One of my passions is research that illuminates perspectives that are not widely appreciated in African American genealogy. I leaned about antebellum free Black people when I learned about my own maternal family, which settled in New Jersey as early as 1815 and in Pennsylvania as early as 1792. On the left, I am holding a moonshine jug found while digging for landscaping on the land purchased by my 4th great grandfather in Timbuctoo in 1829. A neighbor told me it may have belonged to my Aunt Rosie, and/or one of her close friends who lived there two generations later. I "feel" this jug as a tangible connection to my lineage.
The fact that substantial numbers of free Black people were enumerated in every US Census between 1800 and 1860 is not something we typically learn in US History in high school. Who were these people? Where did they live? What did their “freedom” look like? I address those questions from various perspectives in the articles below:
“Rewriting Black History, Timbuctoo, New Jersey,” Beautiful Sunbird: An Africana Magazine for Young People, forthcoming in Summer 2023 (with Brenda Randolph)
“Timbuctoo and the First Emancipation of the Nineteenth Century,” New Jersey Studies, January 2022
“Free People of Color: North and South,” AAHGS News, (November December 2021): 14-15
“The Battle of Pine Swamp,” AAHGS Journal, Vol. 35 (2018): 30-32
“Timbuctoo: A Free Black Community in New Jersey,” AAHGS News, (November-December 2017): 5-6
“New Jersey: A State Divided on Freedom,” AAHGS Journal, Vol. 34 (2017): 1-4
OTHER HISTORY AND HISTORIC PRESREVATION TOPICS
"Exploring My South Carolina Roots Through Cemeteries," AAHGS News, (April-June 2022)
"Historic African American Cemetery Hidden in Plain View,” AAHGS News, (May-June 2021); 14-15
See www.TimbuctooNJ.com for more information on Timbuctoo
Early 20th century moonshine jug I found while digging on my family property in Timbuctoo