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Melungeon
'Melungeon' is a term traditionally applied to one of a number of so-called "tri-racial isolate" groups of the Eastern United States, found mainly in Appalachia, especially Eastern Tennessee, Southwestern Virginia, and Eastern Kentucky. "Tri-racial" refers to populations of mixed European, sub-Saharan African, and Native American ancestry, and "isolate" refers to "genetic isolate," that is, a group that has maintained to some degree a distinct ethnic identity, though is not necessarily isolated in a geographic or cultural sense. Although there is no consensus on how many such groups exist, estimates range as high as 200. http://www.geocities.com/BourbonStreet/Inn/1024/carmel1/Carmel1.htm Originally, the term "Melungeon" referred exclusively to one tri-racial isolate group, the descendants of the multiracial Collins, Gibson and a few other related families of Newman's Ridge, Vardy Valley and other traditional Melungeon settlements in and around Hancock County, Tennessee. Some researchers have limited it even further to the descendants of two early 19th century settlers of that area, Vardy Collins and his brother-in-law Shepherd Gibson. Since about the mid-1990s, however, there has arisen a tendency, especially among amateur researchers, to see Melungeon as a very broad category encompassing almost all traditionally recognized tri-racial isolate groups of the Eastern United States. Melungeons are a highly controversial subject, and there is wide disagreement among secondary sources as to their ethnic, linguistic, cultural and geographic origins and identity. Whether Melungeons constitute a specific race or ethnicity at all is debatable, and they might more accurately be described as a loose collection of families of diverse origins who migrated alongside and intermarried with one another. The United States government recognizes the Melungeons as an ethnic group to the extent that a census category has existed for some time for Melungeons. For the 2000 Census it was "662 Melungeons" under "SOME OTHER RACE 600-999". http://www.census.gov/sdc/www/appendixg.txt Melungeons are defined as having racially mixed ancestry, thus do not exhibit characteristics which can be incontrovertibly classified as being of a single racial phenotype. Most modern-day descendants of Appalachian families traditionally regarded as Melungeon are generally Caucasian in appearance, often, though not always, with dark hair and eyes, and a swarthy or olive complexion. Descriptions of Melungeons vary widely from observer to observer, from "Middle Eastern" to "Native American" to "light-skinned African American." A major factor in the wide variation in descriptions is the lack of a clear consensus on exactly who should be included under the term Melungeon. Almost every author on this subject gives a slightly different list of Melungeon-associated surnames, but the British surnames Collins and Gibson appear most frequently (genealogist Pat Elder calls them "core" surnames). Many researchers also include Bowling, Bunch, Denham, Goins, Goodman, Minor, Mise, Moore, Mullins, Williams, and several others (though this does not mean that all families with these surnames are Melungeon). Not all of these families were necessarily of the same racial background, and each line should be examined individually. Ultimately, the answer to the question "Who or what are Melungeons?" depends largely on which families are included under that designation. OriginsA common belief about Melungeons is that they are an indigenous people of Appalachia, existing there before the arrival of the first white settlers. However, as evidenced by a range of tax, court, census and other records, the ancestors of the Melungeons followed the same migration paths into the region as their English, Scotch-Irish, and German neighbors. The likely background to the mixed-race families later to be designated as "Melungeons" was the emergence in the Chesapeake Bay region in the 17th century of what historian Ira Berlin (1998) calls "Atlantic Creoles." These were freed slaves and indentured servants of European, West African, and Native American ancestry (and not just North American, but also Caribbean, Central and South American Indian: see Forbes (1993)). Some of these "Atlantic Creoles" were culturally what today might be called "Hispanic" or "Latino," bearing names such as "Chavez," "Rodriguez," and "Francisco." Many of them intermarried with their English neighbors, adopted English surnames, and even owned slaves. Early Colonial America was very much a "melting pot" of peoples, but not all of these early multiracial families were necessarily ancestral to the later Melungeons. Genealogists Dr Virginia E. DeMarce and Paul Heinegg, as well as Melungeon descendant Jack Goins, have traced the "core" Gibson and Collins families back to Louisa County, Virginia in the early 1700s. http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Church_Cotanch.htm These families migrated in the first half of the 18th century from Virginia to North and South Carolina. The Collins, Gibson, and Ridley families owned land adjacent to one another in Orange County, North Carolina, where they and the Bunch family were "free Molatas (mulattos)" taxable on "Black" tithes in 1755. http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/nc/orange/census/earlytax.txt Beginning about 1767, the ancestors of the Melungeons moved northwestwards to the New River area of Virginiahttp://www.newrivernotes.com/nrv.htm Not long after, Melungeon Collins and Gibson families were members of Stony Creek Baptist Church in nearby Scott County, Virginia, where they appear to have been treated as social equals of the white members. The earliest documented use of the term "Melungeon" is found in the minutes of this church http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/va/scott/church/stonycrk.txt From Virginia and North Carolina they crossed into Kentucky and Tennessee. The earliest known Melungeon in Northeast Tennessee was Millington Collins, who executed a deed in Hawkins County in 1802. Several Collins and Gibson households appear in Floyd County, Kentucky in 1820, when they are listed as "free persons of color". http://www.rootsweb.com/~kyfloyd/Mis_files/1820census.htm Despite migrating alongside the early European settlers of Appalachia, it is obvious that the pre-20th century Melungeons were not of purely European ancestry themselves. Over the course of the 18th and early 19th centuries, they were most frequently designated as "mulatto," "other free," or as "free persons of color." Sometimes they were listed as "white," sometimes as "black" or "negro", but almost never as "Indian." One family described as "Indian" was the Melungeon-related Ridley family, listed as such on a 1767 Pittsylvania County, Virginia tax list http://www.rootsweb.com/~vapittsy/tith.htm Kennedy (1994) characterizes this gradual change of the Melungeons from a "mulatto" to a "white" population as an "ethnic cleansing." However, the historical evidence reveals that these families facilitated their own assimilation through voluntary intermarriage with whites, leading to an increasingly lighter appearance among descendants. A second important factor in this shift from "mulatto" to "white" was the often imprecise and ambiguous definitions of the racial categories "mulatto" and "free person of color." In the British North American colonies and the United States at various times in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries "mulatto" could mean a mixture of African and European, African and Native American, European and Native American, or all three, as documented by historian Jack D. Forbes (1993). This loose terminology could sometimes lead to wholesale reclassifications of indigenous peoples, as in the case of the Indians of Delaware: http://www.heite.org/Indians/invisible.html The families known as "Melungeons" in the 19th century were generally well integrated into the communities in which they lived, though this is not to say that racism was never a factor in their social interactions. However, records show that on the whole they enjoyed the same rights as whites. For example, they held property, voted, and served in the Army; some, such as the Gibsons, had even owned slaves in the 18th century.http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Gibson_Gowen.htm LegendsIn spite of being culturally and linguistically identical to their white neighbors, these multiracial families were of a sufficiently different physical appearance to invite speculation as to their identity and origins. Sometime during the first half of the 19th century, the pejorative term "Melungeon" began to be applied to these families, thus effectively creating an ethnic group that did not previously exist. It would therefore be anachronistic to speak of "Melungeons" prior to that period. Local traditions soon began to arise about this "people" who lived in the hills of Eastern Tennessee. According to Pat Elder, the earliest of these was that they were "Indian" (often specifically "Cherokee"). Melungeon descendant Jack Goins states, however, that the Melungeons themselves claimed to be both Indian and "Portuguese." One early Melungeon was called "Spanish" ("Spanish Peggy" Gibson, wife of Vardy Collins). Despite the scant evidence, Iberian (Spanish and/or Portuguese) and Native American ancestry are both possible given the history of multiracial families in the Melungeons' time and place of origin (late 17th century-early 18th century Eastern Virginia). However, claims about such ancestry made by Melungeon descendants in the 19th century or later should not necessarily be taken at face value. Many Southern families with multiracial ancestry have claimed Portuguese or American Indian (specifically Cherokee) ancestry as a strategy for denying any African ancestry. Although the available historical evidence makes a specific tribal origin such as Cherokee highly unlikely for the original Melungeon families, some of their descendants may have later intermarried with families of Cherokee ancestry in Eastern Tennessee. Anthropologist E. Raymond Evans (1979), regarding the Cherokee claims of the Melungeons of Graysville, Tennessee, writes: :"In Graysville, the Melungeons strongly deny their Black heritage and explain their genetic differences by claiming to have had Cherokee grandmothers. Many of the local whites also claim Cherokee ancestry and appear to accept the Melungeon claim....". A much more recent claim of a specific tribal origin for Melungeons is Saponi, an early Virginia Siouan tribe. Elder (1999) suggests that the Saponi and other tribes who resided for a time at Fort Christanna in Virginia may have been a component of Melungeon ancestry. Historian C. S. Everett initially hypothesized that John Collins the Sapony Indian, who was expelled from Orange County, Virginia about January 1743 for firing at a white planter, might be the same man as the Melungeon ancestor John Collins, called a "mulatto" in 1755 North Carolina. However, Everett has subsequently revised that position. These were two different men, and only the latter has any proven connection to the Melungeons (see also http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Church_Cotanch.htm During the 19th and 20th centuries, speculation on Melungeon origins continued, producing tales of shipwrecked sailors, lost colonists, hoards of silver, and ancient peoples such as the Carthaginians. With each author, more elements were added to the mythology surrounding this group, and more peoples were added to the list of possible Melungeon ancestors. The most influential of these early authors was probably Will Allen Dromgoole, who wrote several articles on the Melungeons in the 1890s. http://www.geocities.com/ourmelungeons/articles.html Currently, a casual reader of Internet sources on this group might be left with the impression that there exists in the hills of Eastern Tennessee an enclave of people, probably of Mediterranean or Middle Eastern origin, who have been in the area since before the arrival of the first white settlers. Such romantic fictions find no support among academic historians and genealogists, however. Dr. Virginia E. DeMarce, former president of the National Genealogical Society, and author of several articles on the Melungeons, said in a 1997 interview: :"It's not that mysterious once you...do the nitty gritty research one family at a time...basically the answer to the question of where did Tennessee's mysterious Melungeons come from is three words. And the three words are Louisa County, Virginia." EtymologyThere are many hypotheses about the etymology of the term "Melungeon". Kennedy (1994) speculates that it derives from the Turkish melun can (from Arabic "mal`un jinn" ????? ???) which means "damned soul". Another theory traces the word to malungu, a Luso-African root from Angola meaning "shipmate". http://www.eclectica.org/v5n3/hashaw.html The earliest known written use of the word "Melungeon" is in an 1813 Scott County, Virginia Stony Creek Baptist Church record: :"Then came forward Sister Kitchen and complained to the church against Susanna Stallard for saying she harbored them Melungins. Sister Sook said she was hurt with her for believing her child and not believing her, and she won't talk to her to get satisfaction, and both is 'pigedish', one against the other. Sister Sook lays it down and the church forgives her." The usage of this word in the minutes without definition suggests it was a word familiar to the congregation, and appears at first glance to refer to a group of people: this is how Goins (2000) and others read it. However, such a reading seems at odds with the fact that several Melungeons were at the time members of the church, namely Thomas and Charles Gibson and Valentine Collins. Also, there is no record of any group called "Melungeons" prior to this time. As suggested by Joanne Pezzullo and Karlton Douglas http://www.melungeons.com/articles/morm032002.htm By 1840 "Melungeon" had apparently become a racial pejorative, at least in Tennessee: a Jonesborough, Tennessee newspaper article of that year entitled "Negro Speaking!" refers to a competing politician in derogatory fashion first as "an impudent Malungeon from Washington Cty, a scoundrel who is half Negro and half Indian", then as a "free negroe". http://www.geocities.com/ourmelungeons/whig.html There seems to be no written evidence to demonstrate the process whereby a word meaning "ill will" in 1813 had come to mean a "half Negro ... half Indian" or "free negroe" by 1840. Even today, though, some people in Eastern Tennessee still use the term to mean something like "boogeyman", suggesting a possible intermediate stage. Several other uses of the term from mid-19th to early 20th century print media have been collected at this http://www.geocities.com/ourmelungeons/articles.html Website Modern identityThe term "Melungeon" was traditionally considered an insult, a label applied to Appalachian whites who were by appearance or reputation of mixed-race ancestry, though who were not clearly either "black" or "Indian". In Southwest Virginia, the roughly synonymous term "Ramp" was also used, though this term has never shed its pejorative character. Thanks to a play, however, "Melungeon" began about the late 1960s to lose this negative connotation, and become a self-applied designation of ethnicity. As described in a 1968 Kingsport, Tennessee newspaper article http://www.geocities.com/ourmelungeons/drama.html Interest in the group has grown tremendously since the mid-1990s due to the publication of N. Brent Kennedy's popular book on his claimed Melungeon roots, as well as to the Internet, where numerous websites devoted to the "mysterious" Melungeons may be found. Together with this growth in interest, and perhaps because of it, the number of individuals claiming Melungeon heritage has vastly increased. Many newly self-identifying Melungeons have no demonstrable connections to the families historically known by that term, and often had been completely unaware of either the term or the group until encountering them on the Internet. Some individuals begin to self-identity as Melungeons only after reading about this group on a website, and finding that their surname is on an ever-growing list of "Melungeon-associated" surnames, or they have certain physical traits or conditions purportedly indicative of such ancestry.http://genforum.genealogy.com/melungeon/ DNA testingAt the suggestion of N. Brent Kennedy, a DNA study on Melungeons was carried out in 2000 by Dr. Kevin Jones, using 130 hair and cheek cell samples. These samples were taken from subjects who were largely chosen by Kennedy himself as representative of Melungeon lines. The results revealed a very mixed population of Eurasian, Native American and African ancestry, but did not prove anything definitively. http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/read/Melungeon/2002-06/1024535276 More recently, Jack Goins has started a http://www.jgoins.com/core_melungeon.htm Core Melungeon DNA Project Similar groupsOther so-called "tri-racial isolate" populations include the:
Each of these groupings of mixed-race populations has a particular history, and there is evidence for connections between some of them. The Goins have long been identified as Melungeons by people from the rest of Tennessee, and the surname Goins is also found among the Lumbees. In his Foreword to the section on Virginia, North, and South Carolina in Heinegg's work on free African Americans, historian Ira Berlin sums up the history of such groups thus:
:"Heinegg's genealogical excavations reveal that many free people of color passed as whites--sometimes by choosing ever lighter spouses over succeeding generations. Even more commonly, they claimed Indian ancestry. Some free people of color invented tribal designations out of whole cloth. Here Heinegg, entering into an area of considerable controversy, explodes what he declares the "fantastic" claims of many so-called tri-racial isolates." http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/foreword.htm References
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