North Meadow
2024 - 2030
North Meadow
The North Meadow of Hart Island has been used for burials since 1869. In 1872, New York City began using a system of mass burials, similar to those from the American Civil War. Burials in this area consist of 150 people per numbered plot, with each box's position recorded in a burial ledger.
Starting in 1931, the city began reusing plots after 25-50 years, once bodies had fully decomposed to skeletal remains. Most of the estimated 750,000 burials that took place here between 1869 and 2003 are now unmarked. Adult burials were moved to the Southern Plain in 1989.
The oldest intact graves on Hart Island are located in the North Meadow, making it the ideal starting point for the new burial strategy. This new approach involves conducting individual burials one foot above the existing mass graves, without disturbing them. Burials would be performed as needed, once or twice a week, using the method shown in the provided illustration.
The Burial Process
Starting in 2030, individual caskets each have their own GPS
Each day, individual caskets would be placed side-by-side in two rows. There would be enough space left at the foot of each casket for a mortuary box. As the caskets are interred, the crew would mark each one with a GPS tag and record its unique coordinates. This information, along with details like the decedent's name, age, dates of birth and death, and place of death, would be added to a central database.