albemarle county

Black Family History Symposium 2026

Black Family History Symposium 2026 Event Flyer
Black Family History Symposium 2026 Event Flyer

Returning for 2026, Getting Word’s Black Family History Symposium will explore how Black families continue to reshape and refine America’s origin story. Held on Saturday, February 7, 2026, at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, this year’s symposium centers on the theme “REFOUNDING LEGACIES.”

As the nation approaches the 250th anniversary of its founding, conversations about American history are intensifying. This milestone invites us to confront the gap between the nation’s written history and lived reality, especially for African American families whose stories have long been pushed to the margins. Black families have always offered their own edits, additions, and corrections to the American Story, preserving accounts of kinship resilience, creativity, and generational memory that challenge and enrich our national understanding.

This free event includes a catered lunch. Whether you are beginning your family history journey or continuing a long tradition of research and storytelling, this symposium offers space to learn, share, and build community.

Check out the Black Family History Symposium schedule below and register here.


2026 Black Family History Symposium Schedule

09:30 AM – 10:00 AM

Breakfast/Check-in


10:00 AM – 10:15 AM

Opening Remarks

10:15 AM – 11:15 AM

Panel: Stories We Carry: Reclaiming History through Family Storytelling

Justin Reid, Jari Honora, Raja’Nee Redmond, Cainan Townsend

Highlighting individuals who have used the stories of their families and communities to deepen, complicate and humanize the narrative of American history. Through oral histories, personal archives, and intergenerational storytelling, panelists demonstrate how communal memory can reveal overlooked dimensions of the national story, challenging myths, filling silences, and reframing what we think we know about America’s past. As the nation approaches its 250th anniversary, this conversation invites attendees to consider how personal narratives shape collective understanding and why the history of a nation is incomplete without the voices of the families and communities who lived it.


11:15 AM – 11:30 AM

Networking Break

11:30 AM – 12:30 PM

Panel: Vessels of Kinship: African American Families and the Making of America

Lorenzo Dickerson, Yunina Barbour-Payne, Dr. Derek Hicks, Jabari Jefferson

Across generations, African Americans families have preserved their histories not only through written accounts but through the living traditions that sustain them. This panel explores the many ways legacies are passed down through food and recipes that hold ancestral memory, land that grounds community identity, music that carries story, and faith that nurtures resilience. Panelists will share how these forms of heritage serve as vessels of history, connecting past to present and shaping a sense of self across time. By centering the everyday practices through which families remember and honor their lineage, this discussion reveals how heritage becomes a language of survival, creativity, and cultural continuity within the African American experience.


12:30 PM – 01:30 PM

Lunch

Catered lunch is included with registration.


01:00 PM – 02:00 PM

Lunch & Learn: Black History Month Centennial Reflections w/ Dr. Robert Vinson

Dr. Robert Vinson, Tiana Woodard

02:00 PM – 03:00 PM

Community Tabling Break


03:00 PM – 04:00 PM

Workshop: Archiving

Brittany Murray (UVA Special Collections), Regina Rush ( UVA Special Collections)

Workshop 3: Archiving In this workshop, attendees will gain foundational skills in archiving, including organizing, cataloging, and managing historical materials. The session covers best practices for digital and physical archives, ensuring that valuable documents and artifacts are preserved and accessible for future generations.

03:00 PM – 04:00 PM

Workshop: Genealogy

Workshop 2: Genealogy This workshop explores the fundamentals of genealogy and family history research. Participants will learn how to build their family trees, uncover historical records, and navigate key research tools. Through guided activities, this session equips attendees with the skills to trace their roots and connect with their heritage in meaningful ways.

03:00 PM – 04:00 PM

Workshop: Oral History

Jenna Owens, Tiana Woodard

Workshop 1: Oral History This workshop dives into the art and technique of oral history. Participants will gain practical guidance and tools on how to conduct meaningful interviews, capture personal narratives, and document family and community stories with authenticity and respect.

04:00 PM – 04:15 PM

Networking Break


04:15 PM – 05:15 PM

Panel: Family Reunion: Descendant Organizing and Community Remembrance

Niya Bates, Dr. Joy Banner, Muriel Branch, Star Reams

This panel examines how Black descendant organizations across the nation are defining what it means to remember, recognize, and reclaim the stories of their ancestors. Through storytelling, dialogue, and reflection, panelists will explore how descendant-lead initiatives are advancing the work of historical recovery, restoring connections, strengthening belonging, and expanding self determination across generations. This conversation illuminates the vital role descendant organizations play in preserving Black history and ensuring that the narratives of their communities continue to shape the story of America.

05:15 PM – 05:30 PM

Closing Remarks

Q&A: Filmmaker Lorenzo Dickerson Joins Getting Word as Digital and Oral Historian

Instead of exploring unfamiliar territory, filmmaker Lorenzo Dickerson often turns the camera back on his world, sharing stories of his own family history and beloved Albemarle County with the larger world. 

Through his production company, Maupintown Media, Dickerson revisits old stories fed to him by his elders, filling in the gaps of their memories with a new perspective. His movies and annual Maupintown Film Festival allow locals of all ages to engage with stories of the past and present.

Dickerson brings his talents to Getting Word as the department’s new digital and oral historian. He started on December 1.  

In his new role, Dickerson will spearhead new, innovative ways to share the department’s work with audiences at home and on-site. An Albemarle County native, Dickerson will also tap into his deep knowledge of local Black history to highlight the myriad connections between Monticello’s enslaved community and Charlottesville’s African American community. (Can you tell that we’re thrilled to have him here?) 

Dickerson recently spoke with Tiana Woodard, a Getting Word research and oral historian, about his love for history, his road to filmmaking, and his earliest memories of Monticello.  

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. 

Tiana Woodard: What are your earliest memories of history?  

Lorenzo Dickerson: When I was a child, I used to sit at my paternal grandmother’s feet while she read the Bible. I would ask her to tell me stories of the olden days, which is what I called it. She would tell me stories of walking to school, meeting my grandfather. We lived in Cobham at the time, and the entire road is family.  

TW: Why is this such a poignant memory for you?  

LD: Because I spent so much time with elders in my family. Both my parents worked, and so when I was too young to go to school, I spent a lot of time with my grandmother, great-aunts and great-uncles. When I was really young, my babysitter was my great-great aunt, and she passed away at 106 years old. I was the oldest grandkid, and I spent a lot of time with the elders just listening. The stories they would tell sparked my interest in storytelling from the beginning. 

TW: How did film become your main medium? 

LD: The first film I made was actually when I was building my family tree. I had moved away from Charlottesville at that time, and I was coming back here every weekend to do research at the Albemarle County Courthouse or the Library of Virginia in Richmond. I would find information and tell my family, ‘Oh, guess what I found? I found this marriage certificate. I found this.’ But by the next weekend, they had already forgotten what I told them. They couldn’t put it all together. So, I said, ‘You know what? Why don’t I make a film, and that way you can watch it and really understand the full story? ‘ And I fell in love with film from there.  

Lorenzo showing his son, Jude, the ropes.

TW: I know you’ve made several films since then. But was there a moment when you could see your impact from your work in real time, and what was it?  

LD: I really saw it when I made a film called “Albemarle’s Black Classrooms,” which told the history of African American education in Albemarle County from emancipation to the present. Making this film also meant uncovering a lot of information, including the first 26 Black students to attend desegregated schools. We then put up historic markers for those students.  

Producing “Albemarle’s Black Classrooms” also helped us understand how these schools were named. I presented our findings in a talk called “History is the Present,” and this kicked off a school name review in Albemarle County. Since then, they’ve renamed several schools that didn’t match the school system’s mission. I’ve spent a lot of time in classrooms with K-12 students presenting and helping them to understand this history, process and I can see how it’s opened a lot of their eyes as to what history actually is. It also showed them that the folks who lived that history still live in our area today. 

I didn’t get that history in school. No one brought folks into the classroom to share their experiences. It’s great now that they’re learning this history today. 

TW: So, you’re local, and I know a lot of locals grew up visiting Monticello for school. What do you remember about these visits?  

LD: Monticello was probably the most popular field trip, but back then, we never discussed Monticello’s Black history The focus was really on Thomas Jefferson’s accomplishments, as far as inventions and French fries and the polygraph. I don’t even remember slavery being mentioned. 

TW: How does it feel coming to work at a Monticello that is markedly different, at least in interpretation, than what it was during your childhood? 

LD: It feels full circle to me for several reasons. For one, I used to come here as a child on field trips when the story of Monticello and Thomas Jefferson was told in a different way. It’s full circle to be here and be a part of a like-minded team that is helping Monticello tell a more inclusive story. But it’s also full circle because for my very first film, “The Coachman,” I interviewed Lucia “Cinder” Stanton.  

TW: That’s funny. Cinder lives everywhere here. She’s like an omniscient being. Anyways, what makes you most excited about joining Getting Word? 

LD: There are two things. I’m excited to help with storytelling via media, for sure. I’m also really excited about helping to connect Monticello and the descendants to the local Charlottesville-Albemarle community. 

TW: What else would you want readers to know?  

LD: After my first day, I went home, and I told my wife just how great the people are at Getting Word, and how smart they are. It’s great to be around like-minded people that are really serious about doing this work. I’m sure I will bring some things to the table, but I will learn a lot, too.  

Check out some of Lorenzo’s work below: