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Donald Trump Only Living Ex-US Prez Not Direct Descendant of Slaveholders, Says Report – News18


A chiseled block of sandstone in the U.S. Capitol’s visitor center serves as a reminder that the home of the nation’s Congress was built in part by enslaved Black people.

A bronze plaque says the stone, originally part of the building’s exterior, “commemorates their important role in building the Capitol.”

Many lawmakers need look no further than their own family histories to find a much more personal connection to slavery in America, a brutal system of oppression that resulted in the deadliest conflict in U.S. history.

In researching the genealogies of America’s political elite, a Reuters examination found that a fifth of the nation’s congressmen, living presidents, Supreme Court justices and governors are direct descendants of ancestors who enslaved Black people.

Among 536 members of the last sitting Congress, Reuters determined at least 100 descend from slaveholders. Of that group, more than a quarter of the Senate – 28 members – can trace their families to at least one slaveholder.

Those lawmakers from the 117th session of Congress are Democrats and Republicans alike. They include some of the most influential politicians in America: Republican senators Mitch McConnell, Lindsey Graham, Tom Cotton and James Lankford, and Democrats Elizabeth Warren, Tammy Duckworth, Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan.

In addition, President Joe Biden and every living former U.S. president – except Donald Trump – are direct descendants of slaveholders: Jimmy Carter, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and – through his white mother’s side – Barack Obama. Trump’s ancestors came to America after slavery was abolished.

Two of the nine sitting U.S. Supreme Court justices – Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch – also have direct ancestors who enslaved people.

None of the 118 leaders identified by Reuters disputed the findings that at least one of their ancestors had enslaved people, but few were willing to discuss the subject: Only a quarter of those identified as having slaveholding ancestors offered any comment to Reuters.

Representative Julia Brownley, a Democrat from California, was among those who did offer comment after Reuters emailed her a document about her ancestor Jesse Brownley. According to the 1850 census, her forebear enslaved three people in Portsmouth, Virginia. One was an 8-year-old girl.

“It was a profound thing to learn,” Brownley told Reuters. “When I was told that my great-great-grandfather had two slaves and a child slave that hit me really to the very core.”

Brownley grew up in Virginia. When desegregation came to the public schools in her town, she said, her parents enrolled her in an all-white girls boarding school three hours from home. Her world widened when she studied political science and history at Mount Vernon College, a women’s school that later merged with George Washington University, allowing her to meet a broader range of people, including a Black roommate.

“I think it’s important for each member of Congress, in terms of their heritage, it is important for them to know that and bend into it,” she said. “We, as policymakers, members of Congress, we want to move our country forward to sort of that more perfect union, if you will. But we can’t do that without knowing the scars in our history as well. And we have to know that and believe in the truths. And that’s the way we can formulate better policy.”

The Reuters examination reveals how tied America remains to the institution of slavery, said board-certified genealogist LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson, who worked with Reuters to review its reporting.

“I really believe, especially with respect to this Reuters project, that some of the notables whose genealogies we reviewed will pause and think about what it means that they, again, were kind of indirect beneficiaries of slavery. It wasn’t something that just happened 200 years ago. You are a direct descendant of someone who benefited from this institution and that it could influence their perspective, especially the people who are currently involved in policymaking,” Garrett-Nelson said

To trace the lineages of the political elite, Reuters journalists assembled tens of thousands of pieces of information contained in thousands of pages of documents. They analyzed U.S. census records, including antebellum tallies of enslaved people known as “slave schedules,” as well as tax documents, estate records, family Bibles, newspaper accounts, and birth and death certificates. The records – in some cases, family wills that show enslaved human beings bequeathed along with feather beds and farm animals – provide a visceral link between today’s decision makers and slavery. In doing so, they expand upon the antiseptic story conveyed by the sandstone monument in the Capitol’s visitor center.

For Representative Gregory Meeks, a Black congressman who represents a district in Queens, New York, the search for his ancestors continues. The top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Meeks said in an interview that he has spent years trying to trace his family history back before 1870.

He found the birth certificate of his grandfather, a man born right after emancipation. The information it gives for that man’s father – Meeks’ great-grandfather – was enslaved, Meeks said.

Meeks said he talks about family heritage with his white congressional colleagues, both publicly and privately.

“Sometimes it does boil up on the committee, particularly, say if we’re talking on financial services and we’re talking about erasing the wealth disparities, access to capital, being able to move forward. Yes, I speak up and talk about it in very vivid terms to try to explain the perspective of me and America back then and how if we acknowledge that and how if we move forward to try to erase that and make sure that we’re letting folks catch up, that we’re having and we will have a better America,” Meeks said.

About 15 years ago, Meeks said, he took a DNA test that showed his family came from the Mende people of Sierra Leone. Last year, he led a congressional delegation to Africa. In Sierra Leone, the lawmakers stopped at Bunce Island, a former slave-trading port.

He said visiting the port was the most emotional moment for him of the trip and allowed him to reflect on his ancestors’ struggle.

“As I closed my eyes, I could just imagine what was taking place at that time, as I was standing on that island. And so it was both tears and joy. Joy that I’m here. Tears that my ancestors had to go through, what they had to go through,” he said. “Tears and joy.”

(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed – Reuters)



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