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Archive for June 2011

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Create a Place for Your Family to Meet Online

Use your Facebook account to create a special meeting place for your family to meet in one place online no matter where they live. You may have already seen these pages created by businesses and famous people. Even if you are now personally logged into Facebook, sharing your family history research online makes it easier for extended family members to discover and connect with you. Facebook pages show up high in Google and other search engines.

 

Here are a few examples of Facebook pages:

About Our Freedom Community Page: Commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Civil War from an African American perspective.

Preserving Our History in Tangipahoa & St. Helena Parish, Louisiana: Families sharing photos and history.

Over Troubled Water: Strengthening the ties between all African ancestored people.

The greatest thing about Facebook pages is that they do not show the random posts which appear in your news feed, however, your posts from the community page do appear in your news feed for your friends and family to see. Facebook pages allow you to create a community where you can focus on discovering, sharing, and preserving family history.

As family members and friends share photographs, video, and news in their from across the country, bonds are strengthened. Facebook in particular is the perfect place to reach the young members in the family.

Create a Facebook Page

This is the first in a series of articles on how to create a Facebook Community Page where extended family members can share resources and keep in touch. Think of a title for your Facebook page and got to Create a Page. Select the page type. Most family pages can be classified as a Community Page.

Create a Facebook page

After selecting Cause or Community, enter the name of your page, agree to Facebook terms, and click "Get started."

Cause or Community

Next, the "Get Started" page loads, and you will see the first six things needed to set up your new page:

Get Started
The first item is "Upload an image from your computer." In the next post we will walk you through creating a great profile photo and uploading it to your Facebook page.
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Slave Dwelling Project Visits Bellamy Mansion

Slave Dwelling Project Visits Bellamy Mansion

 
Slave Dwelling Project Visits Bellamy Mansion
Bellamy Mansion, Wilmington, NC

Sunday, May 15 found me spending the night at Bellamy Mansion in Wilmington, NC.  I arrived there around 4:45 pm which was good because the young lady working there did not have prior knowledge of my arrival.  This was very important because she was now aware that she should not turn on the alarm in the slave dwelling.  The context of the house reminded me a lot of the Aiken Rhett House in Charleston, SC.  One could easily be enamored by the architectural significance of the house and totally ignore the slavery that was associated with the structure if the former slave dwelling was not still located in back and interpreted.  The dwelling was two stories, made of brick, two bed rooms up top; downstairs contained a bedroom, kitchen and privy.

Slave Dwelling Project Visits Bellamy Mansion
Joe McGill Stands Outside of Slave Quarters, Bellamy Mansion

When I got settled in to the slave dwelling, I took a leisurely stroll to the Wilmington waterfront.  I was amazed by its beauty and the vibrancy of the city.  There was a wealth of activities happening.  I had an abundance of restaurants from which to choose.  I finally decided on one that would allow me to sit outside and enjoy the nice weather and people watch as I ate my meal.

When I returned to the dwelling, I turned on my computer and was amazed to discover that I had wifi capability.  This capability gave me the opportunity to get caught up on blogging about some of the past stays that I had done.

I was later joined by Terry James, this would be his fifth stay. Terry and I were later joined by Braxton Williams the Bellamy Mansion employee who helped to arrange my stay.   Braxton gave us an overview of the history of the mansion.  He then mentioned that there was an African American Civil War reenactor in the area named Fred (Sweet Corn) Johnson.

Slave Dwelling Project Visits Bellamy Mansion
Joe McGill Stands Outside of Slave Quarters, Bellamy Mansion
Of course Terry and I both knew Sweet Corn so Terry gave him a call.  He came to the dwelling in less than 20 minutes.  When Braxton left, Fred, Terry and I walked back to the restaurant where I had eaten earlier for a late night snack.   No matter how hard Terry and I tried, we could not convince Sweet Corn to spend the night in the slave dwelling with us.  He did agree to treat us to breakfast the following morning. 

Terry and I got back to the dwelling around 11:30 pm.  Our conversation did not last very long before both of us went to sleep.  Terry slept in the slave shackles again for the third consecutive time.  Because of the urban setting, I was awakened throughout the night by the fire, police and emergency sirens.

Slave Dwelling Project Visits Bellamy Mansion
Fred "Sweet Corn" Johnson and Joe McGill, Bellamy Mansion

The next morning Sweet Corn treated us to breakfast as he promised.  Terry and I then did a live interview for a local radio station.  Terry then had to go back to his hometown of Florence.  I was obligated to stay to give a lecture on the Slave Dwelling Project later that day.  The lecture was given in the parlor of the Bellamy Mansion to a standing room only crowd.

I went away from that experience knowing that I have to extend the Slave Dwelling Project deep into the heart of the state of North Carolina.  The network established at Bellamy will help me achieve that goal.  Stay tuned for more North Carolina slave dwelling stays in the year 2012 and beyond.

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Exploring Urban Slavery at the Aiken Rhett House

Exploring Urban Slavery at the Aiken Rhett House

Slave Dwelling Project Visits Aiken Rhett House
Aiken Rhett House, Charleston, SC

Saturday, April 30, 2011 found me at the Aiken Rhett House in Charleston, SC to spend the night in a former slave dwelling located there.  I went there the day before with my daughter Jocelyn who had spent the night with me earlier this year in Eliza’s House, the Freedman’s Cottage at Middleton Plantation, also in Charleston, SC.  Our purpose for being there on Friday was to receive a tutorial on the alarm system for the big house and tour the slave dwellings.  In the end, it was decided that access to the big house was not necessary. 

That Friday I realized how people can be easily lulled into a false sense of history.  The magnificence of the Aiken Rhett does not disappoint.  As the house is approached from any angle, one cannot help but marvel at its architectural significance.  As stated in its brochure:  “Built in 1820 and greatly expanded by Governor and Mrs. William Aiken Jr. in the 1830s, the Aiken-Rhett House and its outbuildings have survived as a time capsule virtually unaltered since 1858.  The house speaks powerfully about the interconnections among all members of the household.  Original outbuildings include the kitchen, slaves’ quarters, stable, coach house and privies.”

It is the purpose of places like the Aiken-Rhett House to appeal to tourists but it is the purpose of the Slave Dwelling Project to bring much needed attention to extant slave dwellings.  More recently, this project is allowing me to explore how urban slavery factored into that peculiar institution.  The former home of a slave holding governor of the state of South Carolina would be a great place for me to continue my exploration.

The Stay

Slave Dwelling Project Visits Laurelwood Plantation
Left to Right: Ernest Parks and Terry James

I got there at 4:50 pm on Saturday ten minutes before closing time.  Although I had a key to the back gate that I had obtained the day before, the purpose was to get there while staff was still on duty in case there were last minute instructions.  Staff was wrapping up an unscheduled group tour.  This was a night that I was not scheduled to sleep in the slave dwelling alone.  Ernest Parks, James Brown and Terry James all fellow Civil War reenactors were all scheduled to stay.  This would be the second stay for Ernest and James and the fourth stay for Terry.  All the gentlemen showed up but James Brown was not able to stay because of an impending job that did materialize. 

The remaining three of us slept in the building that contained the kitchen and slave quarters across from the stable and coach house.  We all slept in the same room on the upper level farthest away from the big house. 

Slave Dwelling Project Visits Laurelwood Plantation
Slave Dwelling, Aiken Rhett House, Charleston, SC

Before falling asleep, Ernest and I were engaged in conversation until 2:00 am while it was obvious by Terry’s snoring that he slept well.  Terry decided to sleep in the period slave shackles for a second time.  Both Ernest and I passed on the opportunity to sleep in the second pair that he brought. 

The morning after the sleepover afforded us the opportunity to explore the site without having to compete with tourists.  To that end, lots of pictures were taken. 

One more thank you is in order for the Historic Charleston Foundation.  This is the second property under its stewardship of which it has allowed me to stay.  The Aiken Rhett House like McLeod Plantation both preserve and interpret all aspects of its history. 

If the Slave Dwelling Project had a rating system for stewards of former slave dwellings, Historic Charleston Foundation would rate highly.

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Slave Dwelling Project Receives Warm Welcome in Missouri

Slave Dwelling Project Receives Warm Welcome in Missouri

"Before Joseph McGill’s visit during the 3rd week of April, very little recognition of Missouri’s Little Dixie slave cabins could be found beyond my own efforts with my program “Little Cabins.” I can now say that we have people talking about Missouri’s slave cabins from Kansas City to St. Louis, something that did not exist before. I know the spotlight will not last long, but it is our organization’s desire, as well as my own, to keep the light shining bright for as long as possible with the help of Joseph McGill and his unique and important project." ---Gary Fuenfhausen, President, Missouri's Little Dixie Heritage Foundation
Gary Fuenfhausen, David Lerch and Vicki-McCarrell
Left to Right: Gary Fuenfhausen, David Lerch and Vicki-McCarrell

Monday, April 18, 2011 found me in Pleasant Green, Missouri to stay at Burwood Plantation. I came upon this opportunity through Gary Feunfhausen who contacted me back in December 2010. He is a researcher and architectural and cultural historian living in Missouri with an interest in slave history. He had been researching slave dwellings in the state of Missouri. We both agreed that the Slave Dwelling Project would go over well in Missouri. To that end, Gary proceeded to make plans for the trip, he stepped out on faith and sealed the dates in anticipation that the Missouri Humanities Council would fund the project. Two weeks prior to my trip, Gary received word that his proposal would be funded by the Council.

Burwood would be one of four stays scheduled for the trip to Missouri. My day did not start well. My flight out of Charleston, SC was cancelled. My rescheduled flight would get me to Missouri 5 hours after the time that I was originally scheduled to arrive in Kansas City. When David Lerch, another major player in organizing the trip, became aware of the situation, he immediately took charge and got me on a flight that would shave 2 hours off of the rescheduled arrival time. This was vital in order to stick to the mutually agreed upon schedule.

When I got to Burwood Plantion, I was greeted by the home owner Vicki McCarrell. She had assembled a group that was anxious to hear about the Slave Dwelling Project. The media was represented well within the dynamics of the group. Everyone representing the media got their interview. But there was one gentleman Clayton Slater, a graduate student in Photo Journalism at the University of Missouri who was determined to go above and beyond. We came to an agreement that he could spend the night with me in the dwelling. I am anxious to see the finished product of his work.

Tuesday, April 19 would be the first time I co-presented about the slave dwelling project. The lecture was given at Pickard Hall on the Campus of the University of Missouri in Columbia. I opened the presentation speaking on the need to preserve slave dwellings nationally and Gary followed with the need to preserve slave dwellings on a local and statewide level.

Joseph McGill and Gary Fuenfhausen at Pleasant Green Plantation
Joseph McGill and Gary Fuenfhausen at Pleasant Green Plantation, Missouri

Wednesday, April 20 found me at Pleasant Green Plantation in Pilot Grove, Missouri. I had already become acquainted with the owner Florence (Winky) Chesnutt - Friedrichs for she was a part of the group that gathered at Burwood the previous Monday night. A group of approximately 20 had gathered for a presentation on the Slave Dwelling Project. During the question and answer period, our host Winky did something quite profound, she read the list of all the slaves that were present on the plantation in 1863. As was common, each slave had only a first name, an age and was assigned a value which ranged from $0.00 to $200.00. Noticeably absent from the list were the names of men. As a Civil War reenactor, I immediately speculated that the men had seized the opportunity to join the Union Army. It is a known fact that the State of Missouri supplied 600 men to serve in the 1st Iowa Colored Infantry which was also known as the 60th United States Colored Troops. Of course my assumption led to a spirited discussion during the question and answer period. After the question and answer period we all proceeded outside for photographs and a tour of the slave dwelling.

After the group left, Gary and I did a live radio interview about the project. We then had a nice dinner provided by Winky. The modest dwelling where I slept was the only one left of five that was once on the property, the other four being removed or burned by the new owners in the early 1900s. This one was lived in until the 1940s.

Russell/Reinhard House, Lexington, Missouri
Russell/Reinhard House, Lexington, Missouri

My third stay occurred in Lexington, Missouri at the home owned by Elizabeth S. Sellers. Unfortunately, Mrs. Sellers was out of the state and could not meet me at the site but her son William W. Sellers was a gracious host, he connected me to Mrs. Sellers via a telephone call. The Russell/Reinhard house, located within the city limits has a semidetached two-story summer kitchen and slave quarters. The original owner William Russell was a successful merchant and financer and also a partner with Waddell and Major in the overland trade and Pony Express. Here I was given a choice of sleeping in the modernized upstairs complete with beds or sleeping in the more authentic downstairs. For the sake of the Slave Dwelling Project, I chose the ladder.

It was business as usual, despite the rain, a group had gathered at the site to hear my thoughts. I noticed that the project had established a following, some of the same people were showing up at these sites. After the group left, Gary and I sat down to have conversation with William. Included in the conversation was how some Union troops robbed the local bank during the Civil War and how one of the local bank was robbed by Jessie James.


Joe McGill Sandi Stephens and Gary Fuenfhausen
Joe McGill, Sandi Stephens and Gary Fuenfhausen

My fourth and last stay in Missouri occurred at Winsor/Aull Greek Revival Mansion. The house and quarters was built in 1851, by Thomas Winsor, on the Missouri River bluff. Winsor, who was a successful merchant and banker, owned 3 slaves in 1850.

The current owner of the Winsor/Aull Greek Revival mansion is Sandi Stephens. The following are her comments.

"Old houses are in my blood, always have been. That is why I moved from the West Coast to Lexington, Missouri. It was incidental that my home has slave quarters on the property, but that particular area has become one of our favorite hide-a-ways on our property. It represents part of our history, one that many choose to ignore, or more importantly, make the conscious decision to remove such structures because they are deemed insignificant in comparison to the principal dwelling on the property. Not all of our history may be pleasant, but it is history none-the-less and should not be ignored. It should not be deliberately demolished, as if the lives of those who lived there and worked that land or in that house were inconsequential. I was so thrilled to be a part of Mr. McGill’s Slave Quarters Project and thoroughly enjoyed meeting him and hearing of his endeavor to preserve these integral parts of our past. As he states in his lectures and on his slides, 'these places matter'."

The last scheduled event was a lecture on Saturday, April 23 which was given by me and Gary at the Battle of Lexington State Historic Site.

Missouri was the fourth state to which the Slave Dwelling Project was expanded. This trip was a lesson in how slavery factored into the westward expansion of the United States. It was also a lesson in how slavery factored into the hemp industry. Additionally, it expanded my knowledge of how and why the state of Missouri remained a border state during the Civil War and never officially committed to either side. The four private owners who allowed me to spend a night in their well preserved and maintained former slave dwellings deserve a big thank you. We need more like you. I must especially thank Gary Fuenfhausen for all of the work that he has done to date to replicate on a statewide level what I am trying to accomplish on a national level. It was only fate that our paths crossed, we both have a lot of additional work to do.