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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2020
This article investigates how Progressive Era writers, both popular and scientific, helped to construct multiracial identities alongside competing efforts to enshrine race into strictly black and white terms. Existing scholarship on race in the Progressive Era has not sufficiently analyzed the presence of multiracial populations. Instead, scholars have treated state and federal efforts to police racial boundaries, namely through anti-miscegenation laws and the census, as evidence that multiracial persons were a legal impossibility. However, scientific and popular writing on Appalachia provides a conceptual space in which multiracialism was not only a conceptual possibility, but was engendered. Appalachia took on increased importance during the Progressive Era as both intellectuals and reformers used the region to frame their anxieties about the limits of modernity and the threat of racial mixing. The region was home to white mountaineers who appeared arrested in time, existing in uncomfortable proximity to newly discovered groups with white, black, and Native American ancestry who also seemed to have been shunned by civilization. In attempting to understand the peculiar conditions of Appalachia, these Progressive Era writers helped to advance some of the first ideas about what it meant to be mixed-race in America.
1 “Hill Dwellers Live Like Nomads,” Duluth News Tribune, May 29, 1921, 4.
2 Ibid.
3 “Town Puzzled by Wild Family,” New York Times, May 2, 1921, 16; William James Dobbin, “Wild Men Within Commuting Distance,” New York Tribune, June 12, 1921, D1; and “Village Shrinks From Contact with ‘Poor, Unwashed Whites,’” New York Tribune, May 1, 1921, 2.
4 “Family Living Like Barbarians,” Tulsa World, May 22, 1921, 4.
5 “Finds Wild Family From the Ramapos,” New York Times, May 1, 1921, 7. The racial ambiguity of communities like the Jackson Whites is also borne out in their name, which carried as much lore as the population itself. While two separate origin narratives are thought to explain the etymology of the Jackson Whites, the most common claims that the term is a contraction of “Jacks”—the term used by white northerners to refer to freed slaves—and “Whites”—the white mountaineers who lived in the region and intermarried with the freed slaves and local Native Americans. It should be noted that the term “Jackson White” is held in disrepute by a majority of this community, as the term is seen as pejorative in nature and a denial of their long-standing claim to indigenous ancestry. Known today as the Ramapough Mountain Indians, the shift in nomenclature is evidence of a decades-long battle to determine the boundaries of black and native identity. For the purposes of this paper, the author will use the terms “Jackson White” as well as “Ramapo people” as the historical texts used them. However, this usage should not be read as a commentary on the racial identity of the group in question, but merely in keeping with the usage of the time. For more on the nomenclature and identity struggles of the Ramapough Mountain Indians, see Cohen, David Steven, The Ramapo Mountain People (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1986)Google Scholar.
6 “Hill Dwellers Live Like Nomads.”
7 Calvin Beale coined the term “triracial isolates,” although these communities are known by a number of derisive names, including “racial dropouts,” “racial miscreants,” and sometimes “racial islands.” Beale, Calvin L., “American Triracial Isolates: Their Status and Pertinence to Genetic Research,” Eugenics Quarterly 4 (Dec. 1957): 187CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
8 “Hill Dwellers Live Like Nomads.”
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10 “Strung Up A Negro: Lynch Law in the Mountains of New York State Effect,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Apr. 21, 1899, 5; and Dobbin, “Wild Men Within Commuting Distance.”
11 Jersey's Poor Whites: Inhabitants of the Ramapos,” St Louis Post-Dispatch, Oct. 18, 1884; Dobbin, “Wild Men Within Commuting Distance”; and “A Visit to the Jackson Whites of in the Ramapo,” Washington Post, Feb. 28, 1909.
12 In this essay, I rely on Jill Olumide's definition of “mixed-race,” which she defines as “the patterns and commonality of experience among those who obstruct whatever purpose race is being put to at a particular time.” Olumide, Jill, Raiding the Gene Pool: The Social Construction of Race (London: Pluto Press, 2002)Google Scholar.
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57 “The Jackson Whites: Strange People Living Between New York and New Jersey.”
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88 Ibid.
89 Ibid.
90 Ibid.
91 Ibid.
92 “Blood Combination Has Bred Moron People,” National Labor Tribune (Pittsburgh, PA), Nov. 24, 1932, 5.
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104 The one-drop rule is a legal and social convention asserting that any person with at least a drop of black blood is considered black. It has historically operated in the United States as a cornerstone of America's racial formation project, whereby mixed-race persons become illegible because they are routinely assigned the racial status of the subordinate group. See Davis, F. James, Who Is Black? One Nation's Definition (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1991)Google Scholar.