Indian Communities East
of the Mississippi, 1948;
per a Report by the Smithsonian Institute
We had just about dispelled the lies
that the Melungeons had only claimed Portuguese ancestry for fear of the Jim
Crow Laws. The y-chromosomal DNA testing had also said the major component was
Caucasian with a little sub-Sahara African, but only the Sizemore’s had a
y-chromosomeal DNA result saying they were American Indian. I was yelping for
joy, as I knew this was the exact result you would expect if the original
Melungeons were a small band of American Indian, who were dying out. This small
remnant community married with Caucasians and Africans, to produce the present
population of mixed blood people.
But these results have been twisted
somehow. They had assumed the straight male line or straight female
line would tell them about the Melungeons. However it tells them only of the ancestry of the LAST male and female of the genealogical line. Since ALL of those tested had Eurpoean
surnames, it told of the original Caucasian branch of these families. Surnames tell us of our
male line as well.
Some are saying that these "Portuguese" were really Angolan, and that there was NO Indian component. If this is your opinion, show me your evidence and I'll publish it here, unedited.
Let me remind you about what the Smithsonian Indtitute said 65 years
ago.
I will quote those passages about the
Eastern Siouan and some other remnant tribes found in the East, especially in
Virginia and the Carolinas. The entire report can be found here --
http://archive.org/stream/annualreportofbo1948smit/annualreportofbo1948smit_djvu.txt
http://archive.org/stream/annualreportofbo1948smit/annualreportofbo1948smit_djvu.txt
Annual
Report, Smithsonian Institute, 1948; Surviving Indian Groups, Gilbert
P416
Virginia
P417
Chickahominy
This tribe is divided into two section,
i.] The Upper Chickahominy who rpeside principally in Charles City, County. At
White Oak Swamp n the Chickahominy River near Roxbury, Virginia and number
about 357 . . . ii.] The Lower Chickahominy who live on the lower Chickahominy
River on the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad between Newport News and Richmond in
the neighborhood of Boulevard, Virginia. The latter group is about 55 miles
from Newport News and 40 miles from Richmond. They number about 100 persons and
are situated in James City County. Both of these groups have intermarried with
the Pamunkey Indians, their near neighbors to the North. The main Chickahominy
family names are Adkins, Bradby, Colman, Holmes, Jefferson, Jones, Miles,
Stewart, Swett, Thompson, Wynne.
Pamunkey
This group resides on a state
reservation of about 800 acres in King Williams County at a bend of the
Pamunkey River. They are hardly 20 miles due east of Richmond, the state
capital. There are about 150 Pamunkey on the reservation with about 150 more
scattered elsewhere. . . . The Reservation has been in existence since 1677. .
. . The main family names current among these people are Bradby, Collins, Cook,
Dennis, Hawkes, Holmes, Langston, Miles, Page, Sampson, Swett.
Mattapony
The next tribe to the north of the
Pamunkey is the Mattapony. Like the Chickahominy the Matapony are divided into
two groups, both in King William County. i.] The Lower Mattapony group is
located on a reservation of 50 acres in situated on a bend of the Mattapony
River not over ten miles North of the Pamunkey. Ii.] The Upper Mattapony or
Adamstown Indians live about twenty miles west of the first group and about 38
miles Northeast of Richmond (near Central Garage). The Lower Mattapony number
about 150 persons, the upper group about 170. The chief family nmaes of the
loer group are Allmond, Collins, Costello, Langston, Major, Reid, and Turpin.
In the upper group Adams and Holmes. The lower [ P. 418] group has been
organized as a reservation since 1658, whereas the Upper Mattipony have only
been organized since 1923.
Rappahannock
To the north of the Mattapony are
the Rappahannock who are rather widely scattered in the area of the
Rappahannock River in Caroline, Essex, and Upper King and Queen Counties. They
are centered especially around Indian Neck, Virginia, and are estimated to
number from 400 to 500 persons. This group was incorporated under state law as
the Rappahannock Indian Association in 1919. A band in Upper Essex County has
Nelson as the most common family name.
Miscellaneous
Tidewater Tribes
. . . There are a number of other
Indian Remnants in the Tidewater of Virginia.
The Potomac Indians for example, are
a small band of 150 to 200 persons situated in Stafford County about 8 miles
due north of Fredericksburg, Virginia on a small branch of the Potomac River.
There are also Indian groups in
Northumberland County at the mouth of the Potomac River estimated to number
around 300 persons. These are thought to be the remnant of the Wicomico Tribe
in Colonial times.
Across the Chessapeake Bay on
Virginia’s eastern shore there are still to be found the remnants of the
Accohannock Tribe among the Colored population of Accomack and Northampton
Counties. The numbr of these mixed folks is unknown, but they are said to be located in Accomack County Court House
(Drummondtown) and near Fishers Inlet in southern Northampton County. In the
latter place they bear the family name of Miles.
A band in York County, on the south
shore of the river to the northwest of Hampton, have the family name of Wise.
On the opposite shore of the York
River are certain small groups centering in Allmondsville and Gloucester Point
in Gloucester Point. The Gloucester groups are said to number about 100
persons. AT Allmondsville the family names are Allmond, Norris and Langston,
while those at Gloucester Point are Sampsons. The Gloucester County groups are
thought to me remnants of the Werowocomoco Tribe of colonial times.
Crossing the James River to the
southern shore one finds remnants of the Nondsemond Tribe in Norfolk and
Nondsemond Counties. Their chief center is at Deep Creek in in Norfolk County
not far to the Southwest of Norfolk, Virginia. Located on the Northern and
Eastern edges of the Great Dismal Swamp they number about 200 souls . . . The
principle names were originally Boss and Weaver. . . . The Nansemond Tribe have
been reorganized as a tribe since 1923.
The Nansemond, along with the [P.
419] Chickahominy, Pamunkey, Mattapony, Rappahannock, and Nottaway of Delaware,
have for some years been organized as the revived Powhattan Confederacy of
Indians.
West of the Nansemond in Southampton
County between Sebrell and Courtland there are asserted to be still remaining
remnants of the Nottaway Tribe.
Eastern
Siouans of Virginia
The next tribes are the Siouan
Tribes of Virginia. They are the ones we are more interested in as relations of
the Melungeons.
Amherst
County Issues
This group of about 500 or 600 mixed
blood is located in the central part of Amherst County about 4 or 5 miles west
of the county seat. The principle settlements are on Bear Mountain and Tobacco
Row Mountain in the Blue Ridge. At the extreme western end of the county is
another mixed group of similar origin derived from Indian, White, and in some
localities, Negro blood.
Rockbridge
County Brown People
To the northwest of Amherst County I
Rockbridge County is a small group located on Irish Creek, not more than twelve
miles east of Lexington, Virginia, and called Brown People. Their number is estimated
at 300, and they show a mixture of White, Indian, and occasionally Negro blood.
Like the Issues of Amherst County, they are a group apart from both Whites and
Negroes.
Melungeons
or Ramps
. . .
The Virginia Melungeons are found on the
mountain ridges such as Copper Ridge, Clinch Ridge and Powell Valley in Lee and
Scott Counties, in the vicinity of Coeburn and Norton in Wise County, near
Damascas in Washington County, and in the western Dismal area of Giles County.
No estimate of their numbers is available but they probably amount to several
thousand. They show dark skin with straight or curly black hair and high cheek
bones. The chief family names of Melungeons in the area are Bolen, Collins,
Gibson or Gipson, Freeman, Goins, and Sexton.
North
Carolina
. . . [P. 420] . . .
Cherookee
. . . There is apparently very little
Negro blood in this group. Most of the Cherokees are in Swain County where they
have five towns, Big Cove, Yellow Hill, Bird Town, Wolf Town, and Paint Town.
Other groups are found in Graham and Cherokee Counties nearby and in Jackson
County.
The Eastern Cherokee Band was
incorporated under state law in 1889. . . They still employ the native tongue .
. .
Siouans
or Croatans
This group is said to number upwards
of 16,000 persons . . . Physical measurements indicate the presence of Indian,
White, and Negro types. There is said to be a tendency for the lighter individuals
and families to hold aloof from the darker ones just as in the case of the
Nanticokes or Narangassettes. They are found in greatest concentration in
Robison County, but occur in considerable numbers in the nearby counties of
Bladen, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnet, Sampson, and Scotland. Across the border
in South Carolina they occur in Marlboro, Dillon, Marion, and Horry Counties.
The family names of these people are
Allen, Bennet, Berry, Bridger, Brooks, Brown, Bulter, Chapman, Chaves, Coleman,
Cooper, Cumbo, Dare, Graham, Harris, Harvie, Howe, Johnson, Jones, Lassie,
Little, Locklear, Lowrie, Lucas, Martin, Oxendine, Paine, Patterson, Powell,
Sampson, Scott, Smith, Stevens, Taylor, Vickers, White, Willes, Wilkenson, Wood,
and Wright. . . .
The state [North Carolina] has
recognized their special status and they are endowed with a special school
system from both Whites and Negroes.
. . . There are two factions today, one
calling itself Lumbee Indians . . . the other . . . is located east and North
[p. 421] of the Lumbee River . . .
Miscellaneous
Indians of North Carolina
In northeastern Person County on the
Virginia border in locaed a group . . . who number about 400 persons. They also
occur just across the state line in Halifax County, Virginia, around Christie
and Virginiliana. The chief family names are Coleman, Epps, Martin, Shephard,
Steewart and Talley. The state of North Carolina maintains an Indian School for
these people . . .
The Person County Indians may be
descendants of a small band of Saponi who, according to early census reports,
inhabited Granville County, North Carolina (from which Person County was later
set off.).
In northeastern North Carolina, in
Dare and Hyde Counties, and in Roanoke Island are to be found a few Indian remnants
of the Machapunga Tribe mixed with White and Negro blood. Their family nmaes
are Pugh, Daniels, Berry and Prescott.
Somewhat west of Person County in
Rockingham County, the census record of 1930 reports a considerable number of
Indians. The identity of this group is not known.
South
Carolina
[p. 422] Four major geographical groups
may be distinguished, namely i.] Catawba, on the northern border; ii.]
Croatans, also on the northern border; iii.] Red Bones and other groups on the
capital; and iv.] Brass ankles in coastal areas. Altogether these groups may
total over 10,000 persons. . . . They have lost almost everything that would
distinguish them as Indian except their physical appearance. The latter is of
course greatly modified by mixture with White and Negro blood, yet these people
are recognized locally as being distinct from both White’s and Negroes. They
have their own mixed blood schools . . .
The chief family names among these
mixed-bloods are Boone, Braveboy, Bunch, Chavis, Creek, Driggers, Goins,
Harmon, Russell, Scott, Swett and Williams.
Catawbas
The remnants of this tribe are
located at a small settlement on the banks of the Catawba River in York County,
about 9 miles southeast of Rockhill, the county seat. . . . The 1930 census
returns 159 Indians in York County. Their blood seems to be mostly a mixture of
White and Indian.
Georgia
In most of the counties along the
northern border of this state are to be found many hundreds of people of part
Cherokee descent . . .
. . . It is reliably reported that a
small group of 100 or more Cherokees and Creeks are at present in a settlement
near Shellbluff Landing in Burke County, about 10 miles south of Augusta, and
almost on the Savannah River. The family names are Clark, Woods, Shafer and
Deal. Their settlement is sometimes known as “Shafertown” or “Shafersville”. .
. . In earlier days Yuchi, Shawnee, Appalachee and Chickasaw Indians clustered
in the vicinity of Augusta where the Savannah River crossed the fall line.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI deleted my first comment because I didn't want to put that info out there, but there was a lot more African intermixture than has been let on. I've seen some of the dna from VARIOUS family descendants.
ReplyDeleteIf you'll just look at your neighbors down the street -- there was far more "mixing" of White and Black families. What separated the Melungeon peoples however, is that the word "Melungeon is of French origin, and is 1st person plural, present tense french meaning "We mix". And there were plenty of French Huguenots living in the area, living in the area, and we have documents mentioning 2 Hugeunots who were in close contact with the Saponi Indians, one a minister of the Gospel who preached at Fort Christanna where the Saponi were and the other who was mixe-blood -- part Catawba and part French Huguenot, who lived among the Melungeons. And the word Malungeon is the EXACT French word, not just "sorta close". And these Huguenot encounters with the Saponi HAPPENED. Others say well, this or that "might have happened". What separated the Melungeons from other mixed race people is the Saponi/Catawba component, and proof of genealogical records that do go back to Fort Christanna's Saponi Indian families. That's why they are called TRI-racial isolates.
ReplyDelete