Researchers look to tell stories of Ingersoll's forgotten at unmarked gravesite | CBC News (2024)

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A group of researchers at Western University are working uncoverthe stories of hundreds of people from the 19th century, buried at an unmarked grave site in an Ingersoll, Ont., cemetery.

Western University students to erect monument funded by town of Ingersoll and Zorra Township

Researchers look to tell stories of Ingersoll's forgotten at unmarked gravesite | CBC News (1)

Isha Bhargava · CBC News

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Researchers look to tell stories of Ingersoll's forgotten at unmarked gravesite | CBC News (2)

A group of researchers at Western University are working uncoverthe stories of hundreds of people from the 19th century, buried in an unmarked grave site atan Ingersoll, Ont., cemetery.

About 400 bodies are believed to be buried in thelarge grassy area, known as a potter's field, at the back of the cemetery. The site is aresting place for people from marginalized communities, including immigrants and people living in poverty, who couldn't affordburials ora headstone.

Students used the cemetery's now-digitized burial registryto learn the names of those buried between 1864 and 1976 and who they were. They plan to erect a monument with the names of those deceased as a way to honour them, said graduate student Rebecca Small.

"Thesewere people who unfortunately due to circ*mstances of poverty,weren't given any headstones," she said. "This is a way of commemorating themand [creating] a sense of permanence with a stone monument,and we wanted to be able to provide that to them."

The students combed through the registry and matched it with ancestry documents, census immigration records and military records to identify those buried at the potter's field.

They include Black Canadians, who escaped slavery in the United States andChinese immigrants impacted by the Chinese head tax, which was later replaced by the Chinese Exclusion Act todiscourage immigration.

Researchers look to tell stories of Ingersoll's forgotten at unmarked gravesite | CBC News (3)

Uncovering stories from the potter's field in Ingersoll

1 day ago

Duration 2:22

Western University researchers are trying to learn more about the hundreds of people buried in an unmarked grave site at the Ingersoll Rural Cemetery

Youth from the British Home Children,are also buried in the field. They were amongmorethan 100,000 orphaned or impoverishedchildren who came to Canada from Britain between 1869 and the 1930s. Mostworked as domestic servants or labourers and some faced abuse.

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Small and fellow graduate student, Emily Kirk, were hired as research assistants as part of a summer research internship program at Western, overseen by Indigenous studies professor Cody Groat. Isaac Bender, an archeology student is assisting them by using ground penetrating radar, along with other technology to conduct field research.

Ground penetrating radars are non-invasive technology used by archaeologists for burial identification and Bender's research looks at how it can combine with othertechniques to get more data about the graves, he said.

"Essentially, it'spushing around what looks like a stroller back and forth in lines to collect data that can show us where graves are located in the ground," said Bender.

"Wehave to take a multi-modal approach to paint a better picture of where burials are and how confident we are that these are graves and not just a tree root or buried pipe."

They hope the research from ground penetrating radar can assist communities in their residential school investigations.

Stories represent patterns throughout history

Researchers look to tell stories of Ingersoll's forgotten at unmarked gravesite | CBC News (4)

Among the "plethora of interesting stories" from the potter's field, one that stood out most to Kirk wasThomas George Alden. He was a 15-year-old British home child, who worked at farms across Oxford County, but died after he was crushed in a gravel pit.

"His story really speaks to the experiences that a lot of impoverished children had as they were brought to Canada without people to advocate for them," Kirk said.

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Small was captivated by Ingersoll's large Black community, she said. Although many eventually moved back to the U.S. or settled in other parts of Ontario for better work opportunities and community, their contributions played a major role in the town's history.

Fascinated by the project, thetown ofIngersolland itsneighbouring Zorra Township havecontributed$25,000 for the monument. The students hope it allows the community to learn more about those who came before them.

"Just because people aren't famous or listed in history books, doesn't mean they don't have an interesting and really important story," said Small. "Thepeoplehere really do represent patterns throughout Canadian history and even their individual lives are very intriguing and moving."

The timeline is not set for when the monument will go up.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Researchers look to tell stories of Ingersoll's forgotten at unmarked gravesite | CBC News (5)

Isha Bhargava

Reporter

Isha Bhargava is a multiplatform reporter for CBC News and has worked for Ontario newsrooms in Toronto and London. She loves telling current affairs and human interest stories. You can reach her at isha.bhargava@cbc.ca

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    Researchers look to tell stories of Ingersoll's forgotten at unmarked gravesite | CBC News (2024)
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