Democracy Dies in Darkness

He unearthed his roots. Now he digs up lost stories of enslaved people.

‘Once I find depths of information, I want to give it to the people I think it was stolen from,’ John Mills said

February 6, 2024 at 8:05 a.m. EST
John Mills at the Connecticut State Library. (Alex Breanne Corporation)
8 min

John Mills never gave his surname much thought — until he learned where it came from.

When he was in his late 20s, Mills dove into his family history, which he knew little about at the time. What he discovered disturbed him deeply.

Many of Mills’s ancestors were enslaved, he learned. His great-great-grandfather, Ned Mills, was the first to adopt the family surname. It was given to him by the man who enslaved him.