We have been in each other's beds. His first-person account of tracking down those descendants reminded me of "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks." "Religion, sex, death, money, and the Negroes.". Our book group discussed this last evening. It lists the contents of a house near London that once belonged to the Harleston family, relatives of the Balls. Loved it! In general, a slave had far fewer rights to his offspring than to his spouse. and, I believe, now and then a Virginia reel. Edward Ball is descended from one of the largest slaveholding families in the South. It does get a little deep in places but there is so much information that I have never read about before. WebSlave marriages and family ties were not recognized by American law. So, he is following these descendants. 27 Feb 2023. This is after the 54-year-old quit her job and paid 100,000 in reparation This is the source of the title; he and these black people are members of the same family. As someone who is interested in genealogy, this book was fascinating. Additional gift options are available when buying one eBook at a time. I had a personal reason for reading this book. WebOpen the settings menu. The remnants of rice banks, eroded When did they leave the In the mail one year came an invitation to a Ball family reunion in South Carolina. Remarkablean extraordinary achievement [with] much to learn from., Drew Gilpin Faust,New York Times Book Review, Laudableadmirabledeftimmensely valuablefascinating and important., A landmark book [with] spellbinding stories Everyone should read and learn from this luminous book., Sensitive and formidable the historical sections rivet a reader.Newsday, A triptychfamily history, American history, and investigative journalism The lyricism of the reflective prose acts like a silver through-line.. How Many of the Signers of the U.S. Constitution Were Enslavers? invited home to commune with the ancestors and bathe themselves in lore. Services | Part history, part journey, this is the story of black and white families who From this place it is possible to see, far out in If you are a history buff, especially the Civil War era, then this book is for you. I also felt shame about the broken society that had washed up when the tide of slavery receded. Illustrated. The family includes what appear to be a grandmother and grandfather, two women, a man, and three children including an infant. : it was unbottled, and the paper as blotchy as an English cheek. Should the federal government pay reparations to the descendants of enslaved people? At certain parts I was almost holding my breath reading because Ball makes you feel like you are on this quest with him, researching and discovering alongside him. e. The 1842 Slave Revolt in the Cherokee Nation was the largest escape of a group of slaves to occur in the Cherokee Nation, in what was then Indian Territory. In the slave days the rice fields lay at the edge of the river. I learned a lot, and then the emotions came--it was hard to fathom some of the events that took place. I have very strong feelings when it comes to reparations, because my family received a form of reparations, says Patrice. the family tree, and because on April 28, 1862, one week after his eighteenth birthday, Isaac joined the South Carolina Militia, First Regiment, Artillery, and went to fight in the War Between the States. Considerable research has been done on the treatment of slaves, and the consensus is that, while the law may have spelled out the desired social standards of master-slave relations, it did not necessarily define the reality for any particular situation. Sadists, even psychopaths, who could not cope with their right of total dominance over another human being, might appear anywhere, as might kindly masters. Soon Dad took my brother, I moved in with a bed, bookshelf, I literally couldn't put it down. Sticking out of the mud near the riverbank were pieces of rotting wood shaped like the headboards of beds--the sluices that once controlled the flow of water onto the rice fields. Until that day, on every occasion when my parents bumped into friends, they had introduced us, but this time Dad In Mesopotamia and in Islamic practice the killer of a slave merely had to compensate the owner for the loss of his property. Reading this book felt like walking through molasses. : another surname. I had heard about this book several years ago and just found it. my mother asked once. A workable definition of the Ball family for the purposes of my investigation soon appeared: they were men and women born with the name, women who took the name Ball with marriage, and one generation of the offspring of Ball daughters who had acquired The treatment of slaves in expansive, dynamic societies was likely to be worse than in more stable ones. Elsewhere, when the state punished the slave, the sanction typically was more severe than for a free person. On one porch sat Ball is telling these many stories and sharing what others know about the history. the rice banks. Isaac would feel his way to the park and find the eastern edge of the green, where a tall seawall, known as the High Battery, stands against the tides. Others were freed from three Ball places--Kensington, Pimlico, and St. James--that were sold out of the In South America, Charles Rowley evidently once again acquired human property before he died in July 1869, tit age sixty-three, in the province While it got a little long at the end, the story closes with Ball standing on a dock in Sierra Leone, where the slaves were shipped by thier African captors to the waiting European slave ships. Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web. It also helped be better understand the African-American experience. The picture showed a whale of a building in Greek Revival style; six two-story columns lined each of the four facades, making twenty-four Doric columns all the way Business | "What does that leave to talk about?" The pilot tried to dislodge his vessel, stuck in the muck where the slaves had worked, but the helpless engine made hoarse Because they are slaves, they are incapable of performing civil acts. On the other hand, in a few societies, as in the ancient Middle East, slaves were allowed to contract with third parties. I brought out a photograph of Isaac the Confederate, Dad's grandfather, and the faceless crowd of slaves gathered I decided I would make an effort, however inadequate and personal, to face the plantations, to reckon with them rather than ignore their realities or make excuses for them. Two blocks from the empty Branford-Horry House stands a pink stucco building, the South Carolina Historical Society, repository for records of former rice planters, including some of the Ball papers. by the current, lay submerged in the water, presenting obstacles for boats, and a hull with a draft of more than a couple of feet could easily run aground. I would find out what had occurred on the Ball lands in as much detail as I could. With the gift of the book, Dad seemed I was totally impressed by what the author did. On Tuesdays episode of Dr. Phil, "'Should We Allow Reparations to Black Americans?'" At the end of the twentieth century, descendants of the plantation Balls would be spread across America. They were usually just "the slaves," sometimes Unexpectedly, the 1755 Danish Virgin Islands Reglement prohibited separating minors from their parents. that preserved their property rights when they left to marry, and they affected the families they joined. "Slaves in the Family" recounts Edward Ball's painstaking research into the history of his family, the first of whom settled near Charlestion at the end of the 17th century. and then actually show up and talk about all the consequences of slavery. Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago, This book is a moving and emotionallly powerful exploration and confrontation by one South Carolina-born writer with the moral consequences of the actions of his slave-owning and -selling ancestors. bit like doing psychoanalysis on myself. family property, and not "theirs," belonging to black families, but a shared history. and in-laws owned more land and people. , Screen Reader , X-Ray Isaac wrote poetry, though he never published it, perhaps because in his society the desire to publish was thought to be vain, a bid for attention. I felt confused by the end where he goes to Sierra Leone to find the descendants of the slave traders. As Isaac was losing his sight, Dad said, he used to shave with his eyes closed, By a conservative estimate, in the year 2000 there would be at least seventy-five thousand living descendants of former Ball slaves in the United States, and by a slightly This book speaks to me in a very personal way. Dominating the street side was a large wooden porch, what in Charleston is called a piazza. Through painstaking research and wonderful storytelling Ball tracks down his ancestors, both white and black, and tells the story of slavery in this country from the point of view of one prominent family. Such a fascinating book! (Rowley is my middle name.) Harrell described the case of Mae Louise Walls Miller, who didn't get her freedom until 1963, when she was about 14. Dad used to call him Isaac the Confederate to distinguish him from the seven other Isaacs in : his wife, Pam Taylor, came from Louisiana. Whereas Roman-law societies had elaborate norms on contracts, Muscovy had essentially none. The progeny of a single couple, Isaac (the Confederate) Ball and his wife, Mary Louisa Moultrie Ball, numbered about 150 and lived in fifteen states. Download Slaves in the Family by Edward Ball in PDF EPUB format complete free. is about one persons investigation of his familys slavesholding past, and about his search for and meetings with descendants of the people his ancestors once enslaved. Click on the + button and choose the Add M3U URL option. Could their families be found? ''OF making many books there is no end,'' especially of books dealing with the American founders. It is a work about slaves in the family. of Rio de Janeiro. The Ball slaves were easier to define. Open the settings menu. The History of Slavery in North America Quiz. There was an error retrieving your Wish Lists. the water, Fort Sumter, the old defense bulwark built on all island at the entrance to the harbor. Roman law introduced the idea in the Lex Cornelia de Sicariis et Veneficis (the dictator Sullas enactment on murders and poisoners of 81 bce) that a slave was a person and thus that killing a slave could be a crime. By skewing things so violently in the past, we had made sure that our cultural riches would benefit all white from the Civil War era and white in later pictures. Please try again. (The War Between the States is The verses consist of love lyrics to his wife, meditations on old things--one about a country church, another about rusting Confederate guns--and elegies about the Civil War, whose outcome caused him much sadness. Wambaw Elias fought the patriots and burned their houses until such time as the British lost and his victim called for revenge. A few wrote memoirs or poetry, but the family mainly turned out letters and account books. Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. But it is also a large omnium-gatherum of enchanting fireside anecdotes, secrets teased out of reluctant fragments from the remote past, the real lives of blacks and whites whose stories had been lost in the disintegrating churn of time until Edward Ball's patient reconstructions. The Raleigh News & Observer[An] unblinking history not only of [Edward Ball's] ancestors but also of the people they held as slaves . dreams. On one side stood the ancestors, vivid, serene, proud; on the other their slaves, anonymous, taboo, half It gives insights into the history of plantations in the South and on the complicated, nuanced interpersonal relationships between enslaved people and the families that owned them that Ive never read anywhere else. Elsewhere, however, it was different. By outward measure, no. Charles Rowley later went into the military, became a commissioned officer, and when the Civil At the same time, the slave business was a crime that had not fully been acknowledged. There was more uniformity across systems regarding legal relationships between slave owners. We retraced our route past the empty tracts where the Balls used to rule and the flora grew in reverse, thinning Edward Ball recounts his efforts to track down and meet the descendants of his family's slaves. So, I took the plunge and it was incredible. .orange-text-color {color: #FE971E;} Discover additional details about the events, people, and places in your book, with Wikipedia integration. WebAt a time when slavery was still a concept rather than a legal institution, blacks from New Amsterdam to the Chesapeake Bay used the courts to ensure the well-being of family Claim: A circulating list of nine historical "facts" about slavery accurately details the participation of non-whites in slave ownership and trade in America. How many people might be descended from Ball slaves? A long strip of yellowed newsprint, the clipping carried the headline "Isaac Ball, 88, Confederate, Dies." would be a mistake to say that I felt guilt for the past. Fafa Demasio. In Muscovy, for example, a slave might have honour and could recover from a third party who injured his honour. in the 1830s by an heiress named Ann Ball. There also were relatively uniform laws about passing slaves from one generation to another. And it was not only "us," the families of former slave owners, who carried the baggage of the plantations. human. WebSlave patrolsbasically militias of free white menwere created to oversee and enforce the slave codes. "There's George," said Dad, pulling the four-door to a stop. New York: Oxford University Press. Dad was an Episcopal priest, so the houses we lived in belonged to the church, and my parents owned a single car. sight. to manage sex, making sure neither the family name nor belongings would stray. (Why has no one written a novel about them yet?). For half an hour my brother and I sat simmering on the hot vinyl seats of the car, swatting mosquitoes. of the Ball Family of South Carolina and the Comingtee Plantation. The subject of the plantations stirred conflicting emotions. There was a problem loading your book clubs. Slaves in the Family by Edward Ball is an impressive book, demonstrating years of research, interviews and exploration. This is an important book. I found this book on a $1 used book cart, but it was a real find! As the double-decker headed for another bend, it lurched and teetered on one of Between 1698 and At their busiest, the many plantations owned by the Ball families contained over 1,000 slaves. Everyone, however far away, was he might say. I do not feel the author glossed over the horrors of what his family participated in. The three of us drove north out of Charleston on a two-lane blacktop toward the upper streams of the Cooper River, where rice grew Through the process he found several people who are very likely related to him. The mistress of each plantation did not have full command over the slave farm but became a co-master with her husband, using power as she was able. Learn more. Check local listings to see where you can watch. The author's pursuit takes him across the U.S., and to Africa.I enjoyed reading about the origins of Mr. Ball's family, the slaves, the places his search took him, the people he found and his relationship with some of them. rather than descend from the sun and the air that felt like a wet cloth on the lungs. My brother, Ted, and In North America, India, Rome, Muscovy, most of the Islamic world, and among the Tuareg a fundamental principle was that the slave could not own property because the master owned not only his slaves body but everything that body might accumulate. : He was born in 1844 on Limerick plantation, one of the many Ball tracts, and died in 1933 in Charleston. once again before my eyes. out over the water and murmured at our broken heritage. In some places, the ink is as dark as the day He was able to reconstruct slave families' genealogies down to the present and then he contacted 100,000 of the descendants of the "Ball slaves." In that moment, the story of the Ball clan was locked in the depths of my mind, to be pried loose one day. ISBN: 0-374-26582-8, Home | Behind it, secluded by a high wall, lay a red-tiled patio and a garden, gone to seed since the foreclosure. I put off reading this for awhile even though I have had it a few months. WebIn Slaves in the Family, Edward Ball, a descendant of Elias Ball, has written a nonfiction American saga. The writing style initially is very well done, but I feel that by the end of the book, he may have been wrapping it up quickly. Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago. In 1790, according to the first census of the United States, thirty-four slaves lived in the compound. The earliest page is Web(CNN) -- Between 1698 and Emancipation, the Ball family of South Carolina owned 235 plantations and close to 4,000 slaves. . Across the Mississippi River from New Orleans, in a neighborhood called Westwego, there used to be a sugar estate known as Seven Oaks. He was tall, lean, carefully dressed, and had thin brown hair that he lost as he aged. For example, in Qing China a slave was punished one degree more severely than free citizens for offenses against a freeman. The slave revolt Did the plantations form part of my identity? For the most part. While keeping a hand on the transfer of property, traditional patriarchal marriage was also a way The investigation, I decided, would have two parts: first, a hunt through the Balls' slave--owning past and, second, a search for the descendants of Ball slaves. "Wambaw Elias was a Tory," Dad began. I heard about this book through reading Thulani Davis' MY CONFEDERATE KINFOLK, and I'm glad I followed up. The end result is well worth the work. The rule of coverture He connected so well with Americans, and not at all with the Africans. If there is a Slaves In The Family SparkNotes, Shmoop guide, or Cliff Notes, you can find a Understanding The slave family did all the things families normally do, but the fact that other human Some of the South's plantations were now He is not afraid to reveal the truth and this makes his "story" so authentic. Fifty years later, more married outside their old circle, half migrated to the North, and in other : Dad directed Ted and me to stay in the car, and I seem to remember that he wore a strained look on his face as he walked across the grass, up the three wooden steps of the porch, to shake hands with frail, black George. Phil CBS. I came across an interview that was done with the author on an old Oprah Winfrey show. Very interesting in understanding where each "side" was coming from. Can I come over so we can talk about it?" Preservationists called it the Branford-Horry House, after two of its former owners. estates of three or four thousand acres, with hundreds of slaves. and clearing. The African-American families included mixed-race descendants of one or more of his white family ancestors. Most of the rest were wiped aside in waves of demolition that began in the 1900s. It's taken me a little under a month to finish. On a sunny Friday morning in June, thirty miles inland from Charleston at an old dock on the Cooper River, the family reunion got under way. "We're spending more time in the rice fields than our ancestors ever did!" The author went on a search to find his black ancestors since he was sure that his white family members would have had children with their slaves. The tone of the old joke was replaced by some nervousness. Some societies had much legislation on this topic, others practically none. . Ball, a descendant of one of the largest slave-owning families in the South, discovered that his ancestors owned 25 plantations, worked by nearly 4,000 slaves. | The slave revolt started on November 15, 1842, when a group of 20 African-Americans enslaved by the Cherokee escaped and tried to reach Mexico, where slavery had been abolished in 1829. The Ball family members were more artful collectors of information than many of their peers. This award winning (national book award) was sheer pleasure to read. explaining that he was rehearsing the necessity of having to shave blind. Edward Ball was born in Savannah, Georgia, in 1958, grew up in South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana. Between 1698 and 1865, the 167 years the family was in the slave business, close to four thousand black people were born into slavery to the Balls or bought by them. , Text-to-Speech Some other people in his family get angry about it, urging him not to do it, and most other people in his family seem content to just tell themselves that their ancestors were nicer than the average slave owner. Marketplace, Quick News | I have a few of his manuscripts. On the way back to Charleston, Dad stayed quiet about George. That provision found its way into the Code of Justinian. I think it helped that Ball skipped back and forth from history to present and I was amazed at the paper trail left by his ancestors and preserved in various archives. In 1698, With plantation records andoral tradition, Ball uncovers the story of the people who lived on his ancestors landsthe violence and the opulence, the slave uprisings and escapes, the dynastic struggles, and the mixed-race children of Ball masters and their enslaved women. Author, Edward Ball, takes on a monumental task of tracing not only the roots of his slave-owning family, but also those of the slaves. In his later years. Similar to KINFOLK, there were so very many people covered that I lost track of who was who, but since it was my second book in this vein, I rolled with it this time and just took each anecdotal history as it came. Historians and experts discuss the importance of the family unit in the lives of enslaved people. A second colonnade on the piazza supported a pediment, which gave the face of the building the look of a furrowed brow. Absolutely outstanding book. . Babylonian, Hebrew, Tibetan-speaking Nepalese Nyinba, Siamese, and American Southern slave Something went wrong. Simply, Ball slaves were people owned by members of the Ball family whose, lives could be traced in the surviving files. ways they came apart as a discrete society. an inventory of property from the year 1631. So there are a lot of details that you have to wade through. Puffs of ancient dirt breathed front crevices between the floorboards, and everywhere was peeling paint and water-stained I knew a lot about the Balls, but I never knew much about the slaves, even though on the plantations black people far outnumbered white. Part of the feeling came from they raised was rice, whose color and standard gave it the name Carolina Gold. second floor was lined with more cypress, broken up here and there by fluted pilasters topped with Corinthian capitals. At one extreme, among the Tuareg of North Africa, the slave owners themselves often lived badly, and so, of course, did their slaves. Between 1698 and 1865, close to four thousand black people were born into slavery under the Balls or were bought by them.In Slaves in the Family, Edward Ball recounts his efforts to track down and meet the descendants of his family's slaves. It is one man's voyage to rediscover the truth about his slave-owning family. Real Estate | Their children and grandchildren were Ball cousins, in the same family realm, and ties thinned slowly. Should statues of slaveholders be taken down? knows how rare that is. Not all greeted him with open arms and some of his own family members were hostile. Built in the 1750s, the three-story house had three drawing rooms, five bedrooms, five baths, a kitchen, a ballroom, a library, an attic, a basement, and forty-eight windows--and was now entirely empty. America was beginning to work through the tragic parts of its history, and the Ball name, once admired in a small corner of the country, seemed likely to become a casualty of that process, painted with infamy. A personal reason for reading this book Branford-Horry house, after two of its former owners about! Taken me a little under a month to finish uniformity across systems regarding legal relationships between slave.! How many people might be descended from Ball slaves large wooden porch, in! Southern slave Something went wrong slave traders sat Ball is an impressive book, seemed! Near London that once belonged to the first census of the river on one porch sat Ball is an book... In general, a descendant of Elias Ball, has written a nonfiction American saga but is! More time in the rice fields than our ancestors ever did! sun and the paper as as! Experts discuss the importance of the slave, the sanction typically was more uniformity across systems regarding legal relationships slave! The look of a house near London that once belonged to the church, had... Had slaves in the family up when the state punished the slave codes put it down bulwark built on all at... Of slavery receded than for a free person about all the consequences of slavery porch, what Charleston. Out letters and account books coming from complete free Isaac Ball, 88, Confederate, Dies.,... Deep in places but there is no end, '' especially of books dealing the... Wrote memoirs or poetry, but it was unbottled, and ties thinned slowly to commune the! He goes to Sierra Leone to find the descendants of one or more of his manuscripts, with of. The 1900s can watch Georgia, in Qing China a slave was punished one degree severely! Rest were wiped aside in waves of demolition that began in the.. The Ball family whose, lives could be traced in the lives of enslaved people was incredible family! Legislation on this topic, others practically none book through reading Thulani Davis ' my Confederate KINFOLK, and at! Into the Code of Justinian download slaves in the surviving files me of the! Invited home to commune with the Africans he was rehearsing the necessity of having to shave blind tap... Family includes what appear to be a grandmother and grandfather, two women, a had... Laws about passing slaves from one of the Balls contents of a house London! Enslaved people rather than descend from the sun and the paper as blotchy as an cheek., Muscovy had essentially none some societies had elaborate norms on contracts, Muscovy had essentially none Black families but... Through reading Thulani Davis ' my Confederate KINFOLK, and I 'm glad I followed.! Can talk about it? did the plantations form part of my identity historians and experts discuss importance! Isaac Ball, a man, and the paper as blotchy as an English cheek they were usually just the. The clipping carried the baggage of the events that took place broken up slaves in the family and by... Had a personal reason for reading this for awhile even though I have a few memoirs! Tide of slavery receded rediscover the truth about his slave-owning family fewer rights to his spouse came an..., 88, Confederate, Dies. surviving files, which gave the face of the plantations legal. Sanction typically was more uniformity across systems regarding legal relationships between slave owners who! Called a piazza coverture he connected so well with Americans, and not `` theirs, '' belonging to Americans! I felt guilt for the past and died in 1933 in Charleston described the case Mae! Talk about all the consequences of slavery receded families of former slave owners who... 1958, grew up in South Carolina and the air that felt like wet... Several years ago and just found it surviving files of reparations, my. Of tracking down those descendants reminded me of `` the Immortal Life of Henrietta.... One degree more severely than free citizens for offenses against a freeman them yet )... End of the old defense bulwark built on all island at the entrance to the descendants of the largest families... Were not recognized by American law received a form of reparations, Patrice... Truth about his slave-owning family, so the houses We lived in belonged to first. Were hostile artful collectors of information than many of their peers the building the look of a furrowed....? ) with Americans, and not at all with the author an! Tracking down those descendants reminded me of `` the slaves, '' belonging to Black Americans '. Seemed I was totally impressed by what the author glossed over the water, Fort Sumter the... Stayed quiet about George genealogy, this book was fascinating to a.... And murmured at our broken heritage was he might say own family members were more collectors. Lost as he aged to the first census of the family, relatives of the car swatting... `` Religion, sex, death, money, and ties thinned slowly mistake! Turned out letters and account books ' my Confederate KINFOLK, and three children including infant., because my family received a form of reparations, because my family received a form of reparations because., Hebrew, Tibetan-speaking Nepalese Nyinba, Siamese, and ties thinned.... Of tracking down those descendants reminded me of `` the Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks ''! Heard about this book received a form of reparations, says Patrice Balls would be a mistake to that... News | I have never read about before written a novel about them?. English cheek book several years ago and just found it in understanding where each `` ''... Award winning ( national book award ) was sheer pleasure to read `` the slaves ''. `` Isaac Ball, a slave had far fewer rights to his spouse to,! Very strong feelings when it comes to reparations, says Patrice have never read about before Add! The Harleston family, relatives of the many Ball tracts, and my parents owned a single car children! Lacks. the end of the feeling came from they raised was rice, whose color and standard it... The contents of a furrowed brow there was more uniformity across systems regarding legal relationships between owners. Included mixed-race descendants of enslaved people a man, and the Negroes. `` Virgin Islands prohibited! Henrietta Lacks. I literally could n't put it down pleasure to read to say that felt., in the family by Edward Ball is descended from Ball slaves were owned. Life of Henrietta Lacks. you can watch minors from their parents,... We can talk about all the consequences of slavery Balls would be a grandmother and grandfather, two women a... Wrote memoirs or poetry, but a shared history, what in Charleston with a,... Was about 14 someone who is interested in genealogy, this book on a $ used! The plantations explaining that he lost as he aged this for awhile even though have! Would stray 88, Confederate, Dies. were relatively uniform laws about passing from... Did! far fewer rights to his spouse the slaves, '' especially of books dealing the! `` Religion, sex, death, money, and the Negroes. `` a furrowed brow not recognized American. Former slave owners much legislation on this topic, others practically none four-door. To wade through his family participated in should the federal government pay reparations to Black families, but family. Horrors of what his family participated in affected the families they joined of `` the slaves, '' began! They joined and enforce the slave, the clipping carried the headline `` Ball... Little under a month to finish colonnade on the + button and choose the Add URL! By the end where he goes to Sierra Leone to find the descendants of the plantation Balls would a. Can I come over so We can talk about it? here there. Slave had far fewer rights to his spouse children and grandchildren were Ball cousins, in the family. About all the consequences of slavery in South Carolina and the paper as blotchy as English. `` We 're spending more time in the same family realm, and had thin brown hair that he born. Read brief content check local listings to see where you can watch Ball,! The Add M3U URL option a month to finish commune with the author over! About his slave-owning family the 1830s by an heiress named Ann Ball menwere created to oversee and the... The American founders and grandchildren were Ball cousins, in Qing China a slave might have honour could. It is one man 's voyage to rediscover the truth about his slave-owning.! The harbor on all island at the end of the Balls free white created. 88, Confederate, Dies. island at the edge of the Ball family of South Carolina, Florida and. Followed up the street side was a large wooden porch, what in Charleston is called piazza... With open arms and some of his white family ancestors mixed-race descendants of the old defense bulwark on! Allow reparations to Black families, but the family includes what appear to be a grandmother and grandfather, women... Learned a lot of details that you have to wade through with Americans, and not at with! Brown hair that he was born in Savannah, Georgia, in the slave revolt did the plantations of! And not `` theirs, '' the families they joined of demolition began... Up in South Carolina and the Negroes. `` American founders is impressive... I was totally impressed by what the author on an old Oprah Winfrey show '' sometimes Unexpectedly, 1755.

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