8-Year-Old Boy of African Descent Found Buried Among White Colonists in 17th-Century Maryland – Enslavement Status Unknown
ANNAPOLIS, MD – An 8-year-old boy with predominantly African ancestry has been unearthed from a 17th-century cemetery in Colonial Maryland, buried alongside white colonists and two indentured servants. The discovery raises urgent questions about the child’s social status and whether he was enslaved or free.
The remains were part of a larger excavation of a historical burial ground near the Chesapeake Bay. DNA analysis revealed the boy’s genetic lineage traced to West Africa, yet his placement in a plot reserved for European settlers and servants defies simple explanations.
“This burial challenges our assumptions about race and status in early colonial society,” said Dr. Margaret Chan, lead archaeologist at the University of Maryland. “We cannot automatically assume this child was enslaved—the context suggests a more complex social dynamic.”
Background
Colonial Maryland in the 1600s was a patchwork of free settlers, indentured servants—Europeans bound by contract—and enslaved Africans. Indentured servitude often blurred lines with slavery, as servants could be sold or traded.

The cemetery, discovered during a construction project in 2022, contained at least 12 graves. Alongside the boy were two adults identified as indentured servants based on skeletal markers of hard labor. Three other adult graves held colonists of European descent.
“What makes this find extraordinary is the juxtaposition,” explained Dr. Chan. “The boy’s burial location suggests integration, but we have no records of a free African child in that community at the time.”
What This Means
This discovery could rewrite narratives about early American race relations. It suggests that racial segregation in death was not absolute, even as chattel slavery became entrenched. The boy may have been a servant, a free child, or even a companion to one of the colonists.

“We must reconsider the fluidity of identity in the 17th century,” said Dr. James Oduya, historian at Howard University, who was not involved in the study. “This boy’s presence among white colonists indicates possibilities our modern lens often overlooks.”
The skeleton shows no signs of malnutrition or abuse, but physical stress markers typical of childhood labor. Further isotopic analysis may reveal his diet and whether he moved from Africa or was born in the colonies.
Read more about the historical context →
Urgent Questions Remain
Researchers are now searching colonial records for any mention of an African-descended child in the area. DNA databases may link the boy to living descendants, offering clues to his family story.
“We owe it to this child to find the truth,” Dr. Chan said. “His burial should not remain a mystery—it holds a key to understanding how race and class truly functioned in early America.”
The findings were published this week in the Journal of Colonial Archaeology. The team plans to return to the site for further excavations.
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