Country Zest and Style Autumn 2021 Edition

Page 34

Photo by Linda Roberts

Kyle Davis, Blandy associate director, Dave Carr, Blandy director, and Antonio Austin, archival research intern, with a copy of a 1905 plat showing the existence of a cemetery for the enslaved. The area was recently studied and encircled.

Linking Present and Past at Clarke County’s Blandy Farm By Linda Roberts

“H

opefully I will be able to give these people a voice that they didn’t have in their lifetime,” said Antonio Austin, archival research intern at the Blandy Experimental Farm. Austin has spent the spring and summer months working to identify some 40 enslaved people who are buried at Blandy in Clarke County, which is the State Arboretum of Virginia. A Howard University student working on his Ph.D. in history, Austin learned about the position at Blandy earlier this year and was “elated when I got the job,” he said. His days have been filled with researching old records in both Clarke and Frederick counties, as Clarke was once part of Frederick. “Timing is everything,” he said. “With history, you don’t find everything you want immediately. It eventually comes out over the years.” Dave Carr, Blandy director, and Kyle Davis, Blandy associate director, have worked closely with Austin and on another project underway at Blandy. A century-old plat of the property helped identify the likely existence of a cemetery believed to be where enslaved people were buried as early as 190

34

years ago. Blandy contracted with Leesburg-based GeoModel to survey the site with ground-penetrating radar. Evidence of 40 graves was found within the coordinates. Due to the close proximity of some of the graves, it is believed that some individuals were interred in family groups.

The State Arboretum, or Blandy, didn’t always exist as the 700-acre property we know today. It was once the more than 800-acre Tuleyries tract, which dates back to the ownership of Joseph Tuley Sr. in the early 1800s and later his son, Joseph Tuley Jr. The son directed construction of the Tuleyries mansion west of Blandy. Into the 1860s, it is believed that more than 50 enslaved people worked the land and at the mansion. Other owners followed the Tuley family until Graham Blandy, a New Yorker, purchased a portion of the original Tuleyries tract, about 1924. His will stipulated that upon his death, Blandy would go to the University of Virginia for the purpose of training students in farming practices. In 1927, Orland E. White was appointed Blandy’s first director, and it is he who today’s students, naturalists, scientists, and recreational users can thank for the amazing trees and plantings that make the property so unique. In addition to continuing farming practices

Go Green Middleburg | Autumn 2021

and using Blandy as a field research station, Dr. White took a special interest in nurturing the growth of trees not thought to thrive in Virginia soil. In the early 1980s, the property was opened to the public free of charge and it is open daily from dawn to dusk. A wide variety of plant and insect studies, classes, lectures, field trips and summer camps also bring students, naturalists and horticulturists to Blandy. A grassy area on Blandy’s eastern perimeter has been designated as the cemetery of the people the Tuley family enslaved. Another very prominent reminder that slaves were once housed on the property is the eastern wing of the handsome brick, two-story building now known as the Quarters. Historians believe this section was built in the 1820s or ‘30s, while the other two wings were built in 1941. Today this U-shaped building serves as offices for Blandy’s staff and lodging for research students, as well as space for a library and meeting room. According to Davis, “perhaps our research might someday enable us to identify living descendants (of the enslaved) … our efforts will not provide justice for those who lived and died here, but we will strive to ensure that they are not forgotten.” Details: Blandy 540-837-1758 or blandy@virginia.edu.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Cup of COFFEE: Another Summer in Saratoga: Hello and a Long Goodbye

3min
page 58

Lynn Wiley: A Real Estate Love Affair

5min
pages 56-57

Book Excerpt: Still Horse Crazy After All These Years

3min
page 54

The 35th Running of the West Virginia Breeders Classics

2min
pages 52-53

Perspectives on Childhood, Education, and Parenting Mission Impossible: Predicting a Child’s Long Term Future

2min
page 51

Zoom or the Classroom: Living with Virtual Reality

2min
page 50

Pleasant Vale Farm is Long on Legacy

2min
pages 48-49

Up, Up and Away with a High-Flying Friend

2min
page 47

Middleburg’s Seven Loaves Fills a Great Need

3min
page 46

Vineyard View: Firefly Cellars

3min
page 45

The Community Music School

3min
page 44

Fauquier NAACP Making an Impact

3min
page 43

A Stamp of Approval for Retiring Middleburg Postmaster

3min
page 42

Out & About: HERE and THERE

1min
page 41

OPINIONCOUNTRY MATTERS: Uncertainty in Upperville

3min
page 39

At This n’ That, An Amish Touch

2min
page 38

Music to my ears: GlORIA’S BRINGING BACK THE BANDS

2min
page 37

Goose Creek Association Celebrates Fifty Big Ones

1min
page 36

Linking Present and Past at Clarke County’s Blandy Farm

3min
page 34

It’s Play Time in Middleburg’s PLAYroom

3min
page 32

ROOTS & SHOOTS IN UPPERVILLE

1min
pages 30-31

FINE FEATHERED FRIENDS

1min
page 28

Celebrations

1min
page 26

Modern Finance: Show Me The Money

1min
page 25

Hemp Farming Offers a Feel Good Story

3min
page 24

Dolphin Quest Facilities Have Roots in The Plains

6min
pages 22-23

Carry Me Back: Rummaging For a $6 Coat

2min
page 21

The Potter’s House Aiming to Build a New Future

2min
page 20

IN FULL BLOOM

1min
page 18

Celebrating at Great Meadow

1min
page 17

Ready to Ride?

2min
page 16

Recalling Fauquier County’s 100 schools

4min
pages 14-15

BOOKS

1min
page 13

It’s Oh Thank Heaven at Marshall 7-11

2min
page 12

Doubling Their Antique Pleasure, and Maybe More

2min
page 11

The Sound of World Class Music at Emmanuel

2min
page 10

At Millwood: Putting the Country in Country Club

4min
pages 8-9

Doc5 Comes Alive in Second Season

1min
page 7

Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center for Equine Athletes

2min
page 6

of NOTE - Happy Anniversary

2min
page 4

For Sheila Whetzel: Time to Close the Book

2min
page 3
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.