Birth: About 1739 in Africa, Spalding, Georgia, USA
Occupation: Unknown
Marriage: Jane
Children: Jerome Laurence Cromwell, Hannah Elizabeth Cromwell, William Cromwell Sr
Parents: Unknown & Unknown
Death: About 1827 in Weymouth, Digby, Nova Scotia, Canada
Burial: Unknown
Arrival in South Carolina (mid-1750s – 1779)
Upon surviving the Middle Passage, Joseph would have arrived in Charleston, South Carolina, one of the major slave ports in the American colonies. Here, he would have been sold at an auction to a plantation owner in the Goose Creek area, a small but economically significant settlement just outside Charleston. Goose Creek was a hub for rice and indigo plantations, where enslaved labor was essential to the colony’s economy. The climate and geography of South Carolina were ideally suited for rice cultivation, but it was grueling, labor-intensive work that required extensive knowledge of water management and planting techniques—skills that many enslaved Africans brought with them from regions like West Africa.
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Marie Jeanne Amirault
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Anselme Hatfield's story crosses borders and legacies- born in revolutionary New York and laid to rest in Acadian Nova Scotia, he helped seed a family rooted in resilience and heritage.
Thomas Henry Jackson worked the land and raised a large family in Ontario- his life marked by resilience, routine, and rural roots across the turn of the century.
Johanne Wilhelmine Rodenbeck crossed continents to build a family in a new world—her legacy planted in the soil of New Jersey and rooted in the traditions of her Prussian homeland.
Francois Savoie’s journey from France to Port Royal laid a cornerstone for Acadian heritage, his legacy carried forward by generations of Savoies in the heart of Nova Scotia.