The lives of 36 people who were buried in unmarked graves in Charleston, South Carolina, in the late 1700s are being revealed by US researchers using ancient DNA.
It is estimated that more than 40% of all Africans who were in slavery travelled via the city’s port, which is located on the east coast.
During the transatlantic slave trade, it was the busiest port of disembarkation in North America.
When laying the groundwork for a new arts centre in 2013, construction workers came onto the location on Anson Street.
By extracting genetic material from their remains, researchers have since learned more about these individuals and their lives.
“The chemical signatures of the bone indicated that six individuals were likely born in Africa and the rest were likely born outside of Africa, in Charleston or in North America, ” said biological anthropologist, Raquel Fleskes of the University of Connecticut.
“This is a way of restoring dignity to individuals that should have always had this dignity all along,” she said.
It’s one of a growing number of projects using ancient DNA research.
The region is littered with the unmarked graves of these enslaved people, but most of their names and stories have been lost to time.
“They lived, they worked, they died. And, now, they’re being remembered forever,” said retired city planner, Ervin McDaniel Jr, and Yoruba drummer.
Now, 36 people living in the area, including McDaniel are serving as models, their hands to be cast in bronze, to represent each of the ancestors
They will become part of a memorial fountain at the site in Anson Street.
Community members have also submitted DNA samples, hoping to find a personal connection to one of the ancestors.
So far, there have been no matches, but La’Sheia Oubré, a community outreach organiser with the Anson Street African Burial Ground Project says that doesn’t matter.
“The one loving thing about this whole project is they’re just family. We are all just family of the 36 ancestors. And that their story is our story,” she said.
In 2019, the ancestors remains were reburied at the site during a traditional Yoruba naming ceremony.