By
Stefan Cornibert
scornibert@timespapers.com
The burial of six Civil War-era skeletons
unearthed in Centreville is fueling a controversy among historical researchers.
Discovered by chance in 1995, the bones
represent some of the earliest casualties of the Civil War. Archaeologists
believe the six men died during the Battle of Blackburn's Ford on
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The
remains, thought to be Union soldiers from the First Massachusetts regiment,
were re-interred at a military cemetery in their home state two weeks ago on
June 9.
But exactly who they were is a mystery, one that has researchers and archaeologists feuding over whether burying them was the
right move.
"It doesn't prevent identification," said Michael Johnson, a senior
archaeologist for
Identifying the men is a task that had Dalton Rector, member of the Northern
Virginia Relic Hunters Association, devoting countless hours to research.
"By processes of elimination, I was able to determine the possible groups
of soldiers they could belong to," Rector said. "The First
Massachusetts lined up very well. The only thing lacking was DNA testing."
Rector said he wanted more time to locate the men's next of kin and arrange for
DNA tests.
"They just went back into the ground, unknown," Rector said. "I
really have mixed emotions. I am very disappointed."
The men ranged in age from 16 to 18 years old. Rector believes he has already
found the name of the youngest, Albert Wentworth, after combing archival
documents, searching for a 16-year-old soldier who would have served in
"His selection of who they were is a theory," said Johnson, who
defended the decision to re-bury the soldiers with military honors.
"I just didn't feel right about leaving them in a box any longer," he
said.
The site of the three-day excavation that brought the six bodies to the surface
is now a McDonald's on
Although finding the remains offers little new information about their time
period, Johnson said it does provide a small window into the days following the
outbreak of the Civil War.
"It's a piece of history that you can read as a narrative," Johnson
said.
The Battle of Blackburn's Ford, according to a history from the Fairfax County
Park Authority, began when Confederate troops arrived at Union lines on a
reconnaissance mission. The rebels were repelled with an artillery barrage, but
there were casualties on both sides. The Union troops were taken to
Centreville, where several buildings were used as makeshift hospitals.
There is evidence to suggest, Johnson said, that the men were buried around the
time Union troops began to fall back after their defeat at
"They had time to bury them but not unlimited time," he said.
The bones stayed underground for more than 130 years until Kevin Ambrose, a
relic hunter, found them with a metal detector. Ambrose summoned the
authorities, and the excavation was under way.
"We probed the ground, and right away we knew there were at least five and
maybe six graves there before we started digging," Johnson said.
A forensic pathologist from the Smithsonian Institute later examined the bones,
determining the ages of the men when they died. The remains were kept at the
Smithsonian until their burial in
"One was shot in the head," he said.
Unearthing the bodies took three days with the help of 50 volunteers. Among
them was Fairfax County Supervisor Michael Frey (R-Sully), who also arranged
for police protection of the site.
"I worked at uncovering a femur, and I could already see the skeleton from
his waist up to his skull. As I'm working on it, he was just looking right up
at me the whole time," Frey said.
The excavation, he added, brought him closer to the county's history.
"We know they were young men," he said. "You just have to wonder
who were they, what happened to them and what sent them into the war."
Before the decision was made to bury the men in
"On one hand, there was a little disappointment," he said. We had
hoped they would be re-interred here. They have spent 130 years here. But, we
know they were sons of
Grave sites, fortifications and other pieces of history are often uncovered in
the area, but the county keeps the location of many of them under wraps.
"We don't really tell the public where they are because we feel the sites
would be in danger," she explained.
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