Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

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Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby elfismiles » Wed Dec 12, 2012 9:35 am

White House Boys Scandal - NOT WH Pageboys
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=31800

Image
The White House Boys use images like this one to tell the brutal story of the Dozier School on their website thewhitehouseboysonline.com. (Photo: Florida State University)


Dozier School: Report reveals 19 unmarked graves found at Florida boys' reform ... (VIDEO)
Daily Mail - ‎22 hours ago‎
Following the claims, researchers at the University of South Florida in Tampa used ground-penetrating radar and soil samples and now believe there are many more bodies buried there than previously reported. The largest gravesite is on the northside of the ...
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... ds-newsxml

Graves Found at Florida State Reform School
Gather.com - ‎Dec 10, 2012‎
Nineteen previously undocumented graves were found on the land surrounding the The Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, which was also known as the Florida State Reform School. Closed in 2011 for budgetary reasons, the school had been the ...
http://news.gather.com/viewArticle.acti ... 4981808312

Graves Found At Reform School: 50 Unmarked Graves, 98 Deaths At The Dozier ...
iScienceTimes.com - ‎17 hours ago‎
(Photo: Florida State University). University of South Florida anthropologists have unearthed a total of 50 unmarked graves at The Dozier School for Boys in Mariana, Fla. Graves found at the reform school date back as far as 1914. In their official report, USF anthropologists stated that "records indicate that 45 individuals were buried on the school grounds between the years 1914-1952, 31 bodies were shipped to other locations for burial, and 22 cases do not have recorded burial locations." Like Us on Facebook ...
http://www.isciencetimes.com/articles/4 ... ked-98.htm
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Aug 31, 2013 11:25 am

Grave Excavation to Begin at Former Reform School
By Associated Press Aug. 31, 2013Add a Comment


(MARIANNA, Fla.) — University of South Florida researchers will begin exhuming dozens of graves Saturday at a former reform school in hopes of identifying the buried boys and learning how they died.

The work is set to begin at 9 a.m. EDT. Researchers will remove dirt with trowels and by hand to find the remains, which are believed to be 19 inches to 3-plus feet under the surface.

“In these historic cases, it’s really about having an accurate record and finding out what happened and knowing the truth about what happened,” said Erin Kimmerle, a USF anthropologist who is leading the excavation.

Former inmates at the reform school from the 1950s and 1960s have detailed horrific beatings that took place in a small, white concrete block building at the facility. A group of survivors call themselves the “White House Boys” and five years ago called for an investigation into the graves. In 2010, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement ended an investigation and said it could not substantiate or refute claims that boys died at the hands of staff.

USF later began its own research and discovered even more graves than the state department had identified. USF has worked for months to secure a permit to exhume the remains, finally receiving permission from Gov. Rick Scott and the state Cabinet after being rejected by Secretary of State Ken Detzner, who reports to Scott.

Robert Straley, a spokesman for the White House Boys, said the school segregated white and black inmates and that the remains are located where black inmates were held. He suspects there is another white cemetery that hasn’t been discovered.

“I think that there are at least 100 more bodies up there,” he said. “At some point they are going to find more bodies, I’m dead certain of that. There has to be a white graveyard on the white side.”

Among those that have pushed to allow USF to conduct the research are Republican Attorney General Pam Bondi and Democratic U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson.

“My goal all along has been to help bring closure to the families who lost loved ones at Dozier. I feel great relief that the work to identify human remains is now underway,” Bondi said through a spokeswoman.

USF will work at the site until Tuesday and hopes to unearth the remains of two to four boys before resuming the excavation at a later date, Kimmerle said. The initial work will ensure that the process works smoothly before researchers return to the site.

DNA obtained at the site will be sent to the University of North Texas Center for Human Identification for analysis. The hope is that it can be matched to relatives. Ten families have contacted researchers in hopes of identifying relatives that might be buried at Dozier.

If matches are found, remains will be returned to the families.

“They want to bury them in family plots and next to the boys’ mothers and things like that,” Kimmerle said. “Anyone whose remains are unidentified will be re-interned here at Boot Hill.”

Any remains that are reinterned will have a grave marker and their DNA will be recorded in case anyone other families seek to identify remains.

“Hopefully a lot of questions will soon be answered once the scientists finish unearthing these unmarked graves in ‘Boot Hill Cemetery,’ ” Nelson spokesman Dan McLaughlin wrote in an email.

Read more: http://nation.time.com/2013/08/31/grave ... z2dYoeL3hB
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby elfismiles » Fri Jan 31, 2014 5:43 pm

January 30, 2014
Fifty-five Bodies, and Zero Trials, at the Florida School for Boys
Posted by Tim Wu
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/n ... chool.html
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby divideandconquer » Fri Jan 31, 2014 7:04 pm

Yet Florida’s prosecutors have yet to file a single criminal charge, or even open a criminal investigation. To pass over crimes of this magnitude without investigation seems the very definition of injustice.


There is no doubt in my mind that these types of crimes almost always include powerful and wealthy people and that is why they are so reluctant to investigate further. And the reason these crimes take so long to surface is because the people involved are very careful to select victims who they know have no one to stand up for them, mostly poor kids from broken homes. For instance, my brother-in-law and his brother attended Jerry Sandusky's football camp for years and he said he was absolutely shocked when he heard what was going on, and that's because he came from a strong middle-class family who would raise holy hell if anything happened to either boy.

Someone else commenting on one of the articles said it better than I did:

This is happening to our innocent children worldwide. The very children that need care the most are used and abused. This problem runs deep and from the highest levels.
'I see clearly that man in this world deceives himself by admiring and esteeming things which are not, and neither sees nor esteems the things which are.' — St. Catherine of Genoa
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby Searcher08 » Fri Jan 31, 2014 7:42 pm

elfismiles » Fri Jan 31, 2014 9:43 pm wrote:January 30, 2014
Fifty-five Bodies, and Zero Trials, at the Florida School for Boys
Posted by Tim Wu
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/n ... chool.html


Jesus, it sounds like a multi-generational version of Haute delaGaranne in Jersey :(
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Oct 10, 2014 11:29 am

Fla. boys school mystery: Wood-filled casket
Exhumation part of probe into deaths, disappearances at infamous Dozier School

Author: By Eliott C. McLaughlin CNN
Published On: Oct 09 2014 11:59:37 AM EDT Updated On: Oct 09 2014 02:46:21 PM EDT

Florida graves mystery

After their investigation at a former Florida boys school led them to a grave in Philadelphia, anthropologist Erin Kimmerle and Cpl. Tom McAndrew of the Pennsylvania State Police unearth a casket filled with wood. It was supposed to contain the remains of Thomas Curry. According to state and school records, nearly 100 children died while at the Dozier School for Boys, which closed in 2011.

For almost 90 years, the casket lay beneath the earth, Thomas Curry's family believing the teen who died too young rested in peace there, in an unmarked plot with his great-grandparents.

Curry was a charge of Marianna, Florida's Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys, a now infamous juvenile detention facility that closed in 2011 for budgetary reasons, capping a chilling, 111-year legacy of brutality.

From 1900 to 1952, according to a court document, 100 boys died there, but only about half were buried on the reform institution's grounds. Others were shipped home to their families.


Curry, 17, became part of that tally in 1925 when he died "under suspicious circumstances while escaping Dozier twenty-nine days after arriving," says the court order permitting his exhumation this week.

The coroner at the time ruled Curry's manner of death was unknown. The ledger entry at the Dozier school said he was "killed on RR Bridge Chattahoochee, Fla." Another document at Old Cathedral Cemetery in Philadelphia says he was "killed by train." No one from Dozier ever reported his death to the state.

He was returned in a casket to his family, who, in turn, buried him in Philadelphia. Or so the family thought.

It wasn't until a state investigation beginning in 2008 that Curry's death certificate was found at Dozier. It said he died of a crushed skull from an "unknown cause."

And it wasn't until Tuesday, when University of South Florida anthropologists who have been working to unearth and identify remains on the former campus visited Philadelphia with Pennsylvania authorities, that the family learned Curry wasn't in the casket -- no bones, no clothing, no sign of him at all.

"Wood. Layers of pieces of wood," said anthropologist Erin Kimmerle, explaining what she and her team found in the casket. "It was completely filled with wooden planks."

At first, the team thought they had the wrong grave, but then they found Curry's great-grandparents beneath the wood-filled casket.

'Decades of efforts to deceive'

Kimmerle was still incredulous Wednesday, as was Cpl. Tom McAndrew of the Pennsylvania State Police, who along with Philadelphia Assistant District Attorney Brendan O'Malley, was instrumental in clearing the path for Kimmerle's team to exhume Curry's remains, she said,

"It was a little bit of a shock. It was certainly anticlimactic," McAndrew said. "Something was shipped up from Florida, and it was buried, and someone believed it was Thomas Curry."

Does he think, as a law enforcement officer, that the finding is indicative of school officials' intent to deceive Curry's family nine decades ago?

"Absolutely," he said, but it's not surprising when you consider that the investigation into the Dozier school has uncovered "decades and decades of efforts to deceive, coverups, and not just by one but by many people."

McAndrew has been in contact with two of Curry's distant cousins, and while they weren't familiar with Curry or his death before Kimmerle's team began investigating, they've done what they could to advance the investigation, the police corporal said.

They've provided names from their family tree and handwritten notes from their mother. One of the cousins, Eileen Witmier, who is 61 and is the granddaughter of Curry's mom's sister, provided DNA to identify Curry -- had he been found.

"Their interest lies in justice being served," McAndrew said of the cousins.

Asked where his own interest lies, McAndrew gave a similar answer, but also noted that Kimmerle has been an invaluable ally to law enforcement.

Quid pro quo among professionals

The ex-chief anthropologist for the U.N. International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Kimmerle has conducted "isotope testing" in her lab to help McAndrew with homicide cases in Pennsylvania.

For one particularly high-profile case -- a pregnant teen found dismembered in suitcases in 1976 -- Kimmerle's team analyzed the woman's hair and teeth. Via isotope testing, Kimmerle was able to determine where the woman lived based on the water she consumed while alive.

Though police have yet to solve the case, they now know she was born in Europe and immigrated to the Southeastern United States at age 12, McAndrew said.

"When she turned to me for assistance, obviously I would've done anything for her," McAndrew said of Kimmerle.

Kimmerle had hoped, of course, that Curry's remains would unravel some of the mystery surrounding his death.

"We went into it trying to answer questions," she said. "What we have is more questions than answers."

But the investigation continues. Now armed with Witmier's DNA, Kimmerle's team can return to Marianna, about 65 miles west of Tallahassee, and attempt to match the sample to one of the dozens of bodies that have already been dug up on the 1,400-acre former campus.

Though many of the boys died so long ago, it's important to find their family members, Kimmerle believes, if only because of the uncertainties surrounding their deaths and the controversy enveloping the supposed school where they died.

A dubious legacy

That bodies lay there was never a secret -- 31 rusty, white crosses marked the resting places of victims who died from a dormitory fire, influenza, pneumonia and other causes -- but Kimmerle's team has found a total of 55 bodies there so far.

Her team also has found records indicating that 22 boys who died at the school are unaccounted for. Already, Kimmerle and her colleagues have identified three sets of remains. One of those bodies was George Owen Smith, whose sister Ovell Krell, 85, told CNN in August she was elated that the seven-decade mystery surrounding her brother's death was finally solved.

Though ex-students provided detailed accounts of vicious beatings, sexual abuse and disappearances, guards and administrators who are still alive have denied the beatings occurred.

The state investigation in 2008 and 2009 said there was insufficient evidence of abuse at Dozier, but dozens of men, many of them now senior citizens, have come forward with stories. A support group for ex-students, dubbed The White House Boys, takes its moniker from the structure where boys say they were beaten with a leather strap attached to a wooden handle.

They were whipped until their underwear was embedded in their buttocks, The White House Boys say. Some were beaten unconscious. Crying or screaming out would earn you extra lashes, they say.

So while this week's exhumation didn't answer any of the myriad questions surrounding Dozier and its missing and dead boys, it was still an important part of the ongoing investigation, researchers and police said.

"It definitely had to be done," McAndrew said. "We had to at least open the grave if this investigation down in Florida is going to be resolved."
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby RocketMan » Fri Feb 06, 2015 5:35 pm

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/0 ... mg00000021

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — As the bodies exhumed from dozens of old graves at a shuttered Florida reform school continue to yield grudging answers to stubborn mysteries, researchers investigating the cases this week released a report on what they know so far.

There was the 6-year-old boy who ended up dead after being sent to work as a house boy. And another boy who escaped but was later found shot to death with a blanket pulled over his body and a shotgun across his legs. Then there was the "rape dungeon" where boys were taken and abused.

What the researchers have learned about decades of horrific acts carried out at the now closed Arthur G. Dozier School in Marianna is outlined in a report released by the University of South Florida as researchers continue grappling with the mystery of the graves and deaths there.


University anthropologists have found the remains of 51 people buried at the school during a dig that also uncovered garbage, syringes, drug bottles and a dog encased in an old water cooler buried in the cemetery.

They are not only trying to identify who was buried there, but the stories behind how they and others died at the school.

Beyond studying remains, researchers are looking through the school and state records, newspaper archives and interviewing boys' families, former inmates and former school employees to provide a history of the dead.

"Maybe I've been doing this too long, but I'm not surprised at what horrible things people do to one another," said USF anthropologist Erin Kimmerle, the team leader who has researched other mass graves. "It's just really sad the way people treat one another, which may be in part what's captured the public's attention on this — just the sense that it's not right."

The report, prepared for the Florida Cabinet, identifies two more people buried in graves, in addition to three who were identified previously. One was Bennett Evans, an employee who died in a 1914 dorm fire. While there wasn't a DNA match, remains found are consistent with his age and cause of death. The other was Sam Morgan, who was brought to the school in 1915 at age 18 and later wound up dead in a case that still has unanswered questions. Morgan was identified through a DNA match with his relatives.

To date, the remains of four people have been identified through DNA matches.

It's not an easy project. The school underreported deaths; didn't provide death certificates, names or details in many cases, particularly involving black boys; and simply reported some boys who disappeared as no longer at the school. And many in the Panhandle community don't want to talk about the school's dark past.

Several of the boys were killed after escape attempts, including Robert Hewitt, whose family lived a few miles from the school. He was hiding in his family's house and men from the school came looking for him several times after the 1960 escape, according to relatives. The family came home one day to find his covered body lying in a bed. He had a shotgun wound and his father's shotgun was lying across his legs.

There's also the story of 6-year-old George Grissam, who the school sent out to work as a house boy in 1918. He was delivered back to the school unconscious and later died. George's 8-year-old brother Ernest also disappeared from school records, which simply described him as "not here."

Other boys died after severe beatings, being smashed in the head or other injuries. Former inmates and employees interviewed also told researchers about a "rape dungeon" where boys, some younger than 12, were sexually assaulted.

While many of the cases are nearly a century old, some of the dead have surviving brothers, sisters and other relatives still seeking answers.

"To some of this is history, but for many of the people who are involved it's actually their reality every day," Kimmerle said. "They're really committed and moved by this because it's their direct family."
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby Iamwhomiam » Tue Jan 26, 2016 3:53 am

Archaeologists Finally Know What Happened at This Brutal Reform School
The Florida School for Boys did anything but rehabilitate its students

By Erin Blakemore
smithsonian.com

January 25, 2016 1:16PM

Many of the human remains found at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys, Florida’s first juvenile detention center for boys, were buried over a century ago. But questions about their identities—and what exactly happened at this notorious school—have remained alive throughout the center’s brutal history. Who is buried in the school’s many graves, and how did they die?

Now, thanks to a new report by archaeologists and forensic anthropologists from the University of South Florida, some answers have finally emerged. NPR’s Laura Wagner writes that an investigation of grave sites at the Marianna, Florida institution, which only closed in 2011, has revealed at least 55 on-site graves and identified 14 sets of remains.

The report is the final step in a four-year process of excavation and archaeological exploration at the school. The detention center opened in 1897 and was initially run by governor-appointed commissioners, but the governor and cabinet of Florida later took control.

Its original mandate within Florida state statutes was to act as “not simply a place of correction, but a reform school, where the young offender of the law, separated from vicious associates, may receive careful physical, intellectual and moral training." The boys were to to be restored as honorable citizens that contribute to society.

But that mandate quickly proved false for the school’s inmates. Rather than a place for rehabilitation, the school became a site of horrific abuse. Between 1903 and 1913, write the USF team, a series of investigations found some of the school’s children shackled in chains, denied food and clothing, hired out to other people to work, and beaten. The youngest were just five years old.

Abuses continued over the next century. A group of former students eventually formed who called themselves the “White House Boys” after a blood-covered building where beatings were administered. The group provided a support system and a way for the men to share their stories.

The White House Boys were among a group of 100 former students who took part in a 2010 investigation that found that corporal punishment including paddling and beating was common at the school. Even so, no “tangible physical evidence” supported multiple allegations of rapes and other sexual assaults. Eventually, the school closed in 2011 after a Department of Justice investigation found ongoing excessive force, compromised safety and a lack of services at the school.

A history of education in Florida published in 1921 called the institute “a real reclamation school for delinquent boys,” but hundreds died during their time at the facility. The new report found that between 1900 and 1973, over 100 boys died at the Dozier school. The 1400-acre school was the site not only of a cemetery, but also of a number of unmarked graves. The investigation revealed that the school underreported deaths, including those that occurred for reasons like gunshot wounds and blunt trauma. Other deaths took place due to things like fire and influenza.

Many of the unmarked burial sites studied are thought to be of black students, who were segregated at the school. The team found that three times as many black students died and were buried at Dozier than white students, and that some of those boys were incarcerated for non-criminal charges like running away and incorrigibility. Black boys were less likely to be named in historical records, as well, reflecting the grim realities of reform school life in the segregated South.

Reform schools for youth found guilty of crimes ranging from murder to profanity and “incorrigibility” were common at the turn of the century. A 1910 census of juvenile crimes shows that the Florida school was just one of hundreds across the country. That year, 72 children per 100,000 were institutionalized for crimes. Though that number is lower than today’s rate of 173 juveniles per 100,000, the population was only 92 million—28 percent of today’s population of about 322 million.

The new report does not allege any criminal wrongdoing at the Florida school—it only talks about finding and identifying bodies. The team writes in a release that it will push for a plan for burying unidentified children, restoring remains to families and locating surviving family members of the dead. Perhaps now that more is known about life and death at the school, restitution and restorative justice can begin.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/archaeologists-finally-know-what-happened-brutal-reform-school-180957911/?no-ist

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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby Project Willow » Mon Apr 04, 2016 7:29 pm

Interview with two survivors. They were subjected to mind control experimentation, in addition to rapes and beatings.



https://youtu.be/O2QoyvEf1PI
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby cptmarginal » Sat Apr 13, 2019 9:57 pm

More ‘possible graves’ found at Dozier School for Boys - 11 April 2019

By Ben Montgomery

A company doing pollution cleanup at the old Dozier School for Boys property in Marianna, 60 miles west of Tallahassee, has discovered 27 “anomalies” that could be possible graves.

Image
Seen from a distance through the window of a moving van, an inmate at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys tends to the school's kennels on October 13, 2009. [EDMUND D. FOUNTAIN, Times]

The winds of Hurricane Michael might have uncovered another clandestine burial ground inside a thick pine forest on the campus of Florida’s oldest reform school.

After clearing downed trees, a company doing pollution cleanup at the old Dozier School for Boys property in Marianna, 60 miles west of Tallahassee, has discovered 27 “anomalies” that could be possible graves about 165 yards outside the reform school’s Boot Hill cemetery.

Gov. Ron DeSantis directed Florida agencies to work with Jackson County officials “to develop a path forward,” according to an April 10 letter he sent to Jackson Commission Chairman Clint Pate, which was obtained by the Tampa Bay Times.

The finding is shocking because forensic anthropologists have already turned up far more burials on school property than the state knew about.

Relying primarily on historical records, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement concluded in 2009 that there were 31 burials in the cemetery. But anthropologists from the University of South Florida found an additional 24 graves — a total of 55 graves — and unearthed the remains of 51 individuals. The vast majority were boys who died in state custody, and they’ve since been returned to families or reburied in Tallahassee.

The brutal 1,400-acre reform school was open from 1900 to 2011, when the state shuttered it under mounting public pressure. The Tampa Bay Times and other newspapers reported at length on terrible, unceasing abuse and neglect of boys held at the school, and on a number of suspicious deaths.

The reports were driven by a group of old men calling themselves The White House Boys, so named for a small, white cinder-block building in which they were beaten bloody by guards with a weighted leather strap.

Many of the same men who were imprisoned at the school in the 1950s and ‘60s remember seeing several graveyards on the vast rural campus.

“Mark my words: there are more bodies out there,” said Jerry Cooper, 74, of Cape Coral, who says he received 135 lashes by guards as punishment one night in 1961. “I’m more concerned about those kids than anything else in the world.”

Bryant Middleton of Fort Walton Beach, who was sent to the school for “incorrigibility” in 1959, said he wasn’t surprised.

“We’ve been trying to tell the state of Florida that there’s more bodies out there for a long time,” he said. “I’m in possession of a list of 130 some odd boys who died at the school or disappeared and whose last known resting place we can’t find.”

In his letter, DeSantis said he directed representatives from the state to reach out to Jackson County officials “as a first step to understanding and addressing these preliminary findings” and that he would “ensure this issue is handled with the utmost sensitivity and care.”

Geosyntec, the contractor doing the pollution cleanup, sent its report to the Department of Environmental Protection on March 26. The reports shows a subcontractor, New South Associates, used ground-penetrating radar to survey 1.78 acres and found “27 anomalies” consistent with the expectations for possible unmarked graves.

“Due to the sensitive nature of this site, particular caution was used to identify possible graves in this survey,” New South reported, noting that a “liberal approach” was taken in interpreting the data from ground-penetrating. “If an anomaly had any of the features typically used to identify graves” — like size, shape, depth — “it was interpreted as a possible grave.”

The possible graves do not follow any obvious pattern, like a formal cemetery.

“This randomness might be expected in a clandestine or informal cemetery, where graves were excavated haphazardly and left unmarked,” the report says.

New South recommends the site be treated as a graveyard until more testing can be done.

Forensic anthropologist Erin Kimmerle, who led USF’s research at the Boot Hill cemetery, warned against making any firm judgements based on the ground penetration radar data.

“I would just urge a lot of caution and suggest ground truthing be done no matter what,” she said.

Ground truthing is a scientific process of carefully digging trenches and removing topsoil to determine what lies beneath the earth’s surface. Kimmerle and her team used the method on several sites outside the Boot Hill cemetery where the ground penetration radar data showed anomalies, but found things like tree roots rather than burials.

“We dug up a lot of tree stumps all over campus,” she said. “We followed every lead and we feel like we exhausted those leads.”

Regarding the new finding?

“It’s a simple solution. Ground truth it and see what’s buried there,” Kimmerle said. “If there’s more work that needs to be done and we can contribute, we’d be happy to do that.” What has long puzzled Kimmerle is that the first recorded burial at the facility came in 1914, more than a decade after the school opened. Yet historical records suggests its early years were especially brutal for children.

For instance, in 1903, an investigative committee reported to the Florida Senate that it found kids as young as six locked “in irons, just as common criminals … We have no hesitancy in saying, under its present management it is nothing more nor less than a prison.”

In 1911, another committee reported that children are “at times unnecessarily and brutally punished, the instrument of punishment being a leather strap fastened to a wooden handle.”

The Florida Cabinet voted in December to turn the Dozier property over to Jackson County, which planned to use state grants to build a distribution and manufacturing center, and a training center for people with autism.
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Re: Bodies at Dozier Boys Reform School in Florida

Postby cptmarginal » Wed Aug 07, 2019 12:03 am

No human remains found in new investigation at Florida's Dozier School for Boys

July 23, 2019

Image

The first phase of a new investigation of 27 possible graves near the former Dozier School for Boys found "no evidence of human remains," according to a joint statement issued Tuesday by the Florida Department of State and the University of South Florida.

The area under investigation is located less than 200 yards from a section on the Dozier school property where, previously, 55 graves were found by USF researchers led by forensic anthropologist Erin Kimmerle.

Last week, Kimmerle and her team began a new investigation of the site discovered by an engineering firm hired to clean up following Hurricane Michael, according to Florida's Department of State. Using radar, the firm located 27 anomalies "consistent with possible graves" and Gov. Ron DeSantis decided in April that fieldwork was necessary to determine whether human remains might be present at the site.

Despite a grave-like appearance, Kimmerle and her team found mostly evidence of tree roots from a previously removed pine tree forest, according to Tuesday's statement. Using Lidar, a laser-based technology that allows researchers to map the land and its surface characteristics, Kimmerle will now look at the entire 1,400-acre property to identify any additional areas warranting further investigation.

"The Department is committed to seeing the entirety of the investigation through," said Secretary of State Laurel M. Lee.

During the investigation of the 27 anomalies, Dr. Kimmerle and her team used many of the same methods as they did during their prior work on the school property, including removal of top soil through mechanical stripping and hand excavation of potential anomalies.

"Studying this area of the property was an important step for us to be able to answer the questions that had been raised," Kimmerle said. She will provide more detailed information her findings when investigating the anomalies at a public meeting, the details of which will be announced in the coming days.

...


The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead – brutal justice

August 5, 2019

The Underground Railroad author’s powerful new novel evokes the dark realities of a Florida reform school in the 60s

Colson Whitehead has a mission to create a fictional space in which the buried stories of America’s racial history can breathe. His previous novel, The Underground Railroad, exhumed the testimonies of former slaves who fled the American south. The novel gave those histories startling imaginative release, taking the metaphor for the network of tunnels and channels by which abolitionists helped escapees rattle north and giving it unforgettable reality. That book was Whitehead’s eighth, but its publication at the juncture between the 44th and 45th presidencies gave it urgent significance. It came with pointed endorsement from Barack Obama, won a Pulitzer prize and a National Book award and offered an indelible corrective, if one were needed, to ideas that there had been settled closure to that heinous and often unacknowledged past.

The Nickel Boys, a worthy and singular novel to follow that landmark achievement, begins with literal archaeology. The secret graveyard that stood behind a prison reform school in the Florida of the Jim Crow era has been disturbed by developers building a shopping mall. The bodies of black boys who had been dumped in potato sacks have been unearthed, giving substance to the mythology of the Nickel Academy, a segregated borstal in which children were routinely brutalised and sometimes covertly killed by staff. An endnote to the novel confirms not only the factual truth of the archaeological dig – in 2014 – but also of the institution, the Arthur G Dozier school for boys, in Marianna, Florida, on which all that follows is based.


Not saying that I intend to read this, but then again maybe I will. Worth noting one way or the other.
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