FILE
- In this March 26, 2015 file photo, actor Ben Affleck appears on
Capitol Hill in Washington after testifying before the Senate State,
Foreign Operations, and Related Programs subcommittee hearing on
diplomacy, development and national security. Evidence that Affleck’s
distant relative owned slaves prompted the actor to ask PBS to cut Cole
from a TV program highlighting Affleck’s family tree. (AP Photo/Lauren
Victoria Burke, File)
SAVANNAH,
Ga. (AP) — A family death in 1858 left Ben Affleck's great-great-great
grandfather with legal custody of his mother-in-law's most valuable
property — her slaves.
There
was Cuffey, whose value was estimated at $500 in handwritten estate
records still on file with the Chatham County Probate Court. There were
Henry and James, valued at $1,000 apiece. And Robert and Becky, worth
$600 as a couple. They were among 24 slaves willed to Benjamin L. Cole
with instructions to turn them over to his three sons once they reached
adulthood.
Nineteenth
century documents offer a window into the life of the Hollywood star's
ancestor and put Benjamin Cole right at the center of the South's
reckoning with slavery. He had the personal ties — his family's at least
two dozen slaves. But as sheriff of Chatham County, which includes
Savannah, he had deep public ties as well.
His
nearly a decade as the top law enforcement official in one of the
South's most important cities started before the Civil War, when
slavery was a way of life, continued throughout the war, when its
citizens were fighting to maintain slavery, and ended years after the
Confederates surrendered, when tensions between newly freed slaves and
whites desperate to maintain control coursed through the city.
This
photo taken May 1, 2015, shows the burial site of Benjamin Cole, the
great-great-great grandfather of actor Ben Affleck, in Laurel Grove
Cemetery in Savannah, Ga. The site only has a marker for a one-year-old
relative, but city records show that at least 10 other relatives are
buried in the site. Cole, who died in 1871, served as the local sheriff
during the Civil War. Public records show Cole and his wife owned at
least one slave and Cole held at least two dozen slaves temporarily as a
legal trustee for other family members. Evidence that Cole owned slaves
drove Affleck to ask PBS and Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates to
remove his relative from a TV program exploring Affleck's family
tree.(AP Photo/Russ Bynum)
"Slavery
touched everything. Everybody had some kind of a connection to it in
some way," said W. Todd Groce, president of the Georgia Historical
Society.
Evidence
that Cole owned slaves drove Affleck to ask PBS and Harvard scholar
Henry Louis Gates to remove his relative from a TV program exploring
Affleck's family tree. After Affleck's actions became public in April,
the "Argo" actor and director identified the relative as Benjamin Cole
on Twitter. A publicist for Affleck reached by The Associated Press
offered no further comment. The AP used historical public records to
independently confirm that Cole was Affleck's ancestor.
"I
didn't want any television show about my family to include a guy who
owned slaves," Affleck said in a Facebook post April 21. "I was
embarrassed. The very thought left a bad taste in my mouth."
Nearly
144 years before he was dismissed by his great-great-great grandson as
an embarrassment, Cole was praised as a "universally respected" citizen
by the Savannah Morning News after he died on Nov. 16, 1871.
When
Cole became sheriff in 1860, after briefly holding the job in 1856,
slaves made up roughly a third of Savannah's 22,000 people. Many labored
on vast rice plantations south of the city. Others worked as house
servants, wagon drivers, hotel waiters and messengers.
This
May 7, 2015 photo shows an archival document made available by the
Chatham County Probate Court, Ga., showing the appraised dollar value of
slaves owner by Ann S. Norton, the mother-in-law of Benjamin L. Cole.
Cole is the great-great-great-grandfather of actor Ben Affleck. After
Norton died in 1858, Cole was tasked with holding her slaves in trust
for his three sons until they reached adulthood. Cole served as local
sheriff during the Civil War and public records show he and his wife
owned at least one slave of their own. Evidence that Cole owned slaves
drove Affleck to ask PBS and Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates to remove
his relative from a TV program exploring Affleck's family tree. (AP
Photo/Russ Bynum)
Cole
himself had a modest farm with about 100 acres of cleared land. Census
records from 1850 identify Cole as the owner of 25 slaves.
City
and county tax digests paint a different picture. They show Cole paid
taxes on his land, a dog, a horse and a carriage. But he never paid for
any slaves, which were also taxed as personal property.
The
1860 census offers a possible explanation. It shows Cole held 31 slaves
as an estate executor and trustee for Ann S. Norton and S.L.
Speissegger, Cole's in-laws from two marriages. It was Norton who left
her slaves to Cole's sons from a previous marriage. In 1857 he married
Georgia A. Cole, Speissegger's daughter. She was Affleck's
great-great-great grandmother.
Benjamin
and Georgia Cole had at least one slave of their own. Cole's wife paid
taxes on a single slave in 1863 and 1864. It's not clear if the slaves
Cole held in trust worked for him.
"You
can pretty much count on him not letting them sit around," said
Jacqueline Jones, history department chair at the University of Texas at
Austin and author of the book "Saving Savannah: The City and the Civil
War." ''If he's going to feed and clothe them, he wants them to be
productive."
But
the end was near. Savannah surrendered to the Union in December 1864
and the Confederate army itself surrendered the following April, forcing
the South to yield to the abolition of slavery. Sheriff Cole was left
to keep the peace between fearful, resentful whites and freed blacks
demanding access to the ballot and other citizenship rights.
In
April 1867, in the yard of the county jail, the sheriff presided over
the hanging of two black men condemned for murder. The Savannah Daily
News and Herald reported Cole personally placed white caps over the
men's faces before releasing the trapdoor beneath their feet.
A
year later, during Cole's final months as sheriff, the newspaper
reported a courthouse clash between Cole's men and military authorities
as crowds of freed blacks tried to vote in an election. "Sheriff Cole's
Bailiff, who was there by virtue of orders from Headquarters, was thrust
out at the point of a bayonet in the hands of an irate corporal," the
newspaper said. It's not clear why.
Cole
still served as a deputy sheriff at the time of his 1871 death, which
newspapers attributed to "consumption of the bowels." Though his birth
date isn't precisely known, Cole lived about 57 years.
Ending
slavery had a devastating effect on the wealth of many white
Southerners. Public records suggest Cole's family fortunes may have
suffered too.
In
1858, Cole held in trust slaves worth an estimated $13,100. Thirteen
years later, he died with $575 in the bank and $543 worth of land and
household furniture. Estate records show Cole's heirs received another
$1,000 from the Georgia Legislature as compensation for unpaid services
during Cole's time as sheriff.
Cole's body now lies buried in an unmarked grave at Laurel Grove Cemetery, where he had purchased a family plot for $10.
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