Collecting and Compiling Plantation Records: Thomas Terrell Case Study

Orice Jenkins
Oct 4, 2024
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Content

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Welcome
1m 24s
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Speaker's Introduction
1m 56s
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Introduction
9m 13s
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The Inventory
11m 44s
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The Last Probate
8m 49s
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Evalina Stepney
13m 59s
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Pleasant Robinson
4m 10s
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Columbus Gatewood
4m 58s
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Elihu's Exception
18m 51s
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Announcements / prizes
3m 45s
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Questions / answers
2m 37s

About this webinar

Thomas Terrell was a lawyer born in Louisa County, Virginia in 1761. His plantation in Greene County, Georgia and the people he enslaved there have connections to a Civil War battlefield, the University of Georgia, Wells Fargo, a United States Congressman, and northern enslavers from Connecticut and New Jersey. Thomas’ death in 1822 created the only comprehensive list of his enslaved population, requiring the use of unconventional sources to gather more information about them. Many were separated due to devastating slave sales, but 200 years later, their descendants have been reunited by DNA testing.

Discount code: plantation (valid at Familytreewebinars.com)

Valid through: October 8, 2024

About the speaker

About the speaker

Orice Jenkins is a recording artist, genealogist, educator, and author from Hartford, Connecticut. He began researching his family history upon discovering that Whitney Houston’s grandparents were from his grandmother’s hometown of Blakely, Georgi
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  1. GH
    Gypsy Houston
    1 day ago

    I enjoyed the class

    Reply
  2. JM
    Jan Maher
    1 day ago

    I’m in awe of the detail, precision, and doggedness of Orice’s research. I found my fingers twitching at times to scroll down, or advance the screen, I was so absorbed in the story and so eager to see where it was going next. Of course I wasn’t in control of the screen! But not to worry: as a presenter, his pacing is perfect so I was always rewarded with the next piece of it just as I was literally leaning toward my screen to follow where it would go.

    Reply
  3. DT
    Deannie TENSLEy
    1 day ago

    I really enjoyed the information given. My ancestry also come from Louisa county, VA (slave master name NOLAN/NOLAND). These session has given me other places to research.

    Reply
  4. MC
    Maria Capaldi
    1 day ago

    First off I love Case Studies! This was great and what Orice is doing is wonderful!

    Reply
  5. AJ
    Arthur Jones
    1 day ago

    Outstanding! My oldest son and a cousin have done considerable genealogical research on our family, and I invited them both to register and listen in today, or listen to the recording. I am so thoroughly impressed by Orice’s detailed research and his ability to create sophisticated methodological strategies in the course of the work. I am hoping that my family can benefit from his example. So far our family tree stops at the edge of slavery.

    Reply
  6. DB
    Dara Brooks
    1 day ago

    He was so thorough. I also noted family groupings in the inventory list. I’ve been tracking all persons into freedom. Some I have backed up into the records and determined who they were purchased from and who they were rented out to. Your format was something I will apply to my findings, making for a better presentation. Also, not familiar with the Digital Library on American Slavery. Will look into it. Thank you for a “GREAT ANALYSIS”. Dara Tolbert Brooks

    Reply
  7. FJ
    Frank Jones
    1 day ago

    I love the way Orice did his research. A true researcher.

    Reply
  8. MK
    M K. Clark
    1 day ago

    Orice Jenkins is a millennial genealogist to watch. His thoughtful and detailed style of research combined with his ability to communicate his thought and research process to any audience, makes him a valuable asset to the genealogy community. Genealogy is in good hands with researchers like Orice.

    Reply

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