Like always.
I only glanced at your back for one moment as you departed.
Like always.
Like always. Had I known.
never again.
Had I known.
If only I had known.
There have been times in this journey when it was wise to schedule slave dwelling stays back to back.
My trips to Alabama, Missouri, and Texas are perfect examples of that. There has been one trip in South
Carolina where that also applied; that was my stays at Laurelwood Plantation in
. The stays at Seibels House Kitchen Dependency on Thursday, April 5 and
the
on Friday, April 6 would follow that same formula.
Before I could participate in the events planned for the Seibels House Kitchen Dependency on the
evening of Thursday, April 5, 2012, I had to take an interesting detour to
earlier that
morning. Because of the recommendation of a highly respected historian and friend, the TV show
contacted me about filming a scene for them describing the life of a female slave. My
immediate response was yes but then they told me the location. It turned out to be the Hewn –Timber
Cabins at
one of the two places that have denied me the opportunity for an
overnight stay in its slave dwelling. After making this clear to the History Detective representative, we
both concluded that I was still their man. Upon arrival at the site in Florence, I discovered that the film
crew was going to be late. The tardiness of the film crew provided a great opportunity for the property
manager / interpreter to justifiably challenge my intent. After convincing him that I came in peace and
meant him no harm, we got along admirably from that point forward. The filming of the scene went
extremely well but I’ve been on sets enough to know that two hours of filming could mean zero to five
or so minutes in the finished product. The piece is scheduled to air sometime this summer. The chance
for a future overnight stay at this site looks promising.
Operating on assumptions and not letting my host know exactly what time I would arrive, it was 4:00
pm when I reached the Seibels House Kitchen Dependency. The property appeared to be locked so
from a distance I took pictures of the mansion and the kitchen dependency where I was to spend the
night. I then went seeking a place to do some shopping for some snacks for the night stay. While
shopping, I got a call from Ruth Rambo who was scheduled to share the slave dwelling experience with
me. Ruth told me that she was in the garden area of the house which came as surprise to me because
I did not know that one could have unescorted access to the grounds of the mansion. I relayed to Ruth
that once I finished my shopping, I would be there to meet her. When I met her at the site, I told her
about my hesitancy about entering the garden. When I stayed at Cliveden in Philadelphia an alarm
sounded on the morning when I got up and made an attempt to go the bathroom. Through a phone
conversation, the director of Civenden gave me a code to put into the system which did not work. He
stated not to worry because he would call the alarm company to alert them to what was happening.
My immediate thoughts went to the Rodney King incident so I stated to him that I would just sit there
until he or another staff member got there to take charge of the situation. It was that thought and the
current Trayvon Martin incident that convinced me to take all of my photographs of the site from a safe
distance. A sad commentary, but true in my mind.
According to a promotional brochure, “Purportedly the oldest remaining building in Columbia, a portion
of the Seibels House is believed to date to 1796. To the north of the building , attached by a covered
breezeway, stands a circa-1830 kitchen house, believed to be the last building of its kind left in Columbia
and one of only a very few structures in which enslaved African Americans lived and worked, separate
from their owner’s residence. Various owners adapted the house to meet their needs, especially the
Seibels family, who acquired the property in 1858. The building’s Colonial Revival style dates to a 1920s
renovation designed by architect, J Carroll Johnson. Historic Columbia Foundation received the property
as a gift in 1988 and uses the building for its administrative headquarters and as rental property.”
Prior to the stay, a Slave Dwelling Project Lecture was scheduled. Two organizations that represented
the media were there, which was a great testament because I know at some point in the future of this
project, it will not excite the media as it is currently doing, but that will not make this project any less
important. At the end of the lecture, I yielded two minutes to Ruth Rambo who would reveal her reason
for spending the night. It was then that Ruth revealed that she was a descendant of a slave and slave
owner which was news to me and did not go unnoticed because of the work that I am currently doing
with the group Coming to the Table. I also yielded 5 minutes to Robin Foster who is a genealogist and
one of the publishers of my blog. I met Robin two years ago when the two of us sat on a panel together
at Penn Center on St. Helena Island. The Slave Dwelling Project focuses on the places but it is Robin and
others like her who constantly reminds me that it is the formerly enslaved people who are important.
The turnout was great and diverse and lots of questions were asked during the question and answer
period. I was most impressed that a child got the first and last question for the night. After the lecture,
I got to mingle with some of the audience while some of the others went for a tour of the kitchen
dependency. When I finally, made my way to the kitchen dependency and the media left, one of the
staff members alerted me that I had promised one of the audience members that she could spend the
night with us, an error that had to be immediately corrected. In addition to me spending the night, Old
Reliable, Terry James, Ruth Rambo and John Sherrer, staff member of Historic Columbia Foundation
would also share the experience.
It was on a trip last year that John and I took to Richmond, VA to
participate in the annual conference of the American Association of State and Local History (AASLH) that
we devised the plan for what was happening that night. I recall meeting Ruth Rambo at a group
meeting that I organized to see the movie Tuskegee Airmen. Ruth reminded me that I met her earlier at
an event when I was representing my Civil War reenacting group, Company I, 54th Reenactment
Regiment, but how can one forget a name like Ruth Rambo. The opportunity to share the slave dwelling
experience is an open invitation pending the permission of the property owner. Ruth did all that was
necessary to ensure that her spot was secured. The conversation among the four of us was very rich.
Before we fell asleep and after we woke up, we covered everything from the burning of Columbia during
the Civil War; the great migration; the detail of the kitchen dependency; brick making, who snored the
loudest; segregation, and lynchings . Ruth, Terry and John left while I utilized a computer in the office to
do some quality writing for the project.
Deformed and Almost Worthless
|
Interpretive sign in the slave cabin at the Lexington County Museum
|
The Lexington Museum came at this thing from a completely different angle. Most of the buildings
including the two slave cabins were moved to the site from other locations. That would make this stay
similar to the ones at Old Alabama Town in Montgomery, AL; Roper Mountain in Greenville, SC; and
the Price House in Woodruff, SC. Unlike the previous night at the Seibels House Kitchen Dependency,
this stay garnered very little fanfare, similar to previous stays at privately owned properties. When
I toured the grounds with the site director and saw the slave cabins, I verified that I had been there
previously performing living history in the capacity of a Civil War reenactor. The cabin was once used as
an office so it had electricity but no lights, central heating and air and replicas of artifacts throughout.
One impressive part of the building was one interpretive sign that listed the first names of the slaves
who were once the property of the owner.
The most haunting was one interpretive sign that listed the
name of one female slave and categorized her as deformed and almost worthless. I had a conversation
with the gentleman that restored the cabin that I was going to sleep in that night. He expressed his
fear of ghosts, but that did not deter me. I was delivered a bonus when the site director introduced me
to a museum neighbor who told me about a plantation that he owns in Fairfield County, SC that has a
restored slave cabin. Long story short, Lemmon Hill Plantation in Winnsboro, SC will be on the 2013
calendar of the Slave Dwelling Project. A local newspaper reporter showed up for an interview and
was not impressed by my Yankee hat that went with my Yankee uniform. William Tecumseh Sherman’s
troops made an impact in this area during the Civil War.
During dinner at a local Bojangles’ that was located in walking distance from the museum, Old Reliable
Terry James called to let me know that he would be there later that night.
As darkness descended
and a full moon revealed itself, I had quality time inside the cabin alone with my thoughts to do some
quality writing about the project. I now realize that based on some of the inquiries that I have gotten thus far there is great potential for the expansion of the Slave Dwelling project in 2013. Ten thirty
came and Terry James had not yet shown. Thoughts of the early days of the project and how I would
sleep in the dwellings alone danced through my mind. I thought of that reporter who did not like my
Yankee hat and the gentleman who restored the cabin when thirty minutes after I laid down, Terry rang
my phone stating he was outside. After getting Terry settled into the cabin, there would be very little
conversation, his history lesson would have to wait until the next morning.
The next morning Terry took full advantage of his skill as a professional photographer. According to its
brochure, “The Lexington County Museum, founded in 1970, offers a rare and unforgettable experience
– the chance to see and touch a way of life gone forever. Structure and furnishings focus on the early
history of Lexington County and interpret the everyday lives of its residents from ca. 1770 until the
momentous changes wrought by the Civil War. The Museum complex, located right off Highway 378,
encompasses seven acres of property and features 36 historic buildings.” Terry was like a kid in a candy
store taking intricate shots of each building. We both wagered that each of those buildings that were
built prior to the Civil War was built using some type of slave labor. And then we parted, I headed home
to my family, with Terry still taking pictures of buildings.
Joseph McGill Blog Entry
Seibels Kitchen House Sleepover
Columbia, SC
By John M. Sherrer, III
Director of Cultural Resources
Historic Columbia Foundation
1601 Richland Street
Columbia, SC 29201
803.252.1770, ext. 28
jsherrer@historiccolumbia.org
On Thursday, April 5, 2012, history was made within the confines of a circa-1830 brick
kitchen house, adjacent to one of Columbia, South Carolina’s most celebrated sites –the
circa-1796 Seibels House, a landmark structure most often associated with distinguished
architecture and verdant gardens. A cast of four, led by Joseph McGill, a field officer
with the National Trust for Historic Preservation and a Civil War 54th Regiment re-
enactor, crafted an unprecedented Historic Columbia Foundation experienced by virtue
of their respect for the power of preservation. As part of Mr. McGill’s on-going effort
to heighten public appreciation of and preservation advocacy for sites associated with
slavery, this experience was the 31st in his thus-far two-year endeavor. But, for all four of
us it was our first shared encounter and one that profoundly affected me as a steward of
this extraordinary structure.
Upon first inspection we all looked different – three men, one woman; three South
Carolinians, one Ohioan; three black and one white. We shared space recently afforded
by the installation of a partial floor within the building’s north chamber, a room
determined by archaeology and corroborated through oral history, to have served as
a laundry for the main house. Just to our south lay the uncovered floor of the south
chamber, a room that during slavery and for generations after was busied by the efforts of
cooks preparing meals of great variety. Overhead, bear rafters loomed where formerly a
plastered and whitewashed ceiling shielded occupants of both rooms.
Following an evening program in which Mr. McGill shared his first thirty-two
experiences with conducting sleepovers in spaces that once echoed with the sounds of
enslaved laborers, we four gathered our modest supplies for the evening. A couple of
camp stools and sleeping bags – the items of a veteran to such evenings. A rolled towel
for a pillow and a thin and short blanket for myself, gathered hurriedly earlier in the
morning but not without some thought – what should I bring that would grant me some
measure of comfort meanwhile not stripping me of the essential elements of an evening
spent in an unlit, unheated and unfurnished building? Just how comfortable should I
make myself?
Thanks to the generosity of Terry James, a co-re-enactor and friend of Mr. McGill’s, I
received the benefit of a padded moving blanket that would remove me slightly from
the hard pine floor that met us all. True to previous outings, James produced a pair of
manacles in which he slept the entire evening, as a physical reminder of the conditions
experienced by slaves during the Middle Passage and here in America during sale on the
auction block and when punished for various crimes or indiscretions. With each shift
during the evening the individual links sang out a metallic clank.
Ruth Rambo, the fourth in our group, represented a reverse migration of sorts – relocating
from Ohio to her present home of Charleston. Her presence was important for so many
reasons, not the least of which was that this structure was once the realm of women,
African-American women, from whose efforts key expectations each day during bondage
were met for their owners. Her presence made me consider each task with greater
appreciation and how work was divided between enslaved men and women. She also
exuded a sage-like presence that was simultaneously disarming and intriguing.
An overcast evening with very low clouds reflected lights beaming throughout the
downtown, casting a glow throughout the sky as if someone turned on a 15-watt bulb.
Mist persisted where thunderstorms were forecast to have struck and the thermometer
dropped considerably with the front that had moved in for the evening. With one of
the building’s two doors remaining open until 4:00 a.m., I found sleep elusive. Every
20 minutes I changed positions after the pine floor had numbed hip and shoulder to
the point of waking me up. Punctuating bouts of waking up was my contributions to a
chorus of snoring among us that surely would have been quite a concert for the very few
passersby that we had during the evening. When not met with the sound of trains and
sirens, common during certain times of the later hours, I was struck by the quietude of
the kitchen – the one place that Mr. McGill believed would have been, at times, a place
of solitude for slaves whose daily actions were both driven and monitored by owners.
On occasion the only sound discernible was the rustling of palmetto tree fronds in the
adjacent garden and along Pickens Street.
The morning began much like the evening had left off – with conversations about history,
race, slavery and preserving important sites such as the kitchen house. Most of the time I
listened, eager to hear what these three persons felt, what their personal experiences had
been and what the future might hold for the fields of history and historic preservation.
Here and there I offered what I knew about Columbia history in general, the site
specifically and what Historic Columbia Foundation had accomplished in recent years
addressing a handful of topics, including that of slavery – ultimately the institution whose
legacy brought us temporarily together on evening before a peaceful Easter weekend full
of reflection.
For me, a native Columbian, this experience with three visitors whose roots lie in the
town of Kingstree and the cities of Florence and Cincinnati struck a chord that will
resonate for some time to come. I was for those brief few hours an ambassador of the
city, an interpreter of the historic site and a watchful eye and an attentive ear for things
that went bump in the night during their stay. Experiences come in many shapes, sizes
and, in some cases, colors, but for me I recall an evening spent with kindred spirits
interested in learning more about the past while preserving the tangible elements that
make history accessible to contemporary citizens and visitors.
Cousin by Ruth Rambo
And then those men with manes covering their chins
Those men without blood
in too many cloths
Those men making ugly sounds
dancing only with their hands and arms
bringing shining plates where our faces appeared
Bringing bowls of beads that catch the light
and then throw it away
Those silly men traded all those new things for cousin
Those silly men without blood.
Cousin wasn’t Mandinga anyway.
Slave Dwelling Project
By Ruth Rambo
April 5, 2012, Seibels House (Kitchen), 1601 Richland Street, Columbia, S C
It’s 11:30 AM the next morning: grey, dank, and dreary. Yet my insides defy the
environment; they refuse to reflect the mood of the weather, my insides are flying high.
Even my body is behaving jubilantly. These old bones are not predicting rain although a
thin layer of heavenly spit sits on my hair. My back shows no evidence of its night long
encounter with a bare wooden floor as I had anticipated. The hard pine Cracker Barrel
chair feels remarkably comfortable. I surely would have predicted otherwise. No chair
no matter the level of padding would have been comfortable for the next few days or
so I had forecasted. As instructed by Zora Neale Hurston’s Mom, I have ‘jumped at the
sun.’ Didn’t ‘get there but at least I got off the ground.’
|
Seibels Kitchen Dependency, Submitted by Ruth Rambo |
I am driving home to Charleston after a sleep-in at the partially restored brick kitchen
on the Seibels House, an urban plantation in Columbia S C. It is just one stop on Joe
McGill’s National Trust for Historic Preservation Slave Dwelling Project. He is the project
creator/coordinator and has slept in slave dwellings around the country on plantations
from Texas to Connecticut. Terry James, photographer and civil war reenactor has
accompanied Joe, also a reenactor as well as a Field Officer for the Trust, frequently
on this mission to highlight the need for preservation of all the antebellum South
relics. The party of four of slave dwellers also included John Sherrer, Director of
Cultural Resources, Historic Columbia Foundation and me, an African American history
dilettante with a lifetime interest in the American system of slavery.
Joe and Terry were already friends and enjoyed a close camaraderie. Both John and
I had met Joe but didn’t have any common experience with him and didn’t know Terry
at all. Thrown together in a very small space shifting positions or turning over had to
be carefully choreographed. John observed that during Middle Passage the spaces
were much tighter so movement was virtually impossible. My thoughts traveled from
the slaves movement restrictions of a narrow space coupled with the inability to restrict
normal bodily functions with resulting products. We had access to modern facilities
for which I was most grateful. Terry had shackled his hands so when he turned over
we heard the clanging of those chains in the night. It was a frightening and sobering
reminder of physical and psychological elements of antebellum controls. On the lighter
side when we awoke, John our host asked if we wanted coffee. The idea was heartily
welcomed. So he left the historic kitchen and returned from the ‘Big House’ carrying
a tray of juice, coffee and banana bread. We laughed at the role reversal. A possible
descendant of slave owners serving the descendants of
slaves.
Joe extends an open invitation to people interested in the topic of slavery to join him
by sharing the lodging of a slave cabin overnight. The restoration of the fine plantation
homes is a no brainer. Everyone both black and white; from the north and south wants
to vicariously experience - if just for fifteen minutes- the life style and luxuries of a
southern planter. Yet no one wants to explicitly experience the life style of an enslaved
African. Well! Almost nobody.
Last night Joe had three takers: Terry James, John Sherrer, and me, the paternal
great granddaughter of Lydia Rambo. Lydia was a slave born c. 1820 who married and
was freed by her owner Lt. Gayle Rambo and has frequently informed and guided my
life. She has been my personal symbol of strength and endurance. Throughout my life
whenever I was feeling mentally defeated or physically ill, I’d conjure up a scenario
where my great grandmother Lydia was similarly compelled to push herself to meet
exceedingly high expectations…physical goals clearly more difficult to meet than
the ones confronting me during my 20th-21st Century life. Just thinking of this slave
woman’s survival achievement, has often given me the resolve to push through extreme
fear and pain and ‘just do it’. The will to survive is strong. Although I never met her, my
G grandmother taught me that.
Of course one cold night, no matter how uncomfortable, in a brick plantation kitchen/
slave dwelling does not a slave experience replicate. What it did do is give me time and
place and circumstance to think about the real life of a slave. It stimulated me to devote
serious thought to America’s gritty public secret – an inhuman, inhumane system of
trading in human flesh- slavery. The questions flow…the questions with immediate and
obvious answers and the numberless questions without probable answers.
The first is the most apparent to me: What would America be like today culturally,
politically and economically had there been no talented, creative, abundant African
slave labor? What unrecognized role did slavery play in the supremacy of America
on the world stage? Who first envisioned slavery as the cost effective method of
developing America’s north and south east corridor? Of working the land, of building the
dwellings, of expanding the music, of raising the children?
Who were these slaves rendered 3/5th a person? Who were these slaves, the only
major group of North American émigrés who did not willingly and purposefully seek the
opportunities available on these shores? Yes! The Africans too were huddled masses
yearning to breathe free. They were also the wretched refuse of a teeming shore. The
Africans were homeless and tempest-tost. Yet here was no welcome for them….no
lifted lamp….no open nor golden door.
Who were these enslaved Africans who endured a brutal lifestyle of work from ‘kin
to kant’ (can see in the morning to can’t see at night) without becoming chronically
depressed? How did any one of them escape becoming suicidal? Who were these
slaves enduring lifetimes of hardship and deprivation yet had families, created
communities, learned to talk through many languages, danced, laughed and sang. Who
were these Africans who taught their children the many skills they had mastered- the
most vital of all- how to survive and then manipulate the system without being beaten to
death? Who were these slaves?
Who would I be, had I been a slave? Would I have been cheerful and chatty? What
skills would I have developed? Would I have run away? Would I have tried to harm my
owners? Who would I have been? And who am I now because my G G M, Lydia was
chattel.
And why, over 300 years later, does America continue to deny their contribution and the
contributions of their descendants?
Some of these questions might be answerable: others require a Sphinx. What is crystal
clear is that this remarkable slave dwelling experience was intellectually provocative
and stimulating. You should think about becoming a slave dweller.
Contact Joe McGill. You’ll become the better for it. I believe I did.
Ruth ‘Retired’ Rambo