“The exhibit includes the currently known names of nearly 400 people enslaved by the McMurrans at Melrose and five plantations."
Note: A longer version of this story was published by ListenUpYall.com
NATCHEZ, Miss. – A Melrose slave quarters is the
site of a temporary exhibit that presents the history of the McMurran family –
who built the Melrose estate — and the people they held in bondage.
The exhibit, which is titled, “Through the Labor of
Others: The McMurrans as Enslavers,” opened on June 10. It will last through
Sunday, June 30, at #1 Melrose-Montebello Parkway.
It is free to the public and may be viewed each day
between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m.
“The exhibit includes the currently known names of nearly
400 people enslaved by the McMurrans at Melrose and five plantations,” said
Jeff Mansell, lead historian for the Natchez National Historical Park.
The exhibit aims to show, among other things, how words
matter when discussing the topic of enslavement, said Mansell. For this reason,
an entire panel entitled “The Language of Enslavement” addresses this topic.
Mansell believes it will “be particularly thought-provoking” for the visitors.
Dr. David Slay, chief of interpretation, credited Mansell
with creating the exhibit. He said the names of the enslaved people will
include men, women, and children, with the youngest being 12 months old.
The slave quarters where the exhibit is featured is a
small wooden structure with three rooms, where each served as a cell for three
different families. Each room had a front and back door.
On the wall of the middle room is a history panel that
presents the background of the McMurrans. According to the text, John McMurran
was a Pennsylvanian who came to Natchez in the 1820s to make money as a cotton
planter. “In pre-Civil War American, this meant becoming an enslaver on a large
scale,” the panel notes.
When he married Mary Louisa Turner in 1832, her father
gave them a slave labor farm called Hope Farm and 24 enslaved people to work
it. Mary’s father was Edward Turner who was a state legislator and state
justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court.
Even though the McMurran’s started with 24 enslaved people, they would eventually have hundreds working various farms and plantations. It is believed that between 1832 and 1863, the McMurrans had enslaved more than 700 people.
An interesting part of the McMurrans’ history is what
they did to maintain control over the enslaved. What Mary Louisa’s father did
for them in providing slave labor, the McMurrans did the same for their
daughter and son-in-law when they married in 1856, Mansell said.
“They would continue to maintain power and control
through each generation by making enslavers of their children,” Mansell said.
The slave quarters exhibit is one of several programs the
park service initiated this year to commemorate Juneteenth.
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