Bound by history: Black family finds the cabin where enslaved ancestors once lived, owned by same family

Amina King, 15, ducks as she leaves the log cabin in Gaithersburg, Md., that housed the King family's enslaved ancestors, who were considered the property of Thomas Griffith in the 19th century.
(Washington Post/Katherine Frey)
Amina King, 15, ducks as she leaves the log cabin in Gaithersburg, Md., that housed the King family's enslaved ancestors, who were considered the property of Thomas Griffith in the 19th century. (Washington Post/Katherine Frey)

The King family stepped carefully up the concrete steps, through the narrow doorway and into a two-story log cabin with a painful past. Inside, they examined every inch. The low ceiling. The peeling chestnut walls. Then, the second floor, a tiny space under a pitched cedar-shake roof, where sunlight slips through small windows onto uneven oak floorboards.

John B. King Jr., education secretary for President Barack Obama, climbed up the wobbly ladder for a depressing glance at the sleeping quarters. But he quickly came down and crossed his arms, wondering about the people who lived in this cramped space more than 150 years earlier: His enslaved ancestors. Lydia King. Charles King. Anne King. So many Kings once lived here, on this Maryland farm, still owned by direct descendants of the slaveholder, Thomas Griffith.

"My ancestors must have had full lives, families, relationships, and joy and sadness, but their experiences were so bound up with their exploitation," said John, 44, president of the Education Trust, a nonprofit group devoted to closing achievement gaps.

"My wife and our two girls are living a life my ancestors could not have imagined, because of their perseverance. Their daily resistance by living their lives made possible ours."

MOST UNLIKELY FRIENDSHIPS

For much of 2019, as the nation marked the 400th anniversary of the first enslaved Africans' arrival to the English colony of Virginia, the Kings undertook an anguished family history research project — and the most unlikely of friendships with the great-great-great-grandchildren of Thomas Griffith. The Kings have always suspected that the Kings before them were enslaved. But they didn't learn the exact site of that subjugation until February: a 190-acre farm in Gaithersburg called Edgehill, just 25 miles from John's home in Silver Spring, Md.

Since then, John and several relatives have visited the farm, connecting with Griffith's descendants, 50-year-old twin sisters, Frances Becker and Amanda Becker Mosko, who co-own the property. Both families have embraced the opportunity to learn about each other's past with more clarity, despite layers of discomfort and awkwardness.

The King family's overtures to the family that once enslaved their ancestors are highly unusual, according to Chris Haley, director of the Maryland State Archives' slavery project. Descendants of the enslaved usually don't connect with descendants of the enslaver unless they've discovered a genealogical link.

"I don't know of many people who reach out and are like, 'You know what? My family used to work for your family. Hey, how are you doing?'" said Haley, who is the nephew of "Roots" author Alex Haley.

The Kings, though, are no ordinary family.

One great-grandson of the oldest-known enslaved King was Lt. Col. Haldane King, who served in the famed Tuskegee Airmen, the first group of Black combat pilots in the U.S. Army Air Corps. An older brother, William "Dolly" King, was one of the country's first Black professional basketball players; another older brother, John B. King Sr., became New York City's first Black deputy superintendent of schools. Haldane King, the Tuskegee Airman's oldest child, was an Air Force captain who flew KC-135 refueling planes in the Vietnam War. His sister, Janis King Robinson, ran a rural North Carolina hospital. John B. King Sr.'s grandson, Keith Norris, is a renowned UCLA medical school professor and kidney expert. And then there is John B. King Sr.'s son, John B. King Jr., who became the nation's second Black secretary of education.

John Becker (left) and John King sit on the porch of the farmhouse on the Becker property.

(Washington Post/Katherine Frey)
John Becker (left) and John King sit on the porch of the farmhouse on the Becker property. (Washington Post/Katherine Frey)

MIX OF PRIDE, SHAME

The Beckers feel a mix of pride and shame about their family's past on the Montgomery County property, which their sixth great-grandfather bought nearly 250 years ago, shortly before the Revolutionary War. The land was passed down to Thomas Griffith, who owned it for 42 years and relied on enslaved labor to run the property.

"We wanted to apologize, but we really can't apologize because we didn't do it," said Amanda, who lives in Pennsylvania, where she helps run her husband's cemetery restoration business. "I don't know if an apology would even mean anything to [the Kings] because we really should be apologizing to their ancestors."

"We were just born here," said Frances, who lives at the farmhouse with her father and sells vintage auto parts.

"Friends have asked us, 'What do they want? Do they want money?'" Amanda said. "We said, 'They just want us to be careful with their history.'"

And they want to be careful with their own history, too. Frances points to Griffith's sons, who fought for the Confederacy.

"I still appreciate all the veterans in our family and consider Confederates as veterans, too," she said. "I still have questions about Thomas," who owned 15 people ranging in age from 9 to 50 before emancipation. "Why did he do it? I feel bad that he did it. I'd like to think positively that he didn't hurt the slaves."

The Kings have had to gently nudge the Beckers to refer to their ancestors as "enslaved people" rather than "slaves," so that they are not defined by a dehumanizing label. They were also troubled by the old furniture and farm supplies stored in the log cabin. (The Beckers cleaned everything out after the Kings' first visit.)

"But Amanda and Frances have been really eager to learn through this process," John said. "Having taught high school social studies and having spent my life in education, I thought about how illustrative this experience is of our need to do a better job of teaching in this country about the history of African Americans and the institution of slavery."

Estelle L. Stansberry, who later married into the King family, graduated in the class of 1894 from the now-defunct Princess Anne Academy (a boarding school that later became the University of Maryland Eastern Shore). Front row (from left): Stansberry, H. Alverta Waters Johnson, Annie Greene, Annie Riley, Estena White and Ella Horsey. Back row (from left): Charles Winder, Joseph Hayman, John H.S. Waters, Walter J. Moore, Isaac Dennis and Robert Pinkett.

(University of Maryland Eastern Shore via Washington Post)
Estelle L. Stansberry, who later married into the King family, graduated in the class of 1894 from the now-defunct Princess Anne Academy (a boarding school that later became the University of Maryland Eastern Shore). Front row (from left): Stansberry, H. Alverta Waters Johnson, Annie Greene, Annie Riley, Estena White and Ella Horsey. Back row (from left): Charles Winder, Joseph Hayman, John H.S. Waters, Walter J. Moore, Isaac Dennis and Robert Pinkett. (University of Maryland Eastern Shore via Washington Post)

HIS PATERNAL GRANDMOTHER

John King was in his first year as education secretary when he got a call in 2016 from the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. The historically Black college said it had discovered that his paternal grandmother, Estelle King, graduated from the school's predecessor in 1894, before becoming a nurse. Would he want to give a speech at the school? Sure, he said.

The call prompted a dive into his family's past. Last year, he enlisted the help of Christine McKay, a retired archivist from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture who had once discovered Obama's father's letters, some of which he'd written from Kenya imploring universities in the United States for financial aid.

McKay wanted to know everything about the Kings. She started with John's great-great-grandmother, Lydia King, who was born about 1822. She combed the records of the Freedman's Bank — established after the Civil War for freed people — and found two of her accounts, suggesting she'd probably been enslaved. The records also listed the names of four of Lydia's children: John, Sophia, Anne and Charles.

McKay consulted the Maryland State Archives, which keeps voluminous records chronicling the state's history of slavery, which spanned from shortly after its Colonial founding in the 17th century to November 1864, when the state abolished it. (The Emancipation Proclamation of Jan. 1, 1863, freed enslaved people only in seceded states, exempting border states such as Maryland, where there were more than 87,000 enslaved Black people in 1860.) In her search, McKay found a slave census.

The census verified that Lydia and her children had been enslaved. It also disclosed a much bigger revelation: The name of their owner, Thomas Griffith.

Melissa Steel King and her daughters, Amina (left) and Mireya, stand inside the cramped cabin where their ancestors were once enslaved.

(Washington Post/Katherine Frey)
Melissa Steel King and her daughters, Amina (left) and Mireya, stand inside the cramped cabin where their ancestors were once enslaved. (Washington Post/Katherine Frey)

IN THE SAME FAMILY

Quickly, McKay located the Griffith property in Gaithersburg. Then she learned the property was still in the same family. She even found huge ledgers at the Maryland State Archives full of yellowed paper showing the tax records of enslavers, listing names of the enslaved and their monetary values; the amount next to Lydia's name, for instance, was $300 in 1853 and then, a couple of years later, $600.

She also came across an article by a local historian reporting that John's enslaved great-great-aunt Anne King, then just 15, alerted authorities that Griffith had entertained a visit by a "nicely-dressed stranger." Thanks to her tip, Griffith was arrested, charged and prosecuted in a military trial in Baltimore for "giving aid" to a "known rebel officer." Griffith was described in the article as a "one-armed farmer."

Finally, in February, McKay emailed all of her findings to John.

"Wow!" John wrote back that night. "This is amazing. My wife, daughters, and I were all nearly moved to tears by this information. It is incredible to know this history and fantastic to think we can actually go see the property. I cannot thank you enough for the gift of this history."

But what next? Cold-call the Beckers? He decided to spread the word among the other Kings first.

When Janis King Robinson, the retired hospital executive in North Carolina, got her cousin John's email, she knew she had to see the farm in Maryland as soon as possible.

"Nobody in this family is shy," Janis said. "We don't wait for permission."

She was already traveling to Washington the next month to visit the National Museum of African American History and Culture. After she was done, she figured she'd make an impromptu stop at Edgehill.

"My husband said, 'Without permission?'" Janis recalled, laughing. "I said, 'We're going to be just fine.'"

The log cabin that housed the Kings’ enslaved ancestors, a smokehouse and the original farmhouse are still on the Becker property in upper Montgomery County.

(Washington Post/Katherine Frey)
The log cabin that housed the Kings’ enslaved ancestors, a smokehouse and the original farmhouse are still on the Becker property in upper Montgomery County. (Washington Post/Katherine Frey)

LOG CABIN LOOMED

They Googled the address and made their way to Gaithersburg. They found Griffith Road and then turned onto a long gravely route that led to Edgehill.

The couple parked and saw the two-story white farmhouse with the greenish-blue shutters. The log cabin loomed right over their parking spot.

"It took a minute to grab my breath," Janis said.

Then, she approached the door to the main house and knocked.

"My name is Janis King Robinson," she told Frances, who answered the door. "I'm really sorry to interrupt your day, but we've been recently informed that our ancestors were enslaved here."

Frances was floored — and anxious. She never expected to meet the descendants of the people who lived in the log cabin.

"Well," Frances told her visitor, "come on in."

"She was as warm and inviting as a human could be," Janis said later. "My visit there was profoundly spiritual. I was doing exactly as I was supposed to."

In September 2019, John, his wife, Melissa Steel King, and their two daughters walked slowly behind the Beckers' farmhouse. They were on their way to the grave of the man who'd enslaved their ancestors.

Amina King, 15, finds the name of her great-great-great-aunt Anne King, 15, on a slave census.

(Washington Post/Katherine Frey)
Amina King, 15, finds the name of her great-great-great-aunt Anne King, 15, on a slave census. (Washington Post/Katherine Frey)

'IN MEMORY'

When they reached the gravesite, John paused and read the inscription on Griffith's headstone: "In Memory of Thomas Griffith. Born 15th of Sept. 1803, Died 28th of Jan. 1870." Engraved above his name was a weeping willow.

"The weeping willow means they lived a good life," Amanda told the Kings.

John said nothing.

Frances said she hoped Griffith treated his enslaved people well.

"Since the slave quarters are so close to the main house, we are thinking they were interdependent on each other and they would have known each other well," Frances said. "I am putting a 21st-century positive spin on this, but I hope that my ancestors were decent enough people."

John thought about the bravery of his great-great-aunt Anne, who told authorities that Griffith was consorting with Confederates on his property.

"The family's participation in the Confederacy is so telling about their desire to defend the institution of slavery," he said later.

Before the Kings left, Amanda fetched something from the house. It was a copy of a slave census Frances had found, listing the names and ages of the enslaved Kings.

Standing by the log cabin, John's oldest daughter, Amina, 15, grabbed the paper and everyone huddled around her. She and her sister, Mireya, 13, were now scanning the names. The youngest Kings were looking at the names of the oldest-known Kings, all enslaved.

Amina stopped at two of the names: King, Anne F 15; King, William M 13.

"Look," Amina said to her sister. "They were the same age as us."

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