Whitney Plantation
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Whitney Plantation
McLeod Plantation Slave Quarters © Beverly Christ, 2009
Charleston, South Carolina
I used to have an aversion to the Bible and learning about anything that had to do with American slave trade mainly due to HOW we are taught or shown it.
The more i work with my ancestors, the less shame, and frustration i feel. Instead, i feel pure fire to uncover the very many secrets that are the source of our black American culture as well as Hoodoo.
No one can remove the source of Hoodoo, and pretend its something that is not. There is only power within the truth.
First Person Narratives Of The Civil War, Letter Regarding Slavery By Edward Lathrop- Georgia
Photo: Slave Quarters Hermitage Plantation, Savannah, Georgia, ca. 1870.
Disclaimer Warning: This Post contains offensive language/words or negative stereotypes that may be disturbing to some readers. Such materials must be viewed in the context of the relevant time period.
JULY 23, 1903.
MY DEAR MRS. DE SAUSSURE:
“I will proceed to answer your inquiries. You know I am Southern born and raised. I am a Georgian, and although never a slaveholder I was nursed by a negro woman to whom I was most fondly attached, and who, I believe, loved me as she would her own son. I have had the opportunity to mingle freely with slaveholders of different characters and dispositions, and while I regard slavery as such an enormous evil and am heartily glad that it has been abolished in this country, I am bound in candor to say that my observation, during all these years of my residence in Georgia and South Carolina, thoroughly convinced me that in the majority of cases slaves were more kindly treated and brought into more intimate and kindly relations to white families than they are now, though free. This, of course, is not given as an apology for slavery, but it is a simple statement of facts. I might refer, for example, to what I witnessed and felt, while a guest, on more than one occasion, in the house of your honored father and mother. Your father seemed to me to be as watchful of the interests, both temporal and spiritual, of his slaves as of his own immediate white family. It was, to my mind, a beautiful illustration of patriarchal slavery, as it existed in the days of Abraham. Of course there were exceptions to this treatment of slaves by their owners, but, as a rule, so far as my observation extended, your father's methods were universally approved, while the cruel slaveholder was indignantly condemned and repudiated.”
“You may remember that I was for three years the associate of Rev. Dr. Fuller, then pastor of the Baptist Church in Beaufort S. C. Beaufort District (now county) was probably the largest slave holding district in the State. Most that I have stated above, as to the kindly treatment of slaves was emphatically true of Beaufort. The Baptist Church, in addition to its white membership, embraced about two thousand slaves. These slaves, as church members, enjoyed equal privileges with the whites. Dr. Fuller or myself preached to them every Sunday. The Lord's Supper was administered to them and to the whites impartially and at the same time. And any grievance that they complained of, among themselves, was as patiently listened to and adjusted as was the case with the white members. In a word, all that could be done for them, in their circumstances, was promptly and cheerfully done. I could add much more of the same tenor to what I have written, but I will not weary you with a long discourse.”
Affectionately yours, EDWARD LATHROP.
ld Plantation Days; Being Recollections of Southern Life Before the Civil War: Electronic Edition, De Saussure, N. B. (Nancy Bostick), 1837-1915
Bellamy Mansion slave quarters and the stairwell at the big house. Fujixt1 with Ariel Ashcraft.
Exploring freedom and slavery in Revolutionary New England
Slaves were not immigrants!!!!
Happy Juneteenth 2023 USA
Behind the Big House Old Cahawba Archaelogical Park Orrville, Alabama June 27, 2021
Two-story brick slave quarter like this were not typical, but they could be found in wealthy towns like Cahaba. Stephen Barker built these brick quarters and a fine brick home for himself in 1861 on the northern edge of town. After the Civil War, Confederate veteran Samuel McCurdy Kirkpatrick and his wife, Sarah, purchased the Barker’s large home and all of its outlying structures. As other residents started to abandon Cahaba, the Kirkpatricks purchased the vacated lots. They transformed the dying town into a large farm. For nearly seventy years, three generations of Kirkpatricks managed a model farm here called “Kirk-View”. When the mansion burned in 1935, Kirkpatrick’s grandson created a home for his new bride by adding columns and a back wing to the old slave quarters. The columns were removed in 2017.
Old Shack - July 2020 I often rode my bicycle past this old shack while we were staying at Paynes Creek Campground on Lake Hartwell in Georgia. There was also a large, old, abandoned house nearby. Both are old enough that this could have been a slave quarters– later a servant’s quarters– for whomever once lived in that house. Both are now decaying parts of the history of the South. MWM
Idk who here lives in Texas, but since we are defacing racist pieces of shit, we should also tear down the standing slave quarters in Terrell, Texas.
I don't exactly know where it is, but my cousin always mentions it when we drive by 805 1st Street Terrell, Texas 75160.