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Sample of Mixed Blood Ubiquity: Representative
Family Histories
[51]The extant records concerning the traders and other countrymen are uneven in
their coverage of mixed-blood families. Although only the better-known families
were chronicled in the works of early regional historians and authors commenting
on the Indian tribes, the existence of scores of surnames within these records
indicates that mixed-blood families were widespread in the Choctaw nation.
Over the space of several generations the mixed-blood families of the traders
and countrymen began to move more and more towards the culture of their white
kinsmen, especially if the white progenitor had stayed in one area and
recognized the paternity of his offspring. As time passed many of these mixed
bloods were assumed to be whites by travelers and new corners into the region
who did not know of their Indian heritage. The mixed bloods also married into
white society on occasion and the resulting family lines blended smoothly into
whiteness[52] with little other than family tradition to trace their origins.
There exist in the South today countless families who can trace their heritage
back to the earliest mixed bloods. One case in point originates in the
mid-eighteenth century with the noted Scotch trader with the Creeks, Lachlan
McGillivray.1 McGillivray, born in Scotland
in 1719, journeyed to the New World as a youth and eventually lived in the Creek
country of present-day Alabama. There he met and married the mixed-blood Sehoy
Marchand, whose parents were a French merchant and a Creek Indian girl (see
chart 2).
Chart 2
Descendent Chart for
Marchand/Dye Lineage
Creek Wife - Captain Marchand
Lachlan McGillivray - Sehoy Marchand
Sophia McGillivry - Benjamin Durant
Samuel Brashears - Rachael Durant
Alexander Brashears - Emeline Wind
Emiline Jane Brashears - Ira Byrd Smith
Sally Willamac Dillard - William Franklin
Smith
Noah Levi Dye - Emeline Jane Smith
Robert Ford Dye - Mary Lotis Anderson
Mary Ann Dye - Samuel James Wells
Compiled by the author
One of their children, Alexander,
eventually became a major leader within the
tribe; another, Sophia, married an Indian
countryman and trader, Benjamin Durant.
Their marriage resulted in at least three
known children, all daughters. One, Polly
Durant, married a Creek Indian and left no
further history. A second, Sophie Durant,
married John Linder V of the noted Linder
family in the Tombigbee region north of
Mobile and thereby entered into southern
plantation society. A third daughter,
Rachael, married the trader Samuel Brashears
and reared a family[53] which would reach into
Choctaw country and later the state of
Mississippi. Rachael had already married
twice before. Her first marriage was to
Billy McGirth, a Creek mixed blood, and her
second was to Davy Walker whose origins are
unclear.2
According to family genealogies Samuel and
Rachael Brashears had at least two sons,
Samuel Brashears, Jr., and Alexander
Brashears.3
Alexander married Emeline Wind4
and had at least six children including
Emeline Jane, the eldest, born June 1, 1833,
and Louise, born December 12, 1835. These
sisters married brothers -- Emeline Jane to
Ira Byrd Smith, born December 16, 1827, and
Louise to Nathaniel John Smith, born January
13, 1822. The descendents of Nathaniel and
Louise eventually married into the Cole,
Reed, Weaver,[54] and Chastang families of
Mobile and Washington County, Alabama; a
grand-daughter of Ira and Emeline Jane, also
named Emeline Jane Smith, married into the
Dye family of south Mississippi,5
while other descendants married Marchants,
Durants and other bearers of documented
mixed blood names.
One of the more paradoxical links in the
above genealogy is Emeline Jane Brashears
Smith who at the age of seventy-five sought
to be recognized as a Cherokee because her
grandmother was a mixed blood of that tribe.
In answer to a query from the Commissioner
Indian Affairs she stated:
"...as near as I can recollect my
Father was living in Marengo Co., Ala.,
in 1835-6 near Demopolis, Ala., and he
was living at Mt. Vernon, Ala., Mobile
Co., in 1846, and his mother, my
Grandmother, was living in Sumter Co.,
Ala., in 1835-6 and 1846 but I don't
recollect her Post Office and if they
were recognized members of the tribe I
do not know. They were very wealthy
slave owners but were made very poor by
the civil war."6
In an earlier letter she had pleaded with
the officials in Washington to correct her
children's claims because they had stated
they were Choctaw.
[55]"I was away from home when my
children made application so I didn't
know that they had named the Choctaw as
our tribe. It was a bad mistake on their
part for they didn't know for all the
Indian blood that we claim to was
through my Grandmother Rachael Brashear3
(nee Durant) and she was Cherokee Indian
but my children didn't know it[;] they
know t19theoctaws for there is some of
them here yet."7
It is interesting that the claimant was
so insistent that Rachael Durant was
Cherokee when most of the historical records
name her as Creek. Had Emeline Smith
succumbed to the favored Southern myth of
tracing one's descent from a "Cherokee
Princess," or might the family history be
more correct in claiming that Rachael
actually was part Cherokee? Since Emeline
Smith's affidavit states that her
grandparents had both died before her birth,
and because of her advanced age, she
possibly had confused the story with that of
a great-grandmother handed down through her
parents. Regardless, her claim #9576 was
rejected because her parents and
grandparents were not listed on any existing
tribal roll. Her family had strayed too far
from the cultural path of Indians and was
now regarded as white. All of the extant
census records show her family, as well as
her descendents, as white.
Emeline Jane Smith's story, that of a
"white" Southern family with roots running
deeply into Indian[56] blood lines, may be
typical of many white Southern families who
trace their descent from a "Cherokee
Princess." other words, Indian heritage
claims can often be authenticated with a
judicious amount of demythologizing. The
mixed-blood lineage of some "white" families
can definitely be traced from the
mid-eighteenth century until the present
day. Considering that at the time of the
American Revolution there were at least
eighty white traders in Creek country, and
probably as many among the Chickasaw and
Choctaw nation, it is not surprising that by
the time of removal their mixed-blood
offspring numbered in the thousands. Since
most reports of traders include the mention
of an Indian, wife, we can assume that most
of the estimated one hundred sixty traders
sired mixed-blood children. Considering the
large size of frontier families in those
days (ten children in a family was by no
means unusual) it would not be farfetched to
assume conservatively an average of five
children per family. By the end of the
Revolution there conceivably were seven or
eight hundred mixed bloods (and probably
more) in the Southeast not including the
Cherokees. If one allows twenty years per
generation and only allows for strict
intermarriage of the mixed bloods (although
many mixed bloods married full bloods) this
number would have risen to nearly 2,000
(halving the product of eight hundred
families, each with five[57] children, to allow
for inbreeding within the group) by the turn
of the century. By 1820 the number could
have reached 5,000 and by removal, at least
12,000 in the three tribes. These figures
are very conservative and could be doubled
or tripled easily.
Although enough information for extended
statistical analysis is not available, some
assumptions nonetheless can be made from
existing data. There were repeated
incidences of sets of brothers from one
family marrying sisters from another,
probably indicating the limited social
opportunities in Indian country. Although as
in the case of the Linder-Durant marriage
some mixed-blood females married out of the
tribe into white society, some married full
bloods, while most married mixed-blood
traders, planters, or herdsmen and lived in
Indian country. Later during Removal those
staying in Mississippi and Alabama found it
easy, if not necessary, to melt into the
incoming white population. The task was made
less difficult because many owned large
tracts of land, had been using slaves to
cultivate cotton for some years, and were in
agreement with the Jeffersonian program to
transform Indians into yeoman farmers.
In order to better understand the range and
types of family information available on the
Choctaw mixed bloods, eleven individual
family histories are abstracted from
Appendix A and supplemented with anecdotal
accounts.
[58]Most of the data comes from the well-known
studies of the Choctaw people by Baird,
Cotterill, Cushman, Debo, and DeRosier, as
well as the primary government sources: The
Armstrong Roll, the Halbert Roll, the list
of Choctaw Reserves, the Treaty of Dancing
Rabbit Creek, Ward's Register, American
State Papers (Public Land & Indian Affairs
volumes), Records of the Choctaw Trading
House, and correspondence found in United
States Archives, RG-75, Bureau of Indian
Affairs, relating to the individuals
contained in this study.
The families will be discussed in
alphabetical order and include a name list
of known or suspected mixed bloods as well
as a genealogical lineage chart where it
will help explain family relationships. The
genealogical charts are intended to be more
illustrative than comprehensive and in some
cases do not show all offspring. There will
in most families be more than a single line
given, and in a few cases the genealogical
record is quite hazy. Rather than simply
include only those well-documented
mixed-blood family groups such as the
LeFlores and the Pitchlynns, lesser known
and often unreported families are also named
as they are more representative of mixed
bloods residing in Choctaw country in the
early 1800s. All of the families discussed
are drawn from extant lists and censuses of
the Choctaw tribe prior to Removal.
Choctaw Mixed Bloods
1. Albert James Pickett, History of Alabama and
Incidentally of Georgia and Mississippi from the Earliest Period, (Tuscaloosa:
Willo Publishing, 1962, reprint edition) 344; John Walton Caughey, McGillivray
of the Creeks, (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1938) McGillivray to
Panton, August 10, 1789, p. 247.
2. Pickett, History, 342-45; Alexander McGillivray is
also identified as a mixed blood in Thomas S. Woodward's Reminiscences, (1859,
reprint, Tuscaloosa: Weatherford Printing Co.: 1939) 113; Halbert, Henry S., and
T. H. Ball, The Creek War of 1813 and 1814 (University, Ala.: University of
Alabama Press, 1969) Southern Historical Publication #15, ed. by Frank L.
Owsley, Jr., 27-8.
3. Alexander Brashears was born c.1790; see also Records
Relating to Enrollment of the Eastern Cherokee by Guion Miller, 1908-1910,
Record group 75, National Archives, microfilm M-685.
4. Halbert and Ball, The Creek War of 1813 and 1814, 26.
The Wind clan of the Creek tribe was considered an elite Indian group. Emeline
Wind is reported to be from the same lineage as the noted William Weatherford of
Creek War fame.
5. Dye/Smith genealogy in possession of the author.
6. Emeline Jane Smith to Commissioner, July 18, 1908,
copy in possession of the author.
7. Emeline Jane Smith to Nathan Bickford, Sept. 5, 1907,
copy in possession of the author.
Notes About the Dissertation:
Source: Choctaw Mixed Bloods and the Advent of Removal, Dr. Samuel James
Wells, 1987, University of Southern Mississippi. Copyright Dr. Samuel James
Wells, 1987-2009. Used here with permission.
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
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