Janice Hayes-Williams went from being an amateur local historian to an area hero when she found the remains of Smith Price, a prominent Black man displaced from his burial site.
Price was the founder of the first free Black community in Annapolis, Maryland, and his remains had been dug up for the development of a renewal project in the 1980s. However, no one knew where to find the bones.
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“How do you dig up people and take them away?” Hayes-Williams said in an interview with The Washington Post.
The remains now are located in St. Anne’s Cemetery in Annapolis, which Hayes-Williams stated is “they’re home” after seeing a set of custom wooden caskets. According to the Capital Gazette, a 12-man group of community leaders led the remains to the final resting place of St. Anne’s.
The bones in the caskets are of Price and his son, buried once again after a ceremony was held at the church Price assisted in the founding over two centuries ago. The eulogy was performed by Lt. Gov. Boyd K. Rutherford, who is the second African-American in the history of Maryland to have the job. Rutherford spoke of Price, stating he possessed “resilience in the face of conditions we really can’t understand today.”
Price was the son of a white father and Black mother and born into slavery during the 1750s. He was considered the property of the first president of the Maryland Senate, Daniel of St. Thomas Jenifer. Price was known as a talented blacksmith and artisan. He was freed in 1791 after his slave owner’s death and eventually purchased the land for the Asbury United Methodist Church.
In addition to buying the land, Price would also buy the freedom of other enslaved people before his death in 1807. The remains of Price and his son were moved from the graveyard behind the church in the 1980s when Black residents in the area were displaced by pricey townhouses.
While Price and his son were able to be recovered, Wayne Clark, the chief state archaeologist of Maryland at the time, told The Washington Post other remains in the cemetery might have accidentally ended up in a landfill with trash from construction.
“I have a habit of checking construction sites around town,” Clark said. “I was shocked and upset that there was no archaeology done on this area.”
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Hayes-Williams had just started research in the area and was hurt by the way the graveyard was treated.
“This is my story, my people,” Hayes-Williams said. “I mean, these guys were leasing lands, running shops and taverns, buying their own people out of slavery. And nobody knows.”
Hayes-Williams would recover the bones from Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum in Calvert County, a state facility that held over 8 million archaeological artifacts. She was there for a meeting after being appointed to committees by a local official.
The bones were in a box, which was allowed to be turned over to the church for a reburial.
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