Friday, September 21, 2012

Slave Markers at Eastham Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 
Copyright 2012 Judith Beaman Scott

On a recent visit to Boyd County, Kentucky, I visited as I usually do, the Eastham-Fields Cemetery. The cemetery is the burial place of Christiana Eastham (1777-1852), wife of Edward (1771-1828), the first family of this line to settle in Kentucky, as well as other family members and associated families. I was alerted to changes last winter, when my sister called me from the cemetery asking if I knew anything about some new markers placed there. I did not, and as I discovered, neither did many local genealogists.







It has long been rumored, as it is with many old cemeteries, that the rocks peeking out of the ground in the old part of the cemetery are the graves of slaves. I don't know of  any evidence to support this theory, but neither do I have reason to refute the claim.

However, even if these are slave graves, no one knows who is buried there. But someone decided to place markers near the protruding rocks, with slave names on them. How did they decide what names to place there? Please understand I have no problem with marking graves in a cemetery, provided of course that you have permission to do so-this is a private cemetery. I do have some concerns about marking a grave as if it were, in fact, the burial place of a particular person, when there is no way of knowing that. Those markers will remain there after we are gone, and some day descendants will visit that cemetery and believe that is the grave of their ancestor.



The names listed on the markers in the cemetery are:

Ploce, George, Thomas, Jenny, Jacob, David, Sarah, Isaac, Juda
Nathan, James, Margarett, Charles, George.





Unfortunately, the names of the slaves listed here belonged to Eastham families that  are not represented in this cemetery. 

The land where the cemetery is once belonged to Hartwell Chandler Eastham and his wife Isabella McGuire. Hartwell is the son of Edward Eastham  and Christiana Chandler, both born in Virginia. Christiana is buried in this cemetery but her husband Edward, who died years before her, is buried in McCormick Cemetery. The crypt at the back of the cemetery is that of the Eastham family. Most of the tombstones are broken or gone. Buried near Christiana are at least three of her children, Hartwell, James T. and Elizabeth. Her daughter Mary Ann Fields and husband James Fields are buried in another area of the cemetery.

The slave names listed here, for the most part, were not associated with the family members buried in this Eastham cemetery. All the slave names listed are easily located online. Several names  were from a civil suit regarding the estate of another Edward Eastham, this one the son of Edward and Christiana and brother to Hartwell.

Civil Suits Greenup County
Robert W. Eastham vs Noah Payne , & others , May 1860
W.L. Geiger , Vincent Calvin and Asa Bellew appointed commissioners to divide
the slaves of Edward Eastham , deceased, among his heirs : Robert W. Eastham ,
Cynthia Payne wife of Hiram Payne. Henrietta Eastham , Mary Ann Eastham and
Hartwell S.S. Eastham. Slaves were Juda, David, Nathan, Jenny, Sarah, Jacob
and Isaac.

KYCARTER-L Archives, message dated 3/21/1999, pdrrl@eastky.net .http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/KYCARTER/1999-03/0922080693
Citing Eastern Kentucky References by Evelyn Jackson and William Talley

Several more names are from the 1860 census and can be found at Ancestry.com.

1860 U.S. census, slave schedule, Boyd County, Kentucky, page 2.

Robert Eastham, 2 slaves
Judy 60
Nathan 23
This may be the Robert W. from above with two slaves listed in the civil suit.

Same page:
Robert Eastham, 2 slaves
Thomas 23
Charles 21
This is probably the son of Hartwell and Christiana.

Page 3:
J. H. Eastham, 3 slaves
Margaret 22
George 12
James 2
This is likely John, the son of Edward and Christiana. John, his wife, and other family members are buried in an another Eastham Cemetery on Trace Creek in Boyd County.

Lawrence County: Ploce Eastham - b. April 2, 1857; owner H. E. Eastham; Notes: female, mulatto.

From USGenWeb Archives Project, Lawrence Co., KY Birth Index
Lawrence County, Kentucky Births-1857
 http://www.usgwarchives.org/ky/lawrence/birth.htm 

A comparison of the list of names from the records above and the list from the cemetery is a match, with the exception of minor spelling changes and the duplication of the two names explained above.
 
       Records List
Cemetery List






Judy
Juda

David
David

Nathan
Nathan

Jenny
Jenny

Sarah
Sarah

Jacob
Jacob

Issac
Isaac

Judy
Duplicate?

Nathan
Duplicate?

Thomas 
Thomas

Charles
Charles

Margaret
Margarett

George
George

James 
James

Ploce
Ploce

Are there slaves buried in this cemetery? Possibly. But it is not likely that the graves of the slaves named on the cemetery markers are in this cemetery. First, the names on the markers were not connected to the people buried in this cemetery. Another important consideration is the dates. These slaves were all alive in 1860 and probably still alive in 1865 when they were legally free. They would not be buried as slaves after that time.
 
Note: Tomorrow, September 22, is the 150th anniversary of Lincoln's preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, a warning to the southern states to end the war and abolish slavery on their own within 100 days, or he would free the slaves himself, although five slave-holding border states, including Kentucky, were not included. Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on 1 January 1863 which declared all slaves in the rebel state are free. It wasn't until the 13th amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified on 6 December 1865 (without Kentucky) that Kentucky slaves were legally free.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Judi, I am a descendent of the Eastham family and just recently I found a short account written by my grandfather (surname McWharter) concerning one Eastham slave with some interesting info on her relationship to the family. Please email me at info@animalimage.com if you are interested. best, Mary Thurston

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  2. This is so interesting to me. Did you ever learn who put the markers there? I am a descendent of Lucy and Harrison Johns of Lawrence county and have often wondered what happened to the 12-14 slaves who were in their care.

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