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Wayfaring Stranger: The Black Dutch, German Gypsies, or Chicanere, and their relation to the Melungeon By Linda D. Griggs Introduction The Melungeons are an olive complected, dark eyed, dark skinned people living in Appalachia. Their claim of Portuguese descent was largely ignored and they have been historically dismissed as "tri-racial isolates", part African, Indian and White. Ironically, for a people accused of miscegenation, they marry only within their community. Some physical characteristics claimed by those of Melungeon descent are an Anatolian bump, a donut shaped protuberance on the back of the skull; shovel teeth, which are curved across the back rather than straight and end in a ridge at the gum line (also common to American Indians); and Familial Mediterranean Fever, an inherited rheumatic disease ethnically restricted to non-Ashkenzi Jews, Armenians, Arabs and Turks. As racial tensions hardened around the Civil War their status as mulattos deprived them of basic rights such as property ownership and education. N. Brent Kennedy's The Melungeons: The Resurrection of a Proud People - An Untold Story of Ethnic Cleansing in America [1] documents the denial and loss of their history and culture. Requests for bibliographic information as well as questions, comments and criticism may be sent to ldgriggs@erols.com. I would also welcome any family histories relevant to Gypsy history in the American South.
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'Dardanidae duri, quae uos a stirpe parentum prima tulit tellus, eadem uos ubere laeto
accipiet reduces. Antiquam exquirite matrem: hic domus Aeneae cunctis dominabitur oris, et nati natorum, et qui nascentur ab illis.' We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. –Plato– |
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Black Dutch by Mike Nassau Some people in America describe themselves as Black Dutch or Black German. These terms mean the same thing, Dutch is the English form of Deutsch in German or Duits in Dutch (Nederlands). It has come to mean only the people of the Netherlands in English recently, but it originally meant all speakers of German in the broadest sense. This includes the entire German sub-branch of the Germanic Branch of the Indo-European Language Family. The other sub-branches are the Anglo-Friesian (English, Scots and Friesian) and the Nordic (Swedish, Dano-Norwegian [Danish, Rigsmal and Landsmal], Icelandic, and Faeroese). There are many dialects and languages in the German sub-branch, divided into High German and Low German. The forms of High German are German [High Saxon, Alemanni, High Frankish, Swabian, Bavarian, Austrian, Luxembourgese, Alsatian, Styrian], Swiss German, and Yiddish. Low German includes Dutch, Flemish, Afrikaans [South African Dutch], Hanoverian [Low Frankish], Hessian, Low Saxon [Brandenburgian], Holsteiner, Pomeranian and Prussian. The Frankish area includes Rheinland-Pfalz and Hanover, with the area south of Aachen [Charlemagne's capital], centered on Frankfurt, speaking a High German dialect, and the area from Aachen north, centered on Essen, speaking a Low German dialect. The Pennsylvania Dutch are Low Germans from Germany, not Dutch from Netherlands. The Dutch called themselves Nederduitser (Nether German) until recently, when they switched to Nederlander. Belgium is trilingual, the northern part speaks Flemish (Vlaams, a dialect of Dutch), the southern part speaks Waloon (Valone, a dialect of French), and the eastern edge speaks German (Luxembourgese). There are at least six quite different groups of people described as "Black Dutch". If you have been told you are Black Dutch or part Black Dutch, you must find out what the name of the German, Dutch or Flemish immigrant was (if there was one), where he or she came from, what their religion was, if any, etc., before you can figure out to which group they belonged. 1. Melungeons are a Mestee group originating along the VA-NC border, particularly Henry and Patrick county, VA, and Rockingham, Stokes and Surry counties, NC. They, like other Mestee groups of the Southeast, were formed by an amalgamation of various mixed-race and non-white people, particularly the remnants of Indian groups which had absorbed a lot of Black, White and Mulatto people. The white ancestry included many ethnic groups, including both northern European (English, Scots, Irish, etc.) and Mediterranean (Moorish, Portuguese, Jewish, etc.) groups. From this origin along the VA-NC border, they spread westwards to other NC counties, up into the SW corner of VA, into the adjoining mountains of TN (Hawkins, Hancock, Grainger), down the Tennessee valley to Hamilton, Rhea and Roane counties, into eastern KY and from there into southern OH, and along the Sabine river in Louisiana and Texas. There are a lot of Melungeons now in other locations like southern WV, northern AL and the Ozark mountains (AR and MO). Melungeons sometimes call themselves Black Dutch, Black Irish or Black German to hide their mixed race origin while explaining their being darker than most Whites. If they know of German or Dutch ancestry or have a name which sounds German or Dutch, they are very likely to call themselves Black Dutch, more rarely Black German. If not, they are more likely to use Black Irish. For information on the "Black Irish" in America, please see Tom Kunesh's Black Irish site at http://www.darkfiber.com/blackirish . Also see "Shirley Hornbeck's This and That Genealogy Tips, Genealogy Tips on Black Dutch and Irish, Melungeons, Moravians, Pennsylvania Dutch" at http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~hornbeck/blkdutch.htm. For more information on the Melungeons, see Melungeons and Other Mestee Groups and the Open Directory list of Melungeon sites at http://dmoz.org/Society/Ethnicity/Th...cas/Melungeon/. 2. Another Mestee group, the Ramapo Mountain People or Ramapough Indians, are sometimes called Black Dutch. This is more true when they leave the Ramapo Mountain area (NJ-NY border) than when they are in this location. They are the descendants of free Mulattos from Dutch farms in the Hudson Valley who moved to the mountains, where they may have mixed with some remnant Indians, who probably would have been the Munsee group of Lenape (Lenni-Lenape or Delaware) Indians, definitely Algonquian speaking Indians of the East Coast. They may have been joined by some Tuscarora (Southern Iroquoians related to the Cherokee) as they fled north after the Tuscarora War. Since they are mainly a mixture of Dutch and Black, the term Black Dutch would fit them in a way. The two main names are Van Dunk (Van Donck) and De Freese (DeFries). For more information on these people, see the links on the Open Directory at http://dmoz.org/Society/Ethnicity/Me...untain_People/. 3. Schwarzer Deutsch or Black Germans, found along the Danube River in Austria and Germany, in the Black Forest and, to a lesser extent, along the Rhine River, have dark hair and eyes, unlike the fairer people both north and south of them. Their descendants in America may be called either Black Dutch or Black German. The origin of their dark coloration is ancient, from the Roman army in the third and fourth centuries, C.E. The Roman army of this time period was mostly made up of German mercenary soldiers, but along the German border, the Romans preferred to station non-Germans. The army on the Danube was mostly drawn from Black African soldiers from Nubia (northern Sudan and southern Egypt) and Numidia (Libya). One significant Numidian people were the Garamante, who were fierce warriors and long resisted Roman conquest, but were later incorporated in the Roman legions and particularly sought as soldiers. The Garamante (called Tubu now) were Black Africans from the central Sahara. Now the Tubu live in northern Chad, eastern Niger and southern Libya. They are not usually found north of Marzuk in Fezzan or Kufra in Cyrenaica now, but in Roman times they ranged north to the central coast of Libya and to Ghadames in southern Tunisia. As well as Garamante and other Africans, there were some Iranic people stationed on this frontier, especially Sarmatians (called Ossets now) and Scythians (Ashkenazi in the Bible) from southern Russia and the Ukraine. These African and Iranic soldiers left many descendants who tend to have black, heavy hair and dark eyes even yet. Beethoven and Hitler are two famous examples of this group. It is interesting to imagine Hitler's reaction to someone telling him he probably got his heavy, black hair from Black African ancestry. Since this was so long ago, with population movement and inter-marriage, all Europeans must have some ancestry from these Black African soldiers. In sixty generations, a person could leave 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 descendants with just two children per person each generation so long as no descendants married each other. Obviously, after a time, many descendants will marry each other, but still it works out statistically that most people from that long ago who left descendants at all are ancestors of everyone in Europe today. The tendency for people to stay in their own community explains why we can see the effects along the Danube and in the Black Forest in the people with black hair and dark eyes but do not see it far afield like Iceland. The concentration is far greater at the point of origin, but the dispersion radiates out to everywhere given enough time. 4. Tziganes or, more commonly (but erroneously), Gypsies, are another group called Black Dutch in America. A Tzigane from Germany, who could speak German, could be accepted much better by saying he was Black Dutch than if he admitted to being Gypsy. Tziganes were called Gypsies because of the mistaken belief they came from Egypt. At other times and places, they were called Bohemians (as in La Boheme) because they were thought to be from what is now the Czech Republic. Their language is called Romany, sometimes attributed to their self-given name of Rom (or Dom) but more likely because they were thought to be from Romania. In actuality, they come from the Indus valley area of Pakistan and western India, their language is Indic, their traditional religion a form of Hinduism. The name Rom or Dom comes from the Sanskrit word Domba, meaning low caste ("untouchable") musician. Tzigane, which has cognates in most European languages including Russian and Turkish, is derived from the Sanskrit name of their caste in ancient India. Words for Tzigane in a few languages: English = Tzigane; French = Tzigane; Russian = Tsygan Dutch = Zigeuner; German = Zigeuner; Hungarian = Cigany Italian = Zingaro; Spanish = Gitano; Rumanian = T¸igan Turkish = Çingene; Polish = Cygan; Czech = Cikan There is already an excellent site on Tziganes as Black Dutch in America: Wayfaring Stranger by Linda Griggs. It also tells about their connections with the Melungeons. Please see: Part One at http://foclark.tripod.com/gypsy/Patrin1.htm Part Two at http://foclark.tripod.com/gypsy/Patrin2.htm. 5. Dutch and Belgian Jews were sometimes called Black Dutch in America because they spoke Dutch or Flemish and were darker than the other Dutch and Flemish. They had only recently moved to the Netherlands and Belgium (then Spanish Netherlands) from Iberia (Portugal and Spain). When Spain annexed Portugal for a while, many Portuguese Jews fled to Spanish Flanders to escape the Inquisition (see http://www.theotherside.co.uk/tm-her...d/flanders.htm for Flanders as part of Spanish Netherlands). Most, like the famous philosopher Baruch Spinoza, crossed into Protestant Netherlands for greater freedom of expression and religion (see http://users.erols.com/jyselman/ for more on Spinoza). These Sephardic Jews were, on the average, darker than the Ashkenazic Jews of northern Europe, so an explanation like Black Dutch suited them well. 6. Mulattos, Quadroons, Octaroons and other mixed children of German, Dutch or Flemish fathers who appeared mostly White, but were too dark, would use the term in order to live in White society. Of course, they frequently learned the term from one of the other types of Black Dutch and then would seize it as their own. How many people were in each of these groups, I have no idea. But there are a lot of people finding ancestors called Black Dutch, so there could have been a sizeable number in any of them. Mike Nassau, June 26, 2001 [source]
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'Dardanidae duri, quae uos a stirpe parentum prima tulit tellus, eadem uos ubere laeto
accipiet reduces. Antiquam exquirite matrem: hic domus Aeneae cunctis dominabitur oris, et nati natorum, et qui nascentur ab illis.' We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. –Plato– |
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![]() Arch Goins and family, Graysville Melungeons
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'Dardanidae duri, quae uos a stirpe parentum prima tulit tellus, eadem uos ubere laeto
accipiet reduces. Antiquam exquirite matrem: hic domus Aeneae cunctis dominabitur oris, et nati natorum, et qui nascentur ab illis.' We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. –Plato– |
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A Lucky Appalachian by Brent Kennedy ![]() I am a proud American. An Appalachian American to be exact, which is a little different than Northeasterners, or Midwesterners, or even other Southerners for that matter. But an American all the same. Some people call us hillbillies: I just call us lucky. I am in love with my sometimes ridiculed mountain culture and I must admit that with each year that I tack onto my life, I become even prouder of all that she is: Bluegrass music, High Knob, Jack Tales, coal mines, tomato gravy and the Powell Valley sunset. Things I once took for granted are now enshrined in my heart. However, my beloved Appalachia has been shortchanged on its rich heritage. Outsiders, and to some degree insiders, have essentially “whitewashed” our origins. When I was a kid in the 1950s and 1960s, being Scots-Irish or English was the only game in town. We were told that we were lowland Scots who took to the mountains, refused to become educated and pretty much intermarried amongst ourselves. Even the most dark complexioned among us was invariably “northern European”. While we certainly possess a high degree of northern European blood, Native Americans, Melungeons, Africans, southern and eastern Europeans and Asians all figure into the history of the Appalachians. But back then it was a rare occasion when someone would be brave enough to claim an ancestry from one of these categories. I still vividly recall when beloved J.J. Kelly football coach and history teacher, W.G. Bays, talked about the courage of Ethiopian leader Haile Selassie against the overwhelming Italian Fascist forces during World War II and, furthermore, how “dark people” as often as not didn’t get their due respect from historians. The Ethiopians, he explained, fought against the well-armed Italians with knives and sticks and stones, and were mercilessly slaughtered by the land-grabbing Fascists. He then looked our eighth-grade class in the eyes and proudly proclaimed his own Native American roots, another people who fought bravely with whatever weapons they could muster. That was probably the first time I ever heard a respected member of the community admitting a mixed background with pride and, as a consequence, I have never forgotten W.G. Bays. That learning experience also fueled a personal passion to better know my own roots. While my family, too, was “Scots-Irish” it didn’t take a genius to know our heritage had to be a bit more complicated than the purely Emerald Isle imagery that the name Kennedy conjured up. Simply crossing the threshold of my front door each day after school was proof of that. My Mother and my brother looked as if they had stepped out of Lawrence of Arabia, and other cousins and relatives added to the smorgasbord of non-Anglo faces. Later in life, a smattering of Mediterranean genetic diseases and DNA testing would lead me to discover my own genetic ties to Native Americans (through three of my four grandparents), northern India, Eastern Europe, the British Isles, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East. A Mitochondrial DNA connection on my Mother’s side finds its vast preponderance of exact matches not in England or Ireland or Wales, but in Syria, Yemen, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Lebanon, and Palestine. Other “English” ancestors turned out to have manufactured their surnames to hide Italian and Greek and French origins. Just because New World settlers set sail from England did not mean that they were ethnic English. Maybe there was a reason some of my Wise County ancestors placed Stars of David on their tombstones and maybe it wasn’t a “paper error” that two of my Mom’s (and my) direct eighteenth-century ancestors were classified as “taxable mulattos” in York County, Virginia. Science and sleuthing and time have a way of sorting out the truth. The “gospel” I had accepted as a kid turned out to be only a small part of who I was. The truth is that I am a walking, talking, physical embodiment of the United Nations and the same is true for each and every one of us whether we know it or not. Every single person on this planet has an origin that is as complex as the literally millions of people who make up his or her ancestry. We are far more than our parents, with our total ancestry doubling in number with each generation traveled back in time. I have two parents, four grandparents, eight great-grandparents and a whopping 1024 directancestors a mere ten generations back. How could we not be ethnically diverse, Appalachian or otherwise? Twenty years ago, such ethnic influences as discussed above were all too often seen as somehow “un-American.” To admit being part Native American, or Jewish, or Turkish or Portuguese would, in the minds of some, cast a dispersion on one’s patriotism. In a strange and illogical twisting of thought, genetics went hand in hand with being an American, and even being an Appalachian. If you didn’t hail 100% from the British Isles you weren’t a “real” Appalachian, no matter how long your family had been here. Never mind that my ancestors, whoever and whatever they were, were among the first to enter these mountains, build cabins, plow the land, fight the British at Kings Mountain, and even distill a little moonshine in this hollow or on that ridge. No, if they weren’t “pure” Scots-Irish in the old way of thinking then they didn’t quite count. Well, I’m happy to say, things have changed and today they – and we - do count. Our actions and attitudes and the way we live our lives is what really matters when it comes to evaluating our worth. If tomorrow morning you discover that your great-great grandfather had a little Portuguese, or Powhatan Indian, or Turkish or sub-Saharan African in him, would you take down his portrait from the mantle? I would hope not because he’s still your great-great grandfather. Whatever I may discover regarding my family’s ethnic origins, or whatever you may discover about yours, will not change one iota who and what they were and the pride we can take in what they accomplished. I like to remind myself that if I remove any single ancestor from my lineage – any single ancestor – then I am not here. That self-serving rationale alone makes me appreciative of all who came before me. So what’s the point? The point is that we are all part of one big human family, with culture, politics, and religion – NOT race or ethnicity – defining and unfortunately dividing us. And that racially and ethnically, no one really knows who they are unless they can literally see back to the beginning of time. Like it or not, we are all kin and, frankly, I like it. We in the Appalachians could hold hands with our cousins and literally form a chain of kinship that would extend through every nation on earth. That’s how diverse we are. My hope is that scholars will revisit the history of this region with an understanding that this wonderful but overlooked diversity has had a major, positive impact on the development of our Nation: just as important as the millions of settlers who wagoned westward through the Cumberland Gap. Recognizing this truth will not only give us a little more pride in who we are as a people, but it might just help us better understand the rest of the world. And what a marvelous opportunity for us in Appalachia to be at the forefront in teaching our Nation the real meaning of diversity. In the meantime, I will continue to feel a surge of adrenalin when hearing our National Anthem or Rocky Top, or when watching the Tennessee Volunteers charge through the Big Orange T. I’ll take pride in UVaWise’s steady rise in the academic rankings and in the expert renditions of our mountain music by folks like Bill and Nancy Jones. And I’ll enjoy the everyday images of Appalachian life, be it local community festivals, exquisite fall foliage, or coal trucks rumbling by my Dad’s service station. For I am a lucky man – I am an Appalachian. [source]
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'Dardanidae duri, quae uos a stirpe parentum prima tulit tellus, eadem uos ubere laeto
accipiet reduces. Antiquam exquirite matrem: hic domus Aeneae cunctis dominabitur oris, et nati natorum, et qui nascentur ab illis.' We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. –Plato– |
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