BARBADOS AND THE MELUNGEONS OF APPALACHIA
By L.E. Salazar
For the past 375 years Barbados has been Anglophone.
Due to its position as the most easterly island in the Caribbean, it
was early recognized to be of strategic naval and military
importance and with the popularity of sugar which was introduced to
the island by the Dutch from Brazil, the tiny island loomed large as
Britain’s most prosperous colony. The spread of sugar plantations
precipitated migration to the other colonies as those bondsmen who
were to be paid in land at the end of their service were unable to
secure the ten acres that was their due.
May Lumsden states that from 1650 to 1680 nearly 30 000 of the 80
000 original settlers of Barbados moved on to the North American
mainland or to other islands and credits this outflow to the North
American colonies with the introduction of "ideas, capital,
agricultural know-how, a gracious life-style, as well as a
determination to work and prosper."
Today, many of the descendants of early settlers of America can
trace their ancestry to Barbados so that as a foremost colony with
unbroken records of its English speaking inhabitants since 1637,
Barbados’ history cannot be discounted in any study of the English
speaking Americas and its peoples.
Familiarity with those records of Barbados settlers indicates that
there were small endogamous
groups of non-English peoples who anglicized their names.
In comparing the oral history of my own family with that of the
written records, I came to the conclusion that they had originally
been Flemish and by 1715 had done what others were doing, and that
was to bring their names in line with English domination of the
island. This practice
of accommodation by adjustment of surnames in Barbados is the
precedent for the mystery to which Brent Kennedy points concerning
Melungeon surnames and the Melungeon claim to be other than English.
In Kennedy’s history of the Melungeons, there is a marked pattern, a
parallel, to be found in Barbados, not associated so much with the
love child who was incorporated into the plutocracy both in North
and South America and in Barbados but with the ones who were
referred to as "abandoned people", a name which aptly describes what
Kennedy translates from Turkish as being "melun-can" - a lost soul.
Together, "lost soul" and "abandoned people" convey the sense of
dispossession and of alienation from mainstream society in a period
of history when in this hemisphere persons were forcibly removed
from their homelands and left to fend for themselves in unaccustomed
environments.
On the other hand, Melungeon may be, as Kennedy also offers, simply
the Portuguese word for mixed race and this would tie into their
claims to be Portuguese, which then leads us to yet another group of
unsettled people, in search of land, a new identity and acceptance
and these would be persons connected with Jewish communities who had
become conversos. Jewish émigrés from Brazil migrated to Barbados in
1654. According to
Shilstone by the end of the seventeenth century there were about 250
living on the island and "although mainly Portuguese, were gathered
from all parts of the world".
There was also reference to Jews in Barbados since 1628.
This figure of 250 most likely can only apply to practicing Jews.
Under the Inquisition Jews had been persecuted for their religious
beliefs so that fleeing from Mexico and Brazil, some of their
households would have accepted
Christianity as a protection and, in so doing, would have stressed
their kinship with the Christian nations rather than with Judaism.
Cromwell offered asylum to the Jews of Europe to settle in Barbados
and a synagogue has been in existence in Barbados since 1664.
Mixed race persons from Jewish households might therefore have found
it preferable when removed to another colony to identify with the
culture from which they had sprung.
For instance, in 1729 Jacob Valverde made a bequest to his daughter
of the "Indian Wench Sary" and to his son, "the negro Woman called
Esparansa." Esparansa
was no doubt an Anglicization of the Spanish 'Esperanza'.
When such mixed persons escaped to a better life it would have been
more politic to stress their Spanish heritage to account for their
darker skin.
Since Barbados was at the centre of English colonialism,
in this article, therefore, I would wish to give a brief outline of
Barbados history and draw the parallels between the Melungeons and
the poor whites and poor coloureds of Barbados - the red people,
because they are brothers in poverty and the love child is their
sister.
Displacement and the Melting Pot:
In the midst of later conflicting evidence as to the number of
persons settled by Sir William Courteen on the island of Barbados,
the Sloan Manuscript 2441, recorded in the Journal of the Barbados
Museum and Historical Society, sets out an Account of His Majesty's
Island of Barbados and the Government Prepared about 1684 which
describes the first ship load of settlers from England thus:
"In 1626 Courteen settled 1850 men, women and children - English,
Indians and others."
It is to those "Indians and Others" that historians and genealogists
must now turn our attention as it demonstrates the genesis of the
relegation of certain peoples to a non-existent status because even
though there is some evidence of a lively slave trade between North
America and Barbados in Native Americans taken from the American
accounts unearthed by Jack Forbes and Barbara Olexer it has been
the official position in Barbados that only a few Native Americans,
mostly from South America, were enslaved here.
Yet, as pointed out in Love Child, there are references to
slaves whose names are re-echoed in North America.
Chief among these is Cumba/Coombah which Kennedy attributes to the
Lumbee/Croatan of North and South Carolina.
In Barbados, the term "abandoned people" was used to describe an
endogamous group of poor, white-skinned people who were also called
"poor backras or buckras", a name not far removed from the epithet
"buck" used to describe male North American Natives and Natives of
Guyana in South America.
This reference to abandonment was used by the upper classes, the
high whites and the high browns, and even though this community
which has sister communities in the Grenadines and St. Vincent
appeared to be Caucasians they were yet called, by visibly African
people, "red", the same term used to describe Native Americans, as
opposed to the Europeans who were always referred to as "white".
Added to this mosaic were the victims of the African slave trade
moving from Africa to Barbados and on to the American colonies
together with the other hidden trade in Native American slaves
moving from the colonies to Barbados and other islands which is yet
to be fully documented; but it is crucial to understanding the
history of those light-skinned persons who, having been born outside
the pale, whether separate or of combined Native American, European
and African origin saw a chance to remove themselves from the taint
of slavery by transferring
to the North American colonies,
those among them who had the means being assimilated into frontier
society and those without, being cast out.
Since the belief was cemented that there were few Indians enslaved
in Barbados, Price took the trodden path that the name Red Legs and
Red Shanks which applied in South Carolina to persons of Indian
descent could not have the same meaning in Barbados but applied as
he was told to kilted highlanders.
No one took the time to analyze the names in the slave inventories.
For instance, in 1650 Colonel William Hilliard of Somerset leased
Henley Plantation on the East Coast for 99 years to six gentlemen
"... with all negroes
Indians and other slaves with all cattel household stuff...” Six
years later he deeded the plantation to his son in law "in
consideration of marriage between Meliora daughter of the said
William Hillyard" and one of the above lessees together "with all
negroes Indians and others."
Although the documents speak to Indians in the plural only one woman
is singled out as being such. In the first deed, her name is given
as Simmy and in the other as Syminige which name is phonetically the
same as the Yoruba Sheminige.
All other slaves are called "negro" and the Mareahs of the first
document are spelt in the second in their Spanish form which is
Maria. This tiny clue
bears witness to a later statement by a Governor of Spanish Florida
that the English were kidnapping mestizos - half-breeds.
The Hilliard inventory therefore marks a sinister trend and that is
that Native American ancestry was being officially erased or
subsumed under the European or African partner's category.
A footnote to the Hilliard Deeds is the appearance of a paradox.
Hilliard records that 23 new slaves who are obviously second
generation since they have Christian names were brought to Barbados
on the May Flower commandeered by Captain Hunte. It would be
ironical if this is the same good ship the Mayflower which brought
passengers to religious freedom in North America and alternatively
brought others to be shackled in Barbados.
As for Moors in the Caribbean, Pere Labat left that record of them
in the French islands.
In the English colonies, the West African peoples of Nigeria, Ghana
and Senegal were the ones who were highly favored and the ones most
likely to be chosen as overseers and, more importantly, to be given
Native American wives before the influx of African women made it
unnecessary. The first baptismal records of Barbados also indicate
that several people were baptized without reference to their parents
and, especially, without reference to their mothers, which leads to
the very simple conclusion that these mothers were in fact
non-Europeans. Stemming
from Barbados, therefore, one could find a multi-racial group of
people of varying hues who could claim an ancestor who was
Portuguese, Dutch, English, Scotch-Irish, West African or Native
American but who were themselves Anglophone.
Parallel Surnames
Of the Barbados Census of 1680, David Kent remarks that among those
of the Hebrew nation are people with Portuguese surnames but Lumsden
further elucidates that many of the emigrants from Brazil had
earlier had their abode in Amsterdam. This combination of Dutch and
Portuguese speaking Jews may comprise a small part of the claim of
some Melungeons to be of Dutch or Portuguese descent since the
Jewish people were particularly versatile in adapting their surnames
to suit their temporary abode, for example, Navarrh could have been
derived from Navarrhoe, an early Barbados Jewish name.
The names Gibson and Davis which feature in Kennedy's lists as being
Redbones are re-echoed in Price's reference to transplanted
Barbadian Red-Legs to St. Vincent and Bequia, neighbouring islands.
The history of Flemish ingenuity
and their resistance to Spanish oppression by settlement in the
Netherlands and in Britain is a key to understanding social
relationships and inter-marriage patterns in Barbados and elsewhere
because it shows that people who have been separated by nations
often seek out their ethnic groups when they come into unfamiliar
surroundings. By this
period, the Flemish people had either become British like Sir
William Courteen or were known as Dutch like Governor Groenewegen to
whom Courteen's men resorted for assistance in setting up the
colony.
In 1651, however, Sir George Ayscue with his fleet banished the
Dutch from Barbados. So
where did they go when thrust out of Barbados?
The American frontier is the most likely place. The appearance of
people on the mainland who have no previous record among the
so-called white inhabitants of Barbados may be explained by the
possibility that some persons had slipped abroad without licenses to
travel to another colony. By 1663, Barbadians were showing interest
in colonizing Carolina and many of the Melungeon names are to be
found in Barbados.
Kennedy astutely pointed to the presence of Turkish artisans among
the English and the possibility of gypsies being among early
colonists, a hypothesis which is ably confirmed for the latter group
by The Calendar of State Papers of 1679 which records the following
proposal to the King and Council:
"to constitute an office for transporting to the plantations all
vagrants, rogues, and idle persons that can give no account of
themselves, felons who have the benefit of clergy, such as are
convicted for petty larceny, vagabonds, gypsies, and low
persons, making resort to unlicensed brothels, such persons to
be transported from the nearest seaport, and to serve four years
according to the laws and customs of those islands, if over
twenty years of age."
Slavery and Prejudice
The sense of superiority which naturally arises when one group takes
control of another's destiny is no new phenomenon.
It runs through the history of mankind and this is why this writer
considers the Melungeon movement to be so important at this juncture
in history as a force resistant to racist rhetoric so that persons
who acknowledge the contribution of their multi-ethnic ancestors
reflected in their own lives powerfully disprove charges of
intellectual inferiority which the bigoted would like to see as
inherent in any one people.
On one hand, the South Carolina courts
were in essence saying that a mixed race person with property and
known association with whites could be deemed white with all the
attendant privileges of that status but, on the other hand, a slave,
no matter how far he was removed from his African ancestry, could
have no such aspirations. In Barbados, the principle was the same,
though strongly denied.
The closeness that obtained between Barbados and the Carolinas and
Virginia in particular with so many persons of the pioneer companies
having proceeded from Barbados makes this phenomenon very
understandable as the genesis for the need for isolation and the
imparting of extreme prejudice to subsequent generations which, in
Barbados, gave birth to a visibly white community yet known as Red,
their original status.
Other Parallels
The Calendar of State Papers for 1657 gives the unique description
of the labour policies on Barbados in which the Irish "were derided
by the negroes as white slaves" and records that negroes were being
employed at trades rather than the the English, Scotch and Irish.
Two years before the official report it was recorded that the import
of Irish people as labour was being resisted by the English because
the Irish were wont to throw in their lot with the escaped slaves
yet the written record on Barbados is that the Irish never
intermarried with the escapees they joined forces with.
1) Isolation
Forbes came to the conclusion that many of the removed Native
Americans were engaged in fishing activities.
Early Barbados history confirms that the captured natives were being
used as fishermen as well as house servants and coincidentally,
pockets of white communities with a non-European culture were
springing up being termed Red-Legs or Poor Backras marrying among
themselves. Early
photographs of
Red-Legs show a marked resemblance to some of Kennedy's portraits of
Native American and Melungeon families.
On Barbados, the Red-Leg community centered on the hilly, isolated
areas of Irish Town and the Scotland District which has led
historians to believe that they were an unmixed remnant of
Scotch-Irish. The
eating habits formerly ascribed to them of eating lice, crickets and
bonavist, a type of bean, however indicates more than Irish origins.
Impoverished through lack of opportunity these communities were
referred to as "abandoned people".
2) Degradation:
The accounts of the Red-Leg during slavery is that of collaboration
with slaves to steal their masters' goods and of care extended to
them by slaves who were better clothed and fed.
These accounts are at variance with that of an editorial written in
the Barbadian newspaper of 1861 which stated that "they became the
armed protectors of the proprietary against the insurrection of the
slaves." It is the same
job description for Amerindians in Guyana and Indian trackers
elsewhere. In that
editorial, emphasis was loaded on their being descended from
"gentlemen, clergy, officers of the army and navy, industrious
families of the middle classes in England, sturdy English
labourers..."
Though true to one extent, no reference was made to the mixed
ancestry of the mates of these English persons.
Early accounts of their lifestyle of squalor, loose living and
thievery were not explained except by the word "abandoned".
Their poverty was accepted and even their education was limited by
the plantocracy as being suitable for an underclass. Some Red Legs
of Barbados, as the Melungeons of Appalachia, eventually removed
themselves from European aggression and African infiltration but
this is only half the story. The other half I attempted to cover in
the story of the love child, the ones who were assimilated into
European communities as they settled in England, the Commonwealth
and North America.
In conclusion, the rediscovery of the history of the Melungeons, as
related by Brent Kennedy, is of one people linked by our Native
American ancestry throughout the Caribbean and the Americas.
To be Melungeon in today's world is to have the courage to
acknowledge the mosaic of our ancestral heritage and to revel in the
various aspects of those cultures which have formed us; but it goes
further than that. I believe that it must rank as the start of a
movement to uncover the truth of human history without racial bias
because it is clear that if, within 400 years, the record of some
peoples' existence can be so mangled that only a glossy official
record remains, then what has been accepted as truth concerning
ancient empires must be challenged so that there are no missing
gaps; and that, I think, must be our mission.
ABOUT THE WRITER
Lila Salazar is a graduate of the University of the West Indies and
is a genealogist. She
has written a guide to the social history of Barbados, titled Love
Child.
May
Lumsden, The Barbados-American Connection, (Canada: The
Layne Company, 1982) 9-10
N.Brent Kennedy, The Melungeons, (Georgia: Mercer
University Press, 1997) 10 E.M.
Shilstone, " The Jewish Synagogue",
Chapters in Barbados History, ed. P.F. Campbell
(Barbados: BMHS,1986) 145
Barbados Archives, Wills, RB6 VOL 16/416
L.E. Salazar,
Love Child, (Barbados: Family Find, 2000) 45-46
N. Brent Kennedy, The Melungeons, (Georgia: Mercer
University Press, 1997) 173
Edward T. Price, "The Redlegs of Barbados", JBMHS,
vol 29, p. 47
Barbados Department of Archives, RB3 vol 5/125
Calendar of State Papers, 221
Jack Forbes, Africans and Native Americans, (Chicago:
University of Illinois Press, 1993)253 |