Discovery of caskets spurs further debate about cemetery " That fence separates the cemetery from the apartments, but we have always believed that the cemetery did not stop at that fence." - Henry Stepp BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE For years, members of a group working to restore Odd ? fallows Cemetery have t'Jaimed that a fence that sepa raies the old graveyard from ail apartment community is I nix an accurate indicator of ?the cemetery's boundaries. Tljey claimed that the ceme teft\ a premier burial site for , African Americans in the yearly 20th century, actually "fKjends into the apartments' ijjoperty. ?*?- Members of the group are -Saying. "1 told you so," this 2week, after two caskets were 2-uliearthed last week on the ?Jjr'operty of Millbrook Apart !?!? "That fence separates the cemetdry from the apartments, but we have always believed that the cemetery did not stop at that fence," said Henry Stepp. president of the Odd fellows Cemetery Reclama tion Project. A crew from Duke Power discovered the graves while digging at the apartment com plex, which is behind the fair grounds and Joel Coliseum. The crew, covered the graves back up. according to police, and notified the apartment's maintenance personnel about the discovery. The manager of the complex was notified on Monday and she contacted police. Senior Police Officer Craig Stewart said the Police Department is 99 percent sure that the bodies in the coffins are from the nearby cemetery and that there was no foul play. Records for the cemetery were destroyed in a fire. The departmenl is trying to contact local historians to try to iden tify the remains. "Our chief concern is merely to find out who are in the coffins and that they belong there." said Stewart, who added that no one in the department has experience with a case of this kind. The apartments now known as Miilbrook have changed ownership several times since they were built in the 1970s. The N.C. Housing Foundation has owned the apartments since 1996. Community Management supervises the units. John Nichols, vice president of property management for Community Management, said Community Management and the property owners are trying to help the authorities in any way that they can. "The owners (of the prop erty) are compassionate and concerned about this situa tion," Nichols said. Many people pass by Odd Fellows Cemetery each day and do not realize that it is there. In the 1940s the ceme tery began to fall into disarray after members of the Odd Fel lows fraternal order, who took pride in maintaining the grounds of the cemetery, began to die off. Over the decades, thick trees, bushes and roots transformed the bur ial ground into something unrecognizable. Some head stones in the cemetery date back to the 1890s, and some historic African Americans rest there, such as G.W. Hill, one of the founders of Win ston Mutual Life, and the r?5. R.L. File, the founder of Mt. See Graveyard on A10 File Photo Efforts to improve conditions at Odd Fellows Cemetery have been ongoing for the past several years. Here a headstone is nearly invisible because of shrubs and vines. File Photo Gary Green stands on the roof of one of the buildings on Forsyth Tech's Main Campus. / BSC m 7 FILLERS T I Register to Win \ an Easter Stocking On March 30th For more information call the mall office at: (336) 722-7779 MARKHPUCtflMAlL \il 2101 Peters Creek Parkway Winston-Salem, NC 27127 *7 Open Daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., l^jj \ 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays VaVLh FTCC's Green to be installed FROM STAFF REPORTS Dr. Gary M. Green will be installed as the sixth president of Forsyth Technical Commu nity College by the board of trustees on Thursday, April 4. at 2 p.m. The ceremony will take place at the Stevens Cen ter. Classes will be suspended for the day at FTCC so that students, along with anyone from the community, can attend the ceremony at the Stevens Center. A reception will follow at McMillan's Cafe at the Stevens Center. During the installation. Green will unveil the strategic plan for the college. Forsyth Tech's strategic planning directions came from a group of community and college leaders. Green officially took i office on July I. Before arrfv ing at Forsyth Tech, Green served as executive vice pres ident of Calhoun Community College in Decatur and Huntsville, Ala., the largest community college in Alaba ma. While working at Cal houn Community College. Green was active in economic development, leading Cal houn's relocation of its Huntsville campus to Cum mings Research Park and developing partnerships with NASA, the U.S. Army, and other high-tech research and development entities there. He also was instrumental in the planning, design and development of the college's $40 million Aerospace and Advanced Technology Park on its Decatur campus. Green is personally com mitted to students, learning, and technology at Forsyth Tech. He said the college will ? continue to be committed to work-force development in the Piedmont Triad, as well as within North Carolina. "Forsyth Tech was estab lished over 40 years ago to provide the trade and techni cal training needed by the local community. It is impera tive that we not forget the roots from which we came and why we are here. Technology will play an integral role in how we deliver our products," Green said. Green also serves on the board of directors of the Greater Winston-Salem Chamber of Commerce and the board of directors.of Ideal liance (Piedmont Triad Research Park). ? i The ISB Win-a-Trip to-theWSm , I loan Sweepstakes! Whatever you need money for, whether it's a car. truck, boat. RV, home improvement, mortgage, etc. NOW'S the time to get it! In addition to your loan, for every $10,000 loan amount you borrow you'll earn one entry c toward the chance to win , the LSB GRAND PRIZE PACICAGE of two free tickets to the WMg PEPSI 400 in Hq. 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