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Smithsonian digs ECU
anthropologist’s find

ECU anthropologist Charles Ewen and his students have been working with the Smithsonian this summer to identify the remains contained in two Civil War-era cast iron caskets unearthed in Kinston, N.C.

It had been hoped the caskets contained a grandson of the late Gov. Richard Caswell. Caswell, who died in 1789, was a Revolutionary War hero and North Carolina's first governor. The site of his grave remains unknown and a local businessman, Ted Sampley, has offered a $1,000 reward to anyone who could locate it.

Upon request of Gov. Caswell's descendents, Ewen has been searching for the remains of the late statesman since 2000. This summer, Ewen and a dozen archeology students unearthed the coffins and, accompanied by scientists from the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, transportedthem from the Herritage Cemetery in Kinston to the Smithsonian laboratories in Washington, D.C.  Smithsonian researchers areconducting a study of the rare, expensive caskets and were interested Smithsonian researchers are conducting a study of the rare, expensive caskets and were interested in the Kinston site.

Ewen and two of his students witnessed the opening of the caskets at the Smithsonian laboratories. The bodies of two, women who died about 150 years ago were found inside. Based on jewelry, buttons and cavity fillings, the women appeared to be well-to-do. An effort is underway to identify them. Ewen hopes to claim the caskets from the Smithsonian and return them to their original location next month.

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CONTACT: Charles Ewen, ECU professor of anthropology, at 252-328-9454 or through email at ewenc@mail.ecu.edu.



Charles Ewen, casket
ECU anthropologist Charles Ewen checks out a Civil War era casket found in Kinston, N.C., and brought to the Smithsonian this month for further study. Photo by Ken Rahaim, Smithsonian Institution.
 
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The opening of the coffin. Smithsonian forensic anthropologist Doug Owsley, who came to Kinston to retrieve the coffins, looks on (left). Photo by Ken Rahaim, Smithsonian Institution.
 
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ECU students Mattie Rasberry (second from left) and Tracy Gurnsey(second from right) work with Smithsonian scientists to reassemble150-year-old skeletons. Photo by Ken Rahaim, Smithsonian Institution.

 


 
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