Celebrate 1st Year Publishing Anniversary of American Change Agent Today!

Today is a very special day in my dad, Dr. John F. Leeke’s life. It’s his 87th birthday and the first year publication anniversary of his memoir, American Change Agent: A Life & Legacy of Seeking Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion. In honor of both milestones, we decided to share one of the most powerful moments we experienced during our journey as co-authors. It happened a few weeks ago when we visited Hagerstown, the city our 16 Leak/Leek ancestors were enslaved in.

In the early 1840s, my great-great-great-grandparents, Peter and Catherine along with their 14 children, including my great-great-grandfather Leonard, escaped slavery by traveling over 400 miles on the Underground Railroad to freedom in Amherstburg, Canada. While writing American Change Agent, I used my great-great grandfather Leonard’s obituary (see below) that was published in the Lansing State Journal, our cousin Ellen Cook’s research included in our family tree on Ancestry.com, the U.S. and Canadian Censuses, and information from the Doleman Black Heritage Museum, Amherstburg Freedom Museum, and VisitHagerstown.com to estimate how and when our brave and determined ancestors reached freedom.

This information helped us make some reasonable assumptions about our ancestors’ initial escape from slavery in Hagerstown with the support of the Ebenezer African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church founded by Rev. Thomas Henry in the 1830s. Rev. Henry and Ebenezer AME Church were very active in the abolitionist movement and helped African Americans plan and execute their escapes in Maryland.

Leonard Leak/Leek’s Obituary

We visited Ebenezer AME Church located on 26 W. Bethel Street while we were headed to our book reading at Next Chapter Books & Shop in Hagerstown. During our visit, my brother Matt took photos and recorded videos of us discussing the importance of knowing who you are and where your people (family) come from. We also met one of the neighbors who told us her house was originally a sanctuary for hiding African Americans who were seeking freedom.

Being able to stand on the same ground that our Leak/Leek ancestors possibly stood on was humbling, powerful, and affirming. Check out the photos below.

My Februllage 2026 Collage for Day 15: Daffodil

DAFFODIL is the prompt for Februllage Day #15. My collage is entitled “A Tribute to Daffodil Sisters: Mary Etter Bolden and Stella Essa Bolden.” It honors my great-great-grandaunts, Mary and Stella Bolden, the daughters of my great-great-great-grandparents, Sarah Ellen Martin Bolden and John Thomas Bolden Sr. and Sarah Ellen Martin Bolden. They were the younger sisters of my great-great-grandfather, William Henry Bolden.

I decided to honor my great-great-grandaunts Mary and Stella because they both died early in life. Mary was born on June 14, 1877, in Jefferson County, Indiana (estimating the county based on where her family was living at the time of her birth) and died on April 9, 1898, in North Vernon, Indiana (Jennings County). She was only 20 years old.

Stella was born on December 14, 1879, in Jefferson County, Indiana (estimating the county based on where her family was living at the time of her birth) and died on June 28, 1899, in North Vernon, Indiana (Jennings County). She was only 19 years old.

While designing this collage, I did some research on the meaning of daffodils and learned they symbolize rebirth, new beginnings, joy, and cheerfulness.

When I looked at Mary and Stella’s black and white photo, I imagined they were young women filled with joy, dreams, and hopes for their future. Perhaps, they were very active in their church community and were able to read and write, teach Sunday school, and help organize outreach efforts and social events. I also imagined they loved flowers like daffodils which were known to grow during the spring months in their hometown of North Vernon, Indiana. Maybe they loved to pick them and place them in vases in their home. My imagination also had me visualizing their parents, sisters, and brothers bringing daffodils to their graves during the spring season.

I wanted to create a heavenly background with daffodils to illustrate Mary and Stella’s rebirth as loving + wise + well ancestors. Thanks to Canva’s AI-generated tool, I was able to create the perfect one.

YOUR INVITATION


Click on the video below and listen to my song, “Ancestral Medicine” that is featured on my debut album, Thriving Mindfully As Theresa’s Daughter.

Do you have any loving + wise + well ancestors who died early in life?

Use your imagination to think about what your ancestors might have lived to be and do.