Features
Skeletal Human Remains Found At 100-Year-Old Music Venue
The property under
Crews uncovered the bones while removing asbestos in late March, The Cincinnati Enquirer reported. Heavy excavation hasn’t yet started on the venue’s $135 million renovation project.
Gray & Pape, a firm that conducts archaeological and historical investigations, concluded the arm and leg bones are believed to belong to four adult bodies.
Six other grave shafts were identified in the north carriageway, which is the space between Music Hall’s main building and the North Hall. Each contained burials in wooden coffins.
The property under Music Hall was a potter’s field— or a public burial ground.
A report released by the Cincinnati Center City Development Corp., the project manager for the renovation, speculated that the bones may have been moved from an original burial ground and reburied in a single grave.
Anastasia Mileham, a spokeswoman for the project manager, said remains found in the past have been re-interred at Spring Grove Cemetery in Cincinnati.
“We will likely do something similar with the human remains uncovered at Music Hall,” she said.
Officials told The Enquirer they hope that analysis of the remains and historical research will reveal more clues about those who lived and were buried near the Music Hall property.