but her own daughter and we have a photograph of our own daughter, margaret ann, who would have been my great aunt margaret, was sold away from family. they never saw her again. and so my grandfather, who was a baptist minister and helen burroughs, a minister, and he writes he said, you know, if i only knew where her lifeless body was, i would tell my children and my children's children. and so i am telling you about margaret and but lucy obviously worked hard that orphanage because she knew that there were children out there like margaret ann who were taken. and now that organization is still in existence. lucy's picture is is up there. now, what i tell that story, because it's not about me. it's really not it's not really about my family. it's about history is about the nature of a slave system in a city which is very different from the nature of a slave system, a plantation you know, it's about slaves who were owned by institutions. my grandfather was owned by a tobacco factory at seven years old. his went around lucy trying to find a quote, friendly buyer that was a pattern. and p