Archive for June, 2010

Housekeeping note

Author: Laura

I am now tackling the staggering backlog that piled up over the last month while I was sick with, then recovering from, the virus. Please have patience! I’ve started with returning personal and project emails/messages but if you haven’t heard from me by now please let me know — I may have missed one in there somewhere.

Next I’ll be updating the Finland Project’s mtDNA maps, will get back to work drafting the project’s Family Finder page, and hopefully have some blog items posted Friday-Saturday.

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This is a recent news story I’m very much hoping gets further researched and expanded on:  Nicole Norfleet of the Huffington Post’s “Slave Children Photo Found in North Carolina Attic.”

I’ve long haunted antique and second-hand stores and one thing I’ve always found heartbreaking is the orphaned family photos — there because no family was available to take the photos after their owner’s death and/or because the existing family didn’t recognize anybody in that particular batch of photos and so they got consigned to the junk pile.

In this case, the photo of the boy John and friend (either as slaves or recently emancipated slaves) sitting on a barrel and taken at some point in the 1860s was part of a photo album discovered in April 2010 during an estate sale in North Carolina. The photo was also associated with an 1854 “purchase” document for John. The photo itself is labeled by the studio of renowned Civil War era photographer Mathew Brady, although this photo was probably taken by his assistant Timothy O’Sullivan.

As the buyer and collector Keya Morgan noted, this is a rare and poignant, painful look into the lives of slave children in the later 1800s, and the details of those lives have been lost:  John “doesn’t even exist in history.” Here’s to hoping we learn more by bringing orphaned photos and stories into the light and collective awareness.

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