They Had Names

African Americans in Early Records of Liberty County, Georgia

Has your genealogy research led you to an African American family line in Liberty County, Georgia?

Have you struggled to find information on this family line from before Emancipation?
Many pre-Emancipation records naming African Americans in Liberty County exist, but the summaries and indexes available online often omit their names.

This site fills that gap.

Map of Liberty County within Georgia
Location of Liberty County

Liberty County planter families often intermarried, and it was relatively common to keep enslaved people within families through marriage contracts, inheritance, and gifts to children. Much of this was documented in the legal system. 

This means that Liberty County probate and deed records contain many references to enslaved people, and most of these records are available online at FamilySearch.org and Ancestry.com, but even when they are indexed there, the names of the enslaved people are not included in the indexing (though Ancestry is beginning to remedy this). 

This site is the solution to that problem. It contains summaries and transcriptions of these Liberty County records with more than 37,000 references to named African Americans — enslaved and free — and is completely searchable. Everything here is free. 

Is this genealogy or history? It’s both! With this data, descendants can find their long-lost families…and historians and researchers can put together the story of a community and analyze its history within a greater historical context. 

In 2023, the They Had Names website received an award from the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia for Excellence in Documenting Georgia’s History.

Contents of This Site

What if you are not researching Liberty County? This list also identifies the kinds of records you can seek in your county of interest.

recent additions to the site

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Putting FamilySearch’s Experimental Full-Text Search to the Test: A Case Study

Have you heard of FamilySearch’s experimental search feature that allows searching the full text of U.S. county land, probate and court records? It’s definitely a game-changer but how well is it working now in November 2024? I have a website where I put abstracts of Liberty County, Georgia, records naming enslaved people. I’ve gone page by page through through all the antebellum Liberty County deed, wills and estate inventory records available on FamilySearch, abstracting any

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Child of USCT Soldier Quash Fripp: Rebecca Fripp Green West of Beaufort County, South Carolina (1874-1962)

NOTE: This research was done to try to distinguish this Rebecca West from a Rebecca West who was also from South Carolina but who lived in Savannah, Georgia. It is being posted to help anyone who might be researching her or her family. If you find mistakes, please let me know so I can correct them, as this is not my usual geographical research location.  Summary Rebecca Fripp Green West was born in St. Helena

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Rev. James Shannon and the People He Held in Slavery

My thanks to Kevin George, senior librarian, Center for Missouri Studies, The State Historical Society of Missouri, who kindly went well out of his way to assist me in finding the Shannon Family Bible and family letters. Reverend James Shannon, who immigrated from Ireland to Liberty County, Georgia, in 1820, was an influential clergyman, educator and college administrator in Georgia, Louisiana, Kentucky and Missouri. His early experiences in Liberty County, where he married a woman

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Bryan County Bill of Sale (Roberts/Stephen-Stiles)

Enslaved People Named: Lempeter, Catharine On January 29, 1846, at Savannah, Hiram Roberts, sold to Alexander W. Stephens and Benjamin Stiles, trustees of Jane Penney, wife of Beecroft Penney, , for $749.24 “two certain negro slaves, to wit, Lempeter [or Lemsseter] a man, aged about thirty six years, and Catharine a woman, aged about forty years.” Recorded in Bryan County Superior Court on April 25, 1846. Bryan County, Georgia, Deeds & Mortgages, v. E-G 1830-1853,

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Bryan County Chattel Mortgage (Middleton/Smith)

Enslaved People Named: Jemmy, Cicely, Diana, Lucy, Isaac, Nancy, Jenney, Elsy, ? Dornar ? [or Domar], Mia, Harry, Hagar, Oliver, Affy, Peggy, Moses, Ryna [alt: Rhina, Rina], Tyra, Daphne, Quacco, Molly, Tommy, Dandy, Bella, Mary Ann, Cuffy, Charles, Patience, ? Wye ?, Israel, July, Elizabeth, Josey, Priscilla, Peggy, Titus, Myrtilla, Bess, Patience, Deal, Charles, Friday, Jacob, Molly, Sally, Murray, Chloe, Tom, Tyra, Rose and infant, Charles On January 5, 1846, James Mongin Smith, Camden County,

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Bryan County Bill of Sale (Marlow/Harn)

Enslaved People Named: Linda On February 3, 1845, Paul Marlow, Effingham County, sold to John Harn Sr, Bryan County, for $500 “a certain negro slave by the name of Linda about seventeen years of age.” Witnessed by Lewis ? Grovenstine ?, Beal Edwards, William Blitch. Recorded in Bryan County Superior Court on January 19, 1846. Bryan County, Georgia, Deeds & Mortgages, v. E-G 1830-1853, Book F (1840-46), page 389; digitized microfilm accessed through catalog, FamilySearch.org

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History of Liberty County

In the 1750s, the British Colony of Georgia made slavery legal within the colony. A group of European-descended planters and slaveowners in areas of South Carolina, most notably near Dorchester, applied for and received land grants. They began moving to the Midway area in what was then St. Johns Parish, now Liberty County, and brought with them about three times their number in enslaved Africa-descended people, who were forced to create and work the rice, cotton, and indigo plantations. Liberty County has been majority African American ever since. Due to harsh conditions in coastal Georgia, the planter families often moved inland to higher ground for parts of the year, leaving the enslaved people isolated on the plantations where they developed their unique Geechee culture.

Much of life in the Midway area centered around the Midway Congregational Church and Society, founded by the planters in 1752. The church building was burned by the British during the Revolutionary War, but was re-built in 1792, and that building still stands today on Highway 17. The Midway Church has had both White and Black members since its earliest days. The first Black members were admitted on June 26, 1756: Scipio and Judy. Records of the names of all the Africa-descended church members still exist today and have been transcribed on this site. In 1867, after the Civil War, as many of the White members fled the area or left for other churches, the Black members petitioned to rent the building and form their own Church. They thus saved this historic church building. These members later founded the Midway First Presbyterian Church. The First African Baptist Church in Riceboro is the oldest African American church still existing in Liberty County, dating from before the Civil War.

Midway Church

Are you using the 1870 Liberty County federal census? STOP and READ THIS. A fraudulent census was conducted that summer, and both it and the “true” census conducted that fall are online at FamilySearch and Ancestry. If it has Holcombe’s name as the enumerator, DON’T USE IT. Read more here

How To Use This Site

 This site is not indexed — every word is searchable. This means that you do not have to rely on an indexer’s sense of what is useful, but it also means you may have to page through more documents to find what you are seeking. Spellings of names varied wildly in earlier times, so alternative spellings of names have been added to the documents wherever possible. This means that you can find records here no matter which spelling you use for your search (e.g. Affy or Affee), but it is still wise to try various searches. 

Tip: If you search for Thomas Mell on this site, you will find every document that has Thomas and that has Mell, which are many more documents than the ones that have the exact name Thomas Mell. To find documents with the name Thomas Mell, try these searches:

“Thomas Mell” — will return every document that has that exact sequence (i.e., not Thomas J. Mell)

Thomas Mell -n2 — will return every document in which “Thomas” and “Mell” occur within two words of each other (which will get you Thomas J. Mell, Thomas S. Mell, etc). 

For an illustration of how to use this site, please see this case study: Finding Abram Houston.

Copyright & use of site information: Use of information from this site for your personal research and educational purposes is encouraged! For any other purposes, please contact me. I have compilations of the data in formats that may be useful to researchers. 

Breaking the 1870 Census Barrier

People researching their African American ancestors often run into a seemingly impenetrable barrier at the 1870 census, prior to which records of enslaved people usually referred only to first names. Finding the name of the last enslaver is critical in tracing formerly enslaved people back further in time. 

Liberty County researchers are extremely fortunate in that a large number of formerly enslaved people made Southern Claims Commission petitions in the 1870s. Testimony in these claims named previous enslavers. 

Dr. Peggy Hargis, Associate Professor at Georgia Southern University (retired), created a remarkable list linking SCC claimants and witnesses to their former enslavers. Use this “enslaver -> enslaved” list to quickly find your ancestor, then search this site with the name of the former enslaver to find probate, deed, and church records with further information. 

TheyHadNames has been transcribing all the legible Liberty County Southern Claims Commission case files and researching the claimants’ lives backward and forward in time. [Currently on hold waiting for NARA to re-open to obtain better quality images of some of the more illegible case files.] Check the index to see if your ancestor was a claimant or a witness, and click on the “Case Files and Research” link to read through the completed records.

Using the U.S. Southern Claims Commission Files in Your Research

Image from Family Locket Part 1
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Family Locket Image 2
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Enslaved.org

A subset of this site, the estate inventories database, has been published in the Journal of Slavery and Data Preservation, a publication of Enslaved.org, which is a joint project of the University of Maryland, Michigan State University, and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. 

Interested in learning more about Liberty County research or in getting ideas from this research to apply to your African American genealogy research? Use the form below to sign up to receive blog posts via email. These will be informal, mostly weekly, notes inspired by the week’s research. Unsubscribe at any time. This will never be used to try to sell you anything. 

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Need Help?

Feeling overwhelmed? I have developed a method for quickly researching people named in these records. If you email me (at jnscole@yahoo.com) with the information you know about your ancestor, I will be happy to search the site for you and prepare a report of my findings that you can use to further your research. This is free – everything on this site is and always will be free — and I will never use the information you give me for other purposes without your permission.

AAHGS Jean Sampson-scott award

They Had Names is so proud to have won the Jean Sampson-Scott Award, the second-highest award given by the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society (AAHGS). The award, which is for “a significant and measurable contribution to African American history and/or genealogy within the past two years,” was given at the AAHGS National Conference in October 2022. Thank you, AAHGS! 

stories

Most of this site consists of transcriptions and abstracts of documents to help you find your ancestors. There are a few stories that have jumped out of the records and demanded to be told, though…

Flanders Pray - Community Leader

As the Civil War ground to an end, Liberty County, Georgia, was in disarray. It had been raided by Sherman’s Army, white families had fled their homes, and people held in slavery had been moved to other locations or left to fend for themselves. Many had scattered to follow the Army or find their own ways. Leaders — like young Flanders Pray, a formerly enslaved man — stepped up into the chaotic post-war environment to provide the most important requirement for moving forward into a new life: education. Read more

A Study in Courage: Liberty County’s African American Voters in 1868

On November 3, 1868, court officials did not open the Riceboro precinct polling place in an attempt to suppress the Black vote, as Riceboro was majority Black. Not deterred, local Black leaders opened the polling place and collected the votes of hundreds of people. The Savannah Morning News reported that “Tom, late representative of Liberty county in the General Assembly, as chief manager of the election, brought in the returns to the county officers, who rejected the vote as illegal.” Retaliation was swift.  Read more

An 1818 Interracial Marriage in Liberty County

Perhaps the most surprising story of all is that of Elizabeth Anderson, a young woman of color, who legally married white planter and slaveowner William Foster in Liberty County in 1818. After the marriage, they and their four children lived in Liberty County until Williams death in 1825, when Elizabeth took the children and moved to Massachusetts. Read more

The 1870 Holcombe Census Fiasco

In 1870, Charles R. Holcombe, a U.S. Marshall, completely fabricated the federal census he performed for Liberty County, Georgia. Who was Holcombe? His surprising history reveals red flags that should have prevented him from being in a position to conduct the census.  Read more

Henrietta Hamilton, Free Woman of Color

Henrietta (“Hetty”) Hamilton, a free woman of color born at the end of the 18th century, lived independently in Liberty County on 50 acres of land given her as a “life estate” by a wealthy white planter and slaveholder named Jacob Wood. When he sold the land, he conditioned the sale on continuation of her life estate. Henrietta Hamilton herself also held at least 12 African Americans enslaved during her lifetime before her death in 1868. Read more.

A Different Kind of Civil War Story

James and John Somersall were white brothers who lived in rice-growing, slave-owning Liberty County, Georgia. They were poor. They owned a few acres of land, grew their own food, milked their own cows, and didn’t own people.

John was in his late 30’s when the clouds of the Civil War appeared on the horizon, and his view of the matter was that he had nothing to fight for. His mother, Elizabeth, a widow, tried telling her neighbors that they shouldn’t fight to keep their slaves. She told them that if she did own slaves, even a lot of them, she would gladly give them up to keep the war away. John had to tell her to stop, that they were going to come for her and kill him for defending her. She stopped. Read more.

William McWhir: Irish-Born Educator, Clergyman, Slaveholder

William McWhir was at one time the most famous educator in Georgia. Most histories of his life omit entirely one of the most important pillars on which his life rested: he owned people. Read more. 

Sent to Liberia by Jacob Wood

Jacob Wood was a traditional, wealthy and well connected planter of his time in Liberty and McIntosh Counties…except for one detail at the end of his life. His will directed that the people he held in slavery be sent to Haiti with the help of the well known Zephaniah Kingsley. Kingsley died before Wood, however, and instead 154 people he had held in bondage boarded the ship Chieftain on February 15, 1850, and sailed for Liberia. Read more

Stop Sign

Content Warning

Slavery was an evil institution. Nothing on this site is intended to suggest otherwise or support any narratives of “good slaveowners.”

Reading and transcribing old handwriting is hard work and there must certainly be mistakes on these pages. The original documents are always cited and are online; please consult them before you draw any conclusions. 

These are historical documents and the original wording used is often extremely offensive. Original wording is indicated with quotation marks.