A potter's field is a place for the burial of unknown or indigent people.
Origin
The term comes from Matthew 27:3-8 in the New Testament of the Bible, in which Jewish priests take 30 pieces of silver returned by a repentant 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.[1]
The traditional site of this is in the valley of Hinnom, which was a source of potter's clay. This may be the origin of the name.[2]
Examples
- Lincoln Park, on Chicago's North Side, found it's origin in the 1840s as Chicago City Cemetery. The southernmost portion of the cemetery, where one may now find a number of baseball fields (north of LaSalle Dr., west of North Avenue Beach), was the location of the City Cemetery potter's field from 1843 to 1871. More than 15,000 people, including 4,000 Civil War Rebels, were buried here on marshy land near the water's edge. The baseball fields have occupied these grounds since 1877. In 1998, during construction of a parking structure at the history museum, workers uncovered the skeletal remains of 80 bodies. Due to various oversights, many likely remain to this day.
- Madison Square Park, Washington Square Park and Bryant Park in New York City originated as potter's fields. The city's current potter's field, and the largest cemetery in the United States with at least 800,000 burials, is on Hart Island.[3]
- Potter's Field was also the name of a small cove of the East River just below the Williamsburg Bridge on the Brooklyn side, where bodies that have been in the river from November through the winter season surface in April as the rising temperature causes them to decompose and rise to the surface. The fluid dynamics of the East River causes a collection of these bodies every year off the docks of Potter's Field.[citation needed]
- Hudson County Burial Grounds
- Washington Square (Philadelphia)
- Potter's Field (Omaha) in Omaha, Nebraska
- Holt Cemetery in New Orleans, Louisiana which contains the remains of known and unknown early jazz musicians, including Charles "Buddy" Bolden. The battered remains of Robert Charles, at the center of the 1900 New Orleans race riot were briefly interred here, then dug up, and incinerated. It is located next to Delgado Community College.
- Potters Fields, London, SE1, near the London City Hall and St Olave's Grammar School
- Toronto, Ontario had a Potter's Field at the corner of Yonge and Bloor Streets. The burial grounds were closed with some of the bodies moved to other cemeteries. Unknown number of bodies remained on the site when it was built over. Today the grounds are part of the posh Yorkville district, and the site of an office tower.
- Cimetière de Laval, near Montreal, Quebec [1]
- Music Hall in Cincinnati, Ohio was built over a nineteenth-century potter's field.
Popular culture
- A documentary about potter's field by Melinda Hunt Hart Island: An American Cemetery.
- From Potter's Field is a novel by Patricia Cornwell.
- Potter's Field is an album by the rock band 12 Stones.
- On the title track to Johnny Cash's album American IV: The Man Comes Around, the lyrics include a reference to "the potter's ground" as a metaphor for dying without salvation.
- "Potter's Field" is also the name of a song by heavy metal band Anthrax from the 1993 album Sound of White Noise.
- Hart Island (New York), the Potter's Field in New York City is featured in the film Don't Say a Word.
- Tom Waits makes references to Potter's Field in several of his songs.
- The Potter's Field is the name of one of the Brother Cadfael detective books by Ellis Peters, later turned into a television episode.
- Mr. Potter, the greedy banker in the Frank Capra film It's a Wonderful Life, is told by his land agent that his slum-like housing will soon be a "potters field" due to the Bailey's efforts to build affordable housing.
- In the long-running MUD GemStone IV an area called the "Potter's Field" is the primary spawn area for zombies. The area's descriptions are, indeed, of a long-disused graveyard for the indigent and unknown.
- Similarly, in City of Villains a massive graveyard called "Potter's Field" is a place where zombies spawn, while magicians use the area for necromantic rituals.
- In the HBO drama Oz (TV Series), "Potter's Field" is the name for the cemetery where deceased prisoners with no next-of-kin or whose remains are unclaimed are buried
- "No Eagle Lies in Potter's Field" is the name of a song by the rock band On A Pale Horse.
- Potter's Field is the title of an 3 issue limited comic book series (plus a one shot) written by Mark Waid and published by Boom! Studios about an anonymous investigator who takes it upon himself to discover the identities of those buried on Hart Island.
- Boy actor, Bobby Driscoll (Peter Pan, 1953), was unidentified at the time of his burial, but it is now confirmed that he is buried in Potter's Field on Hart Island in New York.
- In Sam Fuller's Pickup on South Street (1953), tie saleswoman "Moe" [Thelma Ritter] is saving up money for a funeral so she won't to be laid to rest in Potter's Field: "Look, Tiger, if I was to be buried in Potter's Field, it would just about kill me!"
- In the television movie/series "Glory Enough for All", the character Frederick Banting indicates that a soldier he was trying to save is dead by saying "Another one for Potter's Field".
- In Victor Hugo's Les Misérables Jean Valjean is buried in Potter's Field
- Harry Potter gets his last name from Potter's Field in London, as J.K. Rowling has always been fond of it since childhood.[citation needed]
- A potter's field is featured in Neil Gaiman's novel The Graveyard Book. One of the characters, Liza Hempstock, is a witch that was buried in a potter's field next to Nobody Owens' graveyard.
References
External links
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