"Our Family Keepers"
Most of you 
	are familiar with 
	
	William Lowndes Yancey, 
	
	secessionist and "fire eater" of the Confederacy. 
	Probably by far the most famous member of 
	the Yancey family of America. 
 Research recently published 
	by Mrs. Rose Ellen Morton provides some interesting tidbits 
	of information many may not be aware of  concerning this member of the 
	Yancey Family.
	
	Some interesting information from her research
William Lowndes Yancey 
		once fought a duel with US Representative Thomas Clingman in 1845. 
 Both men fired - and Clingmans bullet went thru Yancey's hat and Yancey's 
		bullet went thru Clingmans lapel.
 Both men walked away unharmed. 
 
His wife, Sarah Caroline 
		Earle, had been blind in one eye from her childhood.
 A probable reason no photos/sketches exist of her - due to her self 
		conscious nature of the fact.
Many of William Yancey's 
		slaves descended from slaves once held 
		by Arthur Middleton a signer of The Declaration of Independence from 
		South Carolina.
 These are just a few 
	interesting tidbits of information that Rose has included in her research 
	concerning the Yancey family stories.
	
	   BUT these are just tidbits that pale to insignificance to the 
	importance of a much greater and important story.  A story that has been 
	waiting to be told for over 150 years . . . .  the story of those who across 
	many generations lived the life of plantation slaves - from the plantations 
	of Arthur Middleton, then being sold to the family of George Washington 
	Earle and finally being inherited by William Lowndes Yancey via his marriage 
	to Sarah Caroline Earle.  It is the story of Cesar & Judy,  
	Agrippa and Mary, Ninner, Ella and their children and extended 
	families and many others who worked as household or field slaves on the 
	Yancey Estate - who as individuals and as a group lived a life that few 
	today could even begin to comprehend. Then finally after decades and 
	generations of slavery, bondage, death, violence, abuse - they finally saw 
	the light of freedom as Abraham Lincoln declared the slaves free - within 
	six months, Master William Lowndes Yancey himself had died.  Many have 
	recorded the genealogy and history of the  branches of the white plantation 
	owner's extended Yancey family.  But few, if any, until now 
	have documented and shared the story of those who intimately knew the family 
	- as they worked and slaved in the fields and in the house on the Yancey 
	Plantations. 
	
	The interesting truth of the matter . . . through her research Rose has come 
	to know the history of the William Lowndes Yancey family
	at least in some ways - better then the vast majority of William Yanceys own 
	white descendants.  
The history is just as much HER story as it is theirs - the story of William Lowndes Yancey's family is HER family story too . . .
For information about 
	obtaining a copy of Rose Morton's book  "OUR FAMILY KEEPERS" - 
	published in 2005. 
Please feel free to contact her at :  
	historysearchers  @  yahoo.com
	
She is most interested in sharing her book and her stories with others of 
	the Yancey family - both Black and White.
  Any who wish to better understand the story of life during the years of 
	slavery in the Southern United States would benefit much from reading this 
	book.
A favorite quote of Rose:
"A people which takes no pride in the noble achievement's of remote ancestry, will never achieve anything worthy to be remembered with pride by remote descendants........Macaulay
	
Rose's Mother and her sister