Category: 29. Genealogical materials

    1043. DeMarce, Virginia Easley. “Looking at legends: Lumbee and Melungeon: applied genealogy and the origins of tri-racial isolate settlements.” National Genealogical Society Quarterly 81.1 (March 1993): 24-45.

Publication type: Journal article

Investigates the origin of the Lumbee community by examining land grant records, tax lists, census records, genealogical studies, and other documents. Her analysis yields three conclusions: The earliest documented Lumbee families originated in Tidewater Virginia and upper N.C.; the records examined use inconsistent ethnic labels; and the nonwhite labels indicate triracial origins. Discusses the proportion of Black, White, and Indian blood in triracial isolates, and possibilities that individuals or families crossed the color line to avoid “Black codes” and “Jim Crow laws.” She asserts, “researchers must examine every record in the geographic area of interest, no matter what the racial category listed in the census.”

Additional subjects: Tri-racial isolates | Tuscarora theory of tribal origin

This annotation first appeared in The Lumbee Indians: An Annotated Bibliography (McFarland, 1994), by Glenn Ellen Starr.

Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net

 


 
 
 

Copyright © 2002, Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. 
This document may be reproduced only if this copyright notice is reproduced with it.