EASTERN SHORE OF VIRGINIA

A Lost Boy Finds a Final Resting Place

Deborah Hull-Walski of the Smithsonian Institution, who helped research the history of William Taylor White, attends a service for him in Modest Town, Va. White's coffin was unearthed in 2005, 153 years after his death.
Deborah Hull-Walski of the Smithsonian Institution, who helped research the history of William Taylor White, attends a service for him in Modest Town, Va. White's coffin was unearthed in 2005, 153 years after his death. (By Amanda Lucier -- AP)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, October 18, 2009

They bade William Taylor White goodbye again last Saturday.

Under rainy skies in a country churchyard, descendants and well-wishers gathered to recall the Eastern Shore teenager who died in Washington 157 years ago and was resurrected, in a sense, when a work crew unearthed his coffin in Columbia Heights in 2005.

Prayers and kind words were said in the graveyard of Modest Town Baptist Church in Accomack County, Va., beside a brand new tombstone bearing his name. It didn't matter that, in accordance with his family's wishes, the body of White, who was about 15, remained at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History.

The small ceremony was a chance for those he never knew, and those who never knew he existed, to say farewell.

White, who was probably a prep student at the old Columbian College in Columbia Heights, the precursor to George Washington University, died there Jan. 24, 1852.

A sickly boy, he was buried in an elegant white suit of clothes, placed in a state-of-the art iron coffin that had a window and probably buried in what was then a school cemetery.

During the tumult of the ensuing decades, the cemetery was moved. William's body was left behind. And the city spread atop it. On April 1, 2005, construction workers digging beneath a gas line outside an 80-year-old apartment building at 1465 Columbia Rd. NW stumbled on the coffin.

For the next two years, experts at the Smithsonian pored over the boy's body, clothes, coffin and the public record, trying to determine who he was. They did so in September 2007. Last year, descendants decided to leave the body with the museum for further scientific study.

But they also wanted a chance to say goodbye, once again. A tombstone was commissioned. The church was selected because other family members are buried there, and researchers believe he might have worshiped there.

The ceremony, attended by several dozen descendants, was low-key but heartfelt, said the Smithsonian's Deborah Hull-Walski, who led much of the genealogical research and was also present.

On the back of the tombstone are etched the words from an obituary in a Richmond newspaper:

"Thus is cut off, in the morning of his days, one in whom many hopes were centered -- and who had the fairest prospects of happiness and usefulness in life."



More from Virginia

[The Presidential Field]

Blog: Virginia Politics

Here's a place to help you keep up with Virginia's overcaffeinated political culture.

Local Blog Directory

Find a Local Blog

Plug into the region's blogs, by location or area of interest.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2009 The Washington Post Company