I also included one question that the tour guides could not answer: "Is there a slave burial site on the Wakefield property?" Jolie's response to that question gave me a lot of new information about the plantation. This is what I learned from her email:
- She and her husband, Dr. Eugene Berry, acquired the Wakefield Antebellum Home in 1988 and are the first owners who are not Stirling family descendants.
- They acquired 50 acres, the remainder of the original 63,000 acres after many divisions and losses through the years!
- No slave quarters or production buildings (as sugar mill, cotton gin, grist mill, granary) exists.
- At the peak of Lewis and Sarah Stirling's acquisition of land, the Wakefield Plantation comprised 62,000 acres!
- Jolie did not know of a slave burial grounds on the Wakefield. Because of the vast acreage, slaves could be buried anywhere.
- Jolie said that the land for St. Mary's Church and Burial Ground was a gift of a Stirling family descendant in 1880. (author's note: A plaque on the church indicates that the church was established in 1880.)
- More land was given by another family descendant in 1990 with a request that a fence be constructed to encompass, protect and delineate the church burial ground - the areas of the graves having exceeded the boundaries of the original gift of land.
- There are at least two Union soldiers who were buried in unmarked graves according to family speculation.
- Lilie Stirling Sinclair placed the family documents in the LSU Library in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
- Jolie asked if I and others would keep them informed about the history of the Wakefield and those whose lives were an integral part of the history of the Wakefield and the Felicianas.