Archive for the ‘Churches’ Category

30

Sep

Hartford Scrapbook

The second to the last stop on the Road Tour was amazing! We were hosted by Joann Price and the Seniors Ministry of Union Baptist Church in Hartford, CT. The church was such a beautiful backdrop for sharing and learning about history from the seniors of the community.

Union Baptist Church

Union Baptist Church

We revealed the ancestries of 10 members of the group and their results were met with much enthusiasm and excitement!

Excited Reveal!

Excited Reveal!

Very Happy!

Very Happy!

Now I have to tell you, I absolutely love JoAnn. She is a longtime supporter of African Ancestry. So I could not figure out WHY it was taking her so long to do her own test…until I got to the church. She has such a generous spirit that she kept giving hers away to one of the seniors! So, with their help, we got her to FINALLY do her test. I hope that she is my Fulani cousin!

JoAnn Takes the Test!

JoAnn Takes the Test!

It wouldn’t be a church Seniors event without lunch. Woo-hoo!

Seniors Lunch

Not everyone was a Senior…

Not Just for Seniors

Not Just for Seniors

We enjoyed meeting all of the families that joined us too. Ramona and John O’Neal have been following us online and we finally got to meet them in person!

The O'Neal Family

The O'Neal Family

One more stop to go. Boston, we are on our way!

Victoria Reflects

Victoria Reflects

Click here for more photos or video from Hartford.

03

Apr

A Church with Strong Community Roots

I spent four years in the Bay Area for college. During that time, we’d make an occasional road trip into San Francisco. Our perspective was always a tourist one. You know, cable cars, the wharf, eating, shopping, driving those steep hills, and things like that.

Queen Califia

Queen Califia

Had I asked a real touristy question, “Where does the name California come from?”, I wonder if I would have learned that it is named after a mythical Black queen, Queen Califia. When I think of Black people in the Bay Area, honestly, I think of Oakland. I had no idea of San Francisco’s rich African American history.
For example, Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett was a medical doctor, activist, and publisher. As the publisher of the Sun-Reporter, he built a weekly SF paper into an influential newspaper chain and fought tenaciously for civil rights in San Francisco for over forty years. San Francisco’s City Hall sits at One Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett Place!

Last weekend, I was invited by Rev. Dr. Amos Brown to present the African Ancestry Experience to the community at Third Baptist Church. It was the first Black church west of the Rockies has been a place of spiritual rejuvenation for Black San Francisco since 1852.

W.E.B. DuBois speaks at Third Baptist Church in 1958

W.E.B. DuBois speaks at Third Baptist Church in 1958

I gave a presentation on the African Ancestry Experience to an engaging and diverse group. Several of San Francisco’s Black leaders were there as we revealed Rev. Brown’s Yoruba ancestry.  I think we may even have convinced Danny Glover to find his roots.

Actor and Activist      Danny Glover

Actor and Activist Danny Glover

It was a wonderful afternoon in which I got to connect with African Ancestry family members who go back as far as 2003! I’m looking forward to welcoming some new Bay Area folks into the African Ancestry family in about six weeks. Thanks to everyone who attended that afternoon. I’ll see you in June!