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Seller's Description:
Near Fine. 180 pages. As early as 1654, English and French explorers in the southern Appalachians reported seeing dark-skinned, brown-and blue-eyed, and European-featured people speaking broken Elizabethan English, living in cabins, tilling the land, smelting silver, practicing Christianity, and, most perplexing of all, claiming to be "Portyghee." Declared "free persons of color" in the late 1700s by the English and Scottish-Irish immigrants, the Melungeons, as they were known, were driven off their lands and denied voting rights, education, and the right to judicial process. The law was enforced mercilessly and sometimes violently in the resoundingly successful effort to totally disenfranchise these earliest American settlers. An appendix lists commonn Melungeon names along with related surnames of Brass Ankles, Carmel Indians, Cubans, Guineas, Lumbee/Croatan Indians, Pamunkey/Powhatan Indians, and Redbones.
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Seller's Description:
Fine. 8vo. xviii, 180pp, index, appendix, bw ills. Or card covers. Slightest of edge wear to covers. The story of the persecution of the Melungeons, a people of mixed race who lived in the Appalachians as early as 1654. They were declared free poeple of color in the late 1700s, driven from their land and denied most rights. The law was enforced mercilessly in an attempt to totally disenfranchise these earliest American settlers.