Outside of the Gatekeepers is a rigorously grounded family history that examines the overlooked lives of African Americans whose labor sustained America's founding estates while their identities remained largely unrecorded. For more than fifty years, Eliza Coleman served as gatekeeper at Monticello, the plantation home of Thomas Jefferson. Stationed at the threshold of one of the nation's most iconic landmarks, Coleman regulated access to power, property, and privilege-yet her own life existed beyond the margins of official historical narratives. Authored by her descendant, Hugh Carter, this work blends genealogical research, historical context, and intergenerational memory to explore the lived experience of Black families whose roles were essential to the operation of early American institutions. Rather than focusing on the architecture or legacy of the estate itself, this book centers the human presence at its gates-the individuals entrusted with responsibility but denied authorship of their own historical record. Outside of the Gatekeepers contributes to African American history, public history, and family historiography by interrogating who is preserved in archives, who is omitted, and why. It invites readers to reconsider the boundaries of American historical memory and the unseen lives that sustained it.
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