Ashley's Sack
It was a gesture initiated by an enslaved woman named Rose to ensure her nine-year-old daughter, Ashley, who was being sold into slavery will remember her roots. In 1850 in one of the plantations of South Carolina she gave her daughter a sack filled with a few items but most importantly the memory of motherly love to carry along as their slaveowner separates them.
As the years passed and Ashley became conscious of her roots, she embroidered the family history on the sack bag including her mothers last words it be filled with my love always. This was captured in an awe-inspiring book written by historian Tiya Miles after she discovered the sack made of cotton fabric dating to the mid-19th century and measuring about thirty-three by sixteen inches.
Ashleys sack as has now become known is stitched in three colors of cotton embroidery with heartfelt inscriptions made by the nine-year-old girl with her last known text made in 1921, according to Southern Spaces. Ashleys sack was found at a flea market in Springfield, Tennessee in 2007. It was placed on public display from 2009 to 2013 at Middleton Place in South Carolina, which drew a lot of emotional connection with the thousands of patrons.
Ashleys sack is now on loan to the Smithsonian museum and keeps attracting millions of visitors having an engagement with the historic relic. Historian Miles said her reconstruction of the myth surrounding Ashleys sack before 2007 took a lot of research into historical records. She said many of the details put out about the sack may be possibilities but it offers enough lessons for future researchers. She indicated that the message embroidered in the cotton fabric is to a large extent true.
more at:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/lifestyle-buzz/ashley-s-sack-the-bag-revealing-the-horrors-of-slavery-including-the-slave-sale-of-a-9-yr-old-girl/ar-AA14h91s?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=93b1154ccc50407480866d64741575e0