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Potter's field
Potter's field
from Wikipedia
The Trench in Potter's Field on Hart Island, New York, circa 1890 by Jacob Riis
Potter's field in Dunn County, Wisconsin

A potter's field, paupers' grave or common grave is a place for the burial of unknown, unclaimed or poverty-stricken people. "Potter's field" is of Biblical origin, referring to Akeldama (meaning field of blood in Aramaic), stated to have been purchased after Judas Iscariot's suicide by the chief priests of Jerusalem with the coins that had been paid to Judas for his identification of Jesus.[1] The priests are stated to have acquired it for the burial of strangers, criminals, and the poor, the coins paid to Judas being considered blood money. Prior to Akeldama's use as a burial ground, it had been a site where potters collected high-quality, deeply red clay for the production of ceramics, thus the name potters' field.[citation needed]

"I come to claim my dead" drawing by William Thomas Smedley, circa 1884

Purpose

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Potter's field is a term of Biblical origin, a place dedicated for the burial of the bodies of unknown, unclaimed or indigent people. In addition to such dedicated cemeteries, most places have provision for pauper's funerals to pay for basic respectful treatment of dead people without family or others able to pay, without a special place for interment.

Origin

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The term "potter's field" comes from Matthew 27:327:8 in the New Testament of the Bible, in which Jewish priests take 30 pieces of silver returned by a remorseful Judas:

Then Judas, who betrayed him, seeing that he was condemned, repenting himself, brought back the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and ancients, saying: "I have sinned in betraying innocent blood." But they said: "What is that to us? Look thou to it." And casting down the pieces of silver in the temple, he departed, and went and hanged himself with a halter. But the chief priests, having taken the pieces of silver, said: "It is not lawful to put them into the corbona, because it is the price of blood." And after they had consulted together, they bought with them the potter's field, to be a burying place for strangers. For this the field was called Haceldama, that is, the field of blood, even to this day. — Douay–Rheims Bible

The site referred to in these verses is traditionally known as Akeldama, in the valley of Hinnom, which was a source of potters' clay. After the clay was removed, such a site would be left unusable for agriculture, being full of trenches and holes, thus becoming a graveyard for those who could not be buried in an orthodox cemetery.[2][3]

The author of Matthew was drawing on earlier Biblical references to potters' fields. The passage continues, with verses 9 and 10:

Then what the prophet Jeremiah had said came true: "They took the thirty silver coins, the amount the people of Israel had agreed to pay for him, and used the money to buy the potter's field, as the Lord had commanded me."

This is based on a quotation from Zechariah (Zechariah 11:12–13). However, Matthew attributes the quote to Jeremiah. The author of Matthew may have been mistaken. There are two other possible reasons for the reference. First, Jeremiah also speaks of buying a field, in Jeremiah 32:6–15. That field is a symbol of hope, not despair as mentioned in Matthew, and the price is 17 pieces of silver. The author of Matthew could have combined the words of Zechariah and Jeremiah, while only citing the "major" prophet. Secondly, "Jeremiah" was sometimes used to refer to the Books of the Prophets in toto[citation needed] as "The Law" is sometimes used to refer to Moses' five books – Genesis through Deuteronomy, the Pentateuch.

Craig Blomberg suggests that the use of the blood money to buy a burial ground for foreigners in Matthew 27:7 may hint at the idea that "Jesus' death makes salvation possible for all the peoples of the world, including the Gentiles."[4] Other scholars do not read the verse as referring to Gentiles, but rather to Jews who are not native to Jerusalem.[5]

Examples

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A potter's field is a reserved for the interment of unidentified, unclaimed, or indigent individuals unable to secure private graves. The term derives from the New Testament account in Matthew 27:7, where Jewish priests purchased a field associated with pottery-making using the thirty pieces of silver returned by Judas Iscariot, designating it for the burial of foreigners and strangers. This biblical precedent established the concept of communal, often unmarked, plots for those without means or kin, a practice that persisted in Western tradition. In the United States, potter's fields emerged in the 19th century as urban populations grew, with municipalities allocating marginal lands—frequently near poorhouses, hospitals, or prisons—for mass burials of the destitute, victims of epidemics, or the unidentified. Notable examples include New York City's , operational since 1869 and estimated to hold over a million burials in and mass graves, and smaller sites like Dunn County, Wisconsin's potter's field, where recent efforts focus on identifying remains through forensics and records. These fields highlight historical disparities in death rites, with burials often conducted hastily by inmates or laborers, lacking individual markers to minimize costs. Modern challenges involve genealogical recoveries and ethical debates over exhumations, underscoring ongoing quests for dignity in anonymous deaths.

Etymology and Biblical Origin

Biblical Reference

In the Gospel of Matthew, the concept of a potter's field emerges in the aftermath of Judas Iscariot's betrayal of for . Overcome with remorse upon witnessing Jesus's condemnation, Judas returned the payment to the chief priests and elders, declaring his sin in betraying innocent blood, before departing to hang himself. The priests, deeming the coins blood money unfit for the temple treasury, resolved to purchase with them "the potter’s field as a burial place for foreigners." This acquisition fulfilled a prophetic reference, and the site acquired the name , meaning Field of Blood, perpetuated to Matthew's time due to its origins in betrayal and death. The Book of Acts presents a variant account of the same field in Acts 1:18-19, stating that Judas "bought a field with the reward of his wickedness" from the betrayal payment, where he fell headlong, his body bursting open with entrails spilling forth. This violent demise led Jerusalem's residents to call the location , or Field of , in their tongue. The narratives diverge on key details—Matthew attributes the purchase to the priests post-Judas's , while Acts links it directly to Judas via a fatal fall—yet both tie the field's designation to the blood money and designate or imply its use for , particularly of non-locals or the marginalized. This scriptural precedent underscores the field's dual connotation: procured through treacherous compensation and repurposed for interring strangers or foreigners, distinct from customary Jewish practices reserved for kin or members. The potter's involvement in selling the land, as noted in Matthew, likely stemmed from its clay-rich suitable for but marginal for standard graves, aligning with its utilitarian adoption for outsider sepulchers.

Alternative Interpretations of "Potter"

One alternative linguistic interpretation posits that "potter's field" originated from areas depleted of clay through extraction for pottery production, rendering the land infertile and economically valueless for farming, thereby making it suitable only for inexpensive burials of the poor. Clay pits, once exhausted, left behind barren soil unsuitable for agriculture, and historical English records from the 18th century reference burial sites named "Potter's Field" located adjacent to such depleted pits, as in Swaledale where old clay extraction ponds bordered a field by that name. This usage emphasized the field's inherent cheapness due to prior industrial exploitation rather than ownership by a potter. Another non-scriptural sense derives "potter" from its historical English meaning as a vagrant, itinerant , or low-status wanderer—often sellers of cheap —who represented society's transients and marginalized. This , recorded in English before 1525 in a , linked "potter's field" to burial grounds for such rootless poor, distinct from fixed paupers. By the early 18th century, as evidenced in ' 1777 correspondence referring to a "Potter’s Field" as a general burying ground, the term had evolved in English to broadly signify any pauper's or strangers' cemetery, with archival and dictionary evidence indicating usage detached from direct biblical invocation. The Oxford English Dictionary traces this vagrant influence as a key factor in the phrase's application to indigent interments.

Historical Purpose and Practices

Criteria for Interment

Interment in potter's fields historically targeted individuals lacking resources for private , primarily paupers whose or families could not cover costs, as municipal governments assumed responsibility for disposing of such remains to prevent public health risks. In colonial America, local ordinances in cities like required public burial grounds for the indigent poor, excluding those with even minimal funds or kin able to pay fees, reflecting fiscal pragmatism in allocating taxpayer resources for unprovisioned dead. Eligibility extended to unidentified transients and strangers, whose anonymous status precluded private claims, alongside unclaimed bodies from public institutions such as almshouses, asylums, and prisons, where oversight often left remains without designated handlers. Executed criminals were commonly directed to these fields, as their stigmatized deaths barred access to family plots or other dignified interments, a practice rooted in punitive traditions that persisted into the 19th century. Unlike churchyards, which prioritized parishioners affiliated with parishes and adhering to doctrinal norms, potter's fields accommodated non-parishioners, suicides denied consecrated soil due to theological prohibitions against self-inflicted death, and others excluded from sacred grounds by rules or civic policy in the 18th and 19th centuries. This separation underscored a causal divide between communal religious for the faithful and secular, utilitarian disposal for societal outliers, based on contemporaneous records of practices.

Traditional Burial Methods and Locations

In 18th- and 19th-century urban potter's fields, burials emphasized efficiency through mass graves or elongated trenches capable of holding multiple bodies in stacked rows, often three coffins deep, to manage high volumes under fiscal constraints. Trenches were typically excavated to depths of 7 to 8 feet, allowing for rapid interment without elaborate preparation, particularly during epidemics when quick-lime or ashes were applied to accelerate decomposition and mitigate health risks. Indigents were frequently interred without coffins or in simple pine boxes that deteriorated quickly, reflecting the prioritization of cost over durability or individual dignity. Markers, when present, consisted of numbered stakes or sectional indicators rather than personalized headstones, ensuring minimal maintenance while denoting burial zones for administrative purposes. Sites were chosen on marginal lands unfit for agriculture, such as clay pits or low-lying marshes, which provided inexpensive disposal areas and originated the biblical term's association with potters' sourcing grounds. Locations near prisons, hospitals, and poorhouses further reduced transport costs, facilitating prompt handling of unclaimed remains from institutional deaths. Pre-19th-century practices sometimes involved temporary exposure of bodies prior to , integrated into existing peripheries or grounds to accommodate sudden influxes like those from wars or outbreaks. By the early 1800s, operations shifted toward dedicated cemeteries with rudimentary rites, yet retained volume-focused methods amid ongoing limitations, evolving only modestly in response to and sanitary concerns.

Notable Examples

United States Potter's Fields

Hart Island, located in Long Island Sound and administered by New York City since 1869, functions as the municipal potter's field for unclaimed bodies, stillborn infants, and victims of public health crises including the COVID-19 pandemic. The site features mass burial trenches, each typically accommodating up to 150 bodies in pine coffins arranged in rows, with an estimated total exceeding 1 million interments over its history. Burials were performed by inmate labor from Rikers Island until March 2020, when responsibility transferred to a civilian contractor under city oversight. In early New York City history, Madison Square Park briefly served as a potter's field from 1794 to 1797, established amid a yellow fever outbreak before relocation to what became Washington Square Park. This short-term use reflected urban responses to epidemic mortality among the poor and transients in a growing port city. The potter's field section at Hill in , operated from 1866 to 1917 in the northeast corner of the grounds, interring over 1,000 indigents in unmarked graves. Similarly, Baylor Potter's Field in , contains 1,487 graves for indigent deceased and became inactive after filling in the late 20th century. Potter's fields proliferated in U.S. port cities like New York to manage unclaimed remains of immigrants and unidentified transients, as well as near asylums and hospitals for patients dying without family claims, per 19th- and early 20th-century municipal burial logs. These sites underscored patterns of interment for marginalized populations unable to afford private burials.

International Instances

In Jerusalem, the site known as Akeldama, or the Field of Blood, located in the Hinnom Valley south of the city, functioned as an ancient precursor to potter's fields, purchased circa 30 AD with funds from Judas Iscariot's betrayal for burying foreigners, strangers, and the indigent. Archaeological evidence places it near the junction of the Hinnom and Kidron Valleys, where potters historically sourced red clay, and it remained a symbolic burial ground for outsiders into later centuries, distinct from local Jewish cemeteries. Under England's Poor Laws, particularly the 1601 Act and subsequent amendments through the , parishes bore responsibility for interring paupers—, the poor, and unclaimed deceased—in designated grounds often adjacent to workhouses or unconsecrated plots, typically with wooden markers or none at all to minimize costs. These sites evolved into sections of municipal cemeteries by the , prioritizing efficiency over commemoration; for example, in from 1870 to , pauper corpses were first routed to anatomical schools under Poor provisions before in such fields, reflecting utilitarian disposal amid rising urban . Colonial extensions in Canada mirrored British practices, with sites like Toronto's Strangers' Burying Ground (active 1826–1855) serving for unclaimed immigrants, frontier unknowns, and indigents in non-denominational plots, influencing later municipal systems before closure due to urban expansion. In Australia, 19th-century equivalents in colonial cemeteries involved trench burials for executed convicts and the destitute, featuring stacked coffins in open pits rather than individualized graves, as documented in Queensland archival records of funerary practices amid penal settlement hardships. European variations often blended pauper interments with graves for epidemics or warfare, diverging from the urban indigent focus elsewhere; for instance, 14th–17th-century plague pits in regions like accommodated thousands in hasty, unmarked communal trenches, with one excavated site yielding 1,000 skeletons from plague outbreaks, prioritizing containment over ritual. Similarly, post-battle fields from 17th-century conflicts integrated unidentified soldiers with civilian poor in collective pits, as evidenced by rural French and English excavations revealing layered remains without distinction by status.

Modern Usage and Developments

Current Practices for Unclaimed Bodies

In the United States, medical examiners or coroners generally hold unclaimed bodies for 30 to 90 days following to permit to come forward, after which the remains are deemed eligible for disposition if no claim is made. This holding period varies by state; for instance, Missouri mandates at least 30 days, while some jurisdictions extend it to three months before proceeding. Since the early , has become the predominant method for handling unclaimed remains in most urban areas to reduce and costs, with often stored indefinitely or scattered at per state regulations. In states like , unclaimed bodies are cremated after seven days by the state board, with remains interred in designated sites. Pennsylvania's Anatomical Act, amended post-2000, requires storage for followed by and storage or scattering. However, mass burial in potter's fields persists in select locations for , utilizing trenches or vaults on ; continues this at , where simple wooden coffins are stacked in trenches accommodating up to 200 bodies each, with burials conducted on designated days like Thursdays and Fridays. Administrative records of these burials are maintained by local authorities to enable potential future exhumation, as seen in 's Cemetery Management implemented in recent years. Recent procedural adjustments, such as New York City's increase in bodies per Hart Island trench amid rising caseloads, underscore ongoing adaptations for . These practices have seen heightened demand in the 2020s, driven by demographics including homeless individuals, overdose victims from the , and elderly persons without surviving kin, contributing to estimates of up to 150,000 unclaimed bodies annually nationwide amid urban and trends. This reflects post-2020 surges in such cases, correlated with economic hardship and crises exacerbating .

Efforts in Identification and Commemoration

In Lawrence, Kansas, a 2021 geophysical survey at Oak Hill Cemetery's Potter's Field employed ground-penetrating radar and other equipment, combined with a rediscovered historical plot map, to locate hundreds of unmarked graves dating back over a century. The project, led by the Kansas Geological Survey, aimed to map the site comprehensively for future identification and remembrance efforts. In Dunn County, Wisconsin, the Friends of Potter's Field nonprofit identified at least 110 burials through archival research, prompting collaboration with University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire researchers in 2024 to further document and verify graves in the Menomonie potter's field. This initiative focused on restoring records lost to time, facilitating potential genealogical matches without exhumation. Memorialization has progressed through dedicated monuments and access reforms. On July 16, 2025, Grand Haven, Michigan, unveiled eight plaques at Lake Forest Cemetery listing names of 852 individuals interred in the local potter's field from the 19th and 20th centuries. Similarly, Hart Island in New York City expanded gravesite visitation for families to twice-monthly sessions by 2020, with public tours introduced in 2023 following advocacy for greater transparency. Nonprofits and academic partnerships continue to drive these efforts, emphasizing record compilation and site preservation to honor unclaimed deceased through factual recovery rather than narrative imposition. The Hart Island , for instance, has pushed for digitized burial logs and public engagement to reconstruct family connections.

Criticisms and Reforms

Accounts of Neglect and Dehumanization

New York City's potter's field, established in 1869, utilized inmate labor from to dig burial trenches and inter bodies into unmarked mass graves, a practice that persisted into the late 20th century. This method contributed to the anonymization of over one million interments, rendering individual identities irrecoverable in many cases. Prior to 2020, access to the island was tightly controlled by the Department of Correction, featuring infrequent service that ended in 1977 and imposed strict visitation limits, thereby hindering timely identifications and reclamations. In Rhode Island, the potter's field associated with the Institute of Mental Health in Cranston served as the burial ground for deceased patients from the facility, which by the mid-20th century had devolved into conditions characterized as degrading and dehumanizing for the mentally ill. Unmarked graves in such institutional potter's fields perpetuated the erasure of personal histories, with remains often left unidentified amid institutional overcrowding and neglect. Cincinnati's Price Hill Potter's Field, active from 1852 to 1981, has faced ongoing reports of overgrowth and physical , including unchecked and that disrespect the estimated 20,000 interred remains of the indigent and unknown. Historical urban expansion has similarly encroached on potter's fields, as in cases where sites were disturbed or relocated for development, such as mining activities that desecrated edges of burial grounds in the late 19th century. These documented instances of inadequate and restricted oversight highlight episodic failures in preserving the of potter's field burials, distinct from standard procedural interments elsewhere. In the United States, state-level has mandated efforts to notify and maintain detailed for unclaimed bodies, with many jurisdictions requiring coroners to search for relatives and hold remains for specified periods before . For example, requires immediate notification to known relatives upon discovery of an unclaimed body, followed by a 96-hour holding period to allow for claims. Similarly, at least 16 states have enacted requirements for coroners and to enter unidentified remains and missing persons into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons (), facilitating cross-jurisdictional that reduce anonymized burials over time. A prominent example of advocacy-driven reform occurred in , where sustained pressure from organizations like the Hart Island Project led to legislative changes for , the city's primary potter's field. In December 2019, Mayor signed four bills transferring administrative control from the Department of Correction to the Department of , introducing civilian oversight for burials, expanded public access, and improved transparency in operations. This shift, intensified by public scrutiny during the COVID-19 pandemic when over 2,300 adults were buried there in 2020—more than double the 2019 figure—aimed to humanize processes and diminish reliance on mass trenches through better documentation and family notification protocols. These reforms have via digitized and like , genealogical and occasional identifications that prevent permanent anonymization, though unclaimed cases remain numerous at an estimated tens of thousands annually nationwide. However, transitions such as mandates for over in cost-conscious jurisdictions have elevated per-case expenses—often $500 ,000 for basic —straining municipal budgets amid rising unclaimed volumes driven by economic factors and estranged families.

References

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