RICHMOND — Larry Hamilton was a high school history teacher in Piqua, Ohio, in 1975, when he took a a group of students to hear a talk by Alex Haley, author of the best-selling book “Roots.” The book recounts Haley search to find the ancestor who was abducted from Africa and sold as a slave in the American colonies of Great Britain. As he did whenever he spoke, Haley challenged his listeners to begin searching for their roots by talking to their oldest living relative. Haley’s presentation reminded Hamilton of the tales his grandmother would tell about her grandmother, Lucy Sams, a teenage slave on a plantation in Madison County, Ky. According to his grandmother, Lucy Sams, along with her sister and their mother, fled to Camp Nelson in Jessamine County, a Union Army post that gave refuge to runaway slaves and where a man with pale blue eyes named John G. Fee preached a gospel of love and equality and taught the uneducated to read the Bible. Fee taught and preached at Camp Nelson when he returned to Kentucky after he and his followers were expelled from Berea, where he had started an anti-slavery church and school, following John Brown’s raid on the Harper’s Ferry, Va., federal arsenal in an attempt to arm slaves for rebellion. After the war, Fee would return to Madison County, and his school became Berea College. Alex Haley served it as a trustee in the 1980s. Hamilton’s grandmother still was living when he heard Haley speak, so he visited her with a tape recorder and asked her to repeat the story she had told him as a child. The story takes a long pause at this point. Although he taught black history, along with world studies and current events, at Piqua High School, Hamilton inexplicably let the oral history interview with his grandmother sit in his desk for 33 years. That changed in February 2008 when a former student of Hamilton’s contacted him after learning he would be giving a Black History Month presentation on Camp Nelson at Edison Community College in Piqua. Inclement weather prevented Christina DeLaet from attending the event, but in a follow-up communication, she asked if Hamilton would meet her at her parents’ print shop so she could learn more about Camp Nelson. The high school class years before had stimulated in her a deep interest for 19th century literature and history, particularly of the slave experience. She also told her former teacher that she had taken to writing stories based in that era. Hamilton sensed that providence had provided him with the writer who could share his family’s story with the world. In a professorial manner, he gave her a story line about two young women attempting to bathe their elderly grandmother and asked her to fill out the scene with dialogue and action. Although he writes graceful expository prose, which is evident in his direct contributions to the book, Hamilton felt his skills were not adequate to the task of writing a novel that would bring his great-grandmother’s story to life. His suggestion to DeLaet was a veiled test to determine if she had the appropriate writing skills. Her response confirmed to Hamilton that providence had, indeed, given him DeLaet to write the first of a fact-based trilogy, “Lucy’s Story: Right Choices But Wrongs Still Left,” that would tell the saga of an American family, just as “Roots” did. What DeLaet wrote at Hamilton’s suggestion became the first book’s prologue. One of the two young women in the scene was Hamilton’s grandmother. As they gently, but firmly uncover their grandmother Lucy’s back, they are shocked to discover her reluctance to undress was not based solely on feminine modesty. Her light skin was marred with a lattice work of scars left by the slave master’s lash. The first chapter starts with Lucy as a young, attractive teenage, who knows little of the world beyond living in the dirt-floor cabins of the slave quarters and the toil of picking tobacco worms off of burley leaves, harvesting hemp and hoeing a vegetable garden. When her mother is “promoted” to cook at the big house, Lucy and her sister also go to live there. However, she misses scrunching her toes in the dirt and does not appreciate having to wear “brogans” as a house servant. Her good looks arouse the master’s carnal desires, and he employs the lash in an attempt to teach her submission. When the three women overhear a pro-slavery preacher and the master express their concerns about Camp Nelson and its harboring the human property of slave owners who profess loyalty to the Union, they catch a glimpse of possible freedom. They take flight one evening, and a series of natural occurrences they regard as divine intervention first helps them evade the blood hounds sent to find them and leads them to the Kentucky River and gets them across. There they encounter the “Moses Man,” Fee, who prevents the soldiers from keeping them out of Camp Nelson. The Union Army was more interested in former field hands who could help build roads and railroads, although they need cooks, maids and laundresses as well. The vivid dialogue that DeLaet creates seems to dance to the double-quick time that Camp Nelson soldiers go about their work. Hamilton used the resources of the Berea College Library Special Collections and Archives to verify the history behind his grandmother’s stories. There he was assisted by archivist Shannon Wilson and Dr. Richard, an English professor who published a history of Camp Nelson and Fee’s ministry there. Hamilton also has ancestral roots in Madison County through his father’s family tree. He visited Madison County late last year when he and a cousin from his father’s family, the Rev. Floyd Ballew, presented a copy of “Lucy” to the Madison County Public Library. The 196-page book is available for $18.87, plus $5 shipping and handing, from www.omaviasalipublishing.com. Bill Robinson can be reached at brobinson@ richmondregister.com or at 624-6622.
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Measuring education
Brent Ray, a local contractor, helps Kit Carson Elementary third-graders Nathan Buck and Anijah Rembert measure an outside wall Thursday morning during a class project to determine the perimeter of the school. The third-grade class broke into groups to measure sections of the outside walls which they used to find the perimeter.
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Kiwanis auction Saturday at City Hall
The annual Richmond Kiwanis Club auction will take place Saturday from 9 a.m. until about 5 p.m. with proceedings carried live on TimeWarner Cable Channel 12 and WEKY 1340 AM Radio.
“We have lots of great stuff, as we always do,” said Amanda Stepp, the auction coordinator.
“We have gift cards for almost every restaurant in Richmond as well as two pickup trucks that will be sold,” she said. -
Man pleads guilty to voyeurism charge
A man accused of taking pictures of a woman showering at a Berea truck stop was sentenced to probation Wednesday in Madison District Court.
Paul S. Byrd, 41, of McKee, was arrested Oct. 29 by the Kentucky State Police after a woman reported the incident at the 76 Truck Center off Interstate 75. -
Berea one of state’s first five cultural districts
The Kentucky Arts Council on Thursday named Berea one of the state’s first five certified cultural districts.
Although the legislature designated Berea the state’s Arts and Crafts Capital in the 1990s, this newest designation will draw even more attention and tourism to the city, said Belle Jackson, Berea’s tourism director. -
LRC plans to appeal judge’s HB1 ruling
The leadership of the General Assembly announced Thursday it plans to appeal Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd’s ruling that the legislature’s plan to re-draw state legislative boundaries is unconstitutional.
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Facebook post leads to arrest
A post on the Richmond Police Department’s Facebook page led to the arrest of a man suspected of stealing two Blu-Ray players from Walmart.
Walmart employees reported to police Jan. 25 that a man had concealed the electronics under his coat and attempted to leave the store without paying, said Richmond Police Chief Larry Brock in a news release. -
Four indicted in Berea murder case
The death of a Berea man and the attempted murder of another came at the hands of four people, according to indictments handed down Wednesday by a Madison grand jury.
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Friday at library : Lecturer to portray founder of Berea
John G. Fee, abolitionist and founder of both Berea and Berea College, will be portrayed Friday night by performer Obadiah Ewing-Roush as part of Kentucky Humanities Council Chautauqua performance series at the Madison County Public Library. There is no charge to attend the 7 p.m. event.
As the son of a slave-holding father, Fee witnessed firsthand the benefits of having slaves and the profits that could be made from their labor. When he graduated from college and enrolled in Lane Theological Seminary, he began to understand the inherent wrong and destructiveness of slavery. -
Berea woman dies Tuesday in Laurel County crash
A Berea woman, Tommie Johnson, 60, died Tuesday evening in a Laurel County crash, according to the the Laurel Sheriff’s Office.
The accident took place about 7 p.m. at the junction of Maple Grove Road and KY 363 south of London, as Johnson was attempting to turn onto the state highway.
Laurel County Chief Deputy Eddy Sizemore said Johnson’s Chevrolet Cavalier pulled out in front of a Dodge Durango driven by Charles Joseph, 19, that was traveling south on KY 363.
After being extricated from her vehicle, Johnson was transported to St. Joseph-London hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
Joseph also was transported to the hospital, where he was treated for minor injuries, according to the accident report. -
Finally February
Ian Rosser, an Eastern Kentucky University student from Lexington, clears snow from his car parked on campus Wednesday
morning after about an inch of snow fell in Richmond. Temperatures are forcast to be in the upper 40s today. Kentucky has seen a lot of rain in the past few months, as was predicted by the Farmer's Almanac, but very little snow has fallen. - More Local News Headlines
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