Thursday, October 19, 2017

Cornelia



This is Cornelia Walker Bailey on Cabretta Beach, Sapelo Island, Ga. The date was July 30, 2005, my wedding day. My fiance and I eloped and took Cornelia with us as our witness. Why? Because she was the reason we met. I read her book, fell in love with Sapelo, opened my mind and followed my heart to the man who would become my partner. What a strange and wonderful adventure life has been ever since, and it began with this proud woman and her story about growing up Geechee on a quiet Georgia sea island. I am forever grateful. Rest in peace, dear Cornelia.

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Friday, July 14, 2017


Friday, June 23, 2017

Behavior Cemetery



This is an interview I did in 2010 with Dan Elliott, president of the LAMAR Institute. Elliott was in Behavior Cemetery on Sapelo Island using ground-penetrating radar to search for unmarked graves. He was working with Dr. Nick Honerkamp and his archaeology students from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.

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Friday, May 26, 2017

Gullah Geechee Map


Screen shot of interactive map of Gullah Geechee corridor

A new interactive map highlights historic sites in the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor, a region that includes the barrier islands and coastal mainland communities from Pender County on the southern coast of North Carolina to St. Johns County on the northern coast of Florida.

Gullah Geechee describes a language, culture and a people, the direct descendants of enslaved Africans brought to America to labor on coastal plantations. The Gullah Geechee people lived in relative isolation on the plantations and later as free people in small island and mainland communities in the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida. As a result, they were able to retain and pass down many of their ancestors' African traditions, languages and foodways.

The map was developed by Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Commission in partnership with the History Department at Queens University of Charlotte. The project was funded by the North Carolina Humanities Council, a statewide nonprofit and affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Learn more.

Saturday, May 13, 2017

Storykeeper

One of my mother's last requests of me was that I gather up her genealogy records and keep them safe. 

This was no easy task. 

My mother began her research in the late '70s when we lived in Washington, D.C. She would go to the National Archives and bring home large faded photocopies  of U.S. Census records. While we ate dinner, she'd get so excited sharing all of the facts she had found about our ancestors.

Along with Mama's census records were legal pads with handwritten notes, photographs, letters, old report cards, funeral programs and delicate newspaper clippings and obituaries.

The thought of gathering all of these documents together and making sense of them, organizing  and storing them in my tiny home was overwhelming. But everything is here, and I am steadily doing the research and getting everything in order.

I recently became a grandmother, and this new family status has me thinking about my legacy. I don't want my children and grandchildren to inherit this mountain of paperwork I now possess. My goal is to digitize photos and documents, contribute our family information to online family trees and write down and share as much oral history as possible with my extended family.

While I love the idea of passing this role down to my son, daughter or granddaughter, I realize that this work might not interest them. The stories could be lost, and my promise to my mother could be broken.

But if I toss our stories out to everyone, they will be treasured by those who want to know our history. And they just might land in the hands of a family member with the passion to keep the story going forward.