『The Free Man's Line: Bell and Franklin Family』のカバーアート

The Free Man's Line: Bell and Franklin Family

The Free Man's Line: Bell and Franklin Family

著者: Courtney C - Sisi in Brazil
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2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

A Documentary History of the Manley Ray Bell Family

There is a line that runs from the banks of the James River in 1517 to a football field in Edmonton, Canada, in 1975. It passes through paramount chiefs and English knights, through Cherokee diplomats who stood before King George II and Freedmen delegates who stood before the Chickasaw Nation. It passes through a woman whose name was never recorded and a man who chose his own.

The Free Man's Line is a documentary-grade family history archive built around one man — Manley Ray "Bubba" Bell, born 1927 in Oklahoma — and the 185 documented ancestors who made him possible. Each episode moves through a chapter of the story: the Powhatan Confederacy, the Cherokee Overhill towns, the Chickasaw Freedmen rolls, and the all-Black towns of Oklahoma, where three brothers became the finest athletes the state had ever seen.

This is not a simple family tree. It is a map of America.

-- Website: Bloodline --

-- Watch: Video Library --

Every record, name, and date was verified by Courtney, granddaughter of Manley Ray "Bubba" Bell. The technology is a tool. The history is real.

This archive was researched and produced with the assistance of large language model technology. Click here to read MY reasoning or visit faafo.app and search for "i said yes. and i would do it again."

This work draws on the genealogical research of Angela Walton-Raji, whose expertise on Black American and Freedmen ancestry has been foundational to this archive. Family tree documentation was built by P. Pierson.

The archive, this podcast, and the creative work of bringing it all together belong to Courtney C — Sisi in Brasil.

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  • S1E2 He Whose Soul Is White: Opechancanough and the Last Stand of Tsenacomoco
    2026/04/16

    In 1622, Opechancanough coordinated a multinational military assault across fifty miles of the Virginia James River in a single morning — with no written orders, no telegraph, and no standing army. 347 English colonists died before noon.

    He had been watching them for fifteen years.

    Opechancanough is Courtney's (Sisi's) 11th great-grandfather — and his authority to lead came entirely through his mother, Amopotuske, her 12th great-grandmother from Episode 1.

    This is Season 1, Episode 2 of The Free Man's Line — the story of the Powhatan war chief who was the direct ancestor of Manley Ray Bell's family, and whose authority to lead came entirely through his mother, Amopotuske, the woman we met in Episode 1.

    His name was Mangopeesomon. He Whose Soul Is White. He was not treacherous. He was a sovereign military strategist defending his nation from an existential threat. He was nearly 90 years old when he led his final uprising in 1644 — carried on a litter by his warriors because he could no longer walk. Captured. Imprisoned. Shot in the back.

    He was murdered. He was not defeated.

    The line continued through his daughter, Pride — called "Shawnee Woman" — who carried it westward into Cherokee territory. 500 years later, his descendants are still here.

    -- Website: Bloodline --

    -- Watch: Video Library --

    NOTE: This archive was built by courtney c, known as sisi in brasil. the family tree that made it possible was researched and maintained by p. pierson, a family member. genealogical reference material was drawn from the published work of angela walton-raji. neither was involved in the production of this archive.

    Statement on LLM technology https://faafo.app/i-said-yes-and-i-would-do-it-again

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    39 分
  • S1E1 Scent Flower: The Woman at the Root of the Line
    2026/04/13

    She was born in 1517. Ninety years before Jamestown. In a world the English had not yet reached.

    Her name was Amopotuske — Scent Flower and she is Courtney's (Sisi's) 12th great-grandmother. She was born at the confluence of the Dan and Staunton Rivers in the Powhatan homeland of Tsenacomoco, a civilization of 30 tribal nations, 160 villages, and a political system so sophisticated the English colonizers couldn't read it when they finally arrived.

    She lived her entire 83 years in an unbroken Powhatan world. She never saw what came next.

    In this episode, we go back to the beginning. We examine the matrilineal society she lived in — where power flowed through women, where her son Opechancanough's authority to rule came directly through her, and where the English failure to understand this system led to 40 years of catastrophic diplomacy and war.

    We also confront what the historical record didn't write down — and why that silence was deliberate.

    14 generations. 510 years. One unbroken line. It starts here.

    This episode draws on family tree documentation built by P. Pierson, and on the genealogical scholarship of Angela Walton-Raji, whose research on Black American and Freedmen ancestry has been an invaluable source for this archive.

    The archive, this podcast, and all creative work belong to Courtney C — Sisi in Brasil.

    This archive was researched and produced with the assistance of large language model technology. Click here to read MY reasoning or visit faafo.app and search for "i said yes. and i would do it again."

    Every record, name, and date was verified by Courtney, granddaughter of Manley Ray "Bubba" Bell. The technology is a tool. The history is real.

    The full archive lives at bloodline.faafo.app.

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    17 分
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