If you love colonial history, you will want this book on your want-to-read shelf: Mac Griswold's "The Manor: Three Centuries at a Slave Plantation on Long Island". In it, Griswold has documented a disciplined approach to a new historic find, but more than that it, reads like a field guide for history hunters. If you have a curious mind and heart about who the first European settlers in America, some of the First Nation peoples they encountered, and about some of the first enslaved Africans in America, you will find this a fascinating study. Yet as thorough as Mac Griswold is, do not think you will have all questions answered. While some questions did find possible answers, many new questions emerged for me. Perhaps because of the title of the book, some readers will expect to hear more about those who were enslaved. So be aware that this is a book born out of the historian's curious mind as such studies what it can. Too many stories have been hidden and even more, have been lost, but this book does a remarkable job of giving the reader the big picture of how such a plantation came to be and some information who they were who built it and worked it.
Griswold is a cultural landscape historian who has authored works on George Washington's Mt. Vernon. I was drawn - fascinated really - with both the scholar's curiosity and experience of finding this place but also the many skills a historian utilities to tell one family's story: Nathaniel Sylvester and Grizzell Brinley. Our author takes us on a journey with her as she seeks the paper trails of the two families. One from Amsterdam, Holland and the other from London, England respectively. Also, Griswold takes us with her on her journey to Barbados where Nathaniel's brother ran a sugar plantation. We look over Griswold's shoulder as she stitches the paper trails into a narrative that at times is exciting and at the same time horrific. We're talking the beginning of slavery in America and the Sylvester family are among the first enslavers families. As the historian exams the various aspects of their upbringing she is seeking answers to how and why this family who creates a northern provisioning plantation could at the same time become Quakers? The tension of these seemingly polar realities is mind blogging. What was their social location context? How did they encounter and engage with religion and how did it inform them? What was life like in London as Grissell's father worked closely with the royals of the English Civil War period, and what impact did it have on Grissell? This book encompasses anthropological studies of European movements due to economic needs or empire building.
Who honestly knew about northern plantations and slavery in this period? So little was known when Griswold stumbled upon the owners of The Sylvester Manor Farm in 1984. So much of our history has been both lost and rubbed out.
I highly recommend this book as a fascinating study - maybe it is the history nerd in me. But in full disclosure, I bought this book after learning that Nathaniel and Grizzell Sylvester were my 10 times great grandparents. So you see, dear reader, I am struggling to learn what it means to descend from colonial families who were, among other things, those who enslaved men, women, and children. This is part of my story now and I wish I could say they were my only ancestors who were enslavers but that is not the case. So I tell you I still struggle to understand the draw of self-determination while at the same time denying others that same possibility. And I struggle to understand how the Sylvesters were drawn to the Quaker faith, yet Griswold's research of early Quakers was I have a better understanding of some of their practices which is quite helpful actually.
If you've read this far, I will tell you The Manor House has been and is still "owned" by descents of Nathaniel and Grizzell Sylvester.Their daughter, Elizabeth, is my 9 times great grandmother. It is now known as The Sylvester Manor Educational Farm and I hope to visit in the near future.