Baltimore Sun Sunday

Georgetown slaves documented by website

- By Mark Pratt

BOSTON — A Bostonbase­d genealogic­al organizati­on and a Georgetown University graduate who launched a project to trace the family histories of hundreds of black slaves sold by the Jesuit college in 1838 have teamed up to digitize the informatio­n and make it available to people researchin­g family histories.

The announceme­nt last week of what’s known as the GU272 Memory Project coincided not only with Juneteenth — the annual observance of June 19, 1865, when word of the abolition of slavery finally reached Texas — but also with the anniversar­y of the 1838 sale of 272 of some 300 slaves the Washington, D.C., college sold over five years.

American Ancestors, also known as the New England Historic Genealogic­al Society, has troves of genealogic­al informatio­n on its website, but the GU272 Project is unique, said Claire Vail, the project director.

“For this project, we said, ‘Let’s do something different and let’s talk to the living descendant­s,’ most of whom have no memory of their ancestors and no family lore that stretched back to their enslaved ancestors.”

So in addition to documents, photograph­s and the indexed genealogie­s of thousands of descendant­s, the project includes recorded interviews with dozens of living descendant­s.

“As black Americans — as descendant­s of enslaved people — we have always been told, ‘You’ll never know who you are. You’ll never know where you came from.’ Now that we have this data, my hope is that we can use it to open doors and make connection­s,” Melisande ShortColom­b, 65, a slave descendant pursuing a history degree at Georgetown, said in a statement released by American Ancestors.

The sale allowed the Jesuits to start the process of transformi­ng the modest college into today’s Georgetown University.

 ?? CLAIRE VAIL/AMERICAN ANCESTORS ?? Photos are shown of descendant­s of enslaved people sold by Georgetown College and the Maryland Jesuits in 1838.
CLAIRE VAIL/AMERICAN ANCESTORS Photos are shown of descendant­s of enslaved people sold by Georgetown College and the Maryland Jesuits in 1838.

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