oumal. Florida. 1915. Report of Joint Legislative Committee Appointed to visit the Florida Industrial School for Boys, 1915. Legislature: House Journal. Florida. 1919. Report orthe Joint Legislative Committee Appointed to visit the Industrial School at Marianna, 1919. Legislature: House Journal. Florida. 1913. Report of Special Investigative Committee on the Marianna School, 1913. Legislature: Senate Journal. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 102 Florida. 1909. Report of Superintendent to the Reform School Board of Commissioners. By S. Belch, Legislature House: House Journal. Florida. 1911. Report on Joint Tnvestigative Committee Under House Concurrent Resolution No.5 , Relative to the State Relormatory at Marianna, Florida 1911. Legislative, Joint Conmlittee: Senate Journal. Florida. 1909. Report on Reform School. Legislature, Joint Legislative Investigating Cotmnittee: Senate Journal. Florida. 1969. Second Annual Report to the Legislature. By Oliver J. Keller, Jr., Director. Department of Health and Rehabilitation Services, Tallahassee: Division of Youth Services. Florida. 1923. Special Committee Inspecting the School, Report. By J .H. Harvell, Chairman, 1923. Legislature: House Journal. Florida. 190 I. State Comptroller's Message to the Legislature. By W.V. Knoll, Legislature, Senate: House Journal. Florida. 1901. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Report. By W.N. Sheats, State Department of Public Instruction: Tallahassee. Florida. 190 I. Superintendent Report oCFlorida State Relorm School 190 I. By Walter Rawls, Legislature, Senate: Senate Journal. Florida. 1911-1912. Twelfth Biennial Report of the Florida Commissioner of Agriculture. Department of Agriculture. Florida Tndustrial School lor Boys, Marianna. I March 1922. The Light, Marianna: Class in Printing. Florida School for Boys. Administrative Records, 1923-2010. Florida State Archives, 0006301.S 2247. Florida School lor Boys. 1958. Learning to live at the Florida School lor Boys at Marianna. Marianna: Division of Child Training Schools. Florida School for Boys. Newspaper Clippings, 1956-1958. Florida State Archives, 0006301.S 2248. Florida School lor Boys. Payroll Ledgers, 1923-1961. Florida State Archives, 000630/.S 2246. Florida School for Boys. Photographs, ca. 1920s-2010. Florida State Archives, 0006301.S 2241. Florida School for Boys. Student Ledgers, 1915-2011 (Vol. 1-8, 18-22,31), Florida State Archives, 0006301.S 2256. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 103 Florida Statutes. 1957. 380-965. Laws of Florida. 1897. Chapter 4565; 1905 Chapter 5388; 1907 Chapter 5721; 1913 Chapter 6529; 1925 Chapter 10203; 1927 Chapter 11808; 1957 Chapter 57-317; 1963 Chapter 63-368; 1967 Chapter 67-295; 1968 Chapter 68-22; 1973 Chapter 39. Foucault M. 1980. Pmvel'lKnowledge: Selected IntervieH's and Other Writings 1972-1977. New York: Pantheon. Hatton R W. Interviews, 24 September 1971, 20 April 1973. Retired Director of the Florida Industrial School, Marianna, Florida. In: Lundrigan NG. 1975. Devel"pment (fthe Florida Schoolsf;'r Male Youtffiil C)fenders, 1998-1969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. Holmes County Advertiser. 28 November 1914. A Thief as a Reformer. Bonifay, Florida. Hunt C. 2012. Florida State Hospital: A preliminary cemetery demographic study. USF Student paper. Jackson AT. 2011. Shattering Slave Life Portrayals: Uncovering Subjugated Knowledge in U.S. Plantation Sites in South Carolina and Florida. Am Anthropoll13, 3:448-62. Keller, OJ. Interview, June 1971. Director of Florida Division of Youth Services, Tallahassee, Florida. In: Lundrigan NG. 1975. Deve/t,pment (fthe Florida Schools fiJI' Male Youtlful CJfenders. 1998-1969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. Litwack L. 1998. Trouble in Mind: Black Southerners in the Age ffJim Crow. New York: Random House. Lundrigan NG. 1975. Deve/t,pment (fthe Florida Schoolsf;'r Male Youtlfit! C)fenders, 19981969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. Montgomery B. September 13,2009. Mother agonizes over beating at Florida School for Boys that she says killed her son. Tampa Bay Times. Orser CE. 1998. The Challenge orRace to American Historical Archaeology. Am Anthropol 3:661-668. Orser CE. 2004. Race and Practice in Archaeological Interpretation. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. Orser CE. 2007. The Archaeology (fRace and Racialization in Historic America. The American Experience in Archaeological Perspective Series. Gainesville: University Press or Florida. Powell Jc. 1891. The American Siberia. Chicago: J.J. Smith and Co. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 104 Pratt KF. 1949. The Develcpment cfthe Florida Prison System. Master's thesis: Florida State University. Robin FE. 1950. R'jimn School: A Study in Institutional Sociology. Ph.D. dissertation: Columbia University. Robinson E. Interview, 24 October 1973. Panama City, Florida. In: Lundrigan NG. 1975. Develcpment cfthe Florida Schoolsfor Male Yout/ful (,fenders, 1998-1969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. Rhyne JS. 1968. Our Yesterday ·s. Marianna, Florida, Jackson County: Floridian Press. ST PETERSBURG TIMES. Monday, August 16, 1976. Florida State Hospital cemetery: efficient, anonymous. United Press International. Stubbs VV. Interview, 16 July 1972. Marianna, Florida. In: Lundrigan NG. 1975. Deveif,pment (fthe Florida Schoolsji)r Male Yout/jid {Jfenders, 1998-1969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. U.S. v. Kent. 1966.383 U.S. 541 and 555. U.S. v. William H. Bell. 1912. 5209 Rov. Statutes oI'U.S., "B" Criminal Final Records Book. Pensacola: U.S. District Court, Northern District ol'Florida. p 192-197. U.S. v. Willie Carl Singleton, a minor, by Neva Singleton, his mother, et al. v. Board of Cotmnissioners of State Institutions, et al. 31 August 1966. Civil Act No. 963. Tallahassee: U.S. District Court files for the Northern District of Florida. Walters DR. Interview, 23 August 1974. Former school superintendent and administrative assistant to Arthur Dozier. Marianna, Florida. In: Lundrigan NG. 1975. Develcpment cfthe Florida Schools for Male Youtljitl {Jjenders, 1998-1969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. Williams LE. Interview, 2 November 1973. Superintendent or the Dozier Boys' School, Marianna, Florida. In: Lundrigan NG. 1975. DevelDpment (fthe Florida Schoolsji)r Male Youtljitl (jjenders, 1998-1969. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University. Williamson J. 1984. The Crucible cfRace: Black and White Relations in the American South since Emancipation. New York: Oxford University Press. Wilkie LA. 2000. Creating Freedom: Material Culture and Aji'ican American Identity at Oakley Plantation, Louisiana, 1840-1950. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. Wilkie LA. 2001. Black Sharecroppers and White Frat Boys. In: Archaeologies cfthe Contemporary Past. Buchili V, Lucas G, editors. London: Routledge p 108-118. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery lIas Wilkerson I. 2010. The Warmth cfOther Suns-The Epic Story cfAmerica 's Great Migration. New York: Random House. Woodward CV. 1951. Origins (fthe New South, 1877-1913. Baton Rouge: Louisiana Slale University Press. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 106 ApPENDIXES lnterim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 1107 To: Erin Kimmerle, Ph.D. University of Sonth Florida From: Lanra Hair, M.D. and Leszek Chrostowski, M.D.; Associated Medical Examiners, District 13 Medical Examiner Department, Tampa, Florida Date: October 18, 2012 Re: Expert Opinion on Medical Review of Deaths at the Former Arthnr Dozier School for Boys Historical investigations that seek to understand past medical and pathological diagnoses are always a challenge due to the evolution of forensic and diagnostic medicine in recent years. The field of forensic pathology is relatively young, but combined with modern death investigations, we offer the justice system methods to try to answer questions that could not be found it the past. We were asked to provide an expert opinion on several child deaths that occurred between 19521966. The records that exist were reviewed, and our opinions are summarized below: 1. Billey Jackson was a 13 year old African American boy, who died on 10-7-1952 in Jackson Hospital, 10 days after admission from FIS. According to his death certificate, his cause of death was pyelonephritis. Two witnesses (Walthour and Williams) stated that about two weeks prior to his death, Billey Jackson was severely beaten following an attempt to escape from the school; allegedly, the beating included his abdomen, which then swelled, and prompted his hospital admission. After his death an autopsy examination was performed by the school physician, Dr. Whitaker; however, no written record ofthe examination can be found. Pyelonephritis is a form of ascending urinary tract infection, which may af'lect one or both kidneys. It is usually associated with urine retention, and can indeed be fatal. The obstruction of flow initiating the pathology may result from a congenital condition, e.g. inadequate valve mechanism at the junction of the ureters and the bladder, or obstruction of the ureter(s) due to urolithiasis, i.e. kidney stones, or trauma. Nowadays the cause of death is defined as "injury or disease initiating the chain of events resulting in death", Having no record orthe autopsy, we are unable to conclude the primary cause (or combination of causes) of Jackson's ailment, hence his cause of death remains unknown. The manner of his death is undeternlined, since a natural death would be exclusively due to natural disease, and in his case it is uncertain whether there was a contributing traumatic factor. Review of the original autopsy report would be most helpful to clarify the above, 2. Robert Jerald Hewett was a 16 year old white boy who entered FIS on 3/22/1960. The FIS ledgers confirm that Hewett was admitted and then on March 25 was temporarily released to the Jackson Hospital. He returned to FIS the following day on March 26 and then on April 2, he ran away. The ledger and death certificate indicate he died two days Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 1108 later on April 4. All of this infomlation comes from the daily ledger, as the discharge ledgers for this time are not public rccord. Hewctt's death certificatc states thc manner of death is "unknown" and the cause of death is "gunshot wounds in chest inflicted by person or persons unknown". There was no autopsy performed. No other inlomlation including coroner or police incident reports could be located. Hewett's death certificate is incorrect by today's standards: once a person dies due to gunshot wound(s) inflicted by another person, his manner of death is classified as homicide, i.e. "death from hands of other person, regardless of intent". Such classifications do not indicate "murder", "manslaughter" or other variations, which are or interest to the judicial system rather than medical examiner. Examination or R.I. Hewett's remains is reconmlended because if there was skeletal trauma, it would be possible to learn about the projectile trajectory, shedding a light on possible circumstances of the incident. 3. Michael Smelley was a 17 year old white boy who died 3/15/1966. His death certificate indicates he died of "carcinoma of the spine and lungs" about a year after his incarceration at the school. Witnesses allege he was beaten severely following an attempted escape and that itmnediately afterwards he was unable to walk. Several days later he was admitted to the hospital. Michael had a history of "carcinoma" and prior to entering FTS in 1965 had a tumor removed Crom his spine. Tn Montgomery's 2009 investigation, he posed the question as to " ... whether a blow or multiple blows to a spinal tumor could aggravate the tumor or cause paralysis or even accelerate the spread of the cancer and lead to early death?" Medical records and autopsy indicate that Michael had a sarcoma around his spinal cord with later metastases to the lung. Since no evidence or Fractures is noted in his hospital records during surgery, the "blow or blows" most likely did not alTect the tumor. His inability to walk following the blows might be related to the alleged beating but nothing is stated of his walking ability before the alleged beating. His inability to walk could be a result of the tumor. After his first surgery, Michael did have the ability to walk with a cane. The acceleration orthe spread or a neoplasm by beating in not likely and very speculative. The hospital records available from the University of Florida do not indicate trauma. Our conclusion is that Smelley died a natural death, due to malignant neoplasm. This of course does not exclude a possibility of being beaten; however, if a beating occurred, it cannot be linked with this person's cause of death. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 109 October 15, 2012 Attention: Subject: Erin H. Kitmnerle, Ph.D. Associate Prof'essor of' Anthropology University of'South Florida 4202 E. Fowler Ave., SOC 107 Tampa, Florida 33620-8100 USA Fire Origin and Canse Investigation The Florida Tndustrial School lor Boys 4111 County Road 167 Marianna, Florida 32448 Dear Professor Erin Kimmerle, City of'Tampa Fire Tnvestigator Christopher M. Stone and retired City of'Tampa Supervisor of' Fire Investigation Al Alcala are pleased to submit this summary regarding our fire scene findings at the above-referenced location which was conducted on Monday, October 1,2012. The purpose of the investigation was to render a professional opinion as to the origin and cause of the fire that reportedly damaged the above referenced florida Industrial School for Boys building on Wednesday, November 18,1914 and to list any and/or all contributing f'actors. The site assessment included an examination of'all provided historical documentation of'relevant infornlation and findings. Based on our investigation of all available resources obtained of the fire damage at the loss site, as presented within the remainder of this report, our conclusions arc summarized as follows: • No evidence of an exterior fire was discovered during the document reviews of the fire scene inspection conducted in 1914. • Based on a known account From one orthe residing stalT members, 0.0. Marston, the fire appeared to have originated near the main stairwell on the east side orthe first /loor of' the building, because he had alerted and directed the boys on the second floor to the stairway located on the western end of the building. • The area of' origin was deternlined to be on the first /loor level at/or near the eastern portion of'the building, which consisted orthe assembly room, washrooms, and offices. • After analyzing the collected and available data using the principles of the scientific method, several hypotheses were developed. o Recognize the need. We could all come to a conclusion that a fire occurred on November 18, 1914. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 110 o Define the Problem. Having determined that a problem existed, a proper origin and cause investigation was not conducted in 1914. Through a combination of other data collection methods, such as the review of several previously conducted investigations orthe incident, the interviews or witnesses the morning aller the fire, and/or other knowledgeable persons involved, several competent ignition sources existed within the building. o Collect Data. Not all known facts about the incident were collected. The building materials, the dimensions ofthe building, configuration of the building, room by room , floor by 1100r, ruel loads such as all combustible materials (rurniture, rugs, clothing, chemicals, etc.) present within the building, ventilation and constructed openings such as windows, doors, ceiling heights, and stairwells were not properly documented. We were unable to identify any fuels in the area of origin, identify potential ignition sources in the area of origin, or identify the first fuel ignited. o Analyze the Data. Based on the limited data gathered during the investigation review process, several hypotheses were considered based on the limited information gathered. o Develop a Hypothesis (Inductive Reasoning). The limited empirical data that was collected and considered during this investigation, revealed several lit kerosene lamps used lor lighting placed throughout the staircases and walls orthe building, oil based paints and rags used in the painting process, a wood burning stove used for heating, and arson were all possible competent ignition sources and contributing factors to the fire. o Test the Hypothesis (deductive Reasoning). Based on the limited information gathered and reviewed, the loll owing hypotheses were considered: " The wood burning stove used for heating could not be eliminated as a possible source of ignition. According to the 1914 report, this wood burning stove was brought into the building to heat the building on a cold night. This wood burning stove must have proper ventilation routed to the exterior oCthe building, as to the sarety concern or carbon monoxide poisoning caused Irom the burning wood within the stove. This wood burning stove was supported with three legs and two bricks and was functioning properly when staff members went to bed. The location of this wood burning stove still remains unknown; however, the possibility of the floor being ignited horizontally by the wood burning stove is unlikely. The ventilation pipes Irom the wood burning stove irrouted to the exterior or the building through a window opening or wall opening would be a likely competent source of ignition if the ventilation pipes had perforations which would allow the flames and heated gasses to escape and make direct contact with the building's combustible materials and eventually ignite them vertically. A fire that burns vertically spreads rapidly and a fire that burns horizontally spreads slower. Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 111 j;- If spontaneous combustion is believed to be the cause of this fire it is necessary to determine if this is possible. firstly, it should be determined whether or not the materials involved in the fire are susceptible to spontaneous combustion. This requires investigation orthe material itself" and the conditions present at the time of the fire. The only information provided is that oily greasy rags had been used during the painting process and placed at/or ncar a locker stored with dynamite underneath the stairwell. The configuration ofthe reacting mass is also important in determining whether sufficient heat could build up to the point of" ignition. A loosely placed or thrown pile will undergo spontaneous ignition. If" a spontaneous combustion fire would have occurred at/or near the stored dynamite locker located underneath the stairwell, this would have possibly resulted in an explosion causing severe damage to the stairwell and building. According to eyewitness accounts, no explosion was mentioned. j;- Kerosene oil lamps were used lor lighting and placed throughout the staircases and walls of the building. The exact manufacture of the oil lamps, the total number of oil lamps, location, and/or mounting of the oil lamps is unknown. Kerosene oil lamps require constant cleaning, maintenance, and a watchful eye to insure proper operation. If the accumulation of"residue and debris builds up on the lamp and glass suriaces, the lamp will not operate properly. Over filling the reservoir with kerosene oil could result in the oil igniting and causing the oil to drip onto other surfaces eventually igniting other combustible materials in the itmnediate area. The most common cause of kerosene oil lamp fires is that of an accidental nature, being knocked over causing the ignited liquid to spill resulting in rapid fire spread. The use of" contaminated kerosene oils could have also posed a potently serious fire hazard. The daily operation and use of the oil lamps is unknown, therefore the possibility of the kerosene oil lamp as being a potential fire cause cannot be ruled out. j;- Arson was also believed to be a possible cause of the fire which was considered. The Pensacola Journal reported that prior attempts to burn down the dormatory building had been made several months earlier. further, a Mr. George Coldwell, of Laurel Hill, florida, attempted to have his son released from the school several days prior to the fire with negative results. Mr. Coldwell allegedly made verbal threats to blow up the building if his son was not released. Coldwell was allegedly seen on the school grounds earlier the day of"the fire. Coldwell was later exonerated by a grand jury and his son who ran away Irom the school belore the fire was released several days after the fire. Although Coldwell was exonerated arson cannot be ruled out as a possible cause of the fire. The evidence against Mr. Coldwell appears to have been circumstantial, which today can be used during prosecution in trial. The usc of a handheld open flame device (lighter, matches, candle) used to ignite common combustibles and Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery 1112 lor an accelerant (ignitable liquid) is a possible cause of the fire and therefore cannot be ruled out as a potential cause ofthe fire. Investigation Methods: • • The investigation methodes) and/or Procedures utilized during the course of this limited investigation were conducted in accordance with NfPA 921, Guide lor Fire and Explosion Investigations 20 II, and NfPA 1033, Standard lor Prol"essional Qualii'ications lor fire Investigator 2009. The systematic approach used in this limited investigation was that of the scientific method as prescribed in NfP A 921, Chapter 4 Basic Methodology, and NFPA 1033, A.4.1.2. The data collected was systematically examined, the collected data analyzed, possible hypotheses were considered based on the limited amount of data collected. Documents Reviewed: As part 01" our assessment ol"the reported damage at the Industrial School lor Boys, we reviewed the following documents: th • The 6 Legislative Committee since 1901 report of 1913 • Board 01" Managers Report (W.H. Milton) • Edwards Report of 1969 • Florida Legislative Committee • Jackson County Coroner (Conducted Coroner's Jury) Conclusion: Based on the limited amount 01" in lormation gathered regarding the i'ire at the Industrial School lor Boys, a true definitive cause ol"the i'ire could not be reached. We were unable to state specifically which of these competent ignition sources ignited the unknown first fuel. The determination of the cause of the fire requires identification of those circumstances and factors that were necessary for the fire to have occurred. Those circumstances and factors include, but are not limited to, the device or equipment involved in the ignition, the presence 01" a competent ignition source, the type and lorm orthe material i'irst ignited, and the circumstances or human actions that allowed the factors to come together to allow the fire to occur. The cause of this fire cannot be proven to an acceptable level of certainty, therefore, should be classified as undetermined until new information becomes available. Limits ol"the Study Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 113 This report was prepared for the exclusive use of Professor Erin H. Kimmerle, Ph. D. and was not intended for any other purpose. This report represents the forensic observations and conclusions resulting from information that was provided to us as well as several reported rire scene rindings. The opinions or this report are based upon rire science and limited documented observations made during the course or this study and were developed to a reasonable degree of investigative certainty. Please note that we reserve the right to revise the documented findings, conmlents, and/or conclusions above as conditions change or additional information becomes available. This report was prepared for Erin H. Kimmerle Ph. D. and we disavow any liability lor use by others. We appreciate this opportunity to have assisted you with this investigation. Please contact us if you have any questions or need additional infomlation. Sincerely, Christopher M. Stone City of Tampa Fire Investigator Interim Report on Boot Hill Cemetery I 114 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA October 10, 2012 Dr. Erin Kitmnerle Department or Anthropology USF 4202 E. Fowler Ave. Tampa, FL 33620 Dear Erin: I have been at work processing the cedar cores as best as I can. I am able to tell you a couple of things, but generally I don't have good news for you. What we have been calling "cedars" are members orthe genus Juniperus. They are either Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus virginiana) or Southern Red Cedar (Juniperus silicicola). To be sure, we would need information from other tree structures that weren't available when I was there, like male and female cones. But it doesn't matter much, as the two species have very similar ring structures. In general, the eastern Juniperus are notoriously difficult to date, and these trees share that quality. There are two problems with dating the tree cores. The first is heart rot within the trees. Because of the heart rot, the samples do not go back as far as we would like. Many of my cores are less than hal r as long as they would be in the absence or rot. Because ring widths vary throughout time (randomly From year to year, and systematically declining in width with age), it isn't possible to estimate ages from either the tree ring record itself or by combining it with the measurements of the trees that I made while there The second major issue T failed to reconcile-false rings. Cedars make a lot orthem. These aren't an indicator orannual growth, and distinguishing them Crom true rings in this species is very difficult, increasing error. It's also possible that these cedars are missing rings as well. I also noticed that the rings can vary much more than usual between the two samples taken per tree, which makes it difficult or impossible to crossdate the trees given such a small wood sample. Consequently, I can't give you an estimate of cedar ages. The only thing I can say is this: the trees in the cemetery, along the fence (AWC2 and AWC3), MAY BE younger than AWC4, A WC5, and StumpD. A WC6 is likely closer in age to AWC2 and 3 than the other trees in the cemetery. This is based almost solely on tree diameter, and T cannot say this with very much certainty. It may be possible to get some rough ages of the cedars with a fair amount more work. At this point, my only suggestion would be to take thick cross sections orthe trees using a -.-~==-~ . :......-~ -- . - chain saw. The sections would need to be a bit thicker than traditional cross-sections (which are roughly I") in case the pockets of rot cause them to break apart. Because this requires cutting down the tree and may still not result in solid ages, 1 can't necessarily reconmlend this, but it could work because it would make it easier to distinguish false from true rings and would be more likely to give us a more complete record unless the entire center oCthe tree is rotted. Most people who work with tree rings avoid working with cedars, ror good reason. Tr you want to pursue this using cross-sections, Gordon can reconmlend some people to youpeople who would probably be the best possible bet for getting meaningful results. If you do continue with dating these trees, I maybe able to help, if time and lab space aren't too constricting. As lar as the other cores, like the pecans and oak-They are a dilTerent type or wood that 1 am presently unable to spend the time learning to understand and cross date, and those samples arc also much shorter than they should be. In this case, these trees are hardwoods, and they usually require cross sections (and a ton of elbow grease) for sampling as well. Please let me know if you have any questions or if 1 may be of help in the future. Thank you lor bringing me on board. Treally enjoyed meeting and working with you and your team, and I'm happy to have been a part of the project. Sincerely yours, Jamie Gluvna Ph.D. student Gordon A. fox, Ph.D. Associate Professor