Family is Concerned About the Fate of an Old Slave Cemetery

SWEET BRIAR, VIRGINIA - APRIL 06: Campbell Anderson (age 7) placed flowers on the plaque that marks the area of the slave cemetery.Bethany Pace and Annette Anderson (they are cousins) have made it a project to keep tabs on the fate of the Sweet Briar Plantation Burial Grounds where many slaves who built and worked the plantation are buried. As the Sweet Briar College faces closure they are determined to protect the the place where some of their kin are buried (Photo by Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images
SWEET BRIAR, VIRGINIA - APRIL 06: Campbell Anderson (age 7) placed flowers on the plaque that marks the area of the slave cemetery.Bethany Pace and Annette Anderson (they are cousins) have made it a project to keep tabs on the fate of the Sweet Briar Plantation Burial Grounds where many slaves who built and worked the plantation are buried. As the Sweet Briar College faces closure they are determined to protect the the place where some of their kin are buried (Photo by Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images
Family is Concerned About the Fate of an Old Slave Cemetery
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Credit:
The Washington Post / Contributor
Editorial #:
468983522
Collection:
The Washington Post
Date created:
April 06, 2015
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Source:
The Washington Post
Object name:
Sweet Briar
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2600 x 1660 px (8.67 x 5.53 in) - 300 dpi - 5 MB