This story deals with some
unanswered questions on the Historical Melungeons. When
and where did this name begin and who was the most likely source?
The answer to these questions is based on opinions from my
research. Some of my direct line ancestors were
entwined in this history and some in my Goins family were among the
first settlers in the Clinch area. Authors
listed them as Melungeon because of various tax, court and census
records. To set this story in its correct
perspective the Melungeons were designated by census and tax
enumerators, courts, and some of their white neighbors as free persons
of color, or mulatto.
The First Melungeons
Who were the first Melungeons in the Newman Ridge/Blackwater area?
Was it the following?
“Micajer Bunch, Isreal Bunch, Solomon Bunch, Claiborn Bunch, Jessee
Bowlin, Zachariah Goins (note: son of John and
Elizabeth of Henry County, Virginia). (1797 Lee County Virginia Tax
Records VA. state library)
The above were all listed “white” in 1797. In an
1800 tax list all the Bunches except Sol were gone, also included in
this tax list are: Jesee Boling, Zach Goins (free
man of color), two John Collins, Jacob and Daniel Collins. (1800 Lee
Co., Va. Tax list)
At this time Virginia claimed most of the land on the North side of
Clinch River for tax purposes. Some whose land was
on the north side of Clinch River in Hawkins County actually signed the
petition to form Lee County, Virginia.
Did this unknown term ‘Melungeon’ inspire people to research them, and
if there is still a mystery, is it---why this name Melungeon?
Basically I find Melungeon research the same as family research if ones
goal is to determine if you are a Melungeon descendant, or in some way
related to the historical Melungeons, also if the
researcher wants to know who the historical Melungeons were and why
they were designated Melungeon. First we need to
know the history of our families and also the history of the Melungeon.
Several researchers, authors etc., who were interested in solving
this mystery have started with a theory, but could not tie it to known
Melungeons. This problem is why Melungeon family
genealogy may eventually solve many of these unanswered questions.
Melungeon families can be traced back in history by written records
because of the mulatto, free man of color designation. Head
Melungeon families are listed on tax and land records by this method,
but the researcher must be able to properly identify them because only
a small percentage of the ones so labeled were Melungeon.
If a researcher discovers some of their progenitors were labeled
fpc/mulatto this may become a real challenge to tie them into the
historical known Melungeons. The researcher may have to decide on
“Maybe Melungeon.” The mulatto identification
was first established in colonial Virginia, which is also the first
hint of discrimination against people of mixed ancestry.
“Be it enacted and declared, and it is hereby enacted and declared,
that the child of an Indian and the child, grand child, or great grand
child, of a Negro shall be deemed, accounted, held and taken to be a
mulatto. Source: Henning’s Statutes at large, vol
3, pp 250-251, 252.”
My first unanswered
question is, why the name Melungeon? Or was it Melungin, or malengin?
Theories range from the French word mélange meaning
mixture to a host of others too numerous to
name.
Who were the Melungeons not remembered? Sneedville
Attorney Lewis Jarvis names several Melungeons: Vardy
Collins, Shepard Gibson, Benjamin Collins, Solomon Collins, Paul Bunch
and the Goodman chiefs. Jarvis later names James
Collins, John Bolin and Mike Bolin and some others not remembered.
Obviously there are more not remembered than named, so the best
we can do is search the census, tax and court records for this FPC
label. Jarvis also stated they were given this name
Melungeon by their white neighbors who lived here among them because of
the color of their skin.
Click
link to read article. (Attorney Lewis Jarvis, Sneedville
Times 4/17/1903 Hancock County, TN and it’s people Volumes 1 and 2.)
Lewis Jarvis was a captain in the Union Army Co E 8th Tennessee
Volunteer Cavalry during the Civil War and was intimately acquainted
with several in my immediate family including Sizemore’s, Goins, Minor
and Lawson. Capt. Jarvis was the commanding officer
who gave Stokley Lawson his fatal three-day leave to return home.
Stokely along with 5 other men were captured by Rebel Soldiers
led by a Captain Surgenor, and as the stories go
either hung in Rebel Hollow, or shot near Fort Blackmore.
My friend Ruth Johnson gave me a copy of a letter to her from William
“Bill” Groshe. In which he wrote: ”True
Melungeons are descendants of Vardy Collins, Solomon Collins, Benjamin
Collins, Levi Collins, Jordin Gibson, Shepard Gibson, William Goodman,
Edmund Goodman, Jesse Goodman, William Nichols, Zachariah Minor, John
Minor and their families, also include James and John Mullins.” Groshe may have written
this from memory and left out some. No Goins were named, but
Maybe they were also Melungeons? ( Letter from
William Groshe to Ruth Johnson, who mailed this author a
copy of above information..)
The Term 'Melungeon"
Unanswered question #2- Where, when and by whom were they given this
name Melungeon? Lewis Shepard the attorney who won
a case in 1872 Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee Chancery Court
for a Melungeon girl, ( her mother a Bolton) who was being denied her
rightful inheritance wrote:
“The term Melungeon is an East Tennessee provincialism; it
was coined by the people of that county to apply to these people.”
(Memoirs of Judge Lewis Shepard, 1915 page 88). (See A Romance of
the Melungeons)
Studying Lewis Shepard Memoirs of that Chattanooga trial, his arguments
on behalf of his client resembled a tribe, rather than a nickname given
to them by their white neighbors, but more important this was 1872, 18
years before Dromgoole. Where did Shepard get this
Ancient Carthage argument? His story was they were
ancient Phoenicians who, after Carthage fell to the Romans, they
immigrated across the straits to Gibraltar and settled in Portugal.
We are right back to the Portuguese, did this Moors/Portuguese
Melungeons story originate from a story told to John Sevier, by a
Gibson?
Much has been written concerning a John Sevier letter and encounter
with the Melungeons. The earliest known reference
to the purported John Sevier encounter was in a letter to the Nashville
Daily American on Monday, September 15, 1890. By Dan
W. Baird:
"At the time when John Sevier attempted to organize the “State of
Franklin" there were living in the mountain section of East Tennessee a
colony of dark-skinned people, evidently of African or Moorish descent,
who did not affiliate either with the white, the Indian or the Negro
race. They called themselves "Malungeons" and claimed to be of
Portuguese descent."
Baird’s letter was in response to two articles written by Will Allen
Dromgoole. Dromgoole used this information in her
Arena articles without referencing where the information came from and
Baird provided no reference for his information. If
you will read both the letter and Dromgoole's articles, notice that
neither writer claimed John Sevier actually wrote a letter.
Thus the possibility exists that this story was handed down
orally and eventually put in writing.
The problem I see with this encounter as written is when Sevier
attempted to organize the State of Franklin the Melungeons named by
Lewis Jarvis and William P. Groshe were not in East Tennessee.
According to documentation, Sevier’s encounter with the Melungeons must
have been when he undertook the survey of Hawkins County in 1802, which
included what is today Hancock County. Therefore
not finding a letter written by Sevier does not prove he did not see,
or describe the Melungeons, because in his survey of Hawkins County he
stayed in the heart of Melungeon country and spent the night with a
Gibson who was most likely a Melungeon Gibson considering Sevier’s
location was in Blackwater Valley.
Excerpts from the diary of John Sevier Mon. Nov. 1802:
“Mr. Fish went on to Hawkins C. H. Self and Genl. Rutledge
crossed Clinch (?) Mountain at Loonys Thur. 25 Rained Lay at Robers
Fry. 26 Clear day. We all sit out from Robert's
crossed Newman's Ridge & lodged all night on black water creek at
Gibsons...”
In Lewis Shepards argument in the trial of the celebrated Melungeon
case, his Phoenicians escaped to Portugal, this may have been from part
of Shakespeare’s celebrated play Othello, The Moor of Venus.
Shepard took them back to Portugal and the Moors, and maybe a
similar exotic argument was used by John Netherland. Perhaps
John Sevier in oral conversations handed down his encounter with the
Melungeons. In 1802 Sevier goes to Blackwater and
stayed the night at Gibson’s. The Gibson he spent the night with
in 1802 on Blackwater was not Shepard, but maybe Rubin. A
Rubin and John Gibson did sign the petition to organize the state of
Franklin.
“Rubin, Fanny, Henry, Thomas Jr, Vina, Fanny and Mary Gibson all joined
Stony Creek Church 23 July 1802. “Sept 25, 1804 Ruben
Gibson excluded from membership of this church he lives down at
Blackwater, and has our letter of (dismission) and keeps it, and has
joined another church” (Stony Creek Church minutes)
This may be why the first time you find the word Melungin in writing
it’s in the Stony Creek Church minutes. The first
minute’s show several that were later enumerated in Hawkins County as
FPC including Charles Gibson and it also shows them returning from
Blackwater to Stony Creek to attend church meetings.
Examining Records
Examining other historical documents, the Melungeon claimed their
origin was Portuguese who later mixed with other nationalities.
Lewis Jarvis was born 1828, at least 50 years after some named
historical Melungeons were born. The word
Melungeon, Melungin is found in writing in 1813, so his information was
not first hand in regard to who, or when they were given this name
Melungeon. Although Jarvis stated he knew Vardy
Collins and some others.
Another problem question is, does this Melungeon label apply to all the
free colored families in Hawkins County, or only the ones who settled
in the part that became Hancock County in 1844? This
old witness separates them, but not by counties.
“In the last decade there has been a deep interest manifested by
educators, the church and the ethnologist, in what is known as the
“mountain people,” many thousands of whom are scattered over parts of
Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Georgia.” But there is
also another people who have lived in the mountains, principally in the
Clinch mountains, of eastern Tennessee for more than a century;
separate and distinct from all others, whose ancestry is shrouded in
mystery - the mystery of obscurity. They have lived their simple
pastoral life and for more than a hundred years so quietly and
obscurely that their name is unknown to many.” They
are the Melungeons -their very name is a corruption of some foreign
word unknown to them or to the few have given them any study. They have
had no poet or seer to preserve their history.” (Statement
by Eliza Haskell who’s father John Netherland won their freedom for
them.)
Unless an old record is located which contradicts these older documents
we can correctly say by research the correct identification as
described by witnesses in the days of the Melungeons:
“They were the families designated as free colored, free man (person)
of color and mulatto who moved into Hawkins/Hancock Tennessee and the
lower western part of Lee/Scott Counties, Virginia beginning 1790’s.”
The oldest documents on the Melungeons is also centered on these
interlocking families, such as the unnamed author in the 1848-49 Littell’s
Living Age; a visit to Mineral Springs and Vardy Collins hotel, and
also describing the gorge where the Melungeons lived. Vardy
Collins was called the chief cook and bottle washer of the Melungeons.
Then 50 years later another writer came to the same location and
interviewed Vardy Collins grandchild and great grandchildren.
“On Friday forenoon, July 2, (1897) the writer (C.H, Humble) and Rev.
Joseph Hamilton, of Parkersburg, West Virginia, started in a hack from
Cumberland Gap, Tenn., for Beatty Collins’, chief of the Melungeons, in
Blackwater Valley, Hancock County, Tenn. (Womens Board
Of Home Missions. The Presbyterian Church U.S.A. Home Mission
monthly).”
Some researchers have ignored both these old visitation accounts and
cast them aside as to be taken as a grain of salt cast into the wind,
or as color writers who should be ignored. My advice is to ignore any
researcher who tells you this because every document must be carefully
examined, because they are as scarce as hen’s teeth. If
the researcher rejects these two documents they are left with Dromgoole
(1890) as the only written source prior to 1900 who actually identified
some of the head Melungeon families. For an example we have:
#1-1813 Stony
Creek Church record on one lady accusing the other of
housing the Melungins (not identified).
#2-1840 Brownlows Whig,
“an impudent Malungeon from Washington Cty, a scoundrel who is half
Negro and half Indian,” (Not identified) and who has actually been
speaking in Sullivan, in reply to Combs.
#3-Edward Guerrant
Diary: July 2,1863 "Came on to Mr Horton's for dinner-found him
in a tornado furious- against Virginians, who fed his grass and &
c, and in ecstatic panegyrics of all Kentuckians-"all of whom were
"interesting" gentlemen"- and no "malungens"(1/2 b & 1/2w).
Here is the message I get from these first three records.
1-A Melungeon was held in very low standing, one you should not keep in
your home.
2- A Melungeon was half Indian and Half Black and thus should be
ignored.
3-Melungeon was half black and half white. Also,
Mr. Horton’s conclusion that the Kentucky soldiers took care of his
crops etc, was because they had no Melungeons in their
army?
Only three written documents to Dromgoole not counting the 1872 Shepard
trial because I have not found, nor have I seen any of those actual
court records in Shepard’s 1872 trial, only his S.L. Shepard Memoirs,
Chattanooga, 1915, or Bairds article, which was in response to
Dromgoole. This is all the written pre Dromgoole
article I have, I’m sure there must be more.
How did the writer in the 1848 article know where to come? And
for that matter how did Dromgoole know where to come? Must have been by
oral conversations.
Other historians/authors later identified the same people as the 1848
and 1897 articles, or else they used Dromgoole to establish that the
Melungeons were free persons of color, but this begs another question,
which free persons of color were Melungeons? Eliza
Haskell, William L. Worden, Henry Price, Sandra Keys Ivey, and many,
many others too numerous to name, all had one thing in common-- they
wrote about and investigated the known historical Melungeons of the
Blackwater/Newman Ridge area. Jesse Stuart
“Daughter of the Legend” was indirectly pointing to these same
interlocking families.
Were They Portuguese
I recommend you read
Saundra Keyes Ivey Dissertation, she stayed in Sneedville and
interviewed many Melungeon descendants as well as taking part in their
outdoor drama, Walk Toward the Sunset. Her research
was outstanding. Here is her opinion on the
correspondent in the 1848 Littel’s Living Age article. Quote:
“There seems to be no reason for this writer to have invented
this detail, “The Melungeons carefully preserved
the “Legend of their history.” This “Legend” according to the writer,
included an original descent from Portuguese adventures and later
intermarriages with Indians, Negroes, and whites.” (Saundra
Keys Ivey PhD Dissertation, Indiana University.)
Most pre 1900 Melungeon records point to a Spanish/Portuguese heritage
that later married Indians.
” They deeply resent the name Melungeon given to them by the whites,
but proudly call themselves Portuguese.” (Dr. Swan
Burnett: The Melungeons Oct 1889 in American Anthropologist),
Notice in the 1848-9 visit to Mineral Springs and Vardy Collins, they
were first Portuguese, but in the 1897 visit to the same place and an
interview with Vardy Collins grandson they were not mixed, but pure.
Why this Indian heritage by Calloway Collins as recorded by Dromgool?
Last paragraph page 747 the Arena, this was after the move to Newman
Ridge, quoting Dromgoole: “there was no mixture of
blood. They claimed to be Indians and no man disputed it.”
Why did the Melungeons nationality change? One
possibility was this mixing with Indians and Europeans as described in
the 1848-9 article finally rooted out their original Portuguese
ancestor after another fifty years.
A good example of this change is evident in my own family whereas
Grandpa Goins talked about his Indian ancestors and never mentioned
Portuguese, but his sister talked about her Portuguese ancestors.
No doubt by the time the Melungeons arrived on Blackwater they
were more Indian than Portuguese. An old adage is if momma was
Cherokee, baby was Cherokee, if momma brought the Indian into the
family, they identified as their mother’s culture did.
“The Melungeons have a tradition of a Portuguese ship mutiny, with the
successful mutineer beaching the vessel on the North Carolina coast,
then their retreat towards the mountains.” (Eliza
Haskell daughter of John Netherland 1912 Arkansas Gazette.)
According to witnesses named in this article John Netherland was the
defense attorney in the illegal voting trials held in Rogersville
1846-48 this above statement by his daughter may have been a hint on
the argument presented by John Netherland in those trials, but Dr. Swan
Burnette had this to say about them in 1889:
“The matter was finally carried before a jury and the question decided
by an examination of the feet. One, I believe, was
found to be sufficiently flat-footed to deprive him of aright of
suffrage. The others, four or five in number, were
considered as having sufficient white blood to allow them a vote.
Col. John Netherland, a lawyer of considerable local prominence
defended them.” (Dr.Swan Burnette 1889)
The 1834 revised Constitution of Tennessee specifically disfranchised
Indians, mustees, and mulattoes. The illegal voting
charges and trials of known Melungeon families in Rogersville proves
they did not escape this discrimination. After two
separate juries ruled Wiatt Collins and Zachariah Minor not guilty the
state dropped the charges on Solomon, Levi, Ezekial, and Andrew Collins
and later dropped charges on Lewis Minor. The answer to why the
charges were dropped is simple, they were brothers and cousins.
Why try Lewis Minor after his brother Zachariah was found not guilty by
a Jury? Evidence points to a probable pre trial
deal between their lawyer and the state prosecutor on who was to be
tried.
Swan Burnette wrote, “one was found guilty.” Ambrose
Hopkins was charged at the same time as Vardy and the others, and found
guilty by a Jury on June 1, 1849. Court records now
show three illegal voting cases tried by juries in Hawkins County,
Tennessee. The grand Jury charges were identical
for Vardy Collins and Ambrose Hopkins. If a pre
trial agreement based on kinship is correct, Hopkins was not related to
the Collins and Minors. (Credit: Dr. David Jones,
Orlando Florida)
The above charges stemmed from an election held in 1845, looking at the
3rd District voters in 1843 the only one charged in 1846 for illegal
voting who voted in the 1843 election was Ambrose Hopkins.
Again we find the old witness correct. Burnette’s
information was no doubt second hand but finding this case proves he
was correct by his quote: “One was found Guilty and
the others were sufficiently white enough.” Was he
correct in the flat foot method used to free or convict those tried?
Also, did John Netherland present the ship wrecked Portuguese
story as told by his daughter Eliza?
Zachariah Minor told his children he was Portuguese/Indian which leaves
little doubt the argument presented at the trial was Portuguese because
Indians were automatically eliminated from voting by the 1834
constitution. Looking at the possibility that the Sevier encounter was
known at this time (Sat.Jan 29,1848), “they
appeared to be of African or Moorish descent.” Perhaps their argument
was Moors from Portugal, what ever it was the following Jury ruled “Not
Guilty”. Thomas Dodson, John Isenberg, Mitchael
Baugh, WM Rowan, James Miller, Meridith Lawson, George Wright, William
Long, Jos R Johnson, WM Lee, Jacob Arnott and John Manis.
The 1880 census of Hancock County, Tennessee adds credence to this
defense because both my Goins and Minors were actually enumerated as
Portuguese written in the first column where race is designated by a
letter, thus Portuguese with the label W for white written over
Portuguese.
1880 federal census of district 4 Hancock County, Tennessee, enumerator
was James A. Doughty, June 1, 1880.
Evidently both my
Goins and Minor family told this census person they were Portuguese and
he wrote Portugee in race column, but later wrote the initial W real
dark over this Portuguese maybe because he noticed the 1880 census did
not list Portuguese.
On page 2 in my book “Melungeons And Other Pioneer families is a photo
of the log house I grew up in and grandpa Goins sitting on the front
porch. This house was built near the end of the Civil War. Dad
purchased the place in 1944 and grandpa died there in 1954.
Ironically, another Goins died there in 1895. “11
Dec 1895 Lewis Goans, an aged and well known citizen of our county,
died at the residence of Harris Bell on Cave Ridge near town Tuesday
night after an illness of about 6 weeks, Aged 84 years. Until
his last illness Mr. Goans had never been sick but 2 days in his life,
and was an exceptionally well preserved man. He was
Very Dark complected and claimed to be of Portuguese stock.
Buried at Cedar Grove near the river.”
Lewis Goans moved to Hawkins County in 1855 from Rockingham County, NC
and the same area where my Rev. war grandfather Zephaniah Goins moved
from in 1811, but I have not been successful in connecting my Goins
family to Lewis. (Distant Crossroads Volume 19,
number 3, 2002)
I’m not sure if the Portuguese came from my Goins or Minor family or
from both. Grandpa Goins always claimed to ¼
Indian and I have found enough evidence to substantiate this ¼
Indian claim, it’s the other ¾ that’s in question. His
sister Lizzie Goins Parsons always talked about her Goins Portuguese
ancestors. In a Tennessee Supreme Court case 1827
Abraham Vaughn vs Phoeba Tucker in a court case involving race, “Always
understood that Molly Moore had one of the family named Minor having
since obtained their freedom on the plea” [being of Indian Descent].
I have not been able to find this Minor case in Virginia and
since no first name was given in the record I gave up on trying to
locate it, both my Minor and Goins family was originally from
Virginia.
In my opinion the answer to
who was a Melungeon lies with the family researcher working within the
scope of the historical records. Those of us who search old records for
the truth know proof of opinions come from documented research.
Hopefully locating and indexing the Hawkins County records 1795-1850
will answer some of these questions and I can remove this ‘maybe
Melungeon’ label from my Goins family. Hawkins County consisted of a
very large area. Hancock County was formed from the lands of Hawkins in
1844,but was not fully organized until 1846. Court cases that occurred
before Hancock was fully organized are in the Hawkins County Court
house. Like the above illegal voting cases, these charges stem from a
state election held in 1845.
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