<p>On July 2 1822 a free Black minister named Denmark Vesey was executed in Charleston South Carolina. Vesey had allegedly orchestrated what would have been the largest slave revolt in American history before the plot was betrayed by a co-conspirator. Several of Vesey's children were implicated yet his twenty-two-year-old son Robert escaped punishment.</p><p>Two centuries later Xavier Spencer uncovered a familial connection to the Vesey lineage while researching his ancestry. During the Civil War Robert Vesey married Spencer's ancestor Hannah Nelson. Though both were in their sixties and previously married they formed a union that would endure the shifting racial realities of Reconstruction.</p><p>Hannah Nelson was a formidable and self-determined free Black woman of means who purchased her own family's freedom. It is not difficult to imagine that she recognized a similar fire within the Vesey lineage. That spirit of resilience-born of resistance survival and self-determination-would be passed down through generations as the family confronted the rise of Jim Crow and the evolving challenges of American racial history.</p><p></p><p>A remarkable and original work of genealogical history <em>The Family Legacy of Denmark Vesey 1822-2022</em> traces seven generations of Spencer's ancestors-from the transatlantic slave ships of the Caribbean to the rice plantations of South Carolina's Lowcountry and ultimately to the hills of West Virginia and Ohio-illuminating a powerful story of endurance identity and legacy.</p>
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