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Redbone (ethnicity)

Redbone is a term historically used in much of the southern United States to denote a multiracial individual or culture. Among African Americans the term has been slang for a fairer-skinned Black person.[1] In Louisiana, it also refers to a specific, geographically and ethnically distinct group.

Definition edit

The term has had various meanings according to locality, mostly implying multiracial people.[citation needed]

In Louisiana, the Redbone cultural group consists mainly of the families of migrants to the state following the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. The term "Redbone" became disfavored as it was a pejorative nickname applied by others; however, in the past 30 years, the term has begun to be used as the preferred description for some creole groups, including the Louisiana Redbones.[2]

Louisiana Redbone cultural group edit

 
Map of Louisiana and Texas showing parishes and counties historically associated with Louisiana Redbone people.[3]
  Traditional Redbone parishes and counties
  Louisiana
  Texas

The Louisiana Redbones historically lived in geographically and socially isolated communities in the southwestern Louisiana parishes, ranging from Sabine Parish in the northwest and Rapides Parish near the center of the state down to Calcasieu Parish in the southwest,[4] including parts of Orange County, Texas and Newton County, Texas. This area is roughly coextensive with what was once known as the Neutral Ground or Sabine Free State, an area of disputed sovereignty from 1806 to 1821 that was primarily bound on the east by the Calcasieu River and the Sabine River on the west.[5] Most families ancestral to the Louisiana Redbones came from South Carolina (where they were at times classified in some census records as "other free persons"),[4] although some families came from other Southeastern states. A review of newspaper articles, land grants, census records and other documents referring to the Redbones indicates that the main settlements of Redbones to southwestern and south central Louisiana and southeastern Texas took place over the course of many years,[6] although some members of Redbone families are noted as settling in the Neutral Ground before 1818 when the land was finally and officially considered part of the United States.[7]

The ambiguity of the origins of the members of the Redbone community and the cultural attitudes held by those living in the same region as the Redbone community but who were not part of it is shown in a letter written in 1893 by Albert Rigmaiden, Calcasieu parish treasurer, to McDonald Furman, a South Carolinian who conducted private ethnological research.[8] Rigmaiden wrote that he was unable to explain how the name Redbone originated and stated that

they are neither white nor black & as well as I can find out, the oldest ones came from S.C many years ago ... they are not looked on as being -- Negros -- Indian nor White people.[9]

Historically, members of the Redbone ethnic group lived in three areas. One community lived along Ten Mile Creek in Rapides Parish and Allen Parish. Members of this community were referred to as "Ten Milers"[10][11] or as "Red Bones."[12] in the 19th century. A second community was along Bearhead creek in what is now Beauregard Parish. A third community was established in Newton County, Texas and Orange County, Texas. 19th century newspapers tended to refer to members of this community simply as "mulattos,"[13][14] and members of the Texas community were not able to vote.

In the frontier of Southwestern Louisiana, the settlers successfully resisted classification as non-white. In 1837 and 1849, several of the members of the Redbone community were indicted for illegal voting on the charge that they were of color rather than white. The state court found them all not guilty, thus establishing that the Redbone community would be legally considered white in the state of Louisiana.[10]

However, references to the Redbone community and its members in 19th century newspapers tend to be wildly divergent, ranging from making no mention of racial makeup,[10][15] to stating that the members were white,[10] to stating that the members were African American[16][17] to stating that the members were of Indian extraction[18] to the assertion that the members were of unspecified mixed race.[19] These newspaper references do have the commonality of all pertaining to violent actions either in the community or perpetrated by members of the community.

Two incidents of violence in Louisiana are particularly notable, one due to the statement of Webster Talma Crawford and one due to amount of newspaper coverage the incident received. The Westport Fight occurred December 24, 1881 in southern Rapides Parish. According to the Crawford account, friction between the more recent settlers and the Redbones had been simmering for much of the month before exploding into a fight that involved several families in the community and ended in the burning down of a store owned by some of the recent non-Redbone settlers.[20] The Bearhead Creek incident took place in what is now southern Beauregard Parish on August 2, 1891. This battle also occurred due to similar tensions between Redbone and more recent, non-Redbone settlers. It left six men dead and several others wounded.[21]

In Texas, one incident of violence is notable. In May 1856 in Orange County, Texas, in the town of Madison (now Orange, Texas), Clark Ashworth was arrested for the theft of a hog. Ashworth was bound over for trial and his bond was paid by his cousin Sam Ashworth. Sam and a friend met the deputy sheriff Samuel Deputy who had arrested Clark on these charges and challenged him to a gun fight. The deputy sheriff arrested Sam Ashworth on the charges of abusive language from Negroes. Justice of the Peace A. N. Reading ruled that Sam Ashworth was a mulatto and not exclusively black, but neither was he white. Reading then sentenced Ashworth to 30 lashes on the bare back. The sheriff, Edward C. Glover, who was friendly to members of the Redbone community, allowed Sam to escape before sentence could be carried out. Sam Ashworth and his cousin, Jack Bunch, then murdered deputy sheriff Samuel Deputy as he crossed a river with his friend A. C. Merriman. Sheriff Glover organized a posse to hunt for Ashworth but only included Glover's and Ashworth's friends. The posse did not find the wanted men. Thereafter, other attempts were made to find Ashworth and Bunch that were not successful. In the aftermath of this incident, members of the Redbone community in Orange County were harassed; their homes and businesses were burned and plundered. Many living in Orange County moved to Louisiana. Over the coming weeks, a war raged between two groups. Those in support of Glover and the Redbones became known as "regulators" while those who supported Merriman became known as "moderators."[22][23]

These incidents illustrate the friction between some (mainly new) non-Redbone settlers to the region and the existing Redbone population. It is incidents such as these that may have cemented the non-Redbone view of this population as being both clannish and violent; however, a close reading of the incidents reveals that the tensions causing the fights arose primarily due to the prejudices of the non-Redbone settlers. The census records from the early to late 19th century list many non-Redbone families settling in the same regions as the Redbones,[24] and these settlers, from the evidence of the records, lived peacefully with members of the Redbone families, even, in many cases, marrying into Redbone families.[25]

During the era of mandated racial segregation under Jim Crow laws (ca. 1870s to 1965) schools accepted Redbone students as white[26] and a review of United States Census records in the late 19th and early 20th century shows that families traditionally considered as members of the Redbone community were mainly (although not always) recorded as white. Additionally, according to the marriage and census records, individuals who were from these families married either other members of the Redbone community or individuals who were listed in the census records as white and not members of the Redbone community.[25]

Academically, the group has been termed "largely unstudied."[4]

In literature edit

In film edit

  • In the film The 6th Man (1997), R.C. St John (played by Michael Michele), in reference to her light colored skin.
  • In the Netflix series Master of None (2015), Denise (played by Lena Waithe) uses the term to refer to a light skinned black person.
  • In the television series P-Valley (2020), Autumn Knight (played by Elarica Johnson), in reference to her heritage/ethnicity.
  • In the television series “Insecure”, Issa Dee (played by Issa Rae) uses the term to refer to Nathan, a fair skinned black love interest.

In music edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ozburn, Renée. "A Redbone's Reality". The Los Angeles Review. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
  2. ^ Bartl, Renate (2020). American Tri-Racials: African-Native Contact, Multi-Ethnic Native American Nations, and the Ethnogenesis of Tri-Racial Groups in North America (Dr. phil. thesis). Munich, Germany: Ludwig Maximilians-Universität LMU München. pp. 312–313. doi:10.5282/edoc.26874.
  3. ^ Marler, Don C. (2003). Redbones of Louisiana. Hemphill, Texas: Dogwood Press. ISBN 1-887745-21-1.
  4. ^ a b c Everett, C.S. "Brass Ankles/Red Bones," Vol. Ed. Celeste Ray, 6 Encyclopedia of Southern Culture (University of North Carolina Press 2007), pp. 102-104
  5. ^ See Adams-OnĂ­s Treaty.
  6. ^ "Ancestry® - Genealogy, Family Trees & Family History Records".
  7. ^ Claims to Land Between the Rio Hondo and Sabine Rivers in Louisiana. Communicated to the Senate January 31, 1825
  8. ^ "Charles James McDonald Furman papers, 1804-1903".
  9. ^ "REDBONE REDBONE".
  10. ^ a b c d The Baton Rouge Daily Advocate, 28 August 1857 p. 2
  11. ^ New Orleans Times-Picayune, 9 September 1877
  12. ^
    • New Orleans Times-Picayune 6 August 1891 p.8
    • New Orleans Times-Picayune 5 August 1891 p.1
    • The New York Times 5 August 1891
    • New Orleans Times Picayune 3 July 1897 p.8
  13. ^ Galveston Weekly News (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 17, Ed. 1, Tuesday, July 15, 1856
  14. ^ The Weekly Telegraph (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 19, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 23, 1856
  15. ^ New Orleans Times-Picayune 3 July 1892
  16. ^ The Springfield Daily Republican 28 August 1857
  17. ^ The New York Times 28 August 1857
  18. ^ New Orleans Times Picayune 6 August 1891
  19. ^ New Orleans Times Picayune 5 August 1891
  20. ^ "REDBONES IN THE NEUTRAL STRIP OR NO MAN'S LAND by Webster Talma Crawford".
  21. ^
    • Dallis Morning News 4 August 1891
    • Times-Picayune 5 August 1891, p.1
    • Times Picayune August 6, 1891
    • Baton Rouge Daily Advocate 7 August 1891
    • Times-Picayune August 9, 1891
    • New Orleans Item 11 August 1891
    • Dallas Morning News 11 September 1891
  22. ^ "Mulattoes: The Orange County War of 1856".
  23. ^ Galveston Weekly News June 6, 1856 - July 25, 1856
  24. ^ "U.S. Federal Census Collection - Ancestry.com".
  25. ^ a b "Ancestry® - Genealogy, Family Trees & Family History Records".
  26. ^ "USGenWeb Archives: Allen Parish, Schools".

External links edit

  • Gilmer, Jason A., Selected Works Free People in a Slave Country,[1], March, 2010.
  • Melungeon Heritage Association
  • DeMarce, Virginia. National Genealogical Society Quarterly, March 1992.
  • Marler, D. C. Louisiana Redbones, presented at the First Union, a meeting of Melungeons, at Clinch Valley College in Wise, Virginia, July 1997. (anecdotal history)
  • Marler, D. C. Redbones of Louisiana, Dogwood Press.
  • Crawford, Webster Talma. Redbones in the Neutral Strip or No Man's Land Between Calcasieu and Sabine Rivers, and the Westport Fight Between Whites and Redbones for Possession of this Strip on Christmas Eve, 1882

redbone, ethnicity, other, uses, redbone, redbone, term, historically, used, much, southern, united, states, denote, multiracial, individual, culture, among, african, americans, term, been, slang, fairer, skinned, black, person, louisiana, also, refers, specif. For other uses see Redbone Redbone is a term historically used in much of the southern United States to denote a multiracial individual or culture Among African Americans the term has been slang for a fairer skinned Black person 1 In Louisiana it also refers to a specific geographically and ethnically distinct group Contents 1 Definition 2 Louisiana Redbone cultural group 3 In literature 4 In film 5 In music 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDefinition edit nbsp Look up redbone in Wiktionary the free dictionary The term has had various meanings according to locality mostly implying multiracial people citation needed In Louisiana the Redbone cultural group consists mainly of the families of migrants to the state following the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 The term Redbone became disfavored as it was a pejorative nickname applied by others however in the past 30 years the term has begun to be used as the preferred description for some creole groups including the Louisiana Redbones 2 Louisiana Redbone cultural group edit nbsp Map of Louisiana and Texas showing parishes and counties historically associated with Louisiana Redbone people 3 Traditional Redbone parishes and counties Louisiana TexasThe Louisiana Redbones historically lived in geographically and socially isolated communities in the southwestern Louisiana parishes ranging from Sabine Parish in the northwest and Rapides Parish near the center of the state down to Calcasieu Parish in the southwest 4 including parts of Orange County Texas and Newton County Texas This area is roughly coextensive with what was once known as the Neutral Ground or Sabine Free State an area of disputed sovereignty from 1806 to 1821 that was primarily bound on the east by the Calcasieu River and the Sabine River on the west 5 Most families ancestral to the Louisiana Redbones came from South Carolina where they were at times classified in some census records as other free persons 4 although some families came from other Southeastern states A review of newspaper articles land grants census records and other documents referring to the Redbones indicates that the main settlements of Redbones to southwestern and south central Louisiana and southeastern Texas took place over the course of many years 6 although some members of Redbone families are noted as settling in the Neutral Ground before 1818 when the land was finally and officially considered part of the United States 7 The ambiguity of the origins of the members of the Redbone community and the cultural attitudes held by those living in the same region as the Redbone community but who were not part of it is shown in a letter written in 1893 by Albert Rigmaiden Calcasieu parish treasurer to McDonald Furman a South Carolinian who conducted private ethnological research 8 Rigmaiden wrote that he was unable to explain how the name Redbone originated and stated that they are neither white nor black amp as well as I can find out the oldest ones came from S C many years ago they are not looked on as being Negros Indian nor White people 9 Historically members of the Redbone ethnic group lived in three areas One community lived along Ten Mile Creek in Rapides Parish and Allen Parish Members of this community were referred to as Ten Milers 10 11 or as Red Bones 12 in the 19th century A second community was along Bearhead creek in what is now Beauregard Parish A third community was established in Newton County Texas and Orange County Texas 19th century newspapers tended to refer to members of this community simply as mulattos 13 14 and members of the Texas community were not able to vote In the frontier of Southwestern Louisiana the settlers successfully resisted classification as non white In 1837 and 1849 several of the members of the Redbone community were indicted for illegal voting on the charge that they were of color rather than white The state court found them all not guilty thus establishing that the Redbone community would be legally considered white in the state of Louisiana 10 However references to the Redbone community and its members in 19th century newspapers tend to be wildly divergent ranging from making no mention of racial makeup 10 15 to stating that the members were white 10 to stating that the members were African American 16 17 to stating that the members were of Indian extraction 18 to the assertion that the members were of unspecified mixed race 19 These newspaper references do have the commonality of all pertaining to violent actions either in the community or perpetrated by members of the community Two incidents of violence in Louisiana are particularly notable one due to the statement of Webster Talma Crawford and one due to amount of newspaper coverage the incident received The Westport Fight occurred December 24 1881 in southern Rapides Parish According to the Crawford account friction between the more recent settlers and the Redbones had been simmering for much of the month before exploding into a fight that involved several families in the community and ended in the burning down of a store owned by some of the recent non Redbone settlers 20 The Bearhead Creek incident took place in what is now southern Beauregard Parish on August 2 1891 This battle also occurred due to similar tensions between Redbone and more recent non Redbone settlers It left six men dead and several others wounded 21 In Texas one incident of violence is notable In May 1856 in Orange County Texas in the town of Madison now Orange Texas Clark Ashworth was arrested for the theft of a hog Ashworth was bound over for trial and his bond was paid by his cousin Sam Ashworth Sam and a friend met the deputy sheriff Samuel Deputy who had arrested Clark on these charges and challenged him to a gun fight The deputy sheriff arrested Sam Ashworth on the charges of abusive language from Negroes Justice of the Peace A N Reading ruled that Sam Ashworth was a mulatto and not exclusively black but neither was he white Reading then sentenced Ashworth to 30 lashes on the bare back The sheriff Edward C Glover who was friendly to members of the Redbone community allowed Sam to escape before sentence could be carried out Sam Ashworth and his cousin Jack Bunch then murdered deputy sheriff Samuel Deputy as he crossed a river with his friend A C Merriman Sheriff Glover organized a posse to hunt for Ashworth but only included Glover s and Ashworth s friends The posse did not find the wanted men Thereafter other attempts were made to find Ashworth and Bunch that were not successful In the aftermath of this incident members of the Redbone community in Orange County were harassed their homes and businesses were burned and plundered Many living in Orange County moved to Louisiana Over the coming weeks a war raged between two groups Those in support of Glover and the Redbones became known as regulators while those who supported Merriman became known as moderators 22 23 These incidents illustrate the friction between some mainly new non Redbone settlers to the region and the existing Redbone population It is incidents such as these that may have cemented the non Redbone view of this population as being both clannish and violent however a close reading of the incidents reveals that the tensions causing the fights arose primarily due to the prejudices of the non Redbone settlers The census records from the early to late 19th century list many non Redbone families settling in the same regions as the Redbones 24 and these settlers from the evidence of the records lived peacefully with members of the Redbone families even in many cases marrying into Redbone families 25 During the era of mandated racial segregation under Jim Crow laws ca 1870s to 1965 schools accepted Redbone students as white 26 and a review of United States Census records in the late 19th and early 20th century shows that families traditionally considered as members of the Redbone community were mainly although not always recorded as white Additionally according to the marriage and census records individuals who were from these families married either other members of the Redbone community or individuals who were listed in the census records as white and not members of the Redbone community 25 Academically the group has been termed largely unstudied 4 In literature editCampbell Will D The Glad River 1982 Greg Iles Natchez Burning 2014 James Lee Burke Morning for Flamingos 1990In film editIn the film The 6th Man 1997 R C St John played by Michael Michele in reference to her light colored skin In the Netflix series Master of None 2015 Denise played by Lena Waithe uses the term to refer to a light skinned black person In the television series P Valley 2020 Autumn Knight played by Elarica Johnson in reference to her heritage ethnicity In the television series Insecure Issa Dee played by Issa Rae uses the term to refer to Nathan a fair skinned black love interest In music editThe American funk rock band Redbone is named after the term as the founding members were all of mixed ancestry The 2016 song Redbone by Childish Gambino is named after the term See also editMelungeon Sabine Free State Adams Onis Treaty Regulator Moderator War Brass Ankles Cajuns Acadians Mulatto Louisiana Creole people High yellowReferences edit Ozburn Renee A Redbone s Reality The Los Angeles Review Retrieved 26 September 2023 Bartl Renate 2020 American Tri Racials African Native Contact Multi Ethnic Native American Nations and the Ethnogenesis of Tri Racial Groups in North America Dr phil thesis Munich Germany Ludwig Maximilians Universitat LMU Munchen pp 312 313 doi 10 5282 edoc 26874 Marler Don C 2003 Redbones of Louisiana Hemphill Texas Dogwood Press ISBN 1 887745 21 1 a b c Everett C S Brass Ankles Red Bones Vol Ed Celeste Ray 6 Encyclopedia of Southern Culture University of North Carolina Press 2007 pp 102 104 See Adams Onis Treaty Ancestry Genealogy Family Trees amp Family History Records Claims to Land Between the Rio Hondo and Sabine Rivers in Louisiana Communicated to the Senate January 31 1825 Charles James McDonald Furman papers 1804 1903 REDBONE REDBONE a b c d The Baton Rouge Daily Advocate 28 August 1857 p 2 New Orleans Times Picayune 9 September 1877 New Orleans Times Picayune 6 August 1891 p 8 New Orleans Times Picayune 5 August 1891 p 1 The New York Times 5 August 1891 New Orleans Times Picayune 3 July 1897 p 8 Galveston Weekly News Galveston Tex Vol 13 No 17 Ed 1 Tuesday July 15 1856 The Weekly Telegraph Houston Tex Vol 22 No 19 Ed 1 Wednesday July 23 1856 New Orleans Times Picayune 3 July 1892 The Springfield Daily Republican 28 August 1857 The New York Times 28 August 1857 New Orleans Times Picayune 6 August 1891 New Orleans Times Picayune 5 August 1891 REDBONES IN THE NEUTRAL STRIP OR NO MAN S LAND by Webster Talma Crawford Dallis Morning News 4 August 1891 Times Picayune 5 August 1891 p 1 Times Picayune August 6 1891 Baton Rouge Daily Advocate 7 August 1891 Times Picayune August 9 1891 New Orleans Item 11 August 1891 Dallas Morning News 11 September 1891 Mulattoes The Orange County War of 1856 Galveston Weekly News June 6 1856 July 25 1856 U S Federal Census Collection Ancestry com a b Ancestry Genealogy Family Trees amp Family History Records USGenWeb Archives Allen Parish Schools External links editGilmer Jason A Selected Works Free People in a Slave Country 1 March 2010 Melungeon Heritage Association DeMarce Virginia National Genealogical Society Quarterly March 1992 Marler D C Louisiana Redbones presented at the First Union a meeting of Melungeons at Clinch Valley College in Wise Virginia July 1997 anecdotal history Marler D C Redbones of Louisiana Dogwood Press Crawford Webster Talma Redbones in the Neutral Strip or No Man s Land Between Calcasieu and Sabine Rivers and the Westport Fight Between Whites and Redbones for Possession of this Strip on Christmas Eve 1882 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Redbone ethnicity amp oldid 1192943181, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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