"The Mixed Community"
   Second Deck
 

MultiRaces

Afro Asian
Afro-Caribbean
Ainocô
Baster
Black-Dutch
Black Indians
Black Irish
Blasian
British Mixed
Burghers
Caboclo
Cafuzo
Castizo
Cholo
Creole
Dominickers
Eurasian
Griqua
Hapa
Marabou
Melungeon
Mestizo
Métis
Moreno
Mulatto
Pardo
Plaçage
Redbone
We-Sorts
Zambo

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RedBone

There are two classes of "Redbones" and are two separate ethnic people. The first ethnic group who were called "Redbones" were groups of multi-ethnic families with similar or the same English surnames who were labeled as Free Persons of Color, Mulatto or Indian by early American census takers. The term was used for these mixed race multi-ethnic groups of families in Louisiana, South Carolina, Mississippi and East Texas.

The ancestry is said to consist of a combination of two or more of the following ethnicities; Northern European, Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, South Asian, Native American and African ancestry of various degrees and mixtures. The origin of this group is probably from Southern states, where many minorities freely mixed, in short multiracial and some not.

The Native American tribes in these groups may include the Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw, Coushatta, Cheraw, Tuscarora, Nansemond and members of the Powhatan Confederation.

A specific brown-to-reddish skinned people of Louisiana with dark eyes and straight, frizzy or curly hair. They are often thought of as a tri-racial people of Native American, African and some form of Eastern or Western European heritage. Redbones are not neccesarily Creole or Cajun, nor mixed with any other heritage-they traditionally speak English.

"Redbone" is seemingly a term common in the Neutral Zone and East Texas among nineteenth century era Euro-Americans and African Americans who thought they were referencing people of multi-ethnic genetics. Later generations of these two ethnicities seemingly continued to reference the descendants of these racially obscure people to the extent that some of these descendants seemingly began to think of themselves as "redbone." A usage is also claimed for an isolated enclave in South Carolina whose complexions confounded their neighbors. Close scrutiny reveals only vaguely distinct differences between the culture of the referenced people and the culture of the dominant Euro-Americans surrounding them wherever the epithet is used.

"Melungeon" is simply another epithet seemingly used in similar fashion with evidenced history to about the same era which produced the terms "redbone", "moor", "brass ankle", etc. All these terms have been associated with many of the same surnames. The term "melungeon" was seemingly common among Euro Americans and African Americans in Tennessee and Kentucky before its usages was recently expanded through tourism promotions and genealogy marketers.

The other group known as "Redbones" are African Americans who use the term "Redbones" for naturally born light-skinned African American families with dark brown skin. Many African Americans produce light-skinned children without having any Native American or European ancestry. This still seems to cause controversy and confusion among people. The Term "Redbone" came from African Americans being "so light that you can see the red blood flowing in them".








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