McCain's Ancestors Owned Slaves 
Thursday, 18 September 2008
By Suzi  Parker and Jake Tapper
Reprinted from Salon.com

Arizona Sen. John  McCain is learning a lot about his family history in
the course of this  presidential campaign.

Sen. John McCain
Because of his bestselling  family memoir, "Faith of My Fathers," which
details the lives and military  careers of his father, Adm. John McCain
II, and grandfather, Adm. John "Slew"  McCain, veterans flock to his
campaign appearances and book signings. They  trade stories about his
heroic forebears and share anecdotes.
The family's  storied military history stretches back to Carroll
County, Miss., where  McCain's great-great grandfather William
Alexander McCain owned a plantation,  and later died during the Civil
War as a soldier for the Mississippi  cavalry.
But what McCain didn't know about his family until Tuesday was  that
William Alexander McCain had owned 52 slaves. The senator  seemed
surprised after Salon reporters showed him documents gathered  from
Carroll County Courthouse, the Carrollton Merrill Museum,  the
Mississippi State Archives and the Greenwood, Miss., Public  Library.
"I didn't know that," McCain said in measured tones wearing a  stoic
expression during a midday interview, as he looked at the  documents
before Tuesday night's debate. "I knew they had sharecroppers. I  did
not know that."
This documentation includes slave schedules from Sept.  8, 1860, which
list as the slave owner, "W.A. McCain." The schedules list the  McCain
family's slaves in the customary manner of the day -- including  their
age, gender and "color," labelling each either "black" or  "mulatto."
The slaves ranged in age from 6 months to 60 years.
"I knew we  fought in the Civil War," McCain went on. "But no, I had no
idea. I guess  thinking about it, I guess when you really think about
it logically, it  shouldn't be a surprise. They had a plantation and
they fought in the Civil  War so I guess that it makes sense."
"It's very impactful," he said of  learning the news. "When you think
about it, they owned a plantation, why  didn't I think about that
before? Obviously, I'm going to have to do a little  more research."
Then he began to piece together information out loud. "So  maybe their
sharecroppers that were on the plantation were descendants of  those
slaves," he said.
Tracing the genealogies of slaves is often easy,  because slaves
frequently adopted the surnames of their owners. In 1876, for  example,
a Mary J. McCain married Isham Hurt. The two had a son,  blues
guitarist "Mississippi" John Hurt, in 1892 on Teoc, the  plantation
community where the McCains owned 2,000 acres.
"Is that right?"  McCain asked, after considering his possible
connection to the famous  bluesman, who died in 1966. "That's
fascinating,fascinatin
McCain  said his interest in his family heritage always had been
focused on his  military background, not his Southern roots. "I just
hadn't thought about it,  to tell you the truth, because I really feel
that my heritage is the  military," he said.
The South -- and its struggle to reconcile its past --  has presented
the GOP candidates with a briar patch of issues to deal with  during
this campaign. Both McCain and Texas Gov. George W. Bush have  grappled
with South Carolina's fight over whether the Confederate flag  should
be allowed to fly over the capitol.
In addition, Bush has spoken at  a college, Bob Jones University, that
maintains a ban on interracial  dating.
While McCain denounced Bush's appearance at Bob Jones and  the
university's dating policy, he has hedged on the flag issue. "As  to
how I view the flag, I understand both sides," McCain said a few  weeks
ago. "Some view it as a symbol of slavery. Others view it as a  symbol
of heritage.
McCain added at that time: "Personally, I see the  battle flag as a
symbol of heritage. I have ancestors who have fought for  the
Confederacy, none of whom owned slaves. I believe they fought  honorably."
Mark Salter, McCain's Senate chief of staff and co-author of  "Faith of
My Fathers," said Tuesday that no one in McCain's family had ever  told
him that his ancestors had owned slaves. Salter said that  McCain
simply assumed his family would have shared such information.
In  "Faith of My Fathers," McCain brushes over much of his Mississippi
heritage,  dedicating about four pages to it. According to Salter, the
family history  was based on a haphazard mess of information contained
in a box kept by  McCain's younger brother, Joe.
Furthermore, in his book, the senator writes  that the McCains of Teoc
"never lamented the South's fall."
The writer  Elizabeth Spencer, a cousin to John McCain, does mention
the family's slaves  in her family memoir, "Landscapes of the Heart,"
-- a book McCain and his  co-author Slater both say they have read,
though they say not closely enough  to have caught her glancing
references to the family's slaves.
Early in  Spencer's book, she refers casually to the issue in a
reference to her  family's history. "All the descendents of
slave-holding families I have ever  known believe in the benevolence of
their forebears as master," she  wrote.
An entire floor in the Carrollton Merrill Museum is devoted to  the
McCain family's local legacy. Boxes are crammed with McCain  family
memories: In one small, clear, plastic box, a photo of John McCain  in
full Navy attire is signed "With Love to Grandmother and  Aunt
Catherine, Johnny." On the back of the photo is written in fading  ink:
"John S. McCain III, graduation from Naval Academy. Now a P.O.W.  in
Vietnam." McCain said he was surprised to learn of the photograph.
Also  in the museum is a 1949 letter to Katie Lou McCain, a great aunt
to the  senator, from family friend Ella Stone, who wrote: "He [William
Alexander  McCain] bought a plantation on Teoc creek [sic] and named it
'Waverly.' They  owned slaves and were happy in their plantation life
until that terrible  holocaust, the War Between the States."
At the end of the interview, McCain  said he was glad to know about his
family's history. "At the next  opportunity, I'm going to go" visit the
Merrill Museum, he said.
Though  McCain may have been ignorant of his Mississippi roots, those
who live in  Carroll County today remember the McCain family well.
Residents recall the  senator's great-grandfather, John McCain Sr., who
served two terms as  sheriff. They remember Katie Lou McCain and Sen.
John McCain's uncle, Joe,  who owned Teoc until his death in 1952.
Simpson Hemphill, a longtime Carroll  County resident, lives 4 miles
down the road from the old McCain place. "That  place was a couple of
thousand acres," says Hemphill, 70, in a lyrical drawl.  "They raised
cotton and corn." Hemphill didn't doubt that the McCains owned  slaves,
"but back then that was as legal as a loaf of bread."
McCain -- an  Arizonan raised all over the country, in true military
brat fashion -- might  be shocked if he were ever to visit Carroll
County, birthplace of Senate  Majority Leader Trent Lott. If the
proverbial sleepy Southern town ever  existed, Carrollton is it. The
civil rights movement seemingly hasn't made it  down to Carrollton,
where blacks and whites still live, literally, on  opposite sides of
the railroad tracks. Confederate flags wave on front  porches. The
Arizona senator has never visited rustic Merrill Museum, built  in
1834, which sits on historic Carrollton town square where a
Confederate  flag flies in front of the county's grand Civil War memorial.
McCain  dismisses the significance of his Southern roots in the
campaign, saying it  would be "ridiculous" for him to campaign in South
Carolina as "a good ol'  boy." He's a military man, he says, and that
institution is his real home,  not any particular geographical
location. When accused of being a  carpetbagger in his first run for
the House in Arizona in 1982, he noted that  the longest he'd ever
lived in one place was in Hanoi, when he was a prisoner  of war for
five-and-a-half years.
He says he has been touched by South  Carolina's patriotism during this
campaign. He says he feels a commonality  with the residents of this
state because of their love of country and their  military service. But
not, he says, because of his Southern  roots.







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