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The other African American family histories

· Saturday, February 27th 2010 at 11:08AM · 501 views
A number of articles during Black History Month focused on the nation's first family and race. As an African American, I find this topic particularly interesting. But some references to the nation's first president of color reminded me of an article the New York Times published last fall about the genealogy of first lady Michelle Obama ["First Lady's Roots Reveal Slavery's Tangled Legacy," front page, Oct. 8, 2009]. This article concerned me because it perpetuated and strengthened a standard, if not iconic, view of African American history completely at variance with my own.

The familiar, slavery-laced tale rooted in the South needs to be put in its place. Here is my story:

One day late in the summer of 1956, when I was an undergraduate, I walked a few blocks to my grandmother's house and sat my father's mother down at her round wooden table. I was born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., and her house at 106 Walnut St. had been a family home for generations. I asked Grandma to tell me about our family.

As she spoke, I took notes and began a detailed chart on a large sheet of paper. Names, places, relationships, personalities -- I wrote it all down and marveled.

Grandma personally knew ancestors of ours whose lives reached back before 1850. She recalled that there was a white relative way back then -- a woman who had lived in this house and spoke a language my grandmother did not understand. As she imitated the sound of the language, German, my grandmother told me about my great-great-grandmother, Katherine Gehring.

In the mid-1840s, Katherine, an immigrant teenager, married my great-great grandfather, Benjamin C. Taylor. Grandma paused in her storytelling and left the table to get out their marriage certificate: May 28, 1846, Michigan Avenue Baptist Church, Buffalo, N.Y. My great-great grandfather is known as Buffalo's first black doctor. I have newspaper articles on him.

I have photographs of Katherine and Benjamin. In one of them, Katherine is embracing her child, my great-grandmother, Elnora Taylor.

Years later, at the genealogy library of the Mormon Temple in Oakland, Calif., I was shown a copy of the 1850 Buffalo Census. There was my family: Benjamin, Katherine, Benjamin Jr., 10-month-old Elnora. To the question of "country of origin," neighbor after neighbor answered "Germany," indicating that my great-great-grandparents lived in the German part of town.

Elnora Taylor married a man named Gustavus Anderson Jr. (thus, the origins of Grandma's husband's name, James Taylor Anderson, which is also my name). My father's sister Ora always said that Gustavus's father was an Englishman. Starting with the name Gustavus Anderson Jr., my investigations and best guesses say that his father might have been a Swede with British citizenship. In a photograph I have of him, he looks like Thomas Jefferson.

All this is Buffalo. This family history has nothing to do with the South, white slaveholders or black slave women. It has everything to do with solid marriages and families in Upstate New York from the middle of the 19th century onward.

And our story of blended black and white lineage cannot be unique. One of the newspaper articles mentioning Benjamin and Katherine says that city records show at least 10 marriages between black men and white women about that time, with most of the women being German or Irish.

How many people know of this history of mixed marriages and families in the United States? There are famous stories, such as those of President Obama and Tiger Woods, but what about the many, many other tales of mixed ancestry in this country? What about all the others that contradict widespread assumptions?

Grandma told me that Benjamin C. Taylor was not what one would call an American Negro or an African American. He was a foreigner, she said, perhaps from South America, and in due course became a U.S. citizen who may have participated in the California Gold Rush. She remembered that Benjamin always carried a passport -- a U.S. passport, which she showed me, that described him as "colored." To the family line that he and his wife began, African Americans and Native Americans later joined.

The iconic story of abuse in the South needs to be put in its place. There are other foundational stories of mixed black and white heritage in our country. It is time to start telling them.

By James T. Anderson
The writer is a composer and musicologist in Palo Alto, Calif.

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Comments (5)

Richard Kigel Saturday, February 27th 2010 at 11:59AM

Clark:

Thank you so much for your contribution.

One significant point that I have learned in my own study of the history of blacks in America is the amazing diverstiy of stories, situations and circumstances.

Since the first Africans came to Jamestown in 1619 as indentured servants with the option to purchase their freedom, there has been a strong presence of free blacks who lived and worked and had families in the north and the south.

Some slaves ran way and began new lives for themsevles and their families in freedom. Some purchased or negotiated their freedom. They had to face devastating prejudice and slave-like work conditions. Doors of opportunity were closed to them. But they were free.

The point is--the story of blacks in America, after the MIddle Passage, is more diverse, nuanced, rich and complicated than a simple story line such as "All Blacks Were Descendents of Slaves" and "all blacks came from the South" would indicate.

Sojourner Truth, the former Isabella Van Wagenen, grew up in upstate New YOrk speaking Dutch.

That is why historians call it a Diaspora because the spread, scope and influence of AFricans in America is so vast.


Black History is an amazingly rich subject that is larger and more surprising than many people think.

Harry Watley Sunday, February 28th 2010 at 3:58AM

Hello Clark,

And through it all, do you believe you are a subjugated man because of your race and color today in White America?

Tell me what you think.

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

Actually "I" hope at least some of us will be better able to say that Mozell's "Y-O" problem was like that seat that Mother ROSA PARKS sat in...and Jen damanding IRMA ROBINSON GET OUT TO THAT SEAT AND BECAUSE I SAID******@@@@@@@@@@ N-O WE HAVE TURNED THIS SITE INTO A 2010 CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT....

FOR ANY THAT TAKES THE EXAMPLE THAT I JUST SITED AS MY GRAND STANDING, YOU ARE IN DENIAL THAT MOST OF YOU HAVE LEARNED MORE ABOUT BIA SINCE THE "Y-o" PROBLEM BLOG THAN YOU HAVE KNOWN IN YOUR WHOLE LIFE...........

BUT, EVEN WORST IS YOU ARE SUPPORTING THE "BRAINWASHING" IF YOU STILL BELIEVE THAT R.P. WAS TOO TIRED TO GIVE UP HERE SEAT..WHEN I HAVE BEEN TELLING YOU THAT R.P. DID NOT E-V-E-R A-C-T ANY DIFFERENT THAT DAY THAN SHE HAS BEEN DOING ALL OF HER BLACK AND PROUD LIFE...THUS LIKE THIS BLOG WITHOUT R.P. HOW MANY WHITE WOMEN WOULD THERE BE ON THE SUPREME COURT OR OUR SENATE OR GOVERNORS OR CDO'S OF BIG BUSINESS...(SMILE)

JIM CROW = MINDCONTROL (I AM NOT SMILING)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

Clark at each of our family reunions the youths that have been put in charge of tracing the family"s roots of our grandfather gives their report so we learn as a UNITED intity.(smile)

Alex Haley's expert advice to our BLACK FAMILY CLASS (in answering one of the student's question)TOLD US TO START TRACING YOUR FAMILY ROOTS by BEGIN ing WITH THE FAMILY BIBLE AND THE OLDEST PEOPLE IN THE FAMILY.(smile)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

DID YOU KNOW THAT AFRICANS WERE BROUGHT HER TO WORK IN COTTON IS AS AS BIG OF A BRAIN WASHING LIE AS MS ROSA PARKS WOULD NOT GIVE UP HER SEAT THAT DAY BECAUSE SHE WAS TIRED...

AFRICANS WERE EXPERTS IN GROWING RICE...THEY WERE BROUGHT HERE TO DRAIN THE SWAMPS IN SOUTH CAROLINA SO THAT R-I-C-E (THE MEGA BUSINESS AT THAT TIME WAS NOT COTTON BUT RICE...

THINK ABOUT THAT BRAIN WASING LIE EVERY TIME YOU SEE HOW OUR TRUE HISTORY OF BIA IS ON THAT BOX OF "UNCLE bEN'S" (STILL REFUSING TO SAY mR. THEREFORE THE u-n-c-l-e) RICE AND WE HAVE NO IDEA OF TIS NO MORE THAN CHARLSTON SOUTH CAROLINA IS NAMED AFTE AN AFICAN DANCE...OR HOW r-a-p ANOTHER SING OF SOMETING THE SALVES INVENTED WHRN THEY TOOK TOSE DRUMS FROM THE AFRICANS...

THEY TOOK THOSE DRUMS BECAUSE THEY COULD NOT COMMUNICATE BECAUSE THE SALVE MASTERS COULD NOT UNDER WHAT THE DRUMS WAS SAYING SO RAP BECAME THE NEW WAY TO COMMUNICATE...

BROTHER rICH, SEE WHY YOU WOULD BE FIRED IF YOU BEGAN TEACHING BIA AND CNN'S BIA CAN BE SEEN AND PAYED MEGA BUCKS TO FARTHER KEEP THIE BRAIN WASHING ALIVE NOW THAT THIS INFORMATION IS WHY THE YOUTH OF TODAY IS COMING OUT IN RECORD NUMBERS WHILE TRYING TO GET THEIR PARENTS AND GRANDPARENTS EDUCATED IN THESE GROUPS AND THAT WHAT IN TRUTH THAT " WEH HAVE GOT TO TAKE OUR COUNTRY BACK BEFORE THIS PRESIDENT DISTROYS IT.(SMILE)

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