B» kfig’ P ace C4 BLACK HHTOR Y M O NTH 1999 ' 1999« W W “ SU?-’"-" ZWEDRU’S CHILDREN: PART THREE smile on his free. “ Looks like w e g o a f watering the horse, the y oung boy cam e trom here.” Then, picking up grains o f B \ S tephen H anks over to her and said, “M y grandfather died.' Akey, who now had learned En­ glish, replied, "Y es, 1 know .’But then the boy George asked, "W h y did he die?” .Akey thought for a m om ent then an­ swered, “ Evertone dies." B ut the young boy G eorge was persistent, “D id your grandfather die?” This w as the first time continued, "D o you know what “pepper" F inally, the ‘ Providence’ ’ entered the waters o f the English colonies. O n June 8*, 1725 itpulledintoaportat Yorktown, V uguuaw ith 161 enslavedhumansouls. W ithin days o f its arrival, the ship’s "cargo” was being adv ertised in the town paper, with an auction already scheduled to have a celebration tonite, cause m as­ ter Eskridge’s cornin’ hom e tonite, and the whole fam ily's getting ready tor one big party,” says Jack. Suddenly, they all hear footsteps com ing from the main house. ‘Shhh,’ says Jack, “som eone’s coming.” It w as only one o f the white indentured servants that w orked there going over to the sm oke house. The plantation was run by over sixty blacks to take place. As chance w ould have it, Akey and Bodebe. who also called him­ self Botswain, were again put together and sent with others to a ‘pen, w here they would be kept until auction day. W hen auction day arrived, people cam e from miles around: planters, busi­ ness owners, lawyers, judges, politi­ cians, clergymen, and slave traders. The selling would be fierce, each one trying to choose w hat they considered the “bestpickofthe lo t” Akey and Botswain were “sold” together. The African m en and w omen comprised m any tribes: Ashanti, Yoruba, G ola, B a ssa V ai, Mandingo. W ith all their strength, dig­ nity, and faith, they gathered themselves with all the courage they had left to try and comprehend w here they were and why. A s the auction appeared to die down and lose steam, the Africans who were s&ll left were taken back to the pens. Soon they w ould be shipped to the next towns along the riveis until each and every last one o f them were taken. Akey and Botsw ain w ere transported into the northern neck o f the colony to a tobacco plantation in W estm oreland County, ow ned by a man nam edCokm el G eorge Eskridge. They w ere handed over to a black overseer, a Virgiman- bom slave named Jack King. Hiere thy w ere led aw ay to the slave quarters to receive their first “breaking in” session. ‘ They call’s m e Jack King, but 1 ain’t no k in g ‘ro u n d h e r e ...w h e r e y a ’a ll from ?.. .ya’all speak any E nglish?...I don’t know where ya’all from, but this here’s tobacco leal’. . .now watch me. this is how you pick it...w a tc h m e n o w ...” Akey and Botswain watch in confii- sion, not understanding a w ord fins old m an has said to them. Soon ole’ Jack K ing gets frustrated and tired. Frus­ trated o f not being understood by these newcomers, and tired o f having to do these “sessions” in the first place, tired ofhaving to do this ju st so to not have to w ork as hard in the fields yet still receive his extra helpings o f food that the other field hands didn’t g et O ff to the side another slave observes, anAfrican named Q uam ino, an Ashanti from Ghana, w ho was brought here two years ago. Quamino stands and listens to the language o f Akey and Botswain. Suddenly his eyes widen as he hears a w ord that sounds femiliar to him. H e approaches them andbegins to speak Unexpectedly, Akey and Botswain quickly become animated, speaking sounds in the .Akan tongue with Quam ino, a language m any W est Afri­ cans share together from different tribes. Sitting in file com er is Jack, with a big and three white indentured servants. T h at n ig h t, w h ile g u e sts from W estm oreland C ounty continued to stream to the party inside the m am house dancing and tipping their glasses to the kegs o f cider brandy, the Africans cel­ ebrated their ow n hom ecom ing. Back aw ay from the m ain house and into file yards o f the ten to twelv e sm all house cabins dotted along the fields entered A k ey a n d B o tsw a in , e s c o rte d b y Quamino, as they were introduced to each family in the cabins. T hose w ho were on hand to greet their new ex­ tended family m em bers w ere Mingo, Q uam ino’sw ifeTafly,W illiam & E liza- beth, and “Congo” Judy . There also were A key had ever b e e n a sk e d such a ques- is? People com e to his house to buy pepper, guinea pepper.” The boy George then picked the sand up also, saying “pepper...pepper.” Akey’stamily at that time was Bodebe, who also called him self Botswain, and his wife Jenny, George & Hannah, and Rose. A n­ o th e r daughterwhich they namedSusan. Frank and Akey had been married six yeais now, just before Dr. Eskridge left for England after deeding the land to Mr. Jackson. A s A key w as sitting and hold­ ing her baby daughter outside the smoke house, the boy George, w ho was now 12, cam e over to her, and both o f them began to reminisce about the things that had occurred over the years during the occasions he h ad com e to visit. T hen A key ask ed him , “do you rem em ber w hen you w ere the size o f m y little S usan, and M r. E skridge died ?” ‘N ot really,” said G eorge, “ 1 ju s t rem em ­ b er m any p eo p le com ing and going, and th e horse w agon slow ly going dow n the ro ad w ith ev ery o n e follow ­ ing b ehind it.” B ut then G eo rg e added, “ I also rem em b er seeing you o v e r by the horses, and you w ere show ing m e the sa n d .’ A key then ask ed him , “ D o you know w h y I w as sh o w in g you the sand? It w as b ecau se you had asked m e if m y g ran d fath er h ad died. Y ou even asked m e w here w as h e.” “W hat did you tell m e?” G eo rg e inquired. the apple orchards, or hanging m eat in the sm oke house, young Frank would w ork next to Akey. She still w ouldn’t smile, but each tim e he w alked b y her, their eyes w ould meet. The day Akey finally sm iled w as w hen Frank slipped A key w ent on, “ I told you that 1 did not know ifh e w as alive o r not, b u t that he lived in a far aw ay p lace across the ocean. I p ick ed up the sand to explain and fell in the w ater while Botsw ain was trying to show him how to fish along the Potomac river. A kruFrankw asnot. A nd w hen Akey w ould catch som e fish but Frank didn’t, he wondered w hat had robbed Frank o f his smile, if only for a moment. Yes, Botswain w as happy that now his niece had found a friend. TenyearslaterC olonelE skndgedied three year old son George. There was no work to be done in the fields on this day. The sixty m en and w om en stayed close to their small cab­ ins, while file friends and fam ily ofC olo- nel George Eskridge cam e to pay their respects. A s people gathered in the parlour room , the boy G eorge w an­ dered outside to play. A s A key was George & Hannah, and Rose. Another femily that lived next to them were Q uam ino & lafty , W illiam & Eliza­ beth, and Frank. O neofCokm el Eskridge sons. Dr. Robert Eskridge, placed this family o f five on his property, which happened to be next door to his father’s. A key’s family remained at the same place. Thus, both families w ere still able to live near each other. Dr. Eskndge later sold his property to a m an named arrangements. The boy G eorge came, too, accom panying his m other Mary Washington. Akey, w ho w as now 29, was also now married to Frank and had a the sam e age as Akey. about one year older. He becam e fond o f A key from that day on, to m eet this young beautiful black skinned girl. H e did not know where she w as from, orw hy shecouldn't speak English, but he knew som ething terrible had robbed her smile. B ut as ‘a true friend loveth all the time, and is a brother bom w hen thou is in distress," young Frank settled to ease A k ey ’s bruised heart and spirit. W hether it w as hoeing in the tobacco fields, picking in N ow his estate w ould be divided among his six children, including the Africans on i t A fter the funeral, the colonel’s family gathered at the m ain house to w elcom e relatives and friends. The colonel’s adopted daughter M ary and her husband Captain A ugustine W ash­ ington soon arrived along w ith their A story o f a West African family in Liberia, and a voung girl ’s life as she is brought to Virginia. Jackson. In 1744 Mrs. Elizabeth Eskridge died, and now her son Sam uel would inherit the main house and the planta­ tion. The family cam e to m ake the final G eorge & Hannah, Rose, T om , Jenny, and youngFrank. Young Frank w as about He did not know where she was from, or why she couldn't speak English, but he knew something terrible had robbed her » to you that m y grandfather grew pep­ per, and that people w ould com e to his farm to buy this pepper, w hich the berries w hen crushed look like the sand.” G eorge then asked, his m ind again becom ing ju s t as curious as it w as nine years ago, “W h at w as the nam e o f this place? ’A key proudly told him . “ It w as called Z w edru, near the river C a v e lla ” S he even w ent on to tell him that her grandfather, Sensobo, w as a sailor and had traveled on ships, returning hom e w ith m uch w ealth. T hese things w ere new to the ears o f this boy. H e did not know w hether to believe these things or not. T his w ould be the last tim e G eorge w ould see A key again. T hree years later, Sam uel Eskridge died. T hat sam e year Frank and A key had another daughter w hom they nam ed Jane. B ut sadly, fam ilies w ould now be separated. S am uel E skridge’s son B urditt took Frank, A key, and their tw o daughers to South C arolina along w ith tw o other persons. B odebe re­ m ained in V irginia w here ha later died, never to see his little niece again, the daughter o f his brother M ennah and his w ife B ina, o f the villge o f Zw edru. Frank and A key lived for a tim e, then they, too, died in S outhC arolina. T heir daugher Jane m arried a young m an nam ed W illiam and had five children: Ruth, B arbara, G eorge, and W illiam B urgess. A nd w hen B urditt Eskridge w as killed during the tim e o f the revo­ lutionary w ar, his tw o sons Sam uel and Ribhard di vided W illiam and Jane ’ s descendants - Sam uel taking som e to T ennesse, and R ichard taking the rest o f the fam ily to a plantation in D uck H ill, M ississippi. The overseer on the plantation w as a m an w hose nam e w as M arion H anks. A s for G eo rg e W ashington, he stipulated that all A frican-A m ericans had been m ade slaves and living at his hom e, Mt. V ernon, be granted free­ dom upon his death. H is nephew , B ushrod W ashington, becam e the first president o f the A m erican C oloniza­ tion Society, w hich led efforts in re­ leasing thousands o f A frican-A m eri­ cans from slavery to Liberia, the coun­ try w here the K ru still live. A fter the w ar o f the rebellion, som e in m y fam ily changed their surnam es. W e lift M ississippi in the great “ E xo­ dus o f 1879” and w ent W est to O sage C ity, K ansas w here m y great-grand­ parents, W illiam and R osetta H anks, raised ten children. M any o f their de­ scendants are still alive and w ell dow n to this day. such a question since she cam e to this strange country, and here now she was being asked, from a three year child at th a t “Id o not know ,’’answ ered A key,“It has been a long tim e since I last saw him.” “W here is he?” continued the boy, his curious nund now becom ing en­ gaged in this m om entary conversation. A t first Akey hesitated to answer, but upon the b o y ’s insistence, she looked around, and not seeing anyone, bent dow n eye level w ith the boy and an­ sw ered, pointing tow ard the visible Potomac river, “M y grandfather lives out there, across the waters far aw ay Dirty Little Secrets B y D r . C laud A nderson Lincoln Didn’t Free Slaves H istorical facts suggest President L incoln w as everything bu t “the great em ancipator o f black slaves.” D uring the earlier years o f the C ivil W ar, P resident L incoln p ublicly claim ed he w ould not and could no t free black sla v es. He even ack now ledged that the C ivil W ar w as not about b lack people, but about national unity. Lincoln w as not passive in his su p ­ port o f slavery even w hen U nion co m ­ m anders issued o rders freeing slaves in captured C onfederate territory. L in­ coln b lo c k e d su ch o rd ers at least twice. L incoln’s position w as strength­ ened by the U.S. C ongress in 1861, w hen it passed and referred to the states in an am endm ent to the C o n sti­ tution that guaranteed that C ongress could never abolish b lack slavery in A m erica. Few northern politicians had any interest in freeing b lack slaves. They w ere concerned about breaking the w ealth and political po w er b ase o f the South. M o s t p o li ti c ia n s k n e w th a t L incoln’s E m ancipation Proclam ation w as a sham . L incoln w as P resident o f the U nion only. H e co u ld not and did not free black slaves. T he E m ancipa­ tion Proclam ation sp o k e gloriously about freeing slaves in the deep South, over w hich the U nion h ad no author­ ity. Y et, it ignored b lack s in the b o rd er states over w hich L incoln d id have authority. T he attitude o f L incoln and his adm inistration w as succinctly put in L incoln’s letter o f D ecem b er 22, 1860, to A lexander S tephen, soon to becom e V ice-P resident o f the C o n ­ t J federacy, “D o the people o f the South really entertain fears that a R epubli­ can adm inistration w ould, directly or indirectly, interfere w ith the slave, o r w ith them , about the slaves? Ifth ey do, 1 w ish to assure you, as once a friend, and still, I hope, not an enem y, that there is no m ore danger in this respect than it w as in the days o fW ashington." T he G reat Em ancipators Sick Joke T here is an old adage that w hatever a m an jo k es about is w hat he truly feels in his h e a rt If there is any truth in this saying, it speaks poorly for Presi­ dent A braham Lincoln. A fter Elijah L ovejoy, an anti-slavery editor had been killed b y pro-slavery forces, Lin­ coln m ade a jo k e out o f his death. In a speech in W orchester, M assachusetts, he said, “ I have heard you have aboli­ tionists here. W e have a few in Illinois and w e shot one the other day.” The crow d roared w ith laughter. But, on the serious side, m any o f L incoln’s form al statem ents revealed he held no love for blacks, free o r enslaved. Reparations For Slaveholders? A b rah am L incoln w as g row ing in­ creasin g ly sensitive to an d fearful of, the d iv isiv e an d explosive issue o f slavery. E arly in the first term o f his p resid en cy , L incoln o ffered repara­ tions to sou th ern slaveholders. L in­ coln d ev ised a schem e to free the s la ves graduall y o v er a p erio d o f som e 30 years. H e w o u ld o ffer reparations to the so u th ern slaveholders and pay them for th eir “ losses” o u t o f the national treasury. T o carry out his plan, he n eed ed the approval o f C on­ gress to p ay southern slaveholders n early a h a lf billio n dollars, only a p o rtio n o f th eir to tal $7 b illio n in­ vestm ent. T h is w as an u n im ag in ab le am o u n t o f m o n ey for that p erio d in h isto ry . Slavery Divided Families and the Nation T he C ivil W ar is o ften referred to as th e G reat D ividing W ar. A lth o u g h sym b o lically it w as fo u g h t to p re­ serv e the U nion, in reality it w as fo u g h t to preserv e slavery. It w as P resid en t L in co ln w h o said th at a house d iv id ed ag ain st itself w o u ld not stand. H e co u ld h av e been speaking about his o w n household. T h e C ivil W ar reach ed in sid e the W h ite H o u se an d to u ch ed L in c o ln ’s fam ily, the F irst F am ily o f this n a­ tion, and d iv id ed it as it d iv id ed the n atio n itself, alo n g lines o f U nion versus C onfederacy. T he d iv isio n w ithin the L incoln hou seh o ld b ecam e so g reat that the U n ited States S en ate C o m m ittee on the C o n d u ct o f the W ar felt it had to deal w ith it w as a natio n al issue. T he co m m ittee m et to co n sid er charges o f treaso n a g ain st the P re s id e n t’s w ife, M ary L incoln. L incoln cam e to h er rescue an d read a b rie f statem ent d enying that an y m em b er o f h is fam ­ THE FUTURE OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY IS NOW! ily h ad co llab o rated w ith the enem y. F o u r o f L in c o ln ’s b ro th ers-in - law w ore C o n fed erate u niform s. O ne o f them , L ieutenant D avid P. T odd, w as charged w ith b rutality against U nion soldiers held as prisoners o f w ar in R ich m o n d , V irginia. M ary L in co ln ’s tw o sisters w ere m arried to C o n fe d e ra te o f f ic e r s , w h ile h e r brother. Dr. G eorge T odd, w as a vol­ unteer confederate surgeon w h o called Lincoln an “unhung scoundrel." M T V MOMf BUSMCSS H fU T H U P t .SSuSiiS © ¡998 American Family Mutual Insurance Company and its Subsidiaries, Madison, WI 53783-0001 www.amfam.com THE END.