In 2023, the Alexandria Library, Special Collection, and Local History hosted the first Alexandria African American Family Reunion. This event focused on increasing the library’s collection of pictures and artifacts of African Americans who once lived or are still living in Alexandria.
Many people contributed pictures at that event, and even a family Bible was given to the library. Through the collection of photographs, I met Freida Bell Brockington.
She donated pictures from her family, including pictures of her father. In a conversation with Freida, she told me that her father worked for the government but was also a photographer. I only knew one early well-known African American photographer who took pictures in Alexandria during the 1930s—1970s, Elrich W. Murphy.
Freida’s story stayed with me. I felt that her family history was a part of Alexandria’s history and needed to be told. An opportunity came to tell her story when I came across a 1922 article about a man who died in Alexandria delivering supplies for the Masonic Temple. This man’s name was John S. Bell. I called Freida and asked her whether she had a story in her family about the Masonic Temple. Immediately, she told me that her great-grandfather had something to do with the Masonic Temple. In addition, she told me that the last three generations on her paternal side were named John Bell, and each John had a different middle name and used their middle name as an initial. There was John J. Bell, her father; John A. Bell, her grandfather; and John S. Bell, her great-grandfather. That was enough information for me to research.
I researched Freida’s great-grandfather, John S. Bell, back to Winchester, VA. Her second great-grandfather, John Bell, was born in Winchester, VA, in 1845 and was listed on the 1860 Census as a free boy at 15. He was living in the household of his mother, Catharine Bell. There were also other children in the household besides John. These children were Emily, age 17; Martha, age 6; Queen, age 4; and Mary, age 1. They were John’s siblings.
If it weren’t for Freida’s participation in the Alexandria African American Family Reunion, where she donated pictures to the library, I would have never known she was connected to a man who took part in building the Alexandria Masonic Temple.
The 2025 Alexandria African American Family Reunion will be on September 6, 2025, at the Alexandria Barrett Library on Queen Street. Please attend and donate copies of your family’s pictures. It just might be a researcher like me who uncovers your family history.
On February 27, 2025, check out the second blog posting of the Bell family with an interview with John A. Bell’s grandson, Andrew “Andy” Evans.
Please read the Alexandria Gazette Newspaper titled, “The Ringing Success of the Bell Family: “A family’s historical connection to Alexandria and the Masonic Temple.” The article is on page 3, https://connectionarchives.com/PDF/2025/020525/Alexandria.pdf
