Howard University Upon completing his doctorate, Blakey joined the faculty of
Howard University, where he held appointments in the schools of Liberal Arts and Sciences and Medicine from 1982 to 2001. At Howard, he founded the W. Montague Cobb Biological Anthropology Laboratory and served as curator of its skeletal collections, which he had upgraded in state-of-the-art steel cabinetry with support from the
National Science Foundation. He simultaneously held an appointment as Research Associate in Physical Anthropology at the
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, from 1986 to 1994.
New York African Burial Ground Project In 1991, construction for a federal office building in
Lower Manhattan uncovered human skeletal remains from the colonial-era
New York African Burial Ground, a cemetery estimated to contain between 15,000 and 20,000 interments of free and enslaved Africans dating from approximately 1668 to 1795. Blakey, then director of the W. Montague Cobb Laboratory at Howard University, was appointed scientific director and principal investigator for the bioarchaeological analysis of the skeletal remains in 1992. Blakey's team examined the skeletal remains of 419 individuals, determining that approximately half of those buried were children, and that the adult population showed widespread evidence of nutritional deficiency (including high rates of enamel hypoplasia and porotic hyperostosis), chronic musculoskeletal stress consistent with heavy forced labor, and trauma including healed fractures in a significant proportion of adults. The team also identified 27 individuals with filed or culturally modified teeth, a strong indicator of African birth, nearly tripling the number of such specimens previously known from the Americas. The project's bioarchaeological findings helped to displace the long-standing perception that
slavery and the
Atlantic slave trade had played little role in the development of the northern colonies and New York City in particular. A methodological and ethical landmark of the project was Blakey's introduction of the concept of the
descendant community and a model of publicly engaged or "clientage" archaeology, in which the living African American community had formal standing in decisions about the research, reburial, and memorialization of the remains. This approach has since been adopted as a best practice by the
National Trust for Historic Preservation (2018) and shaped the
American Anthropological Association's guidelines on ethical bioarchaeology. The site was designated a
U.S. National Monument in 2006–07.
College of William & Mary In 2001, Blakey joined the faculty of the
College of William & Mary as National Endowment for the Humanities Professor of Anthropology, Africana Studies, and American Studies, positions he continues to hold. He is the founding director of the university's Institute for Historical Biology (IHB), which he established to provide an institutional home for research at the intersection of human biology, history, and culture, and which maintains a comparative database of colonial-era bioarchaeological and demographic data from across the Americas. == Research and scholarship ==