November 2025: Presentations & Podcasts

Migration & Names, Genealogy Quick Start, November 2025

This was a busy month! On Tuesday evening, I was a special guest on Shamele Jordon’s Genealogy Quick Start on the Migration and Names episode, talking about my third great grandfather in The Many Names of Telesforo Carrillo, based on a previous blog post. She is an amazing host, and I love her energy. Michael John Neill did the first part of the show, “Benjamin Butler Serves Research Suggestions” making suggestions for locating and verifying a very mobile ancestor who lived in several states over the course of his life.

While I spoke for just a half hour, i’m amazed at how a very long time researching ultimately distilled a story out of documents finally brought together. Thanks to the help of cousins, I pulled together documents to understand more about the struggles that each generation faced. Self identification and self determination weave through the lives of my ancestors. As a child in the South Bronx, I did get to meet Telesforo’s daughter Catalina, my great grandmother, who lived to be 104 years old. I ended with my grandfather’s 1925 passport, a folded page with the only photo of his first wife, Carolina Dorrios Picon and their three children, Bobby, Gloria and Sylvia Fernandez, in a photograph that is now a century old.

There are 213 episodes of Genealogy Quick Start, full of resources and recommendations for your browsing pleasure!

Rediscovering Latinidad, Season 7 Ep.8

Rediscovering Latinidad released their Kissing Cousin episode– Season 7 Ep. 8 – Cuando los primos se exprimen: La endogamia y el matrimonio entre primos, and I enjoyed talking with hosts Eduardo Rueda and Jellisa. Check it out as we go full cringe with endogamy and cousin marriage! This premier podcast about Latino genealogy, culture, heritage and rich layers of intersectionality also has a Patreon. With seven seasons of podcasts, Rediscovering Latinidad is a great resource for learning more about family history, with links for additional information on each episode page.

Rediscovering Latinidad Season 7 Episode 10

Rediscovering Latinidad also rereleased their most popular episode from Season 7 Episode 10, La Caida de 23andMe/ The Fall of 23andMe, with guests my cousin Teresa Vega and I. Teresa’s extensive knowledge of DNA and complex family histories adds to the discussion. Check out her blog, Radiant Roots Boricua Branches for fascinating research on Revolutionary War ancestors, ancestors from Madagascar, and deep dives into family history.

silhouette of Moses Williams, about 1802
Moses Williams, cutter of profiles

On November 19, I participated in the Library Company of Philadelphia’s virtual symposium Finding Moses Williams, along with four amazing scholars, who shared new insights on his art, life and family. He left a considerable body of work, and perhaps, descendants. So much to learn from these talks!

Here’s a list of the presentations:

Carol Soltis, Finding Moses in the Peale-Sellers family album.

Nancy Proctor, Presenting Moses at The Peale Baltimore.

Ellen Fernandez-Sacco, Not Yet Completely Free, The Context of Gradual Emancipation & the Family of Moses Williams 1776-1830.

Dean Krimmel, Locating Moses Williams in Philadelphia, new information about Moses Williams’s life and death based on a re-examination of Philadelphia’s primary sources.

Lauren Muny, Moses Williams, A Technical View.

View the Finding Moses Williams symposium on YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLxsuixugCk

ps just replaced the link for the symposium, and they’re working now!

Wishing you a very happy December! Seneko kakona!

Finding Moses Williams: a virtual program, 19 Nov. 2025

silhouette of Moses Williams, about 1802

Thrilled to announce i’ll be presenting along with four other speakers at an upcoming virtual program. The Library Company of Philadelphia’s Program in African American History and the Center for American Art at the Philadelphia Art Museum are sponsoring the event.

My twenty minute talk, “Not Yet Completely Free: Gradual Emancipation and the Family of Moses Williams, Philadelphia, 1776-1830.” presents the results of an archival journey. While I searched for information on Moses Williams, I instead found indentures in the Pennsylvania Abolition Society Papers for his family members that let me reconstruct his family tree. These records show how a Free Black family navigated a difficult economy in the decades before the 1838 census.

This talk draws on my article which appeared in volume 43 of the AAHGS Journal. The Sons and Daughters of the US Middle Passage awarded me the Phillis Wheatley Literary Award this past June for the article.

title slide, Not Yet Completely Free
title slide, Not Yet Completely Free,

Finding Moses Williams: the program

The other presenters are Carol Soltis, Nancy Proctor, Dean Krimmel, & Lauren Mulvey with an introduction by Sarah J. Weatherwax, Senior Curator, Library Company. Appreciate the knowledge shared & discussed over the preceding months with artists and scholars whose work focuses on Moses Williams. There is much to learn about Williams life, art and family.

Please register at the link below the program description:

profile of Moses Williams ca 1802

Finding Moses Williams

Free Virtual Program

November 19th , 2025 at 1 PM ET

This program of illustrated talks by five speakers focuses on the identification of the exceptional hollow-cut paper profiles created by Moses Williams (1776-1830) at Peale’s Philadelphia Museum and on presenting new historically accurate information about Williams’s life and family. Moses’s parents were manumitted by Peale in 1786 and Moses, who was born enslaved, was then indentured to Peale by his parents until age twenty-eight

Raised within the Peale family, Moses was literate and trained in skills for creating and installing the Museum’s displays of art and natural science. After the installation of a physiognotrace device for creating hollow-cut paper profiles in 1802, Moses was freed and given the concession to operate this new attraction. The popularity of this inexpensive form of portraiture and the highly accurate and elegant profiles Moses cut, made him financially independent.

Recent research into Moses’s life provides us with a clearer understanding of his artistry and other activities, as well as his death date and the identity of his descendants. And, the story of Williams’s birth family illuminates how the practice of indenture used by Free Black families, like the Williams family, was a strategy for seeking financial stability.

A small selection of Moses Williams’s profiles will be on display at the Library Company during November and December and in the Peale Gallery at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

REGISTER HERE

This program is sponsored by the Library Company of Philadelphia’s Program in African American History and the Center for American Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Celebrating My Phyllis Wheatley Award Recognition

Silhouette of Moses Williams, Cutter of Profiles, 1802

Thrilled to learn that I was awarded a Phyllis Wheatley Award for my article, “Not Yet Completely Free: Gradual Emancipation, and Moses Williams’ Family, Philadelphia 1776-1833.” from the Sons and Daughters of the US Middle Passage (SDUSMP)! The article is in the AAHGS Journal v.43 Winter issue.

The Phyllis Wheatley Award Ceremony is coming up on Friday, June 6, 2025, at 6:00 PM, as part of the SDUSMP’s 9th Annual Genealogy and Community Learning Conference. This year’s conference theme is: From Bondage to Legacy: Interactive Paths to Reclaiming Our Heritage in the Age of Erasure.

Silhouette of Moses Williams, Cutter of Profiles, 1802
Silhouette of Moses Williams, Cutter of Profiles, 1802

Appreciate those people who have read various drafts, made suggestions or discussed issues with me; thanks to Guy Weston and the AAHGS Journal, for accepting the article for the journal, and to LaJoy Mosby, who invited me to be part of discussions on it. To Dean Krimmel, a deep appreciation of having the opportunity to talk about Williams; also to Nancy Proctor of The Peale Baltimore for encouraging my research on him and including me among a group of scholars and artists who continue to research him.

Deep thanks to Bernice Bennett, for having me on her new podcast, Ancestor’s Footprints. She gave me an opportunity to share what I learned about the Williams family and how they dealt with the terms of gradual emancipation in Philadelphia. Looking forward to Faye Anderson’s project of having a memorial marker installed in Philadelphia so more people can learn about Moses Williams. May his legacy and that of his family continue despite any attempt to erase or obscure this history.

May the ancestors rest in power.

Not Yet Completely Free – An Evening with AAHGS Journal Writers: 12 Feb 2025

flyer An Evening with AAHGS Authors for 12 February 2025

So happy to announce i’ll be talking about my recent publication in the Winter 2025 issue of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society Journal, “Not Yet Completely Free: Gradual Emancipation and the Family of Moses Williams, 1776-1833.”

I’ll discuss the 1780 Gradual Emancipation Act in Philadelphia, part of the lesser known history of Northern slavery. By tracing the family histories connected to the silhouette artist and museum artisan and assistant Moses Williams (1776-ca 1833) one can catch sight of the challenges experienced by African descended and multiethnic Free People of Color in their emancipation process in this city. Williams was among the children of John and Phylis Williams, a couple held in bondage until 1786. He worked in the Philadelphia Museum of Charles Willson Peale from his childhood to adulthood and was manumitted about 1802.

Shamele Jordon will present on the heritage of Green Book locations in New Jersey, and Mary Belcher and Guy Weston will discuss recovery and reclamation of Black cemeteries in Washington DC and Flushing New York.

The event is for AAHGS members, so join today!