Edward Ball (American author)

Edward Ball
Born1958 (age 65–66)
Savannah, Georgia, U.S.
OccupationAuthor, journalist
Alma materBrown University
Years activeSince 1987
Website
edwardball.com

Edward Ball (born 1958) is an American author who has written multiple works on topics such as history and biography. He is best known for works that explore the complex past of his family, whose members were major rice planters and slaveholders in South Carolina for nearly 300 years. One of his more well known works is based around an African-American family, descended from one member of this family and an enslaved woman, whose members became successful artists and musicians in the Jazz Age.

The Ball Family Slaveholder Index (BFSI) reports that between 1698 and 1865, six generations of the Ball family "owned more than twenty rice plantations in Lowcountry South Carolina and enslaved nearly 4,000 Africans and African Americans."[1] Edward Ball, who completed his MA in 1984, worked as a freelance journalist before he began researching and writing about his family's history of slaveholding.[2]

His books include Slaves in the Family (1998), which won a National Book Award. In Slaves in the Family, he described his great-great grandfather, Isaac Ball (1785-1825), a fifth generation member of the Ball family of slaveholders, who inherited the Comingtee plantation, near Charleston and owned 571 enslaved people.[1]

He was also recognized for his Life of a Klansman: A Family History in White Supremacy (2020). In the Life of a Klansman: A Family History in White Supremacy, he wrote about his maternal great-great-grandfather, Constant Lecorgne (1832 -n.d. ). At one time, he was officially classified as "colored," which denoted that he was a mulatto or a mixed race person at the time. Having European ancestors, he changed his name and passed as white. He became an "embittered racist."[3][4]

  1. ^ a b "Ball Family Slaveholder Index (BFSI)". Lowcountry Africana. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  2. ^ "Slaves in the Family". archive.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference NYT_Isaacson_20200804 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ "A Family With a Past", Radcliffe, Harvard, Summer 2017