In a message dated 3/5/04 3:50:02 AM, Page007655@cs.com writes: << I would love to come to Tuskegee and photograph the old hospital, town , and anything else that pertains to the story of the Syphyllis experiment. I would love to know where Nurse Rivers once lived. and if there is any kind of grave site for some of the men. Is there a historical marker? I would very much appreciate any info. I know there is alot of info on the subject, but very few pictures. I would love to provide some. >> Jan - I am from Tuskegee, but not the generation involved in the Tuskegee Experiment and I don't presently live in Macon Co., but I can tell you that there are no markers, no memorials that I am aware of that denote the location where Macon County's men were treated (subjected to experimentation). I believe many may have been encouraged to come "in to town", at a facility put up just for that purpose and since abandoned. Some may have been treated at the V.A. Hospital, the government complex that was established just to treat "colored" soldiers. It is still there, in Tuskegee, but is all but shut-down. I doubt that subjects were treated at John A. Andrew Memorial Hospital, the facility at Tuskegee (then) Institute, but it is possible. That building still stands, too, but is not in use as a hospital facility. Atty. Fred Gray, who spearheaded the law suit against the govenment on behalf of the subjects in the experiment, is still living and he resides in Tuskegee. You might try and interview him. Sadly, his law firm burned down just a couple of weeks ago, along with the office of the Tuskegee News, causing the loss of many precious records. Since Mr. Gray's offices are temporarily located elsewhere now, I don't know the address. But, I'd be willing to bet that if you address a message to "Atty. Fred Gray, Sr., Tuskegee, AL 36083", he'd probably get it. He would be the ultimate source of information on this subject. There are a couple of cemeteries in Tuskegee where many African Americans are buried, Ashdale and Greenwood being the largest; there are smaller plots throughout the county. You will find deceased persons from the Tuskegee Experiment in nearly all of them, as there was no single place where they were laid to rest. I read that the last of the survivors died just recently... Annette