Before someone else tells it — she's telling it herself.
The Free Man's Line is a documentary-grade family history archive spanning 500 years, 185 documented ancestors, and the full sweep of North American history as lived by one Black American family rooted in Oklahoma.
Season 1: The Ancestors — individual deep dives on the people at the root of the line, from 1517 through the colonial era.
Season 2: The Freedmen — the Dawes era, Oklahoma, and the generation that raised Manley Ray Bell.
Season 3: The Living Line — first-hand testimony from family members who remember. Coming when it's ready.
This podcast begins with a question: what happens when you go looking for your family's history and find out they were there for all of it?
Every record, name, and date was verified by Courtney, granddaughter of Manley Ray "Bubba" Bell. The technology is a tool. The history is real.
This archive was researched and produced with the assistance of large language model technology. Click here to read MY reasoning or visit faafo.app and search for "i said yes. and i would do it again."
The anchor of this archive is Manley Ray "Bubba" Bell, born 1927 in Oklahoma, died 2003. His granddaughter — Courtney, known as Sisi — built this archive after years of meticulous genealogical research. What she found was not a simple family tree. It was a map of America.
The line begins in 1517 with a Powhatan woman named Amopotuske — Scent Flower — born at the confluence of two rivers in Virginia, ninety years before the English arrived at Jamestown. Her son Opechancanough became the most feared military leader the Powhatan world produced. His descendants carried the line westward through Cherokee diplomatic courts, including a direct ancestor who traveled to London in 1730 and negotiated face-to-face with King George II.
From there the line runs through the Chickasaw Nation — through the Colbert dynasty, one of the most powerful and controversial families in Indigenous American history. Through the Trail of Tears. Through the Dawes Rolls. Through a man named King Blue, a Chickasaw Freedman who spent decades petitioning Congress for citizenship, and when the letters stopped working, organized an armed rebellion at nearly 70 years old to protect his family's homes from illegal land seizure.
It runs through Buck Franklin, who purchased his own family's freedom penny by penny on Sunday mornings, then walked the same removal routes as a free man. Through B.C. Franklin, who set up a law office in a canvas tent in the smoldering ashes of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and sued the city of Tulsa — and won. Through John Hope Franklin, whose scholarship helped dismantle legal school segregation in America. Through Dora Bell, who survived Jim Crow not by staying quiet, but by collecting the secrets of the men who ran the town.
The philosophy anchoring this archive is FAAFO — the Doctrine of Natural Consequence. Not an internet meme. A multi-generational survival strategy practiced by this family long before anyone gave it a name. The refusal to ask permission. The understanding of leverage. The knowledge that empires can be made to pay.
This is not a simple family tree. It is a map of America.
Website: Bloodline.faafo.app
Genealogical source: Angela Walton-Raji Family tree documentation: P. Pierson (family) Archive and creative direction: Courtney C (Sisi in Brasil)