February 7, 2015

Hundred Years of Abuse, Homicides, Rapes, Ends In Florida at Closed Reform School



Buried and forgotten: This December 20, 2013, file photo shows where researchers found some of the remains of 55 people in a graveyard at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, Florida

[From article]
Dozens of children's bodies exhumed from old graves have begun yielding the shocking secrets of a shuttered Florida reform school, shedding light on decades of abuse, rape and deadly violence.
There was the 6-year-old boy who ended up dead after being sent to work as a house boy. And another boy who escaped but was later found shot to death with a blanket pulled over his body and a shotgun across his legs.
Then there was the 'rape dungeon' where students attending the Arthur G. Dozier School were taken and sexually abused.
What the researchers have learned about the horrific acts carried out at the now closed Marianna institution is outlined in a report released by the University of South Florida as researchers continue grappling with the mystery of the graves and deaths there.[. . .]
It's not an easy project. The school underreported deaths; didn't provide death certificates, names or details in many cases, particularly involving black boys; and simply reported some boys who disappeared as no longer at the school.
And many in the Panhandle community don't want to talk about the school's dark past.
Several of the boys were killed after escape attempts, including Robert Hewitt, whose family lived a few miles from the school. He was hiding in his family's house and men from the school came looking for him several times after the 1960 escape, according to relatives.
The family came home one day to find his covered body lying in a bed. He had a shotgun wound and his father's shotgun was lying across his legs.
There's also the story of 6-year-old George Grissam, who the school sent out to work as a house boy in 1918. He was delivered back to the school unconscious and later died.
George's 8-year-old brother Ernest also disappeared from school records, which simply described him as 'not here.'
Other boys died after severe beatings, being smashed in the head or other injuries. Former inmates and employees interviewed also told researchers about a 'rape dungeon' where boys, some younger than 12, were sexually assaulted.
While many of the cases are nearly a century old, some of the dead have surviving brothers, sisters and other relatives still seeking answers.
'To some of this is history, but for many of the people who are involved it's actually their reality every day,' Kimmerle said. 'They're really committed and moved by this because it's their direct family.'
The first of the bodies to be identified by researchers last summer was 14-year-old George Owen Smith, who was sent to the school after being caught in a stolen car.
In December 1940, George's mother, Frances Smith, sent a letter to the school inquiring after her son's welfare. She received a reply from Superintendent Millard Davison saying that no one knew where the teenager was.
[. . .]
The reform school for boys opened its doors in 1900 on 1,400 acres of land and closed down only in 2011 for budget reasons.
Some former students from the 1950s and 1960s have for at least a decade accused employees and guards at the school of physical and sexual abuse, but the Florida Department of Law Enforcement concluded after an investigation that it couldn't substantiate or dispute the claims because too much time had passed.
Many former Dozier inmates from that era call themselves 'The White House Boys' after the white building where they say the worst abuse took place.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2941503/Report-describes-horrific-treatment-deaths-reform-school.html

'Rape dungeon' and students hunted down and killed as they tried to escape: Report details a century of horrific abuse at notorious Florida reform school
University of South Florida researchers have found the remains of 51 people buried at Arthur G. Dozier School in Marianna, Florida
The reform school was in operation between 1900 and 2011
A 6-year-old boy ended up dead after being sent to work as a house boy, and another boy was found shot to death after escape attempt
To date, the remains of four people have been identified through DNA matches
Former inmates and employees talked about a 'rape dungeon' where boys, some younger than 12, were sexually assaulted
Some ex-Dozier inmates call themselves 'The White House Boys' after the white building where the worst abuse happened
By ASSOCIATED PRESS and SNEJANA FARBEROV FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 18:49 EST, 5 February 2015 | UPDATED: 14:28 EST, 6 February 2015

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