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First
Union: The Melungeons Revisited
BY JOAN VANNORSDALL SCHROEDER
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Pioneer
researcher
Brent Kennedy. His 1992 Blue
Ridge Country article and 1994
book "The Resurrection of a
Proud People" opened the door
for Melungeon knowledge. |
In
1991, writer Joan Vannorsdall Schroeder spent
time in southwest Virginia and northeast
Tennessee investigating the Melungeons, a group
of people who'd been an enigma in Appalachian
history for centuries. Back then -- in our
July/August '91 issue -- she found more
questions than answers, with guesswork about the
best that was available regarding the origins
and identity of the Melungeon people.
Six years later, a dozen Internet Web sites
are flooded with historical, genetic, linguistic
and genealogical information about the
Melungeons. Schroeder returned to southwest
Virginia in late July for the Melungeon First
Union with the same question in hand: Just who
are the Melungeons? |
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the early stages of planning the first-ever
reunion of people of Melungeon descent early
this year, organizers expected 50 attendees at
the picnic grounds of Clinch Valley College in
Wise, Va. It would, they thought, be a time for
informal sharing and down-home food: nothing
big, nothing scholarly, nothing a few dedicated
Melungeon List volunteers couldn't handle.
By the time the weekend of
July 25-27 rolled around, nearly 500 people had
paid their $10 registration fee. Conference
attendees spilled from the dormitories of Clinch
Valley College and flooded motels in Norton,
Pound and Big Stone Gap. The picnic had turned
into a three-day conference, with its own poster
and T-shirt logo, standing-room-only banquet,
shuttle buses, a press conference and photo-ops,
televised lectures and venders.
In no small way, the story
of First Union echoes that of the Melungeon
people: It is the story of people finally
finding a voice in a culture hell-bent on not
hearing it.
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Melungeon
life.
Mattie Ruth Johnson (left) with family in the
1950s.
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The
adjective most often attached to them is
mysterious. The mysterious Melungeons, with
their dark, Mediterranean skin setting off
startling blue eyes; fine, European features;
their high cheekbones and straight, black hair.
The French found them in 1690 in the western
Carolina mountains, puzzling at their claim to
be "Portyghee." And the Scotch-Irish
settlers who moved down the Shenandoah Valley in
the 1750s found them in the far reaches of
southwestern Virginia and northeast Tennessee,
pushing them farther into the Appalachians of
northeast Tennessee and northwest North Carolina
and laying claim to the fertile Melungeon valley
land.
The Melungeons -- clearly
not Anglo, or Indian, or Negro -- were labeled
in early 19th-century censuses as "free
persons of color" or "mulatto,"
thereby denied the right to vote, attend school
or own property. Mysterious became a lifestyle:
In an effort to avoid racial discrimination,
they stayed to themselves, taking on English and
Scotch-Irish surnames like Collins and Kennedy,
Campbell and Adams.
In central Appalachia, to
call someone a Melungeon was an insult; no
wonder it was a term the Melungeons themselves
avoided like the plague.
But consider this: When
you lose your name, you lose your history.
That history is what Brent
Kennedy set out to reclaim in the late 1980s.
The Atlanta marketing consultant had come down
with erythema nodosum sarcoidosis, a disease
marked by blurred vision, painful breathing,
exhaustion, aching joints and muscles, and skin
rashes. Driven to know more about the disease,
Kennedy discovered that it was most common among
African Americans, people of Mediterranean
descent, and New England's Portuguese
immigrants. Why, he wondered, did he,
Scotch-Irish to the bone, have a Mediterranean
disease?
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"Big
Haley."
Mahala Collins Mullins is the great aunt of
researcher Mattie Ruth Johnson.
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Kennedy was lucky. After
six months, his disease went into remission.
"I thought I was
dead, and I lived," he says. "So my
perspective on life changed. I had a lot of
questions that needed answering, and I set out
to answer them."
Questions such as why his
brother looked like Saddam Hussein. Why his
mother's family was called the Black Nashes. Why
his ancestors on both sides moved around so
frequently in the high regions of North
Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia,
surrendering land without compensation. Why, as
a girl, his mother wasn't allowed to play in the
sun without full cover to keep her skin from
turning even darker. And most of all, why his
family refused to answer any of these questions.
The result of his inquiry
was a book -- "The Melungeons: The
Resurrection of a Proud People" --
published in 1994 by Mercer Press, with a second
edition released in 1996.
"I wrote the book to
bite and sting," Kennedy says. "Many
people disagree with me, and that's OK. That's
the nature of academic debate."
Kennedy's book, subtitled
"An Untold Story of Ethnic Cleansing in
America," has clearly accomplished its
purpose, sending spreading ripples into the
community of American historians like a rock
tossed into a still pond. In it, he asserts that
the Anglo version of America's earliest
settlements at Jamestown and Plymouth is
reductive, obscuring the original melting-pot
nature of the American people, dating back 1,200
years to the Muslim conquest of the Iberian
Peninsula. The Melungeons of central Appalachia
-- his people -- are the prototypic "melange,"
or mixture, possessing Spanish, Portuguese,
North African, Turkish, Semitic,
Native-American, African-American, and, yes,
northern European blood.
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Mattie
Ruth Johnson.
Her "My Melungeon Heritage" book
explores the area near Sneedville, Tenn.
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Look
around the banquet room of the Norton, Va.
Holiday Inn, and it's hard to doubt Brent
Kennedy's assertion. Lots of Mediterranean skin
tones, high cheekbones, black hair, blue eyes.
But also Native Americans and African Americans,
some Jewish profiles in evidence, also. There
are several heads bearing fezzes, a couple
bedecked with Indian feathers. With a few
exceptions (i.e., the media folks), all of them
claim Melungeon heritage.
The head banquet table is
equally eclectic. There is Dr. Will Goins, a
Lumbee Indian, who gives an Indian prayer to
connect the gathering to the earth. The mayor of
Wise, Caynor Smith, who tells the 400-plus
attendees of his trip to Cesme, Turkey to
discover his Melungeon roots. And the mayor of
Cesme, whose translated remarks are eloquent:
"Five hundred years ago, your ancestors
left the Turkish homeland. Now their souls are
happy and comfortable -- we have waited all
those years to combine our hearts."
But it is keynote speaker
Brent Kennedy who sets the tone for the evening.
"There's something important happening
here. We have a movement -- God only knows where
it'll end up. Years from now, you'll tell your
children and grandchildren you were here. Maybe
this is our Woodstock!"
In his keynote speech,
Kennedy tells the story of his illness, the
resulting research, and the academic community's
refusal to acknowledge the evidence he'd
gathered.
"I sent out articles
and got some pretty nasty rejection letters in
return," he said. "My theory -- that
Melungeons were of Iberian, Turkish and other
Mediterranean and Middle Eastern origins --
wasn't particularly well-received," he says
wryly.
(Kennedy's theory
challenged the most commonly accepted theory of
Melungeon origin: that they were Appalachian
"tri-racial isolates," a mixture of
"poor" whites, African slaves and
"renegade" Native Americans -- the
definition, in fact, attached to Melungeon in
Webster's Third New International Dictionary as
recently as 15 years ago.)
Kennedy credits Blue Ridge
Country with giving him the benefit of the
doubt, publishing his article in the July/August
1992 issue of the magazine. The response was
overwhelming. He received hundreds of letters
and phone calls, sharing stories and asking for
more information. Kennedy moved back to his
hometown of Wise, taking an administrative
position at Clinch Valley College, accepting
speaking engagements across the country. Now,
he's known fondly as the Melungeon Poster Boy.
During his speech, Kennedy
brings people to the front of the room to
illustrate various Melungeon physical traits.
Semitic noses. Central Asian cranial ridges.
Shovel teeth. Asian eyefolds. All, he claims,
genetic markers to support his theory that
Melungeons are of Middle Eastern and
Mediterranean origins.
He holds up his hands and
reveals a faint scar on each hand. "You
ever hear the story about the six-fingered
Melungeons? Well, I'm living proof it's
true." He had his extra digits, which are
common among those of Spanish and Jewish
heritage, removed as a young boy.
"Genes don't
lie," he says.
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Ivagene
Johnson.
She's in front of the family's dairy, circa
1930.
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In
addition to the phenotypic evidence, Kennedy and
others have compiled a long list of linguistic
similarities between Appalachian and
Turkish
dialects to prove their assertion of
Mediterranean presence in Appalachia.
"I hope other
researchers continue the work I've
started," he says. "Geneticists and
linguists and historians, anthropologists,
archeologists: It'll take all of these
disciplines to fill in the gaps in the Melungeon
story."
Kennedy finishes his
speech with some provocative statements.
"Why are we doing this? Why are we all
here? We're not seeking justice for lost lands
-- it's too late for restitution. We surrendered
our claims to our land when we assimilated with
the larger white culture. It's almost impossible
to separate the perpetrators from the victims
now.
"The central
importance of the story of the Melungeons is
that we are all related -- all brothers and
sisters. Racism has no place in our world. We
may never be able to determine how the
Melungeons came to be, or just exactly what
racial types we're made up of.
"And if we find that
in fact there were no cultural and genetic
relation to the Turks, Spanish, etc.? Well, so
what? Look at the good that's come out of the
inquiry. Let's all pretend we're related and see
what happens!"
Is Kennedy's globalism a
feel-good cop-out? Has he so expanded the
possible genetic origins of the Melungeons that
the term is useless? Quoted in the Wall Street
Journal, historian Virginia DeMarce thinks so.
In a review of Kennedy's book, she asserts that
Kennedy seems to feel that "any ancestry is
preferable to Northern European."
Cindy Goins Young of
Martinsville, Va. has Melungeon blood on both
sides of her family. She believes that much of
the recent research on the Melungeon people is
"speculation."
" 'Melungeon' is just
a term," she says. "It's a culture,
not a race. And how do you 'prove' a
culture?"
What First Union offers
Young is a chance to make sense of myriad small
things in her childhood, habits such as burying
food, which she remembers clearly. "I
discovered that other Melungeon families did
that, too. Why? Maybe by coming together we can
all figure it out."
The Melungeons: a culture
or a race? Or both? One thing everyone at First
Union seems to agree on is that, despite all the
research, there are still a lot more questions
than answers.
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Mattie
Ruth Johnson.
As a girl, she attended Prospect School.
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James
and Phyllis Morefield have come to First Union
from Edinburg, Va. to answer some questions
particular to their own family. Phyllis
Morefield shares that since the mid-1980s they'd
heard stories from her husband's family about
"Portuguese" blood, stories about the
Lost Colony.
"But you hear those
things, and you forget about them."
Last November, they saw
the special issue of Appalachian Quarterly on
Melungeon heritage. "I didn't even know how
to pronounce the word," Phyllis says.
"But from what I read, I began to realize
that some of the 'missing branches' in my
husband's family tree might be Melungeons."
Jo Lockhart-Sams of
Louisville, Ky. tells a similar story. The
avocational historian came with her uncle to
investigate why her family members described
themselves as Black Dutch, why her great-aunt
May said, laconically, "We came from the
Sioux." Why six generations back her
father's family surname was Duck, which suddenly
changed to Hall. "Several other relatives
took to calling themselves 'John Adams,' "
she says, smiling. About as American-generic as
you can get.
It was like the chorus of
a song: over and over, First Union attendees
talked about the long code of silence in their
families, the warnings from elders not to ask
too many questions, the shame of their
dark-skinned mystery. Connie Clark, a Wise, Va.
high school English teacher of Melungeon
ancestry, offers a poignant anecdote.
"My mother told the
story about scrubbing the back of her neck,
trying to make it white. One day her father saw
her, and told her to quit. 'Honey,' he said,
'I've been trying to scrub it off my whole
life.' "
The
First Union sessions offered Saturday range from
the scholarly to the entertaining. First up is
historian Eloy Gallegos, whose overview of
Melungeon origins closely parallels that of
Brent Kennedy. Gallegos cites 16th-century
Spanish and Portuguese colonization in Georgia
and the Carolinas, the most clearly documented
being Santa Elena, near present-day Beaufort,
S.C.
According to Gallegos,
Captain Juan Pardo and 200 soldiers from the
mountains of northern Spain and Portugal
established a series of four or five forts in
northern Georgia, western North Carolina, and
eastern Tennessee, providing the Spanish with a
base for their colonization efforts. Pardo then
returned to Spain and brought back women and
children to Santa Elena. Some of these settlers
migrated inland and intermarried with Native
Americans. The rest, as they say, is Melungeon
history.
Gallegos shows maps of
Virginia, North Carolina and Tennessee, covered
with Spanish names: Louisa, Amelia, Buena Vista,
Alta Vista, Augusta, Francisco, Pueblo, Lisbon,
Galatia, Gaston, and Valhalla. More proof for
the evidence of Spanish presence in Appalachia.
"Abe Lincoln had
Melungeon heritage through Nancy Hanks'
bloodlines," Gallegos asserts, suggesting
that some feel his mixed-race origins may in
part account for his dislike of slavery. Other
Melungeon researchers believe Elvis Presley and
Ava Gardner share Melungeon genes.
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Darlene
Wilson.
She's the creator of the Melungeon Web site.
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University of Kentucky
Ph.D. candidate and Wise native Darlene Wilson
has a very different focus on the question of
Melungeon identity. Known as the Web-Spinning
Granny on the Melungeon Web site (and its
creator), Wilson believes that the genetic
makeup and chronology of Melungeon origins
matters less than the resulting racism, which
she believes is still rampant in Appalachia
today.
Wilson and Appalachian
State University anthropologist Patricia Beaver
assert that being Melungeon became
"downright dangerous" after the 1830s,
when "the Nat Turner revolt led to more
repressive measures against all free persons of
color. As usual, the mountains provided
sanctuary and a wealth of good hiding places for
clans who needed more time to 'get
white-enough.' "
Wilson calls for nothing
less than "a radical re-interpretation of
Appalachian history" that fully addresses
the patriarchal discrimination leveled against
mixed-race Appalachian cultures. Hers is a
feminist telling of Melungeon heritage, focused
on "the ubiquitous Cherokee granny": a
call for full recognition of the role that
nonwhite women played in Appalachian genealogy
and history.
The brunt of Wilson's
considerable anger falls on Dr. W.A. Plecker,
Virginia's first registrar of vital statistics.
In a series of letters written in the 1930s and
'40s, Plecker left a trail of hate and racism,
referring to the Melungeons as "these
negroes" and "the problem."
According to Wilson,
Plecker was in Germany in 1939 and consulted
with Hitler's eugenicists in order to purify
Appalachian culture. The result: "Them that
could pass for white, did; them that couldn't,
skeedaddled."
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Connie
Clark.
Her mother told of scrubbing her neck to try to
make it white.
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"Plecker left office
in 1945. The following year he was hit and
killed by a truck. I hope it was a six-fingered
Melungeon driving that truck," Wilson says.
Mattie
Ruth Johnson has yet another perspective on the
Melungeon story. Johnson grew up on Newman's
Ridge near Sneedville, Tenn., where the largest
group of Melungeons settled. "A great many
of them are my ancestors," she says
proudly. The nurse and painter-writer -- related
through both her mother and father to the
colorful and large moonshining Melungeon, Mahala
"Big Haley" Mullins -- is the author
of the newly published book
"My
Melungeon Heritage: A Story of Life on Newman's
Ridge."
"Writing this book
brought back wonderful memories: I wrote a while
and cried a while," she says. "My
nieces and nephews, they don't understand why we
swept the yard, or put a water bucket and dipper
on the front porch for passersby. This is my
gift to them, and to the wonderful Melungeons."
"Growing up, I felt a
shyness about people. I did feel very separate.
There was a differentness about us. But we were
good and kind-hearted people who believed in
giving good measure to everyone. The Bible was
the Melungeon Word," Johnson says.
Johnson is eloquent when
she talks about growing up on Newman's Ridge:
"If you go up to the cemetery on a clear
day, it's like looking out into infinity."
People are stealing headstones from that
cemetery now, she says, because they bear
Melungeon names.
Her version of Melungeon
heritage is wistful, personal and respectful,
seen through the gauze of time. Culturally and
individually, it means every bit as much as the
work being done by professional historians and
linguists, and at First Union, her books sells
like hotcakes.
One
vendor's table down from Johnson's, M. Mehmet
Topcak is handing out complimentary pens
proclaiming "We love all Melungeons!"
The self-proclaimed Turkish ambassador of good
will has come to America to accept a national
sister-city award, cementing the bonds between
Wise, Va. and his hometown of Cesme.
"Take," he tells me, pushing stacks of
postcards toward me. Colorful scenes of Turkey
grace the front; on the back is printed an
advertisement for upcoming tours of Turkey.
"Magical names like
Cesme, Izmir, Bursa and Ephesus set the scene
for a unique journey that's pure Turkish Delight
all the way. A heady mixture of history,
mythology, tradition, culture, fun and enjoyment
in a unique Mediterranean style," the
accompanying flyer boasts. There is the
suggestion of a pilgrimage in the promotion, a
sort of Melungeon Roots appeal, that may be a
bit premature given the tentative nature of much
of the burgeoning Melungeon research.
Part of the upcoming
Melungeon documentary, produced and directed by
William VanDerKloot of Atlanta, was filmed in
Turkey. "The Melungeons: A Forgotten
People," a not-for-profit project, will,
according to Brent Kennedy, "explore the
various theories and competing evidence in a
sort of 'in search of' approach." It is
scheduled to air in January 1998.
Sunday morning, after the
car caravan bound for a tour of Newman's Ridge
leaves the Clinch Valley College campus, a few
members of the planning committee wander around
the conference grounds picking up stray scraps
of paper, taking down posters, coiling the cords
of audiovisual equipment. Audie Kennedy, Darlene
Wilson, Brent Kennedy and Mary Goodyear are
clearly exhausted. At noon, they will reconvene
to talk about what went right and what didn't,
and to plan the 1998 conference.
"I feel positive and
upbeat," says Wilson. "People came
here to retouch their hearthland. They are the
children and grandchildren of the Appalachian
Diasporas. For many, it's the first time they've
returned. This conference made that possible for
them."
Brent Kennedy is on his
way to the cemetery to meet more television
cameras. Despite his ever-present smile, it's
clear it's been a long weekend. "I see
myself as the lightning rod -- there's not a
single day in my life I'm not dealing with this.
Some days, I'd just as soon go fishing.
"I look forward to
the day I don't have to go talk to civic and
school groups about Melungeons, because it will
have become common information for all of
us."
Right now, that
information is flooding the Internet at an
astonishing rate. Some of it is contradictory,
much of it conjectural, some seems far-fetched.
The Melungeons, who claim
possible genetic ties to Spain, Portugal,
Turkey, Libya, Morocco, Greece, Syria, Iraq and
Iran, as well as to numerous Native American
tribes, African Americans and Northern Europeans
extending back more than four centuries: Can
they ever determine with certainty their racial
identity? Will the adjective
"mysterious" ever detach itself from
the name of Melungeon? Admittedly, it seem a far
stretch. But, then, six years ago a meeting like
First Union was a far stretch.
Maybe the better place to
look is at the place the Melungeons have held
(and been denied) culturally in Appalachia --
perhaps to talk about a Melungeon culture makes
more sense than talking about the Melungeon
race. And maybe Brent Kennedy's challenge to the
naysayers -- "Come forward and challenge
the current theories -- we want conflict!"
-- will prove all of us wrong.
The following is a list of
resources which may be useful to those wanting
to know more about current Melungeon research
and theories; it is by no means exhaustive:
1. Web site address.
http://www.clinch.edu/appalachia/melungeon/
2. The National
Melungeon Registry. An enrollment archive
intended to register Melungeon descendants and
to serve as a clearing-house for Melungeon
information and activities. Requires at least
one "probable" Melungeon ancestor.
Write to The National Melungeon Registry, The
Wise County Historical Society, P.O. Box 368,
Wise, VA 24293. Registration fee: $10, or $20
for registration plus a subscription to The
Appalachian Quarterly.
3. Under One Sky: The
Melungeon Information Exchange (formerly the
Southeast Kentucky Melungeon Information
Exchange). An occasional newsletter containing
reviews, historical documents and genealogical
information. Contact: Bill Fields, editor, Box
342, Alcoa, TN 37707.
4. Books.
* Ball, Bonnie. "The
Melungeons," 8th ed. (Big Stone Gap, Va.,
privately printed. 1991).
* Bible, Jean Patterson.
"Melungeons: Yesterday and Today"
(Rogersville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Printing
Company, 1975).
* Johnson, Mattie Ruth.
"My Melungeon Heritage: A Story of Life on
Newman's Ridge" (Johnson City, Tenn.,
Overmountain Press, 1997).
* Kennedy, N. Brent.
"The Melungeons: The Resurrection of a
Proud People" (Macon, Ga., Mercer
University Press, 1994). Revised edition 1996.
--JVS
Following are a few of the
many American words that bear striking
similarities to Turkish/Ottoman words, along
with definitions. Brent Kennedy and other
Melungeon researchers suggest that these are
examples of the clear linguistic clues linking
Melungeon and Turkish heritage:
1. Allegheny -- Allah
genis -- God's vastness
2. Alabama -- Allah Bamya
-- God's graveyard
3. Appalachian --
Apa-la-che -- widespread/multitude
4. Shawnee -- sah ne --
great shah, or great king
5. Shenandoah -- sen doga
(pronounced "shen-doah") -- happy
natural setting
6. Shindig -- sen lik
(pronounced "shen-lick") -- happy
party
7. Krill (Appalachian term
for a sprain or twisting of the ankle) -- kiril
-- to twist or break
Kennedy also has available
lists of Cherokee, Powhatan and Chippewa terms
closely related to or identical to Turkish words
and phrases.
--JVS
If the forerunners of
Melungeons were, as Brent Kennedy and others
suggest, from Spain, then what accounts for the
apparent Turkish, Portuguese, Libyan, Jewish,
Arab, and "renegade Greek" presence in
Melungeon heritage?
The key, according to
Kennedy, lies in the diversity of Spanish genes
dating back to 711 A.D., when Muslim armies
(Berber and Arab soldiers) conquered most of the
Iberian Peninsula and made most of Spain and
Portugal an Islamic nation for nearly 600 years.
The Berber and Arab soldiers blended into the
Spanish and Portuguese gene pool, eventually
considering themselves Spanish or Portuguese.
During the Spanish
Inquisition, these "conversos" were
targeted for torture, and thousands left the
Iberian Peninsula for France, Tunesia and
Morocco. Some were pressed into Spanish military
service and sent to the New World --
specifically, to Juan Pardo's Santa Elena
colony.
So the Spanish and
Portuguese who came to America in the 16th
century were already a complex Mediterranean
genetic mixture.
Kennedy also suggests that
Melungeons descend from Ottoman (Turkish and
other Muslim) slaves brought by Sir Francis
Drake to Roanoke Island, N.C. from the
Caribbean; Mediterranean/Middle Eastern blood
may also have been introduced through the
importation of Turkish silkworm workers to
Jamestown.
All of which, if
substantiated, makes Kennedy's broad-based plea
for ethnic tolerance perfectly logical: "We
truly are, at least today, a melange of many
peoplesÉ we are living proof thatÉ all human
beings harbor a racial diversity, known or
unknown, that truly ties them to other human
beings. It is an indisputable point. We are all
the same."
--JVS
Following is an excerpt from
Mattie Ruth Johnson's book, "My Melungeon
Heritage: A Story of Life on Newman's
Ridge." It's a detailed and evocative
account, with one curious (and perhaps
revealing) quirk: While the author is herself
Melungeon in both her maternal and paternal
familial lines, she refers to Melungeons as
"they":
Most people around the
mountain used the Farmer's Almanac signs to
plant their crops. Certain vegetables planted at
the wrong time would not produce well; some
would rot, some would be all vine or root, while
others would not grow at all. It seemed that
there was a season for everything. Not only did
we have spring, summer, fall, and winter, but
also Indian summer, dogwood winter, blackberry
winter, dog days, dew days, and many others.
When the farmers talked of planting, they
mentioned planting when the signs were in the
neck, arms, legs, bowels, full moon, old moon,
or new moon.... During dew days, there was extra
dew on the grass, and you usually saw a lot of
black dewberries... on the ground. If you had a
cut or sore and dew days dew got on it, it would
take longer to heal and would be more sore than
usual. And it was true; it happened to me. When
my cuts or nicks would touch the dew, they would
often become so painful they would make me cry.
--JVS
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