Looking for Angola https://www.lookingforangola.org The Search for an 1800’s Black Settlement Thu, 30 Jul 2015 20:17:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 193362038 Archaeology lab inspired by Angola https://www.lookingforangola.org/template-sticky/ Sat, 07 Jan 2012 14:07:21 +0000 http://wptest.io/demo/?p=1241
I couldn’t help but smile while listening to the speakers at the groundbreaking ceremony of New College of Florida’s public archaeology lab. And I suspect the ancestors of an 1800s settlement called Angola smiled along with me. After all, their lives and legacies were at stake.
A few flashbacks on that fine occasion reminded me of why the archaeological search began for artifacts linked to what then was the little-known and under-reported saga of an outpost of freedom that thrived on the Manatee River near the time of our nation’s birth.
The “Looking for Angola” project subsequently has been established and furthered to pay tribute to that diverse community’s occupants, whose courage, determination and enterprise inspired me.
“This (Angola) is my most important project,” New College associate professor of anthropology Dr. Uzi Baram told the audience gathered next to the lab site.
In a career that spans 25 years, Angola is indeed my most significant venture. Since its inception in 2003, the experience has underscored the importance of collaboration, collegiality and collective work for our team of scholars. That’s the spirit that led to Angola’s existence.
And it’s the same spirit of collaboration that led federal, state and local funders to contribute $500,000 to build the lab. The facility will provide a place for New College students to partner with seasoned researchers, archaeology students from across the country, and volunteers for artifact analysis.
Little did the Angola residents know what their tools, utensils and pottery shards would teach. Their presence guides “Looking for Angola” and every ancillary project that develops as a result.
Vickie Oldham, Project Director, “Looking for Angola” Parrish 

 

 

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Story of early Florida black settlement emerging https://www.lookingforangola.org/mauris-occideritis/ https://www.lookingforangola.org/mauris-occideritis/#respond Tue, 16 Oct 2007 23:48:25 +0000 http://prestazilla.org/wordpress/butterfly/?p=63

Miami Herald

Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2007

FLORIDA JOURNAL

Story of early Florida black settlement emerging

A forgotten 19th century black settlement in mid-Florida is reemerging as a compelling story.

Posted on Tue, Oct. 16, 2007

BY AUDRA D.S. BURCH

aburch@MiamiHerald.com

 

CHARLES TRAINOR JR/MIAMI HERALD STAFF

Vicki Oldham stands next to a Civil War era house in Bradenton. She is part of an effort to help preserve an area on the Manatee River where an African-American settlement flourished in the early to mid 1800s. The area, named Angola, has been an interest to archaeologists who have been surveying the area with equipment used at Ground Zero in new York. The area where she is standing was part of the survey.

» More Photos

BRADENTON — For 10 years, they fought, hid and prayed for freedom here by the river, those 750 fugitive slaves, free blacks and black Seminoles who drifted west from the middle of Florida to form the largest community of its kind in the early 19th century South. Then, in 1821, their settlement, which they had named Angola after its kindred region in West Africa, was burned and looted and destroyed, probably by order of Gen. Andrew Jackson.

For the past five years, documentary producer Vickie Oldham has searched for the forgotten story of this self-sufficient village, which survived war, invasion and the threat of capture long enough to form one of the most extraordinary chapters of Florida history.

Now, Oldham and a team of scientists and historians believe they have found the bones of the Angola story lying beneath a several-mile stretch where the Manatee and Braden rivers meet, secrets suspended under a tranquil trailer park, under the tabby ruins of a plantation owner’s castle, under a playground near a mineral spring.

They call the project — as much spiritual journey as science — Looking for Angola.

”I am looking for my own history. I am looking for the elders who came here centuries ago,” says Oldham, 49, an African-American free spirit driven by the possibilities of the past. “Something about this story of survival and strength spoke to me. Everybody deserves to know this chapter in history.”

Now, finally, after years of research and excavations, after slow learning and cautious hope and a PBS documentary, radar technology is exhuming the truth.

The same sophisticated lasers that detected underground infrastructure damage near the World Trade Center site after 9/11 is starting to uncover Angola’s historical residue.

For years, the settlement’s reality has remained cloaked in a patchwork of historical documents and scholarly journals. Now, workers have found faint physical signs of its past underground.

”There’s evidence of a good deal of materials in a three-acre area,” says Uzi Baram, the archaeologist heading up the project. “We now know the past is right under our feet.”

So close, four feet at the most, that it can be scooped with shovels.

Earlier this summer, Witten Technologies, an underground mapping company based in Tampa, and the Army Corps of Engineers performed an archaeological survey between the river and Manatee Mineral Spring in east Bradenton.

Witten ‘s Radar Tomography system is essentially a John Deere lawn mower chassis retrofitted with 17 radar antennas. Moving at 2 mph, the device produces 3-D images of underground material.

”Think of this as a CAT scan or MRI of the underground,” says Andrew Lund, Witten’s business development manager. “We found hundreds of objects of interest, so the next step is for us to show the team where to start digging.”

Over two days in July, Witten workers scanned a field framed by old playground swings and trees dripping chandeliers of moss.

”We are essentially looking for an invisible community, trying to piece together a settlement that was quite ephemeral,” says Baram, an associate professor of anthropology at New College of Florida in Sarasota. “They did not make a large imprint on the landscape by design, but we know something is there.”

Oldham was 400 miles away sitting in her office at Fort Valley State University in Georgia, where she serves as a marketing director, waiting for updates by phone. These days had been 15 years in the making. She knew the results would be nuanced, not much more than shadows, but she had fretted that nothing would be found, that Angola would remain alive only in the minds of historians and archaeologists and anthropologists.

”I was excited, I felt like we were about to become part of redefining history,” Oldham says. “But I also felt this was urgent, that we had to find the physical evidence to bolster the historical stuff we already knew.”

Canter Brown Jr., a professor of history at Fort Valley, and other team members characterize the settlement as one of the most significant historical sites in Florida.

”It illustrates the role Florida played as a refuge of freedom for slaves and their courage to get and keep their freedom,” says Brown, author of Florida’s Peace River Frontier, which includes one of the earliest mentions of Angola.

Angola was one of about 50 documented maroon communities — underground, autonomous villages of fugitive Negro slaves — in the country during the early colonial period.

Oldham first heard about it in 1992 while working on a documentary about the history of African Americans in nearby Sarasota.

”I knew instantly that I wanted to know more, and that I wanted to prove Angola was real,” Oldham says. “It just struck me as a story of empowerment that should be shared.”

But it would be almost 10 years before Oldham actually went to work on the project. First, she had to learn how much of the story was known. There had been no substantial research, no excavations for artifacts, detailed record of the labors, the struggles, the lives of Florida’s blacks before the Civil War.

The few facts that have emerged: The Angola settlers migrated from Central and North Florida, some as survivors the War of 1812 and other skirmishes. They settled as far north as Tampa Bay but concentrated mostly here along the banks of the Manatee River, near what is now I-75.

The village was carved from thick vegetation along the river banks. Its protected location, rich soil and abundant fresh water made it a haven for escaped slaves. As a thriving seaport, it came to be known as Negro Point. It was prosperous and popular, and some historians refer to it as Florida’s first black town.

Scholars believe that Andrew Jackson, the ruthless and ambitious army general who had just been appointed provisional governor, ordered his allies, the Lower Creek Indians, to destroy all Seminole and black villages as revenge for their dogged resistance to his control.

In the 1821 raid that destroyed Angola, an estimated 300 villagers were captured and returned to slavery. The rest were killed or fled to the Bahamas, where their descendants live today.

In 2003, Oldham received a $25,000 state preservation grant to finance her research. She quickly recruited a team of anthropologists, archaeologists and historians.

Within the year, the team conducted its first explorations. Volunteers dug in the front yard of a white Civil War-era clapboard house owned by preservationists Jeff and Trudy Williams.

”We always suspected that somebody had been here well before us,” says Trudy Williams, a neighborhood resident for 30 years.

Nothing much emerged from that first effort except a single bottle, but Oldham was undeterred. She coordinated several more digs, including an underwater search in the river.

And she told the Angola story in churches and at community centers and libraries, told it to anyone who would listen. Oldham also went looking for living history, traveling to Red Bay on Andros Island in the Bahamas to meet the descendants of Angola’s settlers who spoke of Florida as a long-lost home.

In 2005, she wrote, narrated and produced a 22-minute documentary on the project that aired on the Tampa PBS affiliate the next year. The History Channel also awarded Oldham a $10,000 grant to help incorporate the Angola story into the curriculum of some Florida schools.

But it wasn’t until this summer that the search for Angola yielded real results. Now, after team members finish studying the radar reports, and if another state grant is approved, they will dig this winter.

They will dig for pottery, fishing lines and tools — dig for the 19th century.

”I want to see monuments to Angola in Florida. I want to see its mention in history books,” Oldham says. “I want to celebrate Angola.”

LINK: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami_dade/story/272899.html

 

Cindy Mooy

Associate Director of Public Affairs

  / Media Relations

New College of Florida

5800 Bay Shore Road

Sarasota , FL 34243-2109

Office: 941-487-4152

cmooy@ncf.edu

Cell: 941-650-2820

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9/11 TECH TOOL USED IN SEARCH FOR ANGOLA https://www.lookingforangola.org/hello-world/ https://www.lookingforangola.org/hello-world/#respond Tue, 14 Aug 2007 19:24:49 +0000 http://www.lookingforangola.org/?p=1
9/11 TECH TOOL USED IN SEARCH FOR ANGOLAHigh tech equipment used to assess underground damage near the World Trade Center site after 9/11 will now assist archaeologists in the search for artifacts of an 1800’s slave settlement near Tampa Bay known as Angola. Using a method called Radar Tomography (RT), St. Petersburg-based Witten Technologies will scan a 2 acre site at Manatee Mineral Springs in hopes of finding remains of the place that served as a haven of freedom for escaped slaves, free blacks and Seminoles.

“We’re excited about RT’s archaeological potential. Similar to our work with the utility industry, we can precisely identify where objects of interest are and provide targets during exploratory digging,” said Robert Green, Witten’s Chief Executive Officer. According to Green, the company is volunteering their services in the search for Angola.

Without turning a shovel, Green says underground items such as house foundations, artifact clusters and archaeological features can be identified using geophysics. The non-invasive method involves a mobile array of ground-penetrating radar antennas, a laser survey station, and image processing software. Initially, the technology was developed to provide a 3D map of existing underground infrastructure to companies prior to major road or utility construction projects.

Witten provided RT services in lower Manhattan during recovery and rebuilding efforts after 9/11.

“The value of contributions from Witten and the Corps to our project is tremendous. RT scanning of Manatee Mineral Spring will provide a rich source of information for us,” said Dr. Uzi Baram, Angola scholar and Associate Professor of Anthropology at New College of Florida. Reflections of Manatee Director Trudy Williams adds, “Our goal is to safeguard potential archaeological evidence for research such as this.” In addition to Angola layers, Baram hopes RT will locate materials that reveal the multiple histories of the spring.

Please contact Sherry Svekis at (srobs@mac.com) or Andrew Lund of Witten Technologies at for additional information.

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January 28, 2006-New Records Have Been Added to the Africana Heritage Database! https://www.lookingforangola.org/his-duobus-sicariorum-2/ https://www.lookingforangola.org/his-duobus-sicariorum-2/#respond Sat, 28 Jan 2006 23:36:30 +0000 http://prestazilla.org/wordpress/butterfly/?p=57
January 28, 2006 – New Records Have Been Added to the Africana Heritage Database!

New Records, Week Ending December 4, 2005

The following records have been added to the Africana Heritage Project database:

Many thanks to Bill Davison for the following Records:

Boyles, William. Appraisement, Marion County, WV

Brice, Benjamin. Indenture of Sal to Rachel Brice

Crawford, Harry. Manumission from John Morrison Estate

Fleming, Mathew. Will of, Marion County, WV

Greenlee, Peter. Will of, Pendleton District, SC

Hughes, Thomas. Will of, Greene County, PA

Manumissions: Rogers, Hoye. MD and PA

Minor Family Slaves, Washington County, PA

Shepardstown, VA 1810 Census

Swan, John. Will of, Greene County, PA

Wilson, Jesse. Will of, TN>Dallas County, AL

Valerie Wright has kindly shared these records:

Hagler, Jacob. Bill of Sale for Joseph, to William Hinkle, Randolph County, MO

Hinkle, Edward. Tombstone Inscription, Franklin County, MO

Hinkle, Edward and Mary Ann Woods. Marriage License, Franklin County, MO

Hinkle, John Deed of Gift to Isaac Hinkle, Franklin County, MO

A huge thank you to Audrey Pool for the following:

Deloach Family Wills, Isle of Wight, VA

Many thanks to Patsy for painstakingly transcribing and submitting the following record:

Declarations of Marriage, Jessamine County, KY

Africana Heritage Co Administrator Alana Thevent transcribed these records this week:

EDWARDS, Brister. Freedmen’s Bureau Records. 1872

EDWARDS, Flora. Freedmen’s Bureau Records. 1872-1873

GEDDIS, Amos. Freedmen’s Bureau Records. 1870

GREEN, Augustus. Freedmen’s Bureau Records. 1874

NOWELL, Robert. Freedmen’s Bureau Records. 1871

SANDERS, Hampton. Freedmen’s Bureau Records. 1872

WALKER, Amelia. Freedmen’s Bureau Records. 1871

ALLSTON, Jacob with GRATE, Gabriel. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Georgetown Co., SC

ALLSTON, Jacob. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Georgetown Co, SC

ALLSTON, Jacob. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Georgetown Co, SC

ALLSTON, Jacob. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Georgetown Co, SC

ALLSTON, Jacob. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Georgetown Co., SC

ALLSTON, Samuel. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

ALLSTON, Samuel. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

BONEY, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Duplin Co, NC

BONEY, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Duplin Co, NC

BONEY, William. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Abbeville Co, SC

BRYAN, Cuffy with Jullater. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

BRYAN, Cuffy. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Charleston Co, SC

CAMPBELL, Solomon with MOULTRIE, Rose. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

CAMPBELL, Solomon with MOULTRIE, Rose. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

CAMPBELL, Solomon. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1880, Charleston Co, SC

CAMPBELL, Solomon. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1880, Charleston Co, SC

ELMORE, William. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

ELMORE, William and Sarah. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

ELMORE, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Laurens Co, SC

ELMORE, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Laurens Co, SC

ELMORE, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1880, Laurens Co, SC

ELMORE, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1880, Laurens Co, SC

GAILLARD, Andrew. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1880, Charleston Co, SC

GAILLARD, Andrew. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1880, Charleston Co, SC

GLOVER, Robert. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

HOLMES, Crocket. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Hampton Co, SC

HOLMES, Crockett with RHETT, Lynda. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Beaufort Co, SC

JOHNSON, Claus. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

JOHNSON, Claus. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

JOHNSON, Claus. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Charleston Co, SC

MITCHEL, Bill. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1880, Colleton Co, SC

MITCHELL, Leah. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

MITCHELL, Leah. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

MITCHEL, Stephen. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Anderson Co, SC

MITCHEL, Stephen. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Anderson Co, SC

MITCHEL, Stephen. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1880, Anderson Co, SC

MITCHELL, Stephen. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

MITCHELL, Stephen. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

NICK, Daniel. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

NICK, Daniel. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

NICK, Daniel. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Charleston Co, SC

NISBETT, Caesar. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

NISBETT, Caesar. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

NISBETT, Edward. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

NISBETT, Edward. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

NISBETT, Edward. Family Group Sheet (pg 3), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

PERRY, Henry. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Darlington Co, SC

PERRY, Henry. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Darlington Co, SC

PINCKNEY, Joe. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

SEGAR, Charles with COOKSON, Robin. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

SIMONS, Charles. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

SIMONS, Dick. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Colleton Co, SC

SMALL, Alex. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Colleton Co, SC

WASHINGTON, Henry. Family Group Sheet, 1870, Charleston Co, SC

SMALL, Alex. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Colleton Co, SC

WATSON, Nathan. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

WATSON, Nathan. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

WIGFALL, Plato. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

WIGFALL, Plato with SWINTON, Elias. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

WILSON, Oliver. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Anderson Co, SC

WILSON, Oliver. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

MITCHEL, Stephen. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1880, Anderson Co, SC

GAILLARD, Andrew. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1870, Charleston Co, SC

MITCHEL, Lea. Family Group Sheet, 1880, Colleton Co, SC

MITCHEL, Bill. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1880, Colleton Co, SC

ALSTON, Friday. Family Group Sheet, 1900, Charleston Co, SC

BONEY, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Charleston Co, SC

BONEY, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Charleston Co, SC

BONEY, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 3), 1900, Charleston Co, SC

BRYAN, Cuffy. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Beaufort Co, SC

BRYAN, Cuffy. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Beaufort Co, SC

BRYAN, Peter. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Charleston Co, SC

BRYAN, Peter. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Charleston Co, SC

BRYAN, Peter. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Beaufort Co, SC

BRYAN, Peter. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Beaufort Co, SC

ELMORE, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Laurens Co, SC

ELMORE, William. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Laurens Co, SC

GLOVER, Robert. Family Group Sheet, 1900, Berkley Co, SC

HEYWARD, Jeffery. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900 Berkely Co, SC

HEYWARD, Jeffery. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Berkley Co, SC

NISBETT, Edward. Family Group Sheet, 1900, Spartanburg Co, SC

SEGAR, Charles. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Charleston Co, SC

SEGAR, Charles. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Charleston Co, SC

SMALL, Alex. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Berkley Co, SC

SMALL, Alex. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Berkley Co, SC

WATSON, Nat. Family Group Sheet, 1900, Berkley Co, SC

WILSON, Oliver. Family Group Sheet (pg 1), 1900, Berkley Co, SC

WILSON, Oliver. Family Group Sheet (pg 2), 1900, Berkley Co, SC

Best Wishes and Happy Hunting from the Crew at Africana!

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