Showing posts with label Gullah culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gullah culture. Show all posts

12 February 2024

Black History Month 2024 Research Room Display by Jalen Lugo

As I have mentioned before, I use creation of display cases as a way for new BDC staff to explore certain sections of our holdings in a deeper and more personal way. My goal is that staff will internalize how varied and multifaceted the BDC is - even when it is tied to a certain geographical area - so that they can better assist our customers.  The 2024 theme for Black History Month is "African Americans and the Arts." Thus I assigned Jalen, the BDC's Library assistant the task of highlighting some of the BDC's resources on that theme. He had the liberty to interpret the theme, choose the decorative elements, and then was required to explain to me and to you why he chose what he chose as illustrative of the theme. -- Grace Cordial 

Black History Month is upon us, and I have the pleasure of adding new items into the BDC lobby display case. This month entails all the culture, religion, and practices of the African American people in the U.S. Here at the BDC we strive to capture the stories of African American history and what makes them unique in our area. Everything found in the display case this month focuses on the Gullah community, which is only found in the southeastern United States, ranging from North Carolina down to Florida. The Gullah community contains unique religious practices, music, food, and language not found anywhere else in the world. 

Gullah Culture in America by Wilbur Cross (2007, 2008, 2012, 2023) is a book about the Gullah community across the U.S. since its discovery in the mid-1800s. The Gullah community was largely unheard of up until the mid-1800s, when, during the 1860s, a group of missionaries travelled down south to instruct freedmen how to read and write when they noticed that the freedmen spoke partial English combined with idioms, expressions, and such. What I find interesting about this book is how incredibly deep their stories are. The Gullah have their own language, songs, food, religion, and how they represent themselves in the community, all of which stems from their African roots. It is a world I previously never thought of but am now deeply entrenched in learning about.

Africanisms in American Culture edited by Joseph E. Holloway (1990) discusses African-based historical, linguistic, religious, and artistic perspectives that have been absorbed into American traditions. Together the chapter authors provide cultural context for African Americans, helping identify where certain religious, artistic, and linguistic practices are derived from and how the African American people use this to define themselves today. I chose this because it is interesting to discover where a certain ritual or practice was derived from, and how similar it is to the rituals and practices in Africa. This book can also serve as a starting point for those trying to trace down their roots because so many rituals and practices were specific to a certain group of people in Africa.

Shout Because You’re Free: The African American Ring Shout Tradition in Coastal Georgia by Art Rosenbaum, Margo Newmark Rosenbaum, and Johann S. Buis (1998) is about the African American Ring Shouting tradition. “Ring Shout” is a form of praise and worship for African Americans that involves a sort of call-and-respond form of singing, with a stick to beat on the floor for a beat, along with handclapping and foot-tapping. It was thought to have completely died out by the 1980s, but a small group was found that still actively performed this kind of practice. I chose this book because it discusses an unique style of singing that enslaved people created with what they have. How this form of praise and worship continues even today is a testament to the perseverance, passion, and soul that the African American community exemplifies.

Slave Songs of the Georgia Sea Islands by Lydia Parrish (1992, 1942) is a book about Lydia Parrish travelling far and wide to locate and document the different songs and style of songs that African Americans created and sang during the antebellum period. Parrish creates a delicate and intricate layer between their songs and their way of life, social customs, language, and culture. Parrish garnered the respect and trust of many African American song writers and was able to record their songs in detail, adding depth and providing context to discover the meaning behind them. I chose this book because of its intricate description of songs from the antebellum period and how she explains why, and how, they stood the test of time. 

Gullah: Songs of Hope, Faith and Freedom [Audio CD] (1997) by Marlena Smalls and the Hallelujah Singers provides a gateway to a culture that is largely unknown by many people in the U.S. According to the summary about this item in the SCLENDS catalog: "Gullah is a people. Gullah is a language. Gullah is music like you've never heard before! Marlena Smalls joins with The Hallelujah Singers to present glorious music from the rich culture of West Africa's children who have inhabited the coastal islands of the southeastern U.S. for hundreds of years. Marlena Smalls, perhaps best known for her role as "Bubba's Mama" in the movie Forrest Gump, and the energetic Hallelujah Singers have appeared on the Today Show, Good Morning America, and in concert at the Kennedy Center taking the charm and richness of their unique culture to a worldwide audience."

Ain’t You Got a Right to the Tree of Life by Guy Carawan (1989) is a collection of oral histories about Sea Island life that goes as far back as to the start of the 20th century. It contains the thoughts, emotions, feelings, and overall life of the people of John’s Island as they experienced discrimination and the start of the civil rights movement. I like that the people conveyed their thoughts and emotions themselves.  Each entry is a raw look at the day-to-day life of an African American during the 20th century that provides insight and context to who they were then and what shaped them to who they are today.

Slave Songs of the United States by William Francis Allen, Charles Pickard Ware, and Lucy McKim Garrison (1995, 1867) is a modern reprint of the first book collecting songs sung by enslaved people before, during and after the Civil War. The subject of the songs range from failed dreams and misery to hope and faith of a life beyond what they are in. I chose this book because of the need to remember the past, and to recognize what the enslaved people had to go through. It is a direct link to those who were enslaved. 

Songs uv dee Gullah Pee’puls by the Gullah Kinfolk (2000) is an audio CD that highlights the songs that the Gullah sings. It contains authentic Gullah people who can speak in Gullah and sing their songs the way they were supposed to be sung. I chose this because one can hear how the songs sound and feel their soul. It helped me realize the significant role that these spirituals played during the antebellum period and during the Civil Rights movement. In my opinion, these songs are what define the Gullah and make them an unique culture. The BDC is the only library in the SCLENDS consortium to have this title.  

Gullah Spirituals: The Sound of Freedom and Protest in the South Carolina Sea Islands by Eric Sean Crawford (2021) traces the roots of the Gullah Geechee songs to their beginnings in Africa all the way to their peak in the 20th century as songs that personified the need for social change and the need for equality. Crawford primarily focuses on the “spirituals” of the Gullah community on St. Helena Island. Spirituals were sung by a group of people during times of unrest and weariness. These spirituals helped rally the African American community to action. Some served as lullabies, in that some songs could ease tensions, soothe the soul, and create a dynamic that helped pull them out of tough times. I chose this book as a prime example of how a small community can rise above and beyond what society expects of them and make a change for the better.

Jazz and Blues Musicians of South Carolina by Benjamin Franklin, V (2008) shows how South Carolina played a pivotal role in defining this style of music. It features multiple musicians who played a pivotal role for this genre of music. I chose this because the diversity of the Jazz and Blues style and how people from all walks of life were able to join and play together without thinking about social prejudices. I also happen to love Jazz and Blues music. It is such a classic and melodic style of music. 

Something to Shout About: Reflections on the Gullah Spiritual by Sally Plair (1972) is a book about the style of praise and worship in Gullah culture  known as “shouting.” Shouting was a communal act within Gullah culture that kept spirits high. The book goes on to reflect on how the Gullah Spirituals allowed them to sing about their grievances, trials, happiness, joy, and their loss. I chose this because this book describes how the Gullah created a culture to sing away their pain and embrace joy and peace of mind.

If you interested in borrowing materials about Gullah culture, check out the items on this flyer: 

A heads up: The Library will be closed on Monday, February 19, 2024 for Presidents Day. 

14 July 2021

Lowcountry Tails and Tales: Gullah Folktales

Latest update: 14 September 2023

Gullah folktales are an original contribution of Beaufort District to the American literary canon. Though Joel Chandler Harris' Uncle Remus stories are perhaps the best known, author Reed Smith credits Beaufort resident Abbie Holmes Christensen (1852 - 1938) with "one of the first serious attempts to reduce the Gullah dialect to writing." Smith says that Christensen "both caught the Negro's point of view and mastered the difficult dialect." In her notes Christensen described her stories as coming of verbatim from Sea-Islands storytellers, "some of whose ancestors, two generations back, brought parts of the legends from African forests."

Her Afro American Folk Lore, a book of 18 fables, was published in 1892. Our copies are reprinted editions published by the Negro Universities Press in 1969.

Some items due to their uniqueness, rarity, fragility, and local significance can only be found in our Research Room. One such title is Gulla Tales and Anecdotes of South Carolina Sea Islands by Albert Henry Stoddard published in 1940. I recommend that if you are interested in Gullah folklore that you also take a look at the newspaper and magazine article clippings in the GULLAHS - FOLKLORE vertical file and the unpublished local student short dramas of Lowcountry Folklore (1985) and Five Gullah Folktales : A Collection of Folktales from Sea Island Elders (1993).

There are, however, other Gullah folktale books and books about Gullah culture that you can check out from other parts of the SCLENDS consortium.

For the youngsters in your life, we recommend:

Little Muddy Waters : A Gullah Folk Tale by Ronald Daise

Bo Rabbit Smart for True : Tall Tales from the Gullah by Priscilla Jaquith

De Gullah Storybook by Ronald Daise

Tales from the Land of Gullah by Anita Singleton-Prather (DVD)

Goody, Goodie : A Gullah/Geechee Tale by Marquetta Goodwine, Queen Quet of the Gullah/Geechee Nation

The Sandman's Daughter by Robin M. Carter with Queen Quet

For more accomplished readers, we recommend:

Gullah Animal Tales from Daufuskie Island, South Carolina as told by Albert Henry Stoddard translated and edited by Will Killhour

Gullah Ghosts : Stories and Folktales from Brookgreen Gardens in the South Carolina Lowcountry with Notes on Gullah Culture and History by Lynn Michelsohn

The Black Border : Gullah Stories of the Carolina Coast by Ambrose Elliot Gonzales

Before and After Freedom : Lowcountry Folklore and Narratives by                                           Nancy Rhyne

Gullah Folktales from the Georgia Coast by Charles C. Jones (I just love this book cover, even though the content is for our neighboring state to the south).

As you can see, the Library has lots of other books with Gullah folktales for you enjoy. No matter what a person's age, the Tar Baby's tale is great fun!

Just remember: Access to the Research Room remains limited and appointments are required. Contact bdc@bcgov.net or 843-255-6448 to set up a time for you to come and do your research.

03 November 2019

Free "Making Gullah" Lecture on November 8, 2019

We are grateful for all the folks who help us bring enlightening, illuminating and informative local history programs to you. Since June, we've collaborated with Beaufort Branch, Beaufort County Historical Society, Beaufort History Museum, Hilton Head Branch, and the Pat Conroy Literary Center on a wide range of topics from bootlegging to teaching kids; from colonial life to Beaufort County in the 1970s; natural disasters and disasters made by humans (Civil War) - and through all those time periods, there were African American people who endured and affected that history. We are delighted to collaborate with the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Commission, Penn Center, and the St. Helena Branch Library to offer another program about the Gullah people  to you. 

"Making Gullah: Reflections on Finding Gullah Folk in the American Imagination" by 
Dr. Melissa L. Cooper | BDC@ St. Helena Branch Library,  6355 Jonathan Francis, Sr. Road | Friday, November 8, 2019 at 2 PM


Melissa L. Cooper, PhD specializes in African American cultural and intellectual history, and the history of the African Diaspora. She is an Associate Professor in History at Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey. Cooper's book, Making Gullah: A History of Sapelo Islanders, Race, and the American Imagination (University of North Carolina Press, 2017) is an intellectual and cultural history that examines the emergence of "the Gullah" in scholarly and popular works during the 1920s and the 1930s. Using Sapelo Island, Georgia as a case study, Cooper's manuscript explores the forces that inspired interest in black southerners’ African heritage during the period, and also looks at the late twentieth, and twenty-first century legacies of the works that first made Sapelo Islanders famous. She is the author of Instructor's Resource Manual--Freedom on My Mind: A History of African Americans with Documents (Bedford/St. Martin's Press, 2013) and a contributor to Race and Retail: Consumption Across the Color Line (Rutgers University Press, 2015).  

Please join us for this free lecture being held as a component of Penn Center's 37th Annual Heritage Days Festival. 

Also, we do hope that you have reserved your seat at "Guns of the Big Gun Shoot" as registration is required.The link is https://beauforthistorymuseum.wildapricot.org/event-3552471.  Registration is closed once room capacity is met.

As of this writing, there are still seats available for Jim Alberto's Daufuskie Daze Author Book Talk at Beaufort Branch on November 15th: https://daufuskiedaze2.bpt.me.

Looking ahead: The Library system will be closed on Monday, November 11, 2019 for Veterans Day.


27 January 2019

This Week in the BDC, 27 Jan 2019 - 2 Feb 2019 (and a few heads-up announcements)

Our Research Room is scheduled to be open our usual and customary hours of 9 AM to 5 PM this week. Drop by and talk with Kristy or Sam about your research needs. They will help you use our materials and services to answer your questions about all things Beaufort District. 

In addition to our usual Research Room services, we have two programs this week to interest our customers. One deals with language, origins of surnames and place names, and pronunciations unique to South Carolina . The other teaching research skills to folks interested in family history of ancestors who lived in this area during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras has been full for a week or more.

On Thursday Coastal Discovery Museum hosts BDC manager Grace Cordial who will discuss one of her favorite books Correct Mispronunciations of Some South Carolina Names by Claude and Irene Neuffer. Come learn why native South Carolinians say surnames and place names the way they do! The presentation concentrates on the people and places in Beaufort District's long and storied history.  Because this lecture is being held at Coastal Discovery Museum registration is required: https://www.coastaldiscovery.org/event-registration/?ee=12625 There is a fee. Registration will close when capacity is reached.

We tested the African-American genealogical workshop waters with a co-sponsored event back in October 2018. It was such a success that the International African-American Museum's Center for Family History, the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Commission and the Beaufort County Library banned together to offer a class on Freedmen's Bureau Records. All seats at "Finding Your Ancestors in Freedmen's Bureau Records" on February 2, 2019 were reserved as of 15 January 2019 and the waiting list is beyond full too. Stay tuned for announcements of arrangements to do a second session in the Spring.

Be sure to read our online February Monthly calendar and events. You'll see a program about Native American garbage heaps and an outing to Palmetto Bluff Plantation for an illustrated talk about some of the many hurricanes that have affected Beaufort, Jasper, and Hampton counties through time.

Heads Up Alert:
Registration for "Remembering Ann Head: Beaufort's Forgotten Author & Mentor to Pat Conroy" has opened. I expect that seats for this March 27, 2019 event will go quickly. Sign up at http://bit.ly/2Ddyda6 sooner rather than later if you want - and can -- attend this free local literary history program brought to you by the BDC and our friends of the Pat Conroy Literary Center. Registration will close when capacity is reached.

28 November 2018

December Programs: Daufuskie Island & "Combee"

UPDATE 12/03/2018 - Due to a family emergency the BDC Research Room will be very short-staffed this week. The only known anticipated schedule adjustment will be on Wednesday, December 5th. The Research Room will be closed 9 AM to 2 PM for Grace to host the long anticipated "Daufuskie Island" Author Talk with Jenny Hersch and Sallie Ann Robinson at Hilton Head Branch at 11 AM.  Grace will be in the Research Room to assist customers from 2  PM - 5 PM that day.


In December the BDC sponsors two free programs about black history - and you don't even have to register to attend! 


Sallie Ann Robinson and Jenny Hersch will be at Hilton Head Branch Library the morning of December 5th to share their research, images, and stories of life on the Daufuskie Island. At the conclusion of the program, books will be available for purchase and autographing by the authors.

Wed., Dec. 5 | BDC@ Hilton Head Branch, 11 Beach City Road | 11:00 am

From the publisher's press release: Daufuskie, a Muscogee word meaning “sharp feather” or “land with a point,” is an island located between Hilton Head and Savannah, bounded by the Calibogue Sound and the Cooper River. With no bridge to the mainland, the island maintains a distinct allure. Home to Native American tribes, a paradise for pirates, and a strategic military outpost, Daufuskie held enslaved Africans brought by plantation owners as chattel to build their wealth. After the Civil War and occupation by Union soldiers, freed slaves from the Sea Islands and surrounding states settled on Daufuskie as landowners and sharecroppers. Daufuskie's population fluctuated in keeping with local industries, and those who stayed often relied on farming, hunting, and fishing to survive. Electricity was brought to the island in the early 1950s, and the first telephone rang in 1972. Today, historic sites, restaurants, outdoor recreation, and scenic beauty draw visitors and residents to this unique community. Daufuskie Island is part of the National Park Service's Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.


Jenny Hersch first visited Daufuskie in 2000 and has called the island home since 2013. Sallie Ann Robinson is a sixth-generation Daufuskie native, cookbook author, celebrity chef, and certified nursing assistant. She is known as “Ethel” in Pat Conroy's memoir The Water Is Wide. Together, they have done extensive research and gathered stories and photographs from island residents, visitors, libraries, and archives - including some from us here in the Beaufort District Collection.  

As part of St. Helena Branch's annual Gullah Night on the Town celebration on Saturday, December 8, 2018, we are hosting a very important lecture regarding ground-breaking research about the people released from bondage during the Combahee River Raid.


Dr. Edda Fields-Black, Associate Professor of History at Carnegie Mellon University, is

a specialist in the trans-national of West African rice farmers, peasant farmers in pre-colonial Upper Guinea Coast and enslaved laborers on rice plantations in the South Carolina and Georgia Lowcountry during the antebellum period. She earned her Ph.D. in History from the University of Pennsylvania in 2001. We have copies of her book based on her dissertation, Deep Roots: Rice Farmers in West Africa and the African Diaspora in the Research Room and through the Gullah Geechee Collection at St. Helena Branch. Copies are also available for checkout through SCLENDS.

Her "Combee" presentation focuses on the Beaufort plantations impacted by the Combahee River Raid of 1863 during which Harriet Tubman guided a Union foray into the heart of Beaufort District's rice production area. She interprets a unique compilation of primary historical sources, which show how localized groups who stole their freedom from Combahee rice plantations viewed themselves and viewed other groups from Sea Island cotton plantations and urban centers like Savannah and Beaufort when they were all resettled in Beaufort during the critical Civil War period. The paper chronicles this important microcosm of creolization using the experiences of Blacks enslaved on Combahee River rice plantations and freed in the 1863 raid to create a model of cultural change among New World African cultures and their complicated and nuanced relationships to pre-colonial Western Africa, their environments, and the plantation economies in which they were enslaved."

Sat., Dec. 8 | BDC@ St. Helena Branch, 6355 Jonathan Francis Senior Road  | 1:00 pm

St. Helena Branch also has other activities on the agenda the afternoon of Saturday, December 8th: 


There is no charge for attending any BDC@ The Branches local history programs. Anyone over age 12 interested in the program topic are welcomed to attend.

21 November 2018

Schedule Adjustments and December Programs

Happy Thanksgiving to all!
The Library will be closing at 5 pm today and will resume regular hours on Saturday, November 24th. Because the BDC doesn't have regular Saturday hours, staff will return to the Research Room on Monday, November 26th at 9 AM to assist customers.



Please note: Because of an anticipated staff shortage, the BDC Research Room will be closed at lunchtime on Tuesday, November 27th.
Please pencil in these two local history and Gullah related programs into your calendars for December: 



Daufuskie Island Author Book Talk with Jenny Hersch and Sallie Ann Robinson
Wednesday, December 5, 2018 | BDC@ Hilton Head Branch, 11 Beach City Road | 11 AM

and


"'Combee:' Harriet Tubman, the Combahee River Raid and the Civil War Transformation of Gullah/Geechee" with Dr. Edda Fields-Black, Carnegie Mellon University
Saturday, December 8, 2018 | BDC@ St. Helena Branch, 6355 Jonathan Francis Senior Road
| 1 PM

23 May 2018

All Things Gullah ... Just in time for the Festival

The term "Gullah" or "Geechee" describes a unique group of African Americans descended from enslaved Africans who settled along the Atlantic coast, often on sea islands, between what is now Wilmington, NC to Jacksonville, FL. Gullah is a broad culture embracing the political, social, economic, linguistic, and artistic life of native African-American Sea Islanders.

The Gullah people have made (and continue to make) a lasting impact on this area's local culture and history.  Therefore, the Beaufort District Collection is home to an extensive Gullah/Geechee historical collection of books, manuscripts, pamphlets, vertical files, videos, and more! As Wilbur Cross noted in his book Gullah Culture in America (Praeger, 2008), Beaufort County Library "has one of the South's largest collections of materials on the Gullah language and the sea island culture." Here are just a few highlights to whet your appetite to learn more about Gullah/Geechee sea island culture:
305.8961 CAM Gullah Cultural Legacies by Emory Campbell
305.8961 CRO Gullah Culture in America by Wilbur Cross
398 JOH Folk Culture on St. Helena Island, South Carolina by Guy B. Johnson
427.9757 TUR Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect by Lorenzo Dow Turner
641.59757 ROB Cooking the Gullah Way: morning, noon, and night by Sallie Ann Robinson
641.59757 SEG My Gullah Kitchen by Eva Segar
975 POL The Gullah People and Their African Heritage by William S. Pollitzer
975.799 GOD God's Gonna Trouble the Water [DVD] by Teresa Bruce

Sweet Grass Baskets courtesy of Teri Norris
Don’t forget to view these Beaufort County History Moments segments about Gullah Culture presented by Emory Campbell, former Director of Penn Center and past chairman of the Gullah-Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Commission, on YouTube: Gullah Language, Gullah Food, and Marsh Tackies.  (Beaufort County History Moments were a joint project of the Beaufort County Planning Department, Beaufort County Library, the County Channel, and Coastal Discovery Museum in 2011 - 2012.)
In addition to a vast array of book materials, we have some collections of newspaper and magazine clippings, culture reports, and other ephemeral materials in vertical files, among which are these:

Low Country Gullah Culture Special Resource Study
Festivals--Native Islander Gullah Celebration
Festivals--Gullah Festival
Gullah Culture, Pilot Study, 2000-2002. Ohio University, Southern Campus
Gullah Culture--Tours

Check out our list of links and materials on the topic of Gullah Culture in our Wordpress blog, too. 

The St. Helena Branch Library near Penn Center has a reference collection of Gullah/Geechee materials on site in addition to its BDC sponsored and managed local history section.
Several local organizations advocate and celebrate their Gullah roots. Additional information is available through Penn Center, the Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition, and the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor. And, of course, the 32nd annual Original Gullah Festival is being held May 25 - 27, 2018 at the Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park in downtown Beaufort. This year's theme is: "Come Home to a Celebration of Reconstruction ... The Untold Story."

Enjoy your holiday weekend! Please remember that all parts of the Beaufort County Library will be closed on Monday, May 28th in observance of Memorial Day. Regular hours resume on Tuesday, May 29th. 

27 December 2017

Emancipation Watch Night and the Day of Jubilee

The Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Foundation sent an email blast sent on Tuesday, December 19, 2017 5:09PM encouraging awareness of an important Gullah New Year's Eve and Day tradition:

Not too long ago our elderly cultural bearers would speak of January 1 as 'Mancipation Day, the day the community would gather in the homes, praise houses and churches to listen to their elders describe their trials during slavery, and celebrate their joy that 'Mancipation Day had arrived. 'Mancipation Day always followed the sacred rituals of "Watch Night": an evening of prayer, waiting and watching that ended at midnight as the "Watchmen" called out the passing moments to freedom.

The Gullah Geechee celebration of Emancipation each January 1 has dimmed over time, yet some sea island communities held on to this extraordinary memory. In 2018 the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor is supporting the on-going celebrations of Emancipation Day and inspiring other communities to renew the celebration of the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863.

A number of lowcountry churches are participating 'Mancipation Day Watch Services this year. The list is on the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Commission website.

“Emancipation Day in South Carolina” – the Color-Sergeant of the 1st South Carolina (Colored) addressing the regiment, after having been presented with the Stars and Stripes, at Smith’s plantation, Port Royal, January 1, 1863. (Frank Leslie’s illustrated newspaper, January 24, 1863)

Are you curious to know about what happened on that fateful first 'Mancipation Day here in Beaufort District?  Read this Connections post from 2012 to find out!

To learn more about the celebrations of Emancipation Day throughout the nation, Dickinson College has a  Emancipation Digital Classroom website.

Please note: The Library will be closed Sat., Dec. 30, 2017 and Mon., Jan. 1, 2018 for the New Year's holiday.