By Alvin Johnson
Several years ago, my wife and I drove from Charlotte to Pinewood, South Carolina, hopeful we might find the gravesite of my Johnson ancestors. This was the town where my ancestors were slaves on plantations owned by the Richardson and Manning families, who produced five governors of South Carolina. Driving past acres and acres of farmland, I imagined slaves working in the fields and could hear them singing slave songs.
We spent the afternoon trying to locate an old church cemetery and, after several misdirections, found the graveyard of the New Hope United Methodist Church. We started our search walking through rows of tombstones. Many were hard to read but whenever we came across the surname Johnson, we went to work with the simple tools we brought with us to make our jobs a bit easier: flour to fill in the crevices, the soft toothbrush to remove the debris, and the spray water bottle to saturate the stone. We were ever so careful not to mar the stone.
A break in the clouds revealed a single sunbeam. It directed our attention to a lone gravesite where a single long-stemmed red rose rested in front of the tombstone. We hurried to the location, beckoned by the rose, and went to work with our arsenal of tools.
It was the final resting place of my great great grandmother:
Jessie Dowe Johnson
Born 1866
Died 1910
Alvin Johnson, a retired Human Resources executive, began his writing career in 2022 at the age of 81. He lived in Georgia with his wife, Vera, and their dog, Happy. Mr. Johnson sadly passed away before this piece was published, though Alvin’s desire to share the legacy of his African-American ancestors as well as his keen curiosity about the world are very much alive in this essay. Thanks to his wife, Vera, for permission to publish this work posthumously.
Image by Nikita Tikhomirov courtesy of Unsplash
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