Showing posts with label Melungeons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melungeons. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

An American mystery ? a review....

I recently received an email from a Goins family researcher labeled "They are still in Denial" the email only contained a link: http://tinyurl.com/hrqd8b5

So I clicked on the link, it opened an article titled "An American mystery, Down in the valley, up on the ridge", published on a site from their 'print edition', 'The Economist'. What mystery ? I had never heard of the 'Newspaper' before, so I looked up who they are  'The Economist' :

"The Economist is an English-language weekly newspaper owned by the Economist Group and edited in offices based in London.  Continuous publication began under founder James Wilson in September 1843. For historical reasons, The Economist refers to itself as a newspaper, but each print edition appears on small glossy paper like a news magazine. In 2006, its average weekly circulation was reported to be 1.5 million, about half of which were sold in the United States......

The Economist claims that it "is not a chronicle of economics." It takes an editorial stance of classical and economic liberalism which is supportive of free trade, globalization, free immigration and cultural liberalism  (such as supporting legal recognition for same-sex marriage or drug liberalization). The publication has described itself as  "a product of the Caledonian liberalism of Adam Smith and David Hume......

On the contents page of each newsmagazine, The Economist's mission statement is written in italics.
It states that The Economist was "First published in September 1843 to take part in 'a severe contest
between intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing our progress.".......

The publication belongs to the Economist Group. It is 50% owned by the English branch of the Rothschild family and by the Agnelli family through its holding company Exor. The remaining 50% is held by private investors including  the editors and staff. The Rothschilds and the Agnellis are represented on the board of directors."

 I have no idea who wrote this article, as it appears to be written anonymously. Why that is I have no idea. I thought I'd write  a short review of this classic example of 'yellow journalism'. With that said, I was glad the writer went to the Newman Ridge/Blackwater area to write this article

If you have read this blog before, you would know that I believe there never were a people who identified or called themselves Melungeons, In fact the opposite it was a term that others called them, to the people who were called Melungeons it was an insult, could maybe even get you killed.

I'm a traditionalist in my work with my families history. I don't go for all the haywire unproven theories. The truth is in the history and genealogy of each family line, and this includes genetic genealogy. "genealogy without documentation is mythology” 

I descend from Valentine Collins and Ludicia (Dicey) Gibson. Who left the Newman Ridge/Blackwater area of East Tennessee and migrated to the hills of Eastern Kentucky in the early 1800's.

On with my review, this article is horrible, not historically accurate, and repeats myth after myth, that has been proven to be myth. It's more like a cheap gossip column.

"The story of the Melungeons is at once a footnote to the history of race in America and a timely parable of it. They bear witness to the horrors and legacy of segregation, but also to the overlooked complexity of the early colonial era. They suggest a once-and-future alternative to the country’s brutally rigid model of race relations"

Pure race baiting, Americans didn't write the race laws in colonial Virginia, the British did. Europeans brought racism to America, it wasn't created here. All the early racial slave laws and mixed marriage laws were written a 100 years before The United States of America was founded. They were British laws.

"Where did the Melungeons come from? And do they still exist?"

They didn't came from anyplace, they never did exist, it was a word a small group of mixed blood families were called by others. People who were called Melungins were 'Made in America'. They didn't come from some other place.

This article then goes on to rehash all the old myth's of Phoenicians, Moors, Portuguese, Sir Walter Raleigh, Sir Francis Drake. shipwrecked pirates  Madoc, crypto Jews, the lost tribe of Israel and the biggest myth of all, pre-Columbian Turkish explorers (making them America’s first Muslims).

The truth is the people who were called Melungeon were a  mixed blood people who mixed in the early 1600's , the mixture being of Africans, Europeans, and Native Americans.  DNA doesn't lie.

This writer includes a Doris Ulmann photo that they they have re-captioned "Daughter of Appalachia". There is no proof what so ever this woman in this photo has anything to do with the people who were called Melungeons in East Tennessee. If fact it is unknown where the photo was taken and who she is by name

Ulmann published this photo named “Monday”, in the final issue of 'Pictoral Phototograpy in America' (an image of a woman at her laundry). With the stroke of a pen it's relabeled “Monday, Melungeon Woman, probably North Carolina” in 1996, in the 'In Focus Doris Ulmann, Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum'. I don't know if 'Monday' is this  woman's name or is it the day of the week the photo was taken ? Monday used to be known as laundry day.

“Please be aware that the information available is limited to notes made years after the images were taken, by Ulmann's trustees, and therefore much is inaccurate. Doris Ulmann left no inventory of her images and her own descriptions exist only for the images she published in magazine articles.”

So my question is, why did this writer include this photo in an article written about the people who were called Melungeons of East Tennessee ? Doris Ulmann was never in Hawkins or Hancock Counties.

And what about the map used where the Cumberland Gap is shown way off mark ? The Cumberland Gap certainly isn't south east of Tazewell, TN, It's father west and north from where shown, where Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia meet. Looks like someone needs to take a refresher course in Appalachian geography.

"Then again, a hard-core “ridge only” faction repudiates the valley-dwellers."

 I have no idea who this writer is, but this statement is ridiculous, the term 'Ridge Only' means the people from the Newman Ridge area, after all Vardy Collins lived in 'the valley'. The Ridge Only argument came in resent times. The phrase was coined by researcher Joanne Pezzullo. The people who lived up on 'the ridge' and the people 'in the valley', were all interrelated. 

" Still others reasonably note that, especially during the exodus of Appalachians after the first world war, many Melungeons moved away. Racism, and the chance to “pass” for white elsewhere, gave them an added impetus."

What ? that is nothing more than 'race baiting' .  The fact is most if not all where enumerated as 'white' on the 1920 US Census. Their leaving Appalachia to go other places usually had to do people looking for work and getting jobs to feed their families. It just wasn't the mixed bloods that made the trip up hillbilly highway to find work in industry up north.

"Scott Withrow, the MHA’s hospitable president, says he, too, never heard of the Melungeons as a child, discovering them only as an adult. He has traced an 18th-century North Carolinian ancestor named Collins, one of the core Melungeon surnames, who may have been related to the Collinses of Hancock County, though incomplete records mean Mr Withrow can’t be sure. He hasn’t done a DNA test—though what, really, would it prove? His tolerant organisation does not require a pedigree: “We don’t get into who’s more Melungeon than others.” The Melungeons, he says, inarguably, “are part of the fabric of Appalachia. The fabric of America.” "


" He hasn’t done a DNA test—though what, really, would it prove?"  What would it prove ? If he took an atDNA test such as FTDNA's Family finder test, he for sure would find out if he is kin to the Collins' of Hancock Co TN, that were called Melungeons, plain and simple."

" His tolerant organization does not require a pedigree: “We don’t get into who’s more Melungeon than others.” The Melungeons, he says, inarguably, “are part of the fabric of Appalachia. The fabric of America.” "

"Tolerant" ? Oh please, enough of this Politically correct rubbish. The MHA should require a family tree for each member, other wise how would they know who descends from the people who were called Melungeons ?

"We don’t get into who’s more Melungeon than others.” What a ridiculous thing to say, it has nothing to do with who is 'more' Melungeon than others, it has to do with who descends from from the people who were called Melungeon. Maybe Mr. Withrow should examine the name of the 'Melungeon Heritage Association'. 

"The Melungeons, he says, inarguably, “are part of the fabric of Appalachia. The fabric of America."

I couldn't agree more, as long as the true history is stated !

Be sure and read the comment section of  The Economist article, here are my two favorites;

" Who created this astoundingly erroneous map?! Cumberland Gap is at the point where Tennessee, Virginia and Kentucky meet - not in the middle of East Tennessee! . . . what else is completely unreliable in this article?" another reader post this answer:

"Probably most of it is unreliable, given that everything that TE publishes has a progressive motive behind it. It will be a day worth celebrating when TE becomes a true academic publication that honors academic truth over liberal political bias."

My message to the writer of this article, nice try, but a very poor job, better luck next time.

That's my 2 cents....


Friday, May 13, 2016

Just The Facts........

 For anyone interested in the people who were called Melungins, this is a must read article:

"The Melungeon families came with and were part of the original pioneer settlers before they were labeled Melungeons. Arriving in East Tennessee on, or before 1790. The first U.S. census was conducted in 1790. Under the law the census takers were required to ascertain the number of inhabitants within their respective districts, omitting Indians not taxed, distinguishing free persons from all others, and noting the sex and color of all free persons."

Read the complete article here 'Summary Of Facts'

This article states:

"The male Y-DNA for Romani (Gypsies) Is HM82, and the female mtDNA Haplogroup for Romani Gypsies is M. Neither of these haplogroups is found in the Core Melungeon  Y, or mtDNA test results. And none are found in the Melungeon Families group of 277 members. The Goins Y-DNA project has 175 members and none with the Romani (Gypsies) haplogroup."

www.familytreedna.com/public/goins 

https://www.familytreedna.com/public/familiesofinterest/default.aspx

http://www.familytreedna.com/public/coremelungeon/ 

Curios, I took this one step farther and looked into the Bunch, Collins, and Gibson Projects and found the very same thing to be true, NO HM82 for Y-DNA

https://www.familytreedna.com/public/bunch?iframe=yresults

https://www.familytreedna.com/public/collins?iframe=yresults

https://www.familytreedna.com/public/gibson/default.aspx?section=yresults


Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Newman Ridge, Historical Home of the Melungeons


Beginning in 1849 and to this very day researchers have headed to Newman Ridge to find the Melungeons.

(Note :The first time the term 'Melungin' appears in writing, was in the1813 minutes of Stony Creek Church at Fort Blackmore)

LITTELL'S 1849
You must know that within ten miles of this owl's nest, there is a watering-place, known hereabouts as 'black-water Springs.' It is situated in a narrow gorge, scarcely half a mile wide, between Powell's Mountain and the Copper Ridge, and is, as you may suppose, almost inaccessible. A hundred men could defend the pass against even a Xerxian army. Now this gorge and the tops and sides of the adjoining mountains are inhabited by a singular species of the human animal called Melungeons.

BURNETT 1889
It appears that the Melungeons originally came into east Tennessee from North Carolina, and the larger number settled in what was at that time Hawkins County, but which is now Hancock. I have not been able to hear of them in any of the lower counties of east Tennessee,and those I have seen myself were in Cocke county, bordering on North Carolina.

DROMGOOLE 1890
The Ridge proper is the home of the Melungeons. These people, of whom so little is known, inhabit an isolated corner of the earth, known as Newman’s ridge, in Hancock county. First, I saw in an old newspaper some slight mention of them. With this tiny clue I followed their trail for three years. The paper merely stated that “somewhere in the mountains of Tennessee there existed a remnant of people called Malungeons,......I merely mention all this to show how the Malungeons of today are regarded, and to show how I tracked them to Newman Ridge in Hancock County

HUMBLE 1897
The Blackwater Valley lies between Mulberry and Newman Ridges, and is from half a mile to mile wide. Twenty years ago it was still a wilderness, but is now under good cultivation, and divided into small farms upon which are rather poor dwellings and outbuildings. In this valley and along Newman’s Ridge, reaching into Lee County, Virginia, are settled the people called Melungeons. Some have gone into Kentucky, chiefly into Pike County, others are scattered in adjacent territory.

OTIS 1900
These people are called the Malungeons....The Malungeons number between 400 and 500. They live on Black Water Creek, in Hancock County, which section they have inhabited for more than 100 years. The records of Hancock County show that the Malungeon ancestors came to Powell's Valley as early as 1789, when they took up lands on the Black Water.

JARVIS 1903
Greasy Rock Creek, a name by which it has ever since been known and called since, and here is the very place where these Melungeons settled, long after this, on Newman Ridge and Blackwater. ...these friendly “Indians” live in the mountains of Stony creek, but they have married among the whites until the race has almost become extinct. A few of the half bloods may be found-none darker- but they still retain the name of Collins and Gibson, etc. From here they came to Newman Ridge and Blackwater and many of them are here yet....

CONVERSE 1912
The northern end is drained by Blackwater Creek, which winds its way leisurely northeastward through narrow strips of verdant meadow land. Here, along the banks of this sparkling stream and on the top and eastern slope of Newman Ridge, is the home of the Melungeons.

WILSON 1914
Occasionally the student of ethnology may stumble upon a community that is a puzzle, as, for example, that one occupied by the 'Malungeons' of upper East Tennessee.

MOORE AND FOSTER
So far as is known they were first found in Hancock County on Newman Ridge, soon after the Revolutionary War. Now they are settled in several counties, although still most numerous in Hancock County.

PLECKER 1942-1930
We have in some of the counties of southwestern Virginia a number of so-called Melungeons who came into that section from Newman Ridge, Hancock County, Tennessee.........

August 5, 1930
Mr. J.P. Kelly.Trustee of Schools,
Gap,Lee County, Virginia

Dear Sir: office has had a great deal of trouble in reference to the persistence of a group of people living in that section known as "Melungeons", whose families came from Newman Ridge, Tennessee.

CAMBAIRE 1935
It seems the Melungeons came into Hancock County between 1810 and 1851.

OSBORNE 1947
From what I gathered from Uncle Wash, the Melungeons started coming to Wise and Scott Counties about 1820. These people came in about equal numbers from Kentucky from Newman Ridge and lower end of Lee County. A few came from North Carolina.

WORDEN 1947
Whatever they are—the Malungeons still are on Newman Ridge, in Hancock, Rhea and Hawkins counties of Tennessee, and a few across the border in Virginia. Many are scattered by ones or two miles from the isolated ridge top they occupied for so long.

E. PRICE
The persistent folk tale, however, insists that the Melungeons are unusual racially; it identifies them as a dark-skinned people whose center is on Newman Ridge in Hancock County. The Newman Ridge-Blackwater area seems to be the locality where they have the deepest roots.

VINCENT 1961
Colony of folks in this end of Tennessee settled along Newman Ridge, and on Mulberry Creek in what is now Hancock County, and a few miles out from Sneedville.

DAVIS 1963
Trapped in poverty, snubbed by their fair-skinned neighbors, some of them withdrew to the poor land along Snake Hollow, deep in the rattlesnake-infested gorge in the shadow of towering Newman Ridge. Some of them settled along the northern end of the valley, at the Virginia line, where Blackwater Creek flows, and some settled on the Ridge.

BERRY 1963
For a century and a half, the prolific Melungeons have migrated in all directions from Newman Ridge. .... There are fifteen hundred in Lee County, Virginia....Five hundred are in Scott Count, Virginia....A thousand are found in Wise County, where they are known as "Ramps."

GAMBLE
The only true Melungeons left, however, reside in the nearby mountainside areas known as Snake Hollow  and Mulberry Gap.

H. PRICE
They occupied Newman Ridge---rough and steep in places, but offering some table land and numerous hollows. Here they located near springs or creeks.

S. PRICE 1968
But whatever their origin, the group eventually settled in Hancock County, along Newman Ridge and in settlements known as Blackwater, Snake Hollow and Vardy.

NORDHEIMER 1970
Newman Ridge overlooks Sneedville, a poor community of about 700 persons near the Virginia border. In the early 19th century nearly 350 Melungeons settled on the ridge, coming down into the valley only on rare occasions to forage for wild vegetables and sell moonshine whiskey. They lived apart from the whites for generations. The ridge was a hilltop sanctuary against the outside world and its prejudice.

FETTERMAN (Price) 1970
They bore the Melungeon names which appear on Newman Ridge: Collins, Mullins, Brogan, Goins, Gibson, Bowlin. They were free of the restrictive legislation aimed at slaves and former slaves during the 1700s and 1800s.

YARBROUGH 1972
Those left in Snake Hollow, Blackwater, Vardy and Mulberry - are few in number, Most have left the hills for jobs in cities far and near. And time is catching up with those remaining. In 1931 there were 40 Melungeon families living on Newman Ridge above their ancestral home.

LYNCH 1973
And the white man forced them high into the Clinch Mountains, principally Newman Ridge just outside present day Sneedville, Hancock County, Tennessee.

BIBLE 1975
In East Tennessee, they have spilled over into the neighboring counties in an extension of the Hancock County families......  "Melungeon surnames were noted in southwestern Virginia as early as 1820, but the families were not classified until 1870, when the census enumerators in Lee County listed the county and state of birth of each person. Of forty-six families whose names suggest they were Melungeons, thirty had one or more members who had been born in  Hancock or Hawkins County. Eight had members born in Scott County, and at least one of these also had been born in Hancock County. One person was born in Letcher County, Kentucky of parents born in Hancock and Scott Counties. The adults of a Goins family (one of the few listed as mulatto) were born in Surry and Ashe Counties, North Carolina; their children were born in Knox, Hancock and Grainger Counties, Tennessee. This is the best direct evidence available to confirm the relationship between several different groups of Melungeons and the importance of Newman Ridge as a center of their dispersal, but it is evident that the secondary Melungeon localities were also fed from North Carolina and Virginia

HAUN nd
Most of the mountain people refer to them as Blackwaters and Ridgemanites.” But even in that long gorge, winding some 20 miles in a half-mile-wide band between Newman Ridge and Powell Mountain there are few “pure Melungeons” left today.

WINKLER 2003
The only people who were called Melungeon 100 years ago were those who lived in or near Hancock County, Tennessee--including Lee, Scott, and Wise Counties in southwest Virginia.

Hat Tip to Jack Goins
Text courtesy of the Melungeon Historical Society
Photo of  'Blackwater and Newman Ridge' courtesy of Roberta Estes



Saturday, June 7, 2014

Jump Start...Pine Knots...Changing Direction

Jump Start
I got my 'Jump Start' in 1999 when my first cousin Juanita Lawson nee Christy, mailed me a few old family photos and genealogy notes from my first cousins once removed, Ralph and Dewey Collins Jr's. research, done in the Pre-Internet days. They never got past our families Pre-Kentucky era, only getting as far back as David Collins and Mary (Polly) Collins nee Dale. Never the less, these notes and names/dates opened a door for my family research.
 
A photo of my uncle Noel Collins (left) and his cousin Ralph Collins, standing on a bridge in Lewis County. Kentucky, near Garrison, date unknown, but probably in the early 1940's......


Lucky for me, when I started on my path to find my Collins family history, Google had just dropped it’s Beta label, and now was a full fledged search engine. This was a great help in my ability to do online research. It’s still a 'tool' I use to this day.

My first exiting find was my third Great-grandfather, David Collins listed on the 1870 Johnson Co. Ky U.S. Census as 'Indian', as well as all my other kin. Actually this was no a surprise to me, as I had grown up hearing our Collins' 'were once Indians'.

Then things got a little confusing, in 1880 on the same Counties census records, all my kin are listed as 'Mulatto's'. I also found out my Collins' line was associated with the people called Melungeons of East Tennessee, Salyersville Indians, The Brown People of Magoffin County and the Carmel Indians of Highland County, Ohio.
I have no reason to believe my folks ever heard of these 'nicknames' or self identified as such. I eventually found out what this was all about, I will discuss all that in a future post.

Pine Knots

I ran across an interesting blog post , written by Blogger Betty Cloer Wallace, "Hillbilly stereotypes: picking up pine knots, going to war".

I agree with her assessment 100 %.

She states "Why can we not pick up our pine knots and go to war against this blatant, insidious destruction of our culture? It will not take care of itself, and no one else is going to do it for us."

"It becomes increasingly harder to identify real native mountaineers, and within a few more generations our real culture, like that of the Melungeons, may fade into oblivion long before the stereotypes disappear. Our centuries-old physical characteristics will be gone, along with our language, values, customs, ethics, and morals; and that is why it is important for writers and storytellers and videographers to work overtime now to record our rapidly vanishing culture, to record who we are."

I’m not sure I would separate the 'Melungeon Culture' from 'Appalachian Culture', maybe a sub-culture.

She is so right about 'outsiders' (from the German word Ausländer) rewriting both the history of Appalachian culture and it’s sub-cultured mixed blood groups.

Changing Direction

My late friend Reuben Snake was known to say :

"If we don’t change our direction, we are likely to end up where we are headed."
Reuben was a 'defender' of both his people and their culture, and was/is a great inspiration to those who knew him.

As for this Collins, I’m picken' up some pine knots, and changing my direction.........