'Mississippi to Africa, A Journey of Discovery' by Melvin J. Collier
Published by Heritage Books, Inc.
ISBN: 0788447610
A Review
by George Geder
Books on African Ancestored research and discovery are necessary and there can never be enough. Folks that have the courage to push the envelope and publish the stories of African Ancestored peoples in America are the authors you seek.
You've made it your goal to find the first African in any of your lines who stepped off the slave ship. You have already interviewed you elders, gathered some photographs, looked at some census records, and purchased a genealogy software program. You diligently followed some genealogy rules; namely starting with yourself and worked you way backwards. You got the grands and the great grands and dashed all the way back to 1870 and smashed up against the genealogical brick wall.BAM!
You have amassed a ton of data and yet that brickwall is formidable. DNA can get you around it, quickly. DNA will link you to that group or village in Africa. But you know it won't get you the name of that first African in your line who stepped off the slave ship. There's got to be a book out there that will help you.
In 'Mississippi to Africa, A Journey of Discovery' by Melvin J. Collier we are first taken on a trip finding his Ancestors through the disciplines of recording countless oral interviews and following paper trails researching the many documents. This is not a simple task; and because it isn't simple, Mr. Collier takes us step by step on his personal journey. It's one thing for an author to tell you to do this and do that, it's another to guide by example. That's the brilliance of this book.
Melvin Collier employs a very effective technique. At the beginning of each chapter in his book, he lists his methodology. Then, with the bullet list of research tips out of the way, he deftly distills the story of his family and ancestors. I've seen this literary approach before in other areas, particularly in photography. It liberates the author. Mr. Collier shares conversations and his thinking about the information he receives. The reader can learn from his examples.
Mr. Collier goes against the grain of conventional genealogical research by instead of starting with himself and going back in time, he chose to begin with his maternal grandmother. You are immediately drawn into the story of Minnie Lee Davis Reed. On page 21 you see her picture and you're hooked! Melvin's Ancestors and family come to life at the same time as we learn what documents he gleaned insights from. We learn that by interviewing older family members, he was able to write about his grandmother's wedding day in 1936.
Through four fascinating chapters, we take the journey, with a repeating pattern of learning research tips and how they were utilized, and discover through Melvin's Ancestors what life was like for those Africans in Mississippi (and other southern states) during the 18th and 19th centuries.
But how do we get from Mississippi to Africa? Given what we know about the 'peculiar institution' of slavery, where Africans were stripped of their names, languages, and cultures, how does Mr. Collier make the connection? Documents and oral history can only take him so far.
In order to continue his journey, Melvin enters into the science of DNA. In 2000, he heard of the research that renowned geneticist Dr. RickKittles, Ph .D. was doing. It was as if God was saying, "Be patient my children. You will finally know where you come from." When Melvin's first cousin ordered themtDNA kit in 2003, he couldn't be more thrilled.
There are still other research avenues to consider. Melvin points to timelines when Africans reached America and the ports they entered. Some slaves were able to hang on to their original names, which pointed to particular groups and tribes. He was lucky to have some of his Ancestors with these names.
The book is full of pictures and charts that enhance the telling of an amazing story. Melvin travels to Africa and recounts his feelings as he stood in the infamous 'Door of No Return' onGoree Island. There's an amazing forward by Rick A. Kittles, Ph.D., several appendices, notes, and a bibliography.
'Mississippi to Africa' is not a lightweight book. It could have very easily been one of those scholarly tomes that the lay family historian would shy away from. However, I am hear to say that would be a mistake. Melvin Collier has wisely used his family and personal research and experiences to deliver a text that should be read by anyone who is serious about African Ancestored Genealogy.