What happens when people are made invisible? How can they be brought back to life, at least in historical memory?
Archaeologist Gail Golec explores the dusty archives and burial grounds of southern New Hampshire to uncover the powerful story of the Brooks family of Walpole, New Hampshire, and Westminister, Vermont - a Black family whose members lived and worked across a region normally considered entirely white. She is joined by descendant Ray Brooks, who speaks, too, about his Native ancestors and Tribal connections.
The story centres on the 18th century, but their story begins in the 17th century, when Anglo-American familes from MIddleton, Connecticut, settled in the Middle Connecticut River Valley, and brought with them both enslaved and free Black people. The large, extended Brooks family lived in communities on both sides of the river for at least four generations.
In this fascinating talk, we joined Gail in her hunt to find out the history of this important Black family through archives, gravestones, church papers and more. The Brooks family is one of many researched through the Recovering Black History project organized by the Historical Society of Cheshire County (Keene, NH) and the Monadnock Center for History and Culture (Peterborough, NH). As well as the family story, Gail will highlight the collaboration between local historical societies, Brooks family descendants and the dozens of citizen archivists who made this newly revealed history possible.
Remembering the Brooks Family will be followed by a seminar on April 17, 2024, in how to research the hidden stories in your community, led by the Historical Society of Cheshire County and Monadnock Historic Research Center. The two organizations' Recovering Black History project, aided by citizen researchers, has revealed the names and lives of nearly 500 people of colour whose lives were previously unrecognized. "It is as though they've come out from the shadows," said one of the key researchers.
Gail Golec has been a professional archaeologist for over 20 years, working primarily in the Middle Connecticut River Valley of New Hampshire and Vermont. Currently, she is a project archaeologist with Monadnock Archaeological Consulting, LLC. She also writes and produces a history podcast called The Secret Life of Deathhttps://www.thesecretlifeofdeath.com/, discussing the life and times of regular, often ignored, people through the lens of historic New England cemeteries. Since 2020, she has been a citizen archivist with the Recovering Black History of the Monadnock Region research project, sponsored through the Historical Society of Cheshire County (NH) https://hsccnh.org/ and the Monadnock Center for History and Culture https://monadnockcenter.org/.
The Historical Society of Cheshire County is a contemporary hub for people to make connections between history, art, culture, and the environment. We are located in the Monadnock Region of New Hampshire, 246 Main Street, Keene, NH or visit us online at www.hsccnh.org
The Monadnock Center for History and Culture, in Peterborough, New Hampshire, connects people to the culture and history of the Monadnock region of southern New Hampshire. Its programs, concerts and events enrich cultural life and promote thoughtful discussion and connection to the region, as well as stewarding its historic buildings and collections. Find out more at monadnockcenter.org
All presentations convey the views of the presenter and not necessarily those of the Partnership of Historic Bostons.
Image: Henry Woods' woodworking shop at Westminster Station, Vermont, ca.1895. No one in the woodworking crew shown in this photo has been identified, but based on the location and date, it seems likely that the two Black men are either Nathaniel/Nathan Brooks (1869-1953), Frank LH Brooks (1875-1938), Herbert Williams Brooks (1867-1897), George Albert Williams (1867-1897) or Wallace Williams (1873-1947). Credit: Westminster Historical Society