SECRETS OF THE DEAD: The Woman In The Iron Coffin (2024)

Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023 at 10 p.m. on KPBS TV + Thursday, Feb. 9 at 8 p.m. on KPBS 2 / Watch now with the PBS App

—Uncover the story of early America's free Black communities via remains of a woman from the 1800s—

On Oct. 4, 2011, construction workers were shocked to uncover human remains in an abandoned lot in the Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens, New York. So great was the level of preservation, witnesses first assumed they had stumbled upon a recent homicide. Forensic analysis, however, revealed a remarkably different story. Buried in an elaborate and expensive iron coffin, the body belonged to a young African American woman who died in the first half of the 19th century, before the Civil War and the federal abolishment of slavery. But who was she?

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SECRETS OF THE DEAD: The Woman in the Iron Coffin: Preview

SECRETS OF THE DEAD “The Woman In The Iron Coffin” follows forensic archaeologist Scott Warnasch and a team of historians and scientists as they investigate this woman’s story and the time in which she lived, revealing a vivid picture of what life was like for free African American people in the North.

Listen: The Woman in the Iron Coffin on Dig: A History Podcast

Notable Talent

  • Scott Warnasch – Forensic Archaeologist
  • Kevin Karem - Associate Director for Laboratory Science, CDC
  • Prof. Carla Peterson – Author, Black Gotham
  • Prof. Clarence Taylor – Historian, Baruch College
  • Dr. Jeffrey Kroessler – Historian, John Jay College
  • Prof. Jerry Conlogue - Diagnostic Imaging, Quinnipiac University
  • Prof. Rhonda Quinn – Anthropologist, Seton Hall University
  • Rev. Kimberly Detherage – Pastor, Saint Mark AME Church
  • John B. Houston – Funeral Director, Cushnie-Houston Funeral Home
  • Joe Mullins – Forensic Imaging Specialist
SECRETS OF THE DEAD: The Woman In The Iron Coffin (1)

Courtesy of Impossible Factual

Noteworthy Facts

#1:

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The iron coffin was created in 1848 by Almond Dunbar Fisk, a stove manufacturer from New York. The coffin was created to preserve bodies for sanitary storage and for transportation prior to modern embalming. The airtight coffins also preserved bodies well enough for legal identification purposes. Iron coffins were very expensive for the era and used by the wealthy and elite, including former first lady Dolley Madison, former President Zachary Taylor, and former Vice President John C. Calhoun.

#2:

New York, one of the largest slaveholding states, officially abolished slavery on July 4, 1827. Following the abolishment, freed African Americans began to establish communities in New York City, including the Queens community of Newtown (now Elmhurst), where a body was found at what was once the location of an African Methodist Episcopal church and burial ground.

A History of St. Marks AME Church in Queens

#3:

The “Woman in the Iron Coffin” was first discovered by construction workers on Oct. 4, 2011 and was believed to be a victim of a homicide. Archaeologists were called to the site on Oct. 5, 2011, where they discovered metal fragments, suggesting the woman was buried more than 150 years ago.

#4:

From initial examinations, it was determined that the body was that of an African American woman, dressed in a long white nightgown with thick, knee-high socks and a hand-crafted comb that held a delicate knit cap on her head.

#5:

After examining the body and studying the 1850 Census of New York City, Warnasch determines that the remains likely belonged to Martha Peterson, a 26-year-old African American woman living in New York City in 1850. Peterson was the daughter of John and Jane Peterson, prominent figures in Newtown’s African American community.

#6:

Public records also noted that Martha Peterson lived with William Raymond, the brother-in-law, neighbor and business partner of Almond Dunbar Fisk, the iron coffin creator.

#7:

In 2016, the “Woman in the Iron Coffin” was given a proper burial by the Saint Mark African Methodist Episcopal Church of Jackson Heights.

SECRETS OF THE DEAD: The Woman In The Iron Coffin (2)

Courtesy of Impossible Factual

Buzzworthy Moments

For a non-evasive way to further examine the woman’s remains, Warnasch seeks the help of Prof. Jerry Conlogue to conduct a “virtual” autopsy.

Using sophisticated computer software and hardware, Warnasch and Conlogue determine the woman was between 25 and 30 years old, and died from smallpox.

This Virtual Autopsy Reveals a Surprising Discovery

Forensic imaging specialist Joe Mullins creates a facial reconstruction of the “Woman in the Iron Coffin” by using a CT scan of the skull, digitally fixing the damaged parts of the skull, and incorporating age-and-ancestry-appropriate features from a database of thousands of body parts.

To give back to the Queens community, Warnasch shares the image of the woman with members of the Saint Mark African Methodist Episcopal Church.

Forensic reconstruction reveals a face from history

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Join The Conversation:

SECRETS OF THE DEAD is on Facebook,+ @SecretsPBS on Twitter #SecretsDeadPBS

CREDITS:

A production of Impossible Factual. Directed by Adam Luria. Stephanie Carter is executive producer for SECRETS OF THE DEAD.

SECRETS OF THE DEAD: The Woman In The Iron Coffin (2024)

FAQs

Who was the woman found in the iron Casket? ›

The “Woman in the Iron Coffin” was first discovered by construction workers on October 4, 2011 and was believed to be a victim of a homicide. Archaeologists were called to the site on October 5, 2011, where they discovered metal fragments, suggesting the woman was buried more than 150 years ago.

Who was the black girl in the iron Casket that was dug up? ›

After examining the body and studying the 1850 Census of New York City, Warnasch determines that the remains likely belonged to Martha Peterson, a 26-year-old African American woman living in New York City in 1850.

Who was the black girl in the iron Casket Central Park? ›

It was determined that the woman, who had been buried in a Fisk coffin, died of small pox. Based on historical records, she has been tentatively identified as Martha Peterson, who was born in 1824 and died around 1851.

What was the purpose of the window in the iron coffin? ›

In a time before extensive use of photography, the coffin's oval glass viewing window allowed next of kin to see and confirm the identity of the occupant without encountering odor or potential diseases.

Why were people buried in iron coffins? ›

The airtight cases were valued for their potential to preserve the remains of individuals who died far from home, until they could be shipped back for burial by the family. This type of burial in the 19th century indicated that the individual buried was someone of cultural and societal importance.

What was the iron coffin of lissa? ›

The "iron coffin of Lissa" is a contraption to prolong capital punishment by "killing the prisoner by inches". The prisoner was laid in the coffin with the iron lid creeping slowly down on him. After days and nights in suspense, the prisoner was at last slowly crushed by the iron lid on him.

What is a Fisk iron coffin? ›

Fisk's iron coffins –modern marvels of their day– were specifically designed to naturally preserve their occupants. The coffins were developed in response to some of the inadvertent challenges that had resulted from the introduction of steam transportation in the preceding decades.

What is Central Park built on? ›

A map of Seneca Village. After Olmsted and Vaux's design for Central Park was chosen, the New York State legislature chose 750 acres of land, running from 59th to 106th street, to be the site of the new park.

Was the lady in red buried in alcohol? ›

She was buried along a bank of the Yazoo River near Cruger, preserved by alcohol in a metal and glass coffin. Her red velvet dress, cape and buckled shoes indicated she died in the mid-1800s. But the identity of the Lady in Red remains a mystery, some 60 years after her body was discovered.

What is the meaning of the iron casket? ›

In the age of steam travel, Fisk's iron coffin was invented to address the issue of people dying far from home. The coffins were designed to preserve bodies for sanitary storage and long-distance transportation. If someone died far away, he or she could now be sent back home for a proper burial among kin.

Is polio still treated with an iron lung? ›

Modern development and usage. Polio vaccination programs have virtually eradicated new cases of poliomyelitis in the developed world. Because of this, the development of modern ventilators, and widespread use of tracheal intubation and tracheotomy, the iron lung has mostly disappeared from modern medicine.

Was the lady in red found in a coffin? ›

The Lady in Red is now buried in the Odd Fellows Cemetery in Lexington, Mississippi. She was moved after her discovery on April 24, 1969, on the Egypt Plantation in Cruger, Mississippi while the land was being dug for a septic system. She was found in a Fisk iron coffin with a glass viewing window.

Was the body of the woman found in Buckley? ›

The body Chaithanya 'Swetha' Madhagani was discovered just after midday on Saturday inside a green waste bin at Buckley, about 37km west of Geelong, The Herald Sun reports.

Who was the dead body found in Upper Darby PA? ›

Police spent hours collecting evidence behind some homes off Greenwood Avenue in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, in the early hours of Jan. 16, 2023. A week later, they identified the woman whose body was found as Newark, Delaware's Rosemary Byrne.

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