Georgetown College’s Middle for Youth Justice is becoming a member of Prince George’s County, Maryland’s Legislative Black Caucus, and the Maryland Division of Juvenile Companies of their efforts to honor the 200+ Black lives buried in a lately found deserted grave website.
The Forgotten Kids Initiative says it’s dedicated to “honoring the reminiscence of incarcerated youth buried in deserted and misplaced burial grounds all through america.”
“It’s a extremely unhappy and tragic a part of our historical past that basically hasn’t been instructed. It’s a lacking piece of historical past that needs to be identified,” Marc Schindler, an lawyer and coverage skilled main the initiative, instructed The Washington Publish. “My hope is that Georgetown might be a useful resource for states and jurisdictions which have these kinds of burial websites of their location, and need to be taught extra and begin to do the fitting factor by means of restoring and memorializing these locations.”
Although the analysis hub plans to discover misplaced burial websites throughout the nation, this system was very closely impressed by a current discovery made in Maryland. As beforehand reported by theGrio, the Maryland Division of Juvenile Companies rediscovered the burial websites of 230 Black kids who died whereas confined to the Home of Reformation and Instruction for Coloured Kids, a segregated, state-run juvenile detention facility in Prince George’s County. Researchers discovered that the 200+ Black boys died between 1870 and 1939 and have been believed to have endured harsh situations and abuse earlier than their deaths.
Now, as Gov. Wes Moor has vowed to allocate $250,000 to the restoration of those websites within the state’s 2026 finances, Georgetown’s initiative hopes to unlock the tales of the folks beneath the rediscovered graveyard. The Forgotten Kids Initiative launches in January and plans to construct on present analysis with intensive genealogical work, aiming to find residing members of the family.
“The analysis about who the younger persons are is a really time-intensive, explicit kind of analysis we expect Georgetown could be useful with,” Schindler added. “These kids have largely been forgotten and deserted. There’s been no consideration or effort to essentially discover out who these kids have been, and ensure they’re given the dignity and recognition they didn’t get once they have been within the custody of the state.”
This might not be the primary time researchers found deserted gravesites. In Florida, consultants uncovered the burial websites of 51 kids who died beneath state custody on the Dozier College for Boys. This discovery impressed Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “Nickel Boys,” which impressed the Oscar-nominated movie “Nickel Boys.” Equally, in 2017, a Georgetown College alum, Richard J. Cellini, created the Georgetown Memory Venture to determine the 200+ slaves that the college’s founders offered and join their residing descendants, to whom the college had beforehand promised preferential admission standing.


















