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An old
Virginia
plantation,
a new
owner
and a
family
legacy
unveiled
By Joe
Heim
washingtonpost.com
SHARSWOOD,
VA - Two
years
ago,
when his
sister
called
to say
the
estate
was for
sale, he
jumped
on it.
He’d
been
looking,
pulled
home to
the
place he
left at
18. His
roots
were
deep in
this
part of
Pittsylvania
County,
and he
wanted a
place
where
his vast
extended
family,
many of
whom
still
live
nearby,
could
gather.
The
handsome
house
set on a
rise had
a name,
it
turned
out.
Sharswood.
And
Sharswood
had a
history.
And its
history
had
everything
to do
with
Miller.
Slavery
wasn’t
something
people
talked
much
about in
this
part of
Virginia
when
Miller
was
growing
up in
the
1970s
and
1980s.
And
other
than a
few
brief
mentions
in
school,
it
wasn’t
taught
much,
either.
The only
time he
remembers
the
subject
coming
up was
when
Alex
Haley’s
miniseries,
“Roots,”
was
broadcast
in 1977.
“For a
lot of
us, that
was our
first
experience
with
what
really
happened
during
slavery,”
he said.
“It just
wasn’t
discussed.”
Miller
assumed
his
ancestors
had been
enslaved.
But
where
and when
and by
whom
were
questions
that
were
left
unasked
and
unanswered.
“People
didn’t
want to
talk
about
this
stuff
because
it was
too
painful,”
said
Dexter
Miller,
60, a
cousin
of
Fredrick’s
who
lives in
Java.
“They
would
say,
‘This is
grown
folks’
business.’
And
that’s
how some
of the
history
was
lost.”
Another
cousin,
Marian
Keyes,
who
taught
first in
segregated
schools
and
later in
integrated
schools
from
1959 to
1990,
said
that for
a long
time
there
was
little
teaching
about
slavery
in
Pittsylvania
County.
“We
weren’t
really
allowed
to even
talk
about it
back
then,”
said
Keyes,
who
turns 90
this
year and
lives in
Chatham.
“We
weren’t
even
allowed
to do
much
about
the
Civil
War and
all of
that
kind of
stuff,
really.”
Even
outside
of
school,
when she
was
growing
up,
Keyes
said,
the
subject
of
slavery
was
avoided.
“I just
thought
everything
was
normal,”
she
said,
“because
that was
the way
of
life.”
But the
unspoken
history
left a
gulf.
It
wasn’t
until
after
Fredrick
Miller
bought
Sharswood
in May
2020
that its
past
started
coming
into
focus.
That’s
when his
sister,
Karen
Dixon-Rexroth
and
their
cousins
Sonya
Womack-Miranda
and
Dexter
Miller
doubled
down on
researching
their
family
history.
What
neither
Fredrick
Miller
nor his
sister
knew at
the time
was that
the
property
had once
been a
2,000-acre
plantation,
whose
owners
before
and
during
the
Civil
War were
Charles
Edwin
Miller
and
Nathaniel
Crenshaw
Miller.
Fredrick
Miller
and so
many
members
of his
extended
family
were
born and
grew up
in the
shadow
of
Sharswood
— and
perhaps
it was a
clue to
a deeper
connection.
It
wasn’t
uncommon
after
emancipation
for
formerly
enslaved
people
to take
the last
names of
their
enslavers.
But
establishing
the link
required
more
research.
His
sister
and
cousins
scoured
genealogy
sites
and
contacted
Karice
Luck-Brimmer,
who
works in
community
outreach
with
Virginia
Humanities
in
Pittsylvania
County
and
researches
local
African
American
genealogy.
They
pored
over
court
and real
estate
records,
examined
census
data and
revisited
family
tales
passed
down
over
generations.
As the
puzzle
pieces
connected,
a
clearer
picture
emerged.
Sarah
Miller,
great-grandmother
to
Fredrick,
Karen
and
Dexter,
and
great-great-grandmother
to
Sonya,
died in
1949 at
81. From
her
death
certificate,
they
learned
that
Sarah’s
parents
were
Violet
and
David
Miller.
The 1860
Census
does not
list
enslaved
people
by name,
only by
gender
and age.
In the
1870
Census,
however,
Violet
and
David
Miller
lived
just a
short
distance
from
Sharswood.
Between
the many
documents
that the
descendants
of Sarah
Miller
have
obtained,
the
fragments
of
family
oral
history
they’ve
sewn
together
and the
proximity
of the
family
to the
plantation,
they are
certain
that
Violet
and
David
Miller
were
among
those
enslaved
at
Sharswood.
More
clues
continue
to
emerge.
An entry
in the
Virginia
Slave
Births
Index
uncovered
this
month by
Luck-Brimmer
shows
that a
boy
named
Samuel
was born
to
Violet
in
Pittsylvania
County
on May
9, 1864.
N.C.
Miller
is
listed
as the
enslaver.
In the
1870
Census
record
for
Violet
and
David
Miller,
Samuel,
age 5,
is
listed
as a
member
of the
household.
Sarah,
his
youngest
sister,
also is
listed
as a
member
of the
household.
She
would
have
been 2,
although
no age
is given
for her
in the
record.
The
newly
discovered
document
“hands-down
places
them on
the
plantation,”
Womack-Miranda
said
after
seeing
the
entry.
“It can
never be
disputed.”
For
Fredrick
Miller,
the
10.5-acre-estate
he’d
purchased
for
$225,000
ended up
not
being
just a
future
gathering
spot for
the
family,
but also
its
first
traceable
point in
the
United
States —
an
astonishing
revelation
for him.
It also
left him
thinking
about
family
history
and the
absence
of that
history
for many
people
like
him.
“You’ve
got to
know
where
you come
from,”
he said
in a
phone
interview
from his
California
home.
“You’ve
got to
know
where
you come
from.
It’s
unfortunate
that a
lot of
us
don’t.”
In an
undated
photo of
Sarah
that
family
members
have
shared
with one
another,
the
mother
of seven
wears
wire-rimmed
glasses
and
faces
the
camera
with a
somber
expression.
When he
looks at
the
photo of
his
great-grandmother,
Fredrick
Miller
sees
sadness
in her
face.
But, he
hopes,
maybe
this
purchase
has
brought
some
redemption.
With
Sharswood
in his
hands,
her
family
is
reclaiming
its
past.
“I just
hope
that
somehow
she’s
looking
down
from
heaven
and
finally
cracking
a
beautiful
smile,”
he said.
On a
recent
mid-December
day, the
oaks and
walnuts
that
tower
nearby
had shed
all of
their
leaves.
A dry
spell
had
turned
the
winter
grass
browner
still.
But
Sharswood
still
shone,
with its
bright
white
paint
accented
with
black
shutters
and a
green
metal
roof.
Immaculate.
Designed
by the
famed
New York
architect
Alexander
Jackson
Davis
and
built in
the
middle
of the
19th
century,
Sharswood
signaled
success.
Even
with the
additions
and
paint
jobs
over the
years,
it’s not
hard to
envision
how the
house
looked
before
the
Civil
War,
when it
was the
hub of
one of
the
largest
tobacco
plantations
in
Pittsylvania
County.
And it’s
not hard
to
envision
the
enslaved
men,
women
and
children
who
toiled
to
harvest
that
tobacco
and
enrich
the
plantation’s
owners.
Approximately
550,000
people
in
Virginia
were
enslaved
at the
outset
of the
Civil
War —
roughly
a third
of the
commonwealth’s
population
—
Virginia
Museum
of
History
&
Culture
figures
show.
In
Pittsylvania
County,
closer
to half
of the
population
was not
free.
Those
enslaved
at
Sharswood
in 1860
ranged
in age
from 1
to 72,
according
to
Census
figures.
Thirty-five
were 12
or older
and
considered
adults
on the
census
count.
There
were 23
children.
Of the
58
total,
31 were
female.
There
were 12
houses
for
enslaved
people
on the
plantation,
determined
Doug
Sanford,
a
retired
professor
of
historic
preservation
at the
University
of Mary
Washington,
who has
been
documenting
former
homes of
the
enslaved
across
Virginia
with
Dennis
Pogue,
an
associate
research
professor
at the
University
of
Maryland
and
retired
archaeologist.
The
census
numbers
are a
small
window
into the
plantation’s
life.
But not
much
more.
For many
Black
Americans,
slavery
is a
brick
wall
that
prevents
them
from
finding
out more
about
their
past
before
emancipation.
Census
records
before
the
Civil
War
rarely
provided
names of
enslaved
people.
Some
owners
kept
records
that
included
first
names
and the
prices
they
paid to
buy an
enslaved
person
or what
they
received
for
selling
one, but
personal
details
are
scarce.
Separations
of
families
made the
kinship
trails
even
more
difficult
to
follow.
Even
when
slavery
ended,
the
details
of the
people
subjected
to it
and of
their
daily
lives
were not
easy to
come by.
After
emancipation,
there
often
was a
reluctance
among
those
who had
endured
slavery
to share
their
story
with
their
children
and
grandchildren,
said
Leslie
Harris,
a
professor
and
historian
at
Northwestern
University
who has
written
extensively
about
slavery
in the
United
States.
“The
generation
closer
to these
experiences
clearly
were
dealing
with a
traumatic
memory,
and they
didn’t
want to
rehearse
that
memory,”
Harris
said.
“Toni
Morrison
has this
line in
her book
‘Beloved’
where
she says
‘This is
not a
story to
pass
down.’
So, for
that
generation,
they
didn’t
want to
pass
down
that
trauma.”
But for
subsequent
generations,
Harris
said,
“It’s
not that
it’s not
troubling
to learn
these
histories,
but our
curiosity
and our
desire
to
understand
is
enough
removed
from
that to
have us
ask
different
questions
of the
record.”
The
dilapidated
cabin
behind
the main
house at
Sharswood
isn’t
visible
from the
road. A
humble
structure
with a
central
chimney
dividing
two
rooms,
it feels
almost
hidden.
But
Sarah
Miller’s
descendants
have
focused
their
attention
on it.
What the
family
learned
from
ongoing
research
by
Sanford
and
Pogue
and by
Jobie
Hill, a
preservation
architect
who
started
the
Saving
Slave
Houses
project
in 2012,
is that
the
cabin
was
built
before
1800,
probably
as the
main
house on
the
property,
and then
was
divided
into a
duplex
before
1820.
From
then on,
they
said, it
probably
served
as a
kitchen
and
laundry
for the
main
house
and a
living
space
for some
who were
enslaved
at
Sharswood.
Standing
50 feet
from the
16-by-32-foot
cabin in
which
her
ancestors
may have
worked
or
lived,
Womack-Miranda,
53, said
the
discovery
of the
connection
has been
life-altering.
“When I
walk
around
here, I
imagine
my
ancestors
walking
on the
same
ground,
the same
dirt,”
she
said.
“As an
African
American,
you feel
like you
have
reached
the
point
where
you can
say,
‘I’m
connected
to my
ancestors,
to my
roots,
to the
very
plantation
[where]
my
ancestors
were
enslaved.’
It makes
me feel
whole as
an
African
American.”
Karen
Dixon-Rexroth
says
she,
too,
feels
the
presence
of her
ancestors
all
about
the
property.
But
Dixon-Rexroth,
49, also
has
noticed
the
generational
difference
when it
comes to
discussing
the
history
of the
plantation.
As she
walked
with her
mother,
Betty
Miller-Dixon,
across
the
backyard
last
month
and
toward
the
cabin,
she
sensed
her
mother’s
reluctance.
“You
don’t
like to
go
there,
do you,
Mom?”
she
asked.
Miller-Dixon,
81,
stopped
and
looked
at the
dwelling.
“You
just
wonder
how they
survived
it,”
said
Miller-Dixon,
whose
father,
Gideon
Miller,
was
Sarah
Miller’s
youngest
child.
“I don’t
want to
dwell on
something
I can’t
control,
but it
bothers
me when
I go
even
just to
look in
there.”
Thinking
about
what
their
ancestors
may have
endured
in
captivity
is
painful.
Although
the
Miller
men who
owned
the
property
never
married,
the
descendants
of those
enslaved
at
Sharswood
believe
they had
children
with
women on
the
property.
They
wonder
about
ancestors
who
would
have had
no say
in that.
That
some of
them are
descendants
of the
enslaved
and the
enslaver
is a
real
possibility.
They
have
thought
of all
of that.
And
more.
“When I
saw the
cabin, a
feeling
came
over me
like I
believe
I’m
home,”
said
Dexter
Miller.
“I could
feel my
ancestors,
and it
almost
brought
tears to
my eyes.
I can
picture
them
sitting
around
the
fireplace,
and the
stories
they
were
telling.
I’m in
the
presence
of my
ancestors
hundreds
of years
ago who
lived
here and
slept
here and
birthed
here.
But I
also
think
about
what
happened
around
that big
oak
tree.
Were my
ancestors
beaten
there?
Hanged
there?
That’s
crept
into my
mind.
You
never
know.”
Fredrick
Miller
thinks
about
what
slavery
has done
not just
to his
family,
but to
all
descendants
of the
enslaved.
“When
people
experience
traumatic
events,
they get
counseling
for it.
They go
through
a
process
and, you
know,
try to
get
through
it,” he
said.
“Black
folk
went
through
that
kind of
stuff
for
hundreds
of
years.
And then
when it
was
over,
they
just
said,
‘Okay,
go out
there
and be
normal.’
You
know,
how is
that
possible?
We are a
product
of who
we were
hundreds
of years
ago. And
so it’s
unfortunate,
because
I think
that we
could
have
definitely
progressed
a lot
further
had we
dealt
with
that
stuff
early on
and
dealt
with it
the
right
way.”
While
they do
not
ignore
the pain
and
privation
suffered
by their
forebears,
many in
the
family
say the
lessons
they are
taking
from
this
reconnection,
from
this
reclaiming,
is that
history
is not
fixed in
place;
it is
always
being
written.
“I just
imagine
my
ancestors
walking
here and
how they
may have
felt
inside
that
life has
to be
better
than
this,”
Dixon-Rexroth
said.
“And
now, all
these
years
later,
us
having
the
property
in our
possession.”
In
August,
the
Miller
family
held a
huge
two-day
reunion
on the
grounds.
More
than 200
relatives
came.
Tents
and
chairs
were set
up in
the
yard.
Tables
overflowed
with
fried
fish,
grilled
jerk
chicken,
banana
pudding
and corn
pudding.
A food
truck
served
Italian
ice.
Children
ran
around
or
played
in a
moon
bounce.
There
were
board
games,
raffles,
giveaways.
A DJ set
up on
the
front
porch.
The
Miller
family
reunions
go back
to at
least
1965.
Relatives
told
Fredrick
Miller
it was
the best
one they
had
attended.
Miller
said
that
when he
looked
at the
crowd
that had
gathered
that
weekend,
he was
proud
that his
relatives
were
reconnecting,
not just
with one
another,
but also
with
their
past.
The
small
cabin
behind
the
house
was
something
everyone
wanted
to see.
“I just
sat back
and was
able to
observe
the
excitement
of the
people
who
showed
up,”
Miller
said.
“It was
just
such a
good
feeling
to talk
to them
about
that
place,
and
that’s
something
we’d
been
lacking.”
He still
thinks
about if
he had
not
bought
Sharswood
and how
the past
almost
slipped
through
the
family’s
fingers.
“That
history
would
have
definitely
been
lost,”
he said.
“Definitely.”
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