Urban Archeology Corps at Petersburg National Battlefield

The Urban Archeology Corp (UAC) is a National Park Service program for young people aged 15-26. The paid interns learn about urban national parks and NPS employment. The UAC seeks to use archeology as a vehicle for civic engagement and park stewardship.

Petersburg National Battlefield hosted its first (UAC) internship program with partners Historicorps and the IBé Arts Institute. The four interns used book making and storytelling to interpret the enslaved community at Whitehill Plantation. Participants enhanced existing knowledge by using excavation, oral history, and historical records. Participants took field trips to historic sites for research and conducted interviews. They attended an archeological field school at James Madison’s Montpelier. Participants created art pieces using various media to connect with the local communities. The program's culmination was an art exhibition at Resist Booksellers in Petersburg, VA..

 
 
 
 
A white picket fence with names painted on the pickets stands in front of black paper garments on a clothesline.
The Fence

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The Fence


The clothing line and fence installation features several paper bag garments painted black. The garments are hanging from two ladders on a string. They are bounded by a fence with the names of 120 formerly enslaved people who lived at Whitehill Plantation. The interns created the clothing and accessory pieces. However, the fence was created in collaboration with local community members. Participants at an educational event painted the names of the enslaved on the fence. Charles Friend included these names in the 1850 and 1857 inventories and his commonplace book. The fence represents the white fence surrounding the plantation. It bounded the enslaved community and most of their experiences within the plantation landscape.

 
 
A white male wearing a green NPS volunteer polo shirt
Rory Dickinson

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Rory Dickinson

Rory is a rising senior at Clark University majoring in geography with a minor in history. Having grown up in Petersburg and visiting the battlefield throughout my life, I was excited by the opportunity to do an internship there and connect with the community work in my field of study; in doing this program, I hope to gain hands-on experience in the field of history and geography while at the same time contributing and enriching the environment of my hometown.

 
A black paper shirt with newsprint in the neck hole and cuffs - quotes printed on both sleeves.
Rory's Shirt - The quote on the sleeve inspired the title of the art exhibit.

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Rory's Artwork

Garment
A paper workman's shirt that includes newspaper articles and quotes about free black men accused of murdering Charles Friend. Whitehill Plantation. The central quote is one of William Henry Johnson's last recorded statements before he was executed alongside Richard Green, both formerly enslaved at Whitehill. The quote is screen printed on the garment on either sleeve to represent how the two men repeated eat each other nearly verbatim for their last testament and the two sides of the story, which were mostly ignored at the time.
The words here, though, were Johnson's alone and are the inspiration for the exhibit's title. The quote represents themes interwoven throughout each piece in the exhibition. The title signifies the broad and varying ways we think about death and remembrance from the perspective of looking at the past from the present and how the enslaved community at Whitehill may have viewed life and death, looking from their present to the future.

Uphill Battle (book multimedia)
This mixed media piece is a book displaying two sides of the story of a Whitehill Plantation. One displays the more physical and environmental aspects of the space, while the other showcases the emotional and psychological atmosphere of the place. The book is accordion style and represents two very different views residents would have had of it. One begins at the manor and goes towards the slave quarters, while the other from the quarters moving up toward the manor. All quotes are excerpts from writings by the Friend family, some slightly embellished to derive deeper meaning.

 
 
A black woman with her hair pulled back wearing a green NPS volunteer polo shirt.
Syan Moore

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Syan Moore

Syan is attending Virginia State University in Petersburg, Virginia. I am majoring in agriculture with a concentration in animal science and a minor in education. I decided to apply for the National Petersburg Battlefield Park internship because it aligns with my endeavors to pursue a career within agriculture, to gain critical skills for the industry, to learn about the history of the enslaved, and opportunities to engage with the Petersburg community.

 
A paper shirt painter black with a colorful interior hangs above a paper skirt painted black.
Syan's Shirt and Skirt

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Syan's Artwork


Garments (paper)
The three garments Syan created are a long-sleeved top skirt and shoes. These pieces would have been worn by Betty and the enslaved cook. Betty is resilient, independent, vocal, and headstrong, symbolized by her all-black attire. Syan sees similarities between her grandmother, Lois Young, and Betty because they provide for others above their own. The key represents having access to things and a life that other enslaved people wouldn't have. The flowers are used to represent the continuous blooming of a mature woman even when we have used her physical body to its limits..

Book (multimedia)
A poetry book grappling with ideas of freedom and liberation for various enslaved individuals at Whitehill Plantation. The poems move through the integration of young, enslaved people into the trauma and pain that follows when people are denied fundamental human rights. The book touches on mental and physical degradation, confusion, and abandonment experienced by enslaved people. Syan is attending Virginia State University in Petersburg, Virginia. I am majoring in agriculture with a concentration in animal science and a minor in education. I decided to apply for the National Petersburg Battlefield Park internship because it aligns with my endeavors to pursue a career within agriculture, to gain critical skills for the industry, to learn about the history of the enslaved, and opportunities to engage with the Petersburg community.

 
 
A black woman wearing a green NPS Volunteer polo shirt.
Kaitlyn Holms

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Kaitlyn Holms

Kaitlyn is from Suffolk County. Kaitlyn is a rising senior at Columbia State Community College, majoring in archeology and focusing on Egyptology. This program was of interest to me because it was different from any of the volunteer work that I had previously done. I wanted to challenge myself by understanding the public side of archaeology. I want to learn how to communicate to the community about local history and how to use storytelling as a fundamental tool of historical preservation.

 
A black paper fisherman's hat hangs from a clothesline.
Kaitlyn's Hat

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Kaitlyn's Artwork


Garment (paper)
The hat represents a type of fisherman's hat worn during the time of the war. Moses would have worn this clothing item on board the USS Wyandank. I was inspired to create a piece of naval uniform after seeing a drawing of the ship from the 1862 Frank Leslie's weekly newspaper.

Book (multimedia)
Moses Hunt's Voyage. My book is inspired by my family's relationship to water as fishermen and Navy sailors. Moses Hunt is one of the many who escaped the Plantation during the time of the Civil War to join the Navy. The waterways of the tidewater community have been connected through the history of the Civil War and Virginia's history. The first image in the book depicts the Orange and Alexandria railroad bridge burning, which occurred just before Moses' enlistment. The burning of the bridge symbolizes that destruction is inevitable and war, but freedom is uncertain.

 
 
A white woman with long red hair wearing a green NPS Volunteer polo style shirt,
Erin Lovato

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Erin Lovato

I am a rising sophomore at Loyola University New Orleans studying history. Erin is from Chesterfield, VA. This program caught my attention because I wanted to try an area of history that I had never really had access to before. I have been interested in public history and thought the experience with archaeology and the National Park Service would open many doors for me and my future career.

 
A black basket made from woven paper and red strap in the froeground with a book on a stand in the background.
Erin's basket and book

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Erin's Artwork


Book- Doctress (Multimedia)
A book is made from reconstructed Japanese rice paper dyed using black walnuts. It was assembled to evoke the feeling that it belonged to Amy Green, a nurse and healer for the Friend family and the enslaved people at Whitehill Plantation. This book tells the story of Amy Green through the quotes of Jennie Stephenson, the daughter of Charles Friend, the last owner of the Whitehill Plantation. The story is told through two voices, Jennie Stephenson and Amy Green. The quotes come directly from Jennie Stephenson's writing My Father's Household Before, During, and After the War. Amy Green's voice is created through a reinterpretation of Jennie's quotes. Amy's voice is essential because stories about enslaved people often do not show the story from their eyes. This is Amy's story; her voice needs to be heard.

Basket (paper)
The basket is made from woven panels of brown paper bags. On the basket's exterior and bottom interior panels are two types of native medicinal plants printed using a hand-carved linoleum block. The basket was made to evoke the feeling that it, too, belonged to Amy Green in the same way as the book. Amy would have used this basket to carry around her notes, medicinal plants, and other things she needed to care for and heal over 100 enslaved people who lived at Whitehill Plantation.


 
 

Last updated: September 29, 2023

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Contact Info

Mailing Address:

Petersburg National Battlefield Administration Office
1539 Hickory Hill Road

Petersburg, VA 23803

Phone:

804 732-3531 x200
If you cannot reach us by phone - please e-mail questions to the address listed.

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