Miscegenation and competing definitions of race in twentieth-century Louisiana.MARCUS BRUCE CHRISTIAN Marcus Bruce Christian (March 8, 1900 - November 21, 1976), was a New Negro regional poet, writer, historian and folklorist. The author of the collection, I Am New Orleans and Other Poems , AN AUTHOR AND PROFESSOR AT DILLARD University Dillard University is a private, faith-based liberal arts college in New Orleans, Louisiana. Its address is 2601 Gentilly Blvd, 70122. Founded in 1869 and historically African-American, it is affiliated with the United Church of Christ and the United Methodist Church. , observed in the mid-nineteen-fifties that while New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded might be known for "gumbo, jambalaya jam·ba·lay·a n. A Creole dish consisting of rice that has been cooked with shrimp, oysters, ham, or chicken and seasoned with spices and herbs. [Louisiana French, from Provençal jambalaia. , lagniappe la·gniappe n. Chiefly Southern Louisiana & Mississippi 1. A small gift presented by a storeowner to a customer with the customer's purchase. 2. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. , poor boy sandwiches, pralines, Mardi Gras Mardi Gras (mär`dē grä), last day before the fasting season of Lent. It is the French name for Shrove Tuesday. Literally translated, the term means "fat Tuesday" and was so called because it represented the last opportunity for and Creoles," it also has "another claim to distinction which has not been bruited about very loudly Adv. 1. very loudly - a direction in music; to be played very loudly fortissimo ." New Orleans is a place, he wrote, where family lines "waver back and forth across color-lines like wet wash in a high March wind." The city has given to America "more 'passer pour blanches' [people who pass for white] than any other city in our country." A poet and scholar of black history, Christian anticipated much of the current academic interest in race as a social construction. (1) His meticulous histories of eighteenth--and nineteenth-century families recreated an era when racial lines were more fluid and southern society accepted--or at least expected--interracial sex. In the latter half of Christian's career, as a civil rights struggle charged with anxieties about interracial in·ter·ra·cial adj. Relating to, involving, or representing different races: interracial fellowship; an interracial neighborhood. contact swirled around him, his interests broadened to include the progeny PROGENY - 1961. Report generator for UNIVAX SS90. of those early families. Among thousands of newspaper clippings that Christian saved over his lifetime--documenting New Orleans history from the protracted pro·tract tr.v. pro·tract·ed, pro·tract·ing, pro·tracts 1. To draw out or lengthen in time; prolong: disputants who needlessly protracted the negotiations. 2. fight over school desegregation The attempt to end the practice of separating children of different races into distinct public schools. Beginning with the landmark Supreme Court case of brown v. board of education, 347 U.S. 483, 74 S. Ct. 686, 98 L. Ed. to the debate over stereotypical and degrading representations of Africans in Mardi Gras--one finds dozens of society photographs, wedding announcements, and obituaries that he compiled, seemingly in an attempt to discover a similar secret interracial history of the twentieth century. In the margins, he sometimes annotated genealogies, alternate spellings, or anecdotes about similar names encountered on the other side of the color line color line n. A barrier, created by custom, law, or economic differences, separating nonwhite persons from whites. Also called color bar. Noun 1. . In 1959, for example, he noted, and documented, the strange coincidence of a death notice for a man he thought was a "Negro," who had died at an "all white" hospital, and speculated on the dead man's familial relationship to a realtor listing a "colored" apartment a couple of weeks later. Of the family name in question, he later wrote to himself, "Joubert? What about the white family that says it spells its name 'Jau' and not 'Jou' [?]" Christian often wrote simply, as he did on a 1960 photograph of a couple cutting their fiftieth-anniversary cake, the word miscegenation Mixture of races. A term formerly applied to marriage between persons of different races. Statutes prohibiting marriage between persons of different races have been held to be invalid as contrary to the equal protection clause . (2) The basis for such judgments was rarely explained. Perhaps it was a distant memory, a rumor, or merely Christian asserting his ability as a black man to spot passer pour blanches. Unfortunately he never published his side of these stories. For the historian who seeks to discover the secret history of the race line in the twentieth century, the record is both as suggestive and as cryptic as Marcus Christian's handwritten hand·write tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes To write by hand. [Back-formation from handwritten.] Adj. 1. notes. Though interracial marriage Interracial marriage occurs when two people of differing races marry. This is a form of exogamy (marrying outside of one's social group) and can be seen in the broader context of miscegenation (mixing of different races in marriage, cohabitation, or sexual relations). had been illegal in Louisiana since the eighteenth century, it was common knowledge that few families could claim "pure" lineage from any group. (3) Louisianans had a saying in Christian's day that "You can take a bowl of rice and feed all the people of pure-white blood in the city." Local lore also celebrated, from the safe distance of the twentieth century, an exotic past of interracial romance symbolized by the legendary antebellum "quadroon QUADROON. A person who is descended from a white person, and another person who has an equal mixture of the European and African blood. 2 Bailey, 558. Vide Mulatto. balls." Though white Louisiana revered its cosmopolitan and interracial roots in Spanish, French, Caribbean, and African cultures, it had long ago confined such reverence to memory, adopting a more rigid, binary notion of black and white and the corresponding practices of American segregation. In the twentieth century, the law and racial etiquette absolutely prohibited amorous am·o·rous adj. 1. Strongly attracted or disposed to love, especially sexual love. 2. Indicative of love or sexual desire: an amorous glance. 3. relationships across the color line. Yet scattered evidence, from anecdotes about "passing" to occasional newspaper reports of arrests on miscegenation charges, lends credence to Christian's hunches about the persistence of interracial relationships. Moreover, whites' concern about "race mixing," the purity of one's lineage, and the maintenance of segregation--in other words, too many whites protesting a little too much--provides grounds for suspecting the existence of significant cracks in racial solidarity. The leaders of Louisiana's White Citizens' Council The White Citizens' Council (WCC) is an American white supremacist organization. With about 15,000 members, mostly in the South, the group is essentially a descendant of the white Citizens' Councils that formerly opposed racial integration in the South. , for example, frequently proclaimed that miscegenation was the secret, invidious in·vid·i·ous adj. 1. Tending to rouse ill will, animosity, or resentment: invidious accusations. 2. , un-American goal of both the integrationists and the communists. (4) The state's laws formulated increasingly strict definitions of miscegenation and imposed ever-harsher penalties over the course of the first half of the twentieth century. By the 1950s the maximum punishment for a criminal conviction for interracial sex was five years in prison with or without hard labor HARD LABOR, punishment. In those states where the penitentiary system has been adopted, convicts who are to be imprisoned, as part of their punishment, are sentenced to perform hard labor. . (5) The intensity of white anxiety in the twentieth century makes surviving traces of interracial contact more remarkable and compelling. The realm of law was one of the few venues in which such private relationships became public. Miscegenation law and jurisprudence jurisprudence (j r'ĭspr d`əns), study of the nature and the origin and development of law. offer a
unique, if somewhat problematic, view of a whole constellation of ideas
that twentieth-century Louisianans associated with race. Although court
cases permit only a limited view of actors in an artificially controlled
context, recent scholarship has demonstrated the rich possibility that
legal history affords for providing insight into the construction of
race in the United States Racial demographics
The United States is a diverse country racially. It has a majority of persons of White/European ancestry spread throughout the country. . An autonomous discourse in its own right, as Eva Saks has argued, miscegenation law consisted of an evolving, self-referential body of ideas and actions Ideas and Action is an anarcho-syndicalist journal that was founded in 1981 as a result of numerous conferences organized by the Libertarian Workers' Group and the Strike! collectives. In 1984, the newly formed Workers Solidarity Alliance took over publication of the journal. that acquired a power of its own, enabling it to create and sustain ideas such as the notion that race is, and resides in, "blood." (6) These statutes and cases also played a paramount role in shaping the legal status of race and racial identity, contributing to a deeply racialized but ostensibly os·ten·si·ble adj. Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity. "color blind" jurisprudence based on what Peggy Pascoe Peggy Pascoe is an Associate Professor and Beekman Chair of Northwest and Pacific History, specializing in history of gender, race, and the U.S. West. She has been at the University of Oregon since 1996.[1] Education
This essay will focus on racial laws and four major case studies (only one of which is a criminal prosecution) from twentieth-century Louisiana in order to probe the meaning of race and miscegenation for one segregated but irrefutably interracial society in the Jim Crow Jim Crow Negro stereotype popularized by 19th-century minstrel shows. [Am. Hist.: Van Doren, 138] See : Bigotry South. (8) The analysis is based primarily on court records, including testimony, briefs, and exhibits, as well as the judicial decisions and reasoning behind the resolution of each case. In spite of their limitations, these records represent a site where private relations were momentarily exposed and the indeterminate nature of race was often candidly admitted. (9) The courts themselves created a space where people expressed their unofficial "working" definitions of race, providing a fascinating insight into the adaptations of people who lived with the indeterminacy in·de·ter·mi·na·cy n. The state or quality of being indeterminate. Noun 1. indeterminacy - the quality of being vague and poorly defined indefiniteness, indefinity, indeterminateness, indetermination of race yet continued to believe in some essential meaning of the concept. Legal records also permit an examination of the construction of race at the legislative and judicial levels, the use of gender and sexuality in attempts to police the race lines, and, more generally, the evolution of ideas about what race meant in the mid-twentieth-century South. Two striking conclusions emerge from an analysis of these records. First, Louisianans held much more complicated and historically contingent views of race than the statutes and court decisions alone would suggest. The legal adjudication The legal process of resolving a dispute. The formal giving or pronouncing of a judgment or decree in a court proceeding; also the judgment or decision given. The entry of a decree by a court in respect to the parties in a case. of race in the twentieth century, as Pascoe has argued, historically had a complex, interdependent relationship with popular and scientific beliefs about race. This essay examines one aspect of that tension. By necessity, politics and the courts represented abstract law that could recognize only black and white, but the people who entered the courts worked with a more practical understanding that was also born of necessity. Most noteworthy about the testimony of people brought into Louisiana courts by miscegenation law is the fluidity and contextual nuance with which many people viewed race. In spite of the mid-twentieth century's increasingly rigid lines of demarcation with regard to race, many ordinary Louisiana citizens instinctively understood and accepted the essentially social nature of racial definitions, and they worked with these definitions in the most private areas of their lives. Second, though miscegenation law frequently failed to prevent sex across the race line, it served another equally significant function in the twentieth century: a tool to monitor racial boundaries. Louisiana state law had often been able to tame and contain the contradictions of black and white, but by the mid-twentieth century, the demands of massive resistance increasingly brought about more ideological and less practical applications of jurisprudence. Official public records associated with essentially private and gendered actions such as birth and marriage became a gatekeeping mechanism for maintaining segregation in Louisiana schools, sports, and public conveyances. Government-employed bureaucrats carried out increasingly stringent investigations of once-routine applications for marriage licenses, death certificates, and birth certificates in order to police the boundaries of race and expose those who in the past might have "passed" as white or married across race lines. These private points of individual connection with the state, therefore, took on a substantial burden in the maintenance of racial boundaries, the punishment of miscegenation, and the defense of whiteness. The objective of anti-miscegenation law was ostensibly to discourage and punish sex across the race line, but it also permitted the state to use gender and private life to control the same boundary. In doing so, it made significant contributions to the redefinition of miscegenation and race itself. Incidents of "race mixture" and white attempts to control such encounters have a long and infamous history in the South. Although prohibition of interracial sex was typically legislators' stated objective, recent scholarship also underscores the deeply contextual nature of the statutes' various incarnations. In colonial Virginia, where the earliest legislation on interracial liaisons appeared in 1662, the law reflected first the English conception of broadly defined racial hierarchy and later the social and economic dominance of explicitly racial slavery. At all times, colonial law addressed the reality of ongoing racial mixing, even as it represented what A. Leon Higginbotham Jr. and Barbara K. Kopytoff have aptly described as "attempts to patch holes in the fabric of the system." (10) The solution, as Peter W. Bardaglio puts it, was a legal attempt "not so much to eliminate interracial sexual contacts as to channel them" in directions that bolstered the slave system and existing racial and gender hierarchies. (11) While the specific definitions of the crime and punishment Crime and Punishment (Russian: Преступление и наказание) is a novel by Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky, that was first published in the varied, as Charles Robinson For other persons named Charles Robinson, see . Charles Shane Robinson (born July 2, 1964 in Charlotte, North Carolina) is an American professional wrestling referee currently signed to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), officiating on the SmackDown! brand. notes, "In each colony a violation of the law required some party, man, woman, and/or child, to make restitution by sacrificing freedom." Doubling the fine for interracial fornication Sexual intercourse between a man and a woman who are not married to each other. Under the Common Law, the crime of fornication consisted of unlawful sexual intercourse between an unmarried woman and a man, regardless of his marital status. , Virginia's assembly, for example, declared in 1662 that an interracial child's status would follow that of the mother. This ruling insured that the most common transgression TRANSGRESSION. The violation of a law. of the color line--between black women and white men--would not undermine a social system increasingly based on a dichotomy between black slaves and free white persons. Maryland's 1664 anti-miscegenation law did not proscribe pro·scribe tr.v. pro·scribed, pro·scrib·ing, pro·scribes 1. To denounce or condemn. 2. To prohibit; forbid. See Synonyms at forbid. 3. a. To banish or outlaw (a person). marriage, but it declared that a white woman who married a slave would serve that slave's master for the remainder of the husband's life and that any offspring would be required to labor for the parish for thirty-one years. After 1692 in Maryland and 1725 in Pennsylvania, free black men who married white women were sentenced to a lifetime of slavery. In the first half of the eighteenth century, Massachusetts, North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. , South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15. , Delaware, and Georgia enacted provisions similar to those of Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. (12) Colonial officials also singled out white women who had sex with black men for special punishment, a double standard that reflected, among other concerns, a perceived need both to control white female sexuality and to eliminate the threat that interracial offspring posed to the institution of slavery. (13) Because statutes were created and enforced on a state-by-state basis, it is difficult to generalize generalize /gen·er·al·ize/ (-iz) 1. to spread throughout the body, as when local disease becomes systemic. 2. to form a general principle; to reason inductively. about American anti-miscegenation law prior to Loving v. Virginia Loving v. Virginia, , was a landmark civil rights case in which the United States Supreme Court declared Virginia's anti-miscegenation statute, the "Racial Integrity Act of 1924", unconstitutional, thereby , the 1967 U.S. Supreme Court decision that outlawed marriage regulations based on race. By the mid-nineteenth century, though, twenty-one of thirty-four states had passed legislation to proscribe or limit interracial sex. Most banned interracial marriage, but as Charles Robinson and Peter Wallenstein Peter Wallenstein is an author and professor of History at Virginia Tech. He specializes in History of the U.S. South, Virginia, civil rights, higher education. He is currently researching in the areas of Segregation, Desegregation, and the University of North Carolina. demonstrate in their histories of anti-miscegenation law, the level of enforcement and specific penalties varied considerably, even within the South. South Carolina, for example, forbade for·bade v. A past tense of forbid. forbade or forbad Verb the past tense of forbid forbade forbid white women to have children with nonwhite non·white n. A person who is not white. non white adj. men, but it did not outlaw marriage between them. Alabama and
Mississippi, on the other hand, outlawed marriage, but those states did
not have an antebellum law prohibiting interracial sex. Only Georgia and
Florida explicitly banned interracial cohabitation A living arrangement in which an unmarried couple lives together in a long-term relationship that resembles a marriage.Couples cohabit, rather than marry, for a variety of reasons. They may want to test their compatibility before they commit to a legal union. . However, a lack of specific anti-miscegenation laws Anti-miscegenation laws (also known as miscegenation laws) were laws that banned interracial marriage and sometimes also interracial sex. In the United States, interracial marriage, cohabitation and sex have since 1863 been termed "miscegenation". did not necessarily indicate state lenience le·ni·ence n. Leniency. Noun 1. lenience - mercifulness as a consequence of being lenient or tolerant leniency, lenity, mildness , as Robinson shows, for other states occasionally punished interracial sex under adultery or fornication laws, particularly if the case involved a public relationship between a white woman and a black man. (14) Collectively, because many state laws shared a concern with defining races, the whole body of anti-miscegenation law made important contributions to the construction of race by establishing local, legal definitions of whiteness and affirming the conception of blackness as an algebraic function a quantity whose connection with the variable is expressed by an equation that involves only the algebraic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, raising to a given power, and extracting a given root; - opposed to transcendental function. See also: Function of one's "blood." (15) A number of state legislatures decreed how much--one-fourth or one-eighth--black ancestry or "blood" made a person legally black. (16) Louisiana varied somewhat from the American and southern norms because of its background as a French and Spanish colony. Louisianans historically tolerated interracial unions and grudgingly grudg·ing adj. Reluctant; unwilling. grudg ing·ly adv.Adv. 1. acknowledged their existence, but most of the state's residents did not condone condone v. 1) to forgive, support, and/or overlook moral or legal failures of another without protest, with the result that it appears that such breaches of moral or legal duties are acceptable. such relationships. French law, for example, did not initially prevent European settlers in Louisiana from intermarrying or cohabiting with Indians, though French authorities, fearing the material, social, and religious implications of race-mixing (or metissage), attempted to stop the practice by promoting the immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. of French women to be wives. (17) The French did introduce an anti-miscegenation law in 1724 with severe penalties for interracial sex, but colonial authorities seldom enforced it. Spanish colonial officials, who took control of the territory in 1769, found it equally difficult to prevent interracial sex, even though prohibitions on marriage and on public sexual affairs outside of marriage--known legally as "concubinage concubinage Cohabitation of a man and a woman without the full sanctions of legal marriage. In the Judeo-Christian tradition, the term concubine has been generally applied exclusively to women; Western studies of non-Western societies use it to refer to partners who are "--remained in place. Indeed interracial unions occurred often enough that the French and the Spanish legal systems recognized three distinct populations: Europeans, free people of color In the history of slavery in the Americas, a free person of color was a person of full or partial African descent who was not enslaved. In the United States, such persons were referred to as "free negroes," though many were, in fact, mulattos. , and slaves. When Louisiana became part of the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , some elements of this system persisted, as Louisiana outlawed marriages between people from three, rather than two, groups: free people of color, black slaves, and whites. However, American laws did not attempt to prohibit or punish concubinage, instead enacting measures to maintain the racial caste system Noun 1. caste system - a social structure in which classes are determined by heredity class structure - the organization of classes within a society and white supremacy white supremacist n. One who believes that white people are racially superior to others and should therefore dominate society. white supremacy n. . (18) White society also provided a ritualized outlet for such extramarital ex·tra·mar·i·tal adj. Being in violation of marriage vows; adulterous: an extramarital affair. extramarital Adjective unions in quadroon balls, events organized by white entrepreneurs where wealthy white men courted quadroon women. This courting led not to marriage but to a similarly legal and contractual relationship known locally as placage, whereby a white gentleman supported a young quadroon woman and her mother, provided them with a home, and gave his name to any offspring. But as Monique Guillory has argued, the quadroon balls did not represent a thoroughgoing thor·ough·go·ing adj. 1. Very thorough; complete: thoroughgoing research. 2. Unmitigated; unqualified: a thoroughgoing villain. acceptance of interracial sex, for the whole ritual was carefully contained, institutionalized in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize tr.v. in·sti·tu·tion·al·ized, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·ing, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·es 1. a. To make into, treat as, or give the character of an institution to. b. , and legally limited in contract. (19) In the early nineteenth century, as moral reformers encouraged the spread of anti-miscegenation laws throughout the United States, Louisiana law Louisiana is the only U.S. state whose legal system is based in part on civil law, which is based on French and Spanish codes and ultimately Roman law, as opposed to English common law, which is based on precedent and custom. continued to reflect a greater preoccupation with racial hierarchy and property than with sex. (20) In 1825, for example, the legislature revised the civil code to outlaw the legitimization of biracial bi·ra·cial adj. 1. Of, for, or consisting of members of two races. 2. Having parents of two different races. bi·ra children by white fathers, prohibit children of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color from claiming paternity The state or condition of a father; the relationship of a father. English and U.S. Common Law have recognized the importance of establishing the paternity of children. from white fathers, and make it more difficult for biracial children to receive an inheritance by disallowing all but formal legal acknowledgement as a basis for establishing paternity. Through such measures Louisianans eliminated the old French laws governing support of children born within placage and protected the interests of white heirs from siblings of color. Interracial marriage remained illegal in the sense that it was legally invalid, but the law did not prescribe punishment for violators. (21) The Civil War and Reconstruction temporarily undermined but ultimately strengthened most southern anti-miscegenation laws. The end of slavery intensified white southern fears of interracial sex, and emancipation was frequently touted as the first step to total social equality "Equal Rights" redirects here. for the motto, see Equal Rights (motto) Social equality is a social state of affairs in which certain different people have the same status in a certain respect, at the very least in voting rights, freedom of speech and assembly, the extent of and unrestricted sex across the race line. (22) Indeed, the term miscegenation was coined in 1863 in a pamphlet, falsely attributed to the Republican Party, that espoused interracial sex. (23) In their brief return to southern statehouses during the first phase of Reconstruction, former Confederates accordingly attempted to reiterate and strengthen antebellum anti-miscegenation laws in black codes and revised state constitutions. When congressional radicals took control of Reconstruction, however, the resulting empowerment of black Republicans throughout the South meant that a number of states effectively eliminated restrictions on interracial relationships, in many cases by simply failing to enforce existing laws. Across the South, in Robinson's words, Reconstruction "blurred the social lines just enough to encourage some blacks and whites to form conspicuous interracial relationships." In 1868 Louisiana became the only southern state to repeal its anti-miscegenation laws as a result of black Republican leadership in the legislature. The restoration of white Democratic control in the 1870s, however, resulted in renewed restrictions on formal interracial relationships, if not interracial sex, in every state but Louisiana. (24) Louisiana, for a short while, also remained unique in not adopting anti-miscegenation laws during Redemption. In the 1890s, however, as white southern legislatures codified cod·i·fy tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies 1. To reduce to a code: codify laws. 2. To arrange or systematize. segregation, many state officials cracked down on interracial relationships with renewed legal vigor. Louisiana's legislature followed suit in 1894 and became the last southern state to reintroduce Re`in`tro`duce´ v. t. 1. To introduce again. Verb 1. reintroduce - introduce anew; "We haven't met in a long time, so let me reintroduce myself" re-introduce prohibitions on interracial marriage. Fear of interracial promiscuity Promiscuity See also Profligacy. Anatol constantly flits from one girl to another. [Aust. Drama: Schnitzler Anatol in Benét, 33] Aphrodite promiscuous goddess of sensual love. [Gk. Myth. likewise served as a compelling argument for segregation. Urbanization and industrialization industrialization Process of converting to a socioeconomic order in which industry is dominant. The changes that took place in Britain during the Industrial Revolution of the late 18th and 19th century led the way for the early industrializing nations of western Europe and at the turn of the century exacerbated the fears of white southerners because both black and white women moved freely in workplaces, on city streets, on streetcars and trains, and as patrons of commercial amusements--all sites outside the scope of traditional patriarchal and racial authorities. Many whites, in Edward Ayers's words, found "[t]he sexual charge that might be created among strangers temporarily placed in intimate surroundings" intolerable, even if it did not result in direct physical contact. In 1890 an editorial in a New Orleans newspaper argued in favor of segregated railcars, by stating that any person "who believe[d] that the white race should be kept pure from African taint taint an unpleasant odor and flavor in a human foodstuff of animal origin. Caused by the ingestion of the substance, commonly a plant such as Hexham scent, or while in storage, e.g. milk stored with pineapples, or as a result of animal metabolism, e.g. boar taint. " opposed the "commingling Combining things into one body. The term commingling is most often applied to funds or assets. When a fiduciary, a person entrusted with the management of funds other than his or her own in trust, mixes trust money with that of others, the fiduciary is commingling of the races inevitable in a 'mixed car.'" Articulating what the New Orleans editorial left to the imagination, a Tennessee newspaper recounted one unfortunate white man's horror upon discovering that the young object of an extended flirtation on an unsegregated train was not, in fact, white. (25) Late-nineteenth-century courts also increasingly cited "racial integrity" as the goal of anti-miscegenation laws, claiming that interracial unions were biologically unsound unsound said of an animal, usually a horse, which has been examined for soundness and found to be unsatisfactory. and therefore subject to the state's intervention. As the courts repeatedly confronted the failure of such statutes and a growing population of mixed-race persons, proponents of banning interracial sex defended and refined their arguments, which reflected a mixture of scientific racism Scientific racism is a term that describes either obsolete scientific theories of the 19th century or historical and contemporary racist propaganda disguised as scientific research. , eugenics eugenics (y jĕn`ĭks), study of human genetics and of methods to improve the inherited characteristics, physical and mental, of the human race. ,
"reform" impulses, and the desirability of maintaining racial
"purity." Significantly, in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries the shift from a law based on slavery to one based
on the state's interest in racial integrity and public welfare also
created a legislative opening to extend bans beyond black-white liaisons
to whites' interactions with other nonwhite groups. Virginia's
1924 racial integrity law, for example, declared that it would be
"unlawful for any white person in this State to marry any save a
white person, or a person with no other admixture of blood than white
and American Indian American Indianor Native American or Amerindian or indigenous American Any member of the various aboriginal peoples of the Western Hemisphere, with the exception of the Eskimos (Inuit) and the Aleuts. ." The exception granted to American Indians--the so-called Pocahontas clause--also neatly demonstrated the susceptibility of law to current political and social concerns. Whiteness included Indian-ness as a concession to members of the Virginia elite who otherwise would have no longer been white. (26) In twentieth-century Louisiana, anti-miscegenation jurisprudence continued to reflect concerns with property and, particularly, racial boundaries. (27) As Virginia Dominguez argues, laws banning interracial marriage and cohabitation, as well as statutes that denied nonwhite children the right to inherit or to receive legal acknowledgment of white paternity, "all amount[ed] to legal efforts historically to ensure that relationship by 'blood' did not entail equality of status or through equality of status equal access to property." Moreover, the position of anti-miscegenation law in the Louisiana state code suggests the strength of state prohibitions. The code paired prohibition of miscegenation with prohibition of incest of the first order between consanguineous con·san·guin·e·ous adj. Exhibiting consanguinity. consanguineous adjective Referring to a blood relationship–ie, descendent from a common ancestor relatives, rather than with other articles that dealt with adultery and second-order incest. In Dominguez's words, the pairing "seems awkward but is telling": white lawmakers equated miscegenation with the most socially abhorrent ab·hor·rent adj. 1. Disgusting, loathsome, or repellent. 2. Feeling repugnance or loathing. 3. Archaic Being strongly opposed. sexual deviance defined by the law. (28) If one looks back over Louisiana court records prior to Loving v. Virginia's invalidation in·val·i·date tr.v. in·val·i·dat·ed, in·val·i·dat·ing, in·val·i·dates To make invalid; nullify. in·val of anti-miscegenation laws in 1967 and Louisiana's repeal of its own law in 1972, however, one finds a curious discrepancy between the large amount of white political rhetoric devoted to miscegenation and the small number of cases about sex across the race line. While state laws defining miscegenation and race itself ostensibly sought to insure that interracial sex could not go undiscovered or unpunished unpunished Adjective without suffering or resulting in a penalty: the guilty must not go unpunished, such crimes should not remain unpunished Adj. 1. , the state's legal record of prosecutions and administrations of related issues in marriage, divorce, and inheritance proceedings is surprisingly sparse. The Louisiana Supreme Court The laws of Louisiana and the Supreme Court of Louisiana both have a rich history based in the colonial governments of France and Spain during the early eighteenth century. The current Supreme Court traces its roots back to these beginnings. reviewed more civil cases related to miscegenation than the highest court of any other southern state, a reflection, perhaps, of its unique cultural heritage, but this represented a total of only nineteen cases between 1868 and 1967. (29) If one were to take the appellate court' s record as the measure of the incidence of interracial sex, it would seem as though such unions almost never happened and, from the white state's point of view, that segregation was working. (30) As Robinson has noted, Louisiana was "a southern state that legally both condemned and tolerated interracial sexual violators." In this respect it resembled other states in the region, as strict anti-miscegenation laws did not necessarily result in a strict execution of them. Rather, anti-miscegenation law seems to have functioned primarily as a social tool to discourage the public, domestic interracial relationships that were more easily monitored by the law. (31) Between 1894, when Louisiana passed its anti-miscegenation statute, and 1967, when anti-miscegenation laws were invalidated in·val·i·date tr.v. in·val·i·dat·ed, in·val·i·dat·ing, in·val·i·dates To make invalid; nullify. in·val by the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Loving v. Virginia, only five criminal cases appear in the state case law. (32) Only two criminal cases heard at the appellate level, State v. Daniel (1910) and State v. Harris (1922), resulted in conviction. Perhaps most surprising, State of Louisiana CODE, OF LOUISIANA. In 1822, Peter Derbigny, Edward Livingston, and Moreau Lislet, were selected by the legislature to revise and amend the civil code, and to add to it such laws still in force as were not included therein. v. Brown and Aymond (1959)--a case prosecuted in the heat of conflict over integration and in which both of the accused confessed--was dismissed by the Louisiana Supreme Court. Yet such cases, even in their rarity, provide a provocative view of wider beliefs and practices. The Brown and Aymond case, for example, not only reveals much about the complex of ideas and white anxieties surrounding miscegenation but also provides many clues to why prosecutions of miscegenation were so rare. The case concerned James Brown
James Joseph Brown (May 3 1933[1][2] – December 25 2006), commonly referred to as "The Godfather of Soul" and " , Negro, and Lucille Aymond, white, co-workers at a dry-cleaner's shop in the rural, central Louisiana
Central Louisiana, also known as the Crossroads region, is the part of Louisiana which includes the following parishes: Allen Parish, Beauregard Parish, Catahoula Parish, Concordia Parish, Grant parish of Avoyelles. Local police arrested them after their boss, David Blalock, described their "suspicious" behavior to the sheriff. Blalock had become concerned that Brown and Aymond were too friendly. He said as much to Lucille Aymond and warned her to stay away from Brown. The deputy sheriff arrested Brown and then Aymond. After three hours of questioning, Brown confessed that he and Aymond had had intercourse in the bathroom of the shop one day when Blalock was out. After two hours of questioning, Aymond also confessed to the incident. Their confessions, which were riddled with leading questions, were read into the civil district court record. Both were indicted INDICTED, practice. When a man is accused by a bill of indictment preferred by a grand jury, he is said to be indicted. by the grand jury, tried and convicted together in the Avoyelles district court, and sentenced to a year of hard labor in the state penitentiary penitentiary: see prison. in Angola. (33) Although Blalock had never seen physical contact between the two, their initial transgression had been a friendship that defied customary racial etiquette. "I told her there was too much familiarity between the two of them," he testified, and "that I'd like for her to stay on her side of the shop and do her work and stay away from his side where his work was." Indeed, Blalock confessed to the court that he had misgivings about hiring a black man to work with Aymond in the first place. "I asked Mrs. Aymond if it was agreeable and all right to have a colored man working along with her and if she could stay in her place and keep him in his place," he explained, "because I don't like to mix the two sexes and two races together." According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Blalock, Aymond had replied that "she had worked with [Brown] before and liked him and thought he was a nice fellow." (34) When Blalock was pressed to define the "familiarity" he found so objectionable, he replied, "Well, [Aymond] waiting on him, serving him coffee, making him his coffee and bringing it to him, drinking coffee with him. She with her cup and he with his standing together drinking coffee." (35) Of course, drinking coffee together is not ordinarily indicative of sexual intimacy. But by defying the usual lines of servility ser·vile adj. 1. Abjectly submissive; slavish. 2. a. Of or suitable to a slave or servant. b. Of or relating to servitude or forced labor. and putting Aymond in the role of a white female employee serving a black man, their coffee breaks did breach the customs of Jim Crow. Racial etiquette strictly constrained the range of acceptable interactions between black men and white women. For the judge and jury, Aymond and Brown's breaks may have evoked other exchanges with sexual overtones--for example, the image of a secretary serving a boss, also an ostensibly professional relationship but one that labor historians have long understood to be emotionally charged. (36) Blalock made a point of noting that they drank coffee at the "back of the shop" rather than in areas where they would be subject to the scrutiny of customers. Simply putting themselves in such a position, he implied, merited suspicion. He also reported that neighbors were talking about the two and that Aymond and her husband socialized so·cial·ize v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es v.tr. 1. To place under government or group ownership or control. 2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable. with Brown outside of work, attending boxing matches and traveling together to New Orleans. (37) The Brown-Aymond affair thus dovetailed with many of the myths perpetuated by overwrought o·ver·wrought adj. 1. Excessively nervous or excited; agitated. 2. Extremely elaborate or ornate; overdone: overwrought prose style. whites in the age of integration--namely, that integrated workplaces, lapses in etiquette, and social mixing were dangerous because they all led to one thing: interracial sex. Prompted by leading questions, Brown and Aymond each portrayed the other in ways that were consistent with cliches about interracial sex. In their confessions, neither admitted to a romantic or consensual affair. According to Brown, Aymond was, in his 1950s parlance Parlance - A concurrent language. ["Parallel Processing Structures: Languages, Schedules, and Performance Results", P.F. Reynolds, PhD Thesis, UT Austin 1979]. , no "lady." She talked "about men and women all the time," Brown charged, "so finally one day she told me if I didn't lay her I would be sorry." In contrast, Aymond portrayed Brown as the aggressor AGGRESSOR, crim. law. He who begins, a quarrel or dispute, either by threatening or striking another. No man may strike another because he has threatened, or in consequence of the use of any words. and herself as a penitent victim, who had been inexplicably overwhelmed by Brown's advances: "I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. what made me do it. It just seemed that when he asked me, I just had to give it to him. I don't know why, I don't know what came over me." (38) Although Brown and Aymond's defense attorney argued, among other points, that the statute against miscegenation was unconstitutional, the Louisiana Supreme Court took the opportunity to reassert reassert Verb 1. to state or declare again 2. reassert oneself to become significant or noticeable again: reality had reasserted itself Verb 1. the state's right to regulate sex. Citing two United States Supreme Court United States Supreme Court: see Supreme Court, United States. rulings, the justices noted that Pace v. State of Alabama (1883) held that antimiscegenation laws did not violate the equal protection clause The Equal Protection Clause, part of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, provides that "no state shall… deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. of the Constitution because equal penalties were imposed on each race. Indeed the district attorney noted in his brief that "we most likely could have made a deal with one of the parties, say Mrs. Aymond, to turn State's evidence A colloquial term for testimony given by an Accomplice or joint participant in the commission of a crime, subject to an agreement that the person will be granted Immunity , but we felt that certainly both were equally guilty and that to do so would have been discriminatory." As to the constitutionality of antimiscegenation law, the Louisiana Supreme Court asserted that the law fell "squarely within the police power of the state, which has an interest in maintaining the purity of the races and in preventing the propagation of half-breed children." Then, in an odd twist, the court reworked the arguments put forth in Brown v. Board of Education Brown v. Board of Education (of Topeka) (1954) U.S. Supreme Court case in which the court ruled unanimously that racial segregation in public schools violated the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. as justification for its own ruling in State v. Brown and Aymond. "Half-breed" children found it difficult to be accepted, the Louisiana court declared, and quoting the Brown decision, it observed that there is "no doubt that children in such a situation are burdened 'with a feeling of inferiority as to their status in the community that may affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever to be undone.'" (39) Despite the court's ardent defense of the anti-miscegenation laws, details of the case reveal a lack of urgency on the matter at the local level. Blalock did not rush out to report the incident to the police. Nor were Brown and Aymond particularly secretive about their friendship. In fact, Brown had initially been arrested because Blalock charged that Brown had embezzled em·bez·zle tr.v. em·bez·zled, em·bez·zling, em·bez·zles To take (money, for example) for one's own use in violation of a trust. money from him. Only then had Blalock mentioned his other suspicions to Leon Franklin, a deputy sheriff who decided to conduct his own investigation of possible miscegenation. If the two had not confessed, it is easy to imagine that the charges might have been a subterfuge sub·ter·fuge n. A deceptive stratagem or device: "the paltry subterfuge of an anonymous signature" Robert Smith Surtees. for Franklin to hassle Brown at the behest be·hest n. 1. An authoritative command. 2. An urgent request: I called the office at the behest of my assistant. of Blalock, who was angry about something else. The questions posed to Brown suggested that Blalock had been suspicious for some time. He even claimed to have caught them in the act. According to a transcript of the interrogation interrogation In criminal law, process of formally and systematically questioning a suspect in order to elicit incriminating responses. The process is largely outside the governance of law, though in the U.S. , Franklin asked Brown, "James when Mr. David came to the laundry, one day, he said Miss Lucille come out of the rest room and he didn't see you ... when he got to the shop no one was in the front part, he called and no one answered, after a few minutes Lucille came out of the rest room straightening her clothes. A little later Mr. David said you came in the front door. He said he then suspicioned something was wrong, and he went into the back and the back door was opened which he said he always kept closed. Was that one of the days you had a sexual intercourse sexual intercourse or coitus or copulation Act in which the male reproductive organ enters the female reproductive tract (see reproductive system). with Lucille?" Brown denied it, but he did so within the rules of Jim Crow, addressing the deputy as "Mr. Leon." Only much later did he admit an affair with Aymond, and then he conceded, "yes, sir, I know it was wrong." (40) The other important factor with bearing on how to read the historical record was the difficulty of proving miscegenation in court. Article 79 of the Louisiana Criminal Code defined it as "the marriage or habitual cohabitation of with knowledge of their difference in race, between a person of the Caucasian or white race and a person of the colored or Negro race." (41) While the court read "cohabit co·hab·it intr.v. co·hab·it·ed, co·hab·it·ing, co·hab·its 1. To live together in a sexual relationship, especially when not legally married. 2. To coexist, as animals of different species. " as including more generally "sexual relations sexual relations pl.n. 1. Sexual intercourse. 2. Sexual activity between individuals. or acts of sexual intercourse," the crime itself was difficult to prove. Sharing a home was "strong, if not convincing, evidence of habitual intercourse," according to the court. Interracial marriages were proof of a violation, but such cases were rarely before the judges. Had Aymond produced some of the "half-breed" children that so concerned the court, they might have served as proof. But in this particular case the only evidence that illegal sex had taken place was Blalock's suspicion and the confessions. On the witness stand, Blalock admitted that he had not seen Brown and Aymond have any physical contact. The state had, in the court's words, "no other evidence, 'literally none at all.'" Nor would the confessions suffice. A basic rule of criminal law holds that conviction requires a corpus delicti [Latin, The body of the crime.] The foundation or material substance of a crime. The phrase corpus delicti might be used to mean the physical object upon which the crime was committed, such as a dead body or the charred remains of a house, or it might signify , or proof that a crime has been committed. Confessions could not be admitted into the record until the commission of a crime had been established. Thus, the Louisiana Supreme Court ruled that the confessions did not constitute grounds to convict and reversed the lower court's verdict. (42) The difficulty of proving interracial sex outside of marriage, as demonstrated by State v. Brown and Aymond, may explain the sparse court record on the issue at the appellate level. Though many whites told themselves that informed, consensual sex between races was unimaginable, interracial sex did occur; when it occurred secretly, outside of marriage or a home, that circumstance could circumvent the state's usual legal gatekeeping mechanisms. (43) Appellate cases, in spite of their accessibility to historians, might not be the level where most convictions or accusations can be found. Brown and Aymond were atypical in choosing to appeal. Their attorney, armed with the decision in Perez v. Sharp In 1948, in the case Perez v. Sharp, also known as Perez v. Lippold and Perez v. Moroney, the Supreme Court of California recognized that interracial bans on marriage violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution. 198 P. 2d 17. , a 1948 California case that overruled the state's anti-miscegenation law, may have believed the time was right to challenge the constitutionality of Louisiana's law. (44) The Louisiana Supreme Court, in turn, may have granted a rehearing rehearing n. conducting a hearing again based on the motion of one of the parties to a lawsuit, petition or criminal prosecution, usually by the court or agency which originally heard the matter. because the justices wanted to reassert the constitutionality of their state law. Criminal prosecutions probably occurred more often, and perhaps proceeded more successfully, at the local level. The Times-Picayune, for example, reported a handful of prosecutions in New Orleans and its vicinity in the postwar years. Marcus Christian kept records on official accusations as well as documents supporting his own suspicions. (45) Furthermore, not all cases went to court. A highly publicized racial identity case involving Ralph Dupas Ralph Dupas (b. October 14, 1935) was a boxer from New Orleans who won the world light middleweight championship. Early boxing career Dupas was the second of eleven children of a New Orleans fisherman, Peter Dupas. He became a professional boxer in 1950 at the age of 14. , a professional boxer who sued to obtain a "white" birth certificate necessary to compete in segregated bouts, was preceded by a 1956 miscegenation charge leveled against his brother Peter. That charge was dropped, and at least two couples charged with illegal marriages by the same grand jury resided in states that refused to extradite ex·tra·dite v. ex·tra·dit·ed, ex·tra·dit·ing, ex·tra·dites v.tr. 1. To give up or deliver (a fugitive, for example) to the legal jurisdiction of another government or authority. 2. them. (46) State v. Brown and Aymond also underlines the persistence of extralegal ex·tra·le·gal adj. Not permitted or governed by law. ex tra·le means to prevent sex across the race line. Communities
deployed ostracism ostracism (ŏs`trəsĭz'əm), ancient Athenian method of banishing a public figure. It was introduced after the fall of the family of Pisistratus. and gossip, and because white southern culture would
not recognize the willing consent of white women, white anxiety and
anger were also channeled into demonizing black men as rapists and using
threats of lynching to punish alleged transgressions. (47) Blalock, for
example, had first confronted Aymond directly, and his testimony
suggested that talking may have also been intended to shame the couple
into more discretion, if not an end to their affair.
Miscegenation does appear, however, with some regularity elsewhere in the state's legal record, and these cases suggest ways that couples may have hidden sexual relationships under the cover of more traditional black-white relationships. A large body of civil case law concerning inheritance, succession, and concubinage includes numerous cases of interracial relationships brought to the court's attention throughout the first half of the twentieth century. The significance of this category of law is suggested by the statutory record in Louisiana, which until 1942 addressed miscegenation primarily under laws about concubinage, rather than marriage. As the Louisiana Supreme Court acknowledged in Succession of Lannes (1936), "Various kinds of disguises have been utilized by parties to conceal the relation of concubinage--housekeeper, storekeeper, cook, maid, nurse, niece, sister-in-law, etc." (48) The first five categories were particularly meaningful for black women and white men, as black women more often held such jobs in white households. Christian's unpublished manuscript also contains similar anecdotes. (49) Historians have likewise recognized the intimacy inherent in such relationships as well as the sexual vulnerability that employment in white households imposed on black women. In at least a few cases, the record suggests that jobs otherwise conforming to expectations of white-black relationships may have provided cover for illicit relationships. (50) The relationship between J.W. Jones, white, and his "cook" Amanda Kyle, Negro, seems to have been such a case. Kyle lived in Jones's house from 1904 until 1907 or 1908 and, after that, in a house he built for her on his property. Kyle cooked and kept house for Jones and waited on customers at his store. They did not have children, but, according to the neighbors, "general talk" was that Jones was "keeping" Kyle. One acquaintance even claimed to have found them in bed together. Apparently no one ever reported their activity as criminal. The relationship might have never appeared in the record had Jones not left all of his considerable estate, worth approximately $40,000 in 1926, to Kyle, provoking a challenge from Jones's nieces and nephews. In court, the nieces and nephews attacked the relationship and charged that Kyle and Jones had lived together in a state of illegal "open concubinage." As defined by Louisiana law, "open concubinage" was more morally repugnant REPUGNANT. That which is contrary to something else; a repugnant condition is one contrary to the contract itself; as, if I grant you a house and lot in fee, upon condition that you shall not aliens, the condition is repugnant and void. Bac. Ab. Conditions, L. and damaging to community morals than secret concubinage and was therefore punished by limiting the surviving partner's right to inherit from the other's estate. (51) Kyle denied that she was any more to Jones than his cook, and at least a dozen witnesses so testified on her behalf. Interestingly the legal issue was not the relationship per se, but whether it was open or secret, which had a direct bearing on her fight to inherit. The court concluded that Kyle and Jones had been a couple, citing among other evidence her access to Jones's cash drawer A cash drawer is generally a compartment underneath a cash register in which the cash from transactions is kept. The drawer is usually divided into separate compartments for notes and coins for ease of use. and their living together, but the court disagreed with Jones's nieces and nephews, concluding that the relationship was secret. Jones hid his relationship while keeping "her in his employ ostensibly as cook and housekeeper and assistant in his store...." In fact, by folding the document so that only the signature lines were exposed, he had even kept the contents of his will a secret from the witnesses who signed it. Therefore Kyle was allowed to inherit Jones's estate. (52) It would of course be a mistake to draw too broad a conclusion from this case, as the employer-employee relationship can be entirely professional, entirely antagonistic, or simply abusive. In many situations, household service subjected women to sexual harassment sexual harassment, in law, verbal or physical behavior of a sexual nature, aimed at a particular person or group of people, especially in the workplace or in academic or other institutional settings, that is actionable, as in tort or under equal-opportunity statutes. and made them vulnerable to assault. The white mythology of black hypersexuality hypersexuality see mounting behavior. historically subjected black women to much abuse that white men described as consensual. But the existence of Amanda Kyle and those involved in a handful of similar cases in the twentieth century does suggest a significant loophole in Jim Crow laws Jim Crow laws, in U.S. history, statutes enacted by Southern states and municipalities, beginning in the 1880s, that legalized segregation between blacks and whites. The name is believed to be derived from a character in a popular minstrel song. where interracial relationships could escape attention. (53) As many labor historians note, the private and intimate nature of household service historically posed a latent ideological challenge to segregation, even if white society's commitment to having inexpensive and readily available black help always tromped such ideological inconsistencies. Indeed, some historians argue that the figure of an asexual asexual /asex·u·al/ (a-sek´shoo-al) having no sex; not sexual; not pertaining to sex. a·sex·u·al adj. 1. Having no evident sex or sex organs; sexless. 2. , apolitical a·po·lit·i·cal adj. 1. Having no interest in or association with politics. 2. Having no political relevance or importance: claimed that the President's upcoming trip was purely apolitical. , maternal black household worker serving the white home was central to whites' self-image and exercise of power at the turn of the century. (54) It is thus deeply ironic that given white preoccupation with preventing interracial sex as the key to maintaining whiteness, the service of black workers provided a site where interracial intimacy could be hidden or denied. The employer-servant relationship was one that most whites accepted as natural, appropriate, and even benign. Significantly, in the case of J. W. Jones and Amanda Kyle, the neighbors talked, but no one challenged the appropriateness of a white man having a live-in black female housekeeper. By far the most visible arena of state activism against miscegenation, however, was directed toward preventing it, not punishing it. In Louisiana, state definitions of who was white and who was black did not always correspond to social definitions, so anti-miscegenation law often required steps to prevent an inadvertent marriage of people across the race line. One of Marcus Christian's strategies in looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. clues to miscegenation, for example, was to scour scour, scours 1. the chemical and physical cleaning of fleece wool. 2. diarrhea. dietetic scour see dietary diarrhea. peat scour see secondary nutritional copper deficiency. the Times-Picayune white society pages for photographs of racially ambiguous "whites." (55) Interestingly, state officials often worked with some of the same "folk" indicators of race that Christian employed, and they sometimes delayed or denied marriage licenses on the basis of any number of factors: a suspicious surname, an applicant having been born in a locale known to have a large mixed-race population, and simply the officials' own doubts. Local registrars acted on their authority as long-term residents, who "knew" which families were black and which were white. The state bureau of vital statistics and its counterpart in New Orleans (the two offices under the state board of health charged with maintaining records) also used access to vital statistics to verify and maintain the integrity of racial statistics. (56) The requirement that race appear on marriage licenses probably prevented an untold number of persons from unknowingly marrying across the legal line separating black from white. Members of "white" families, when informed that the family had a "touch of the tar brush," might complain, write letters to their state representative, appeal to the directors of the board of health, or even bring a lineup of blue-eyed, blond relatives to the registrar's office, but, according to bureau employees, the angered family often avoided court because of the potential for public exposure. (57) Licensing of marriage thus provided the state its main legal avenue to intervene against interracial relationships and, in turn, played a singular role in shaping the law of racial identity in Louisiana. Twentieth-century racial identity trials, including those in Louisiana, have received considerable attention from scholars, and the trials in the following case studies generally conform to Verb 1. conform to - satisfy a condition or restriction; "Does this paper meet the requirements for the degree?" fit, meet coordinate - be co-ordinated; "These activities coordinate well" the dynamics identified in those studies. The legal system in Louisiana, as elsewhere in the United States, defined whiteness in terms of exclusion. It said not what made a person white, but what put a person outside the favored class. As legal scholars and historians have shown, this standard has variously served to defend white supremacy, limit access to citizenship, deprive nonwhite groups of property and civil rights, and maintain "racial integrity." (58) Anti-miscegenation law has also played a primary role in defining whiteness and in shaping the legal discourse of race. (59) In the first half of the twentieth century, Louisiana's legislature and supreme court attempted to eliminate any remaining loopholes allowing marriage between whites and mixed-race persons. In doing so the legislature and court imposed both the notorious "one-drop" rule and the extraordinary legal standard of "no room for doubt" for those who might challenge their legal racial designation. State v. Treadaway et al. (1910), for example, considered the legality of a relationship between Octave Treadaway, white, and his companion, Josephine Lightell, an octoroon oc·to·roon n. A person whose ancestry is one-eighth Black. [octo- + (quad)roon.] Usage Note: The terms mulatto, quadroon, and octoroon (commonly understood in Louisiana to be someone "one-eighth Negro"). The law subject to debate in this case was a 1908 statute making interracial concubinage between whites and persons "of the [N]egro or black race" a felony. Given the historic use of the terms Negro and black in Louisiana, the state supreme court was forced to determine that an "octoroon" was perhaps "colored," but not a "Negro," and therefore not covered not covered Health care adjective Referring to a procedure, test or other health service to which a policy holder or insurance beneficiary is not entitled under the terms of the policy or payment system–eg, Medicare. Cf Covered. by the 1908 law. (60) However, the decision prompted the next session of the state legislature to make a hasty revision of the law to include any "person of the colored or black race...." (61) "Colored," the Louisiana Supreme Court bad decided, was a category broader than "Negro" and included a person of "mixed blood." As Dominguez argues, this case was an important turning point in Louisiana history away from the old tripartite system The Tripartite System, known colloquially as the grammar school system, was the structure by which Britain's secondary education was organised in England, Wales and Northern Ireland between the 1944 Butler Education Act and 1976. (black, white, and colored) toward a binary understanding of race (black/white) and reflected a changing ideological climate. (62) In 1938 another intermarriage in·ter·mar·ry intr.v. in·ter·mar·ried, in·ter·mar·ry·ing, in·ter·mar·ries 1. To marry a member of another group. 2. To be bound together by the marriages of members. 3. case, Sunseri v. Cassagne, firmly established the "one-drop" rule in Louisiana jurisprudence, as the court decided that any trace of African ancestry required a person to be designated "colored." (63) The case did not involve criminal miscegenation, but the race of a wife and thus the legality of a marriage were at issue. Sunseri, like all the cases considered in this essay, indicated the important and recurring role that knowledge of race--and particularly the state's control of that knowledge--played in cases involving miscegenation. In Brown and Aymond's case, one argument made by their defense had been that the state had not proven the race of the defendants or their knowledge of each other's race. The statute describing criminal miscegenation specifically noted that violation of the law required knowledge of race by the accused parties. Although the district attorney argued that "the jurors certainly had an opportunity to view the defendants and observe their color," observation often proved less important than knowledge of official records in establishing legal racial identity. (64) Inclusion of that phrase in the law itself gestured toward an important area in Louisiana jurisprudence, as the race of one party was often the issue under litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute. When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. . While Sunseri is frequently cited as the preeminent example of white Louisiana's dogmatic inflexibility on matters of black and white, a closer examination of the full case record--a level of documentation often overlooked in legal studies--provides insight into the popular understandings of race that often governed relationships and ultimately decisions about marriage. In 1936 Cyril P. Sunseri, a New Orleans resident facing prosecution for nonpayment of alimony alimony, in law, allowance for support that an individual pays to his or her former spouse, usually as part of a divorce settlement. It is based on the common law right of a wife to be supported by her husband, but in the United States, the Supreme Court in 1979 , filed for an annulment annulment Legal invalidation of a marriage. It announces the invalidity of a marriage that was void from its inception. It is to be distinguished from dissolution or divorce. To justify annulment, the marriage contract must have a defect (e.g. of his marriage on the grounds that his wife, Verna Cassagne, was "a person of color Noun 1. person of color - (formal) any non-European non-white person person of colour individual, mortal, person, somebody, someone, soul - a human being; "there was too much for one person to do" ." The state supreme court eventually determined that Cassagne was a descendant of Fanny Ducre, a former slave, with traceable African ancestry and therefore annulled the marriage; however, the testimony collected in the civil district court provides a unique and revealing insight into the collective popular perceptions of race in mid-twentieth-century Louisiana. It poignantly speaks to the legal conundrum conundrum A problem with no satisfactory solution; a dilemma in distinguishing between representation and essence, as Eva Saks has so ably described. But the record also reveals the essentially epistemological e·pis·te·mol·o·gy n. The branch of philosophy that studies the nature of knowledge, its presuppositions and foundations, and its extent and validity. [Greek epist , or socially learned, nature of race in everyday life. The court made a simple black-white decision, but repeatedly witnesses proved reluctant, if not unable, to do the same. (65) Cyril Sunseri and Verna Cassagne met while she was attending a white high school. In 1935, when she was seventeen, they eloped and then moved in with her mother, Stella Cusachs Cassagne. They lived together for several months, until, according to Verna and Stella Cassagne and several friends of the family, Cyril Sunseri became abusive and Stella Cassagne evicted him from the house. Sunseri claimed that he left on his own accord "when he found out what kind of tramp she was." Because Verna Cassagne was a minor, the case fell under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court juvenile court Special court handling problems of delinquent, neglected, or abused children. Two types of cases are processed by a juvenile court: civil matters, often concerning care of an abandoned or impoverished child, and criminal matters, arising from antisocial , which ordered Sunseri to pay support. Although his reference to Cassagne as a "tramp" deployed a common racial stereotype, he claimed that race was not the issue when they first separated. According to Sunseri, "It must have been three weeks or so after I had left her when someone told me they heard she had colored blood and I started investigating." (66) He contacted a lawyer and his senator and filed for annulment. His case rested on the status of Verna Cassagne's great-great-grandmother Fanny, a slave emancipated e·man·ci·pate tr.v. e·man·ci·pat·ed, e·man·ci·pat·ing, e·man·ci·pates 1. To free from bondage, oppression, or restraint; liberate. 2. in 1837 by Leander Ducre, her white owner who later became her husband. Fanny Ducre was identified on subsequent documents, notarial no·tar·i·al adj. 1. Of or relating to a notary public. 2. Executed or drawn up by a notary public. no·tar acts under which she acquired slaves, as "F.W.C.," or "Free woman of color," and "F.C.L.," or Femme femme adj. Slang Exhibiting stereotypical or exaggerated feminine traits. Used especially of lesbians and gay men. n. 1. Slang One who is femme. 2. Informal A woman or girl. de Couleur Libre, ambiguous terms that applied in the antebellum period to anyone not recognized as purely "white," but these labels did not necessarily mean someone of African descent or someone who had been a slave. The term Colored became synonymous with synonymous with adjective equivalent to, the same as, identical to, similar to, identified with, equal to, tantamount to, interchangeable with, one and the same as Negro only after the Civil War. (67) Cassagne's lawyers appealed to Louisiana's equivalent of the Virginia Pocahontas clause and argued that Fanny Ducre was an Indian, not a Negro. (68) The court considered documentary evidence A type of written proof that is offered at a trial to establish the existence or nonexistence of a fact that is in dispute. Letters, contracts, deeds, licenses, certificates, tickets, or other writings are documentary evidence. such as certificates of birth, marriage, and death; obituaries; and voter registration Voter registration is the requirement in some democracies for citizens to check in with some central registry before being allowed to vote in elections. An effort to get people to register is known as a voter registration drive. Centralized/compulsory vs. records, as well as witness testimony on how the Cassagnes conducted themselves as white people. Verna Cassagne had been born in a white maternity ward maternity ward n. The department of a hospital that provides care for women during pregnancy and childbirth as well as for newborn infants. , had received her first communion The First Communion (First Holy Communion) is a Roman Catholic ceremony. It is the colloquial name for a person's first reception of the sacrament of the Eucharist. Roman Catholics believe this event to be very important, as the Eucharist is one of the central focuses of the Roman in a white church, had attended white public schools, and had graduated from a white girls' school Girls' School was a single by Paul McCartney and his former band Wings. Written and produced by Paul McCartney it was the other side of the double A-side with Mull Of Kintyre,and was the band's sole UK number one, spending nine weeks at the top in December 1977 and January . Her mother was vice president of the New Orleans Linen Supply Company, a "white organization," according to the court; was a registered white Democratic voter; and had participated in several primary elections--without challenge, the court emphasized. Both women had occupied white seats on buses, streetcars, and trains, and they attended theaters, patronized pa·tron·ize tr.v. pa·tron·ized, pa·tron·iz·ing, pa·tron·iz·es 1. To act as a patron to; support or sponsor. 2. To go to as a customer, especially on a regular basis. 3. hotels, and ate at restaurants for whites. Stella Cassagne's explanation for the most damning evidence, Verna's birth certificate identifying her as "colored," was that when a representative of the board of health had come to her home after the birth, she was ill, an aunt, now deceased, had filled out the card, and the board had made a mistake. The original card, according to the chief clerk The Chief Clerk in the United States The Chief Clerk, between 1789 and 1853, was the second-ranking official within the United States Department of State, known as the Department of Foreign Affairs before September 5, 1789. , had been lost. (69) Over a dozen witnesses who had known Fanny Ducre and her descendants were called to the stand, and much of the testimony concerned the appearances, both physical and social, of the family members in question. Witnesses disagreed on how to identify a white, a Negro, and an Indian, and they provided wildly contradictory descriptions. Various witnesses described Fanny Ducre as "a nigger nig·ger n. Offensive Slang 1. a. Used as a disparaging term for a Black person: "You can only be destroyed by believing that you really are what the white world calls a nigger" woman, plain straight"; "dark skinned"; "black"; "of a copper color" with "long straight black hair"; "someone who always did go for white"; as having "tolerable fair hair, what we call Madagascar hair"; "just like an Indian and nice hair hanging straight back, just as straight as you want"; and always "taken for white people." (70) The distinction between "Indian" and "Negro" proved particularly difficult to pin down in court. Questioning a woman who identified herself as "colored," the district attorney asked, "Aunt Fanny was about your color, wasn't she?" He received the answer, "No, just like I tell you, just like an Indian." When he replied, "Don't tell us that. Tell us what an Indian looks like," she could only add, "Just like an Indian." The court then pressed for elaboration: "What do you mean by an Indian? How did she look?" "Well," the witness replied, "an Indian look a nice color. I can't say, me. You don't see Indian?" (71) The attorneys occasionally tried to pin down descriptions by asking witnesses to compare Fanny to themselves: "Your color is considered brown or yellow, isn't it?" and "Was your hair straight before it went gray?" (72) A woman identified as Fanny's daughter-in-law told the court, "She was black, she was about my color. She couldn't be white, you know I can't be white, can I? She was about my color, no difference in her and me." Even with such direct comparisons, the results were absurd, as the court recognized the subjectivity of descriptions and then entered its own opinion as fact. Of the daughter-in-law, the court "admitted that this witness is a very dark negress, the usual color of a person of Negro race, a full-blooded Negro." The record was peppered with such observations: "It is admitted the witness's hair is kinky kink·y adj. kink·i·er, kink·i·est 1. Tightly twisted or curled: kinky hair. 2. ." (73) Though many witnesses entered physical descriptions with some certainty, few made confident pronouncements about the race of a subject in question. Most of the testimony merely underlined the uncertainty of whether Fanny and her descendants were white or black. Some suggested that Fanny and her children had "passed" as white, although the court in this case focused exclusively on the issue of the marriage rather than the question of deliberate deception. Many accounts made it clear that racial definitions were contextual and contingent. When the deputy recorder of births, deaths, and marriages in New Orleans was questioned about the death certificate of one of Fanny Ducre's sons, Drauzin Ducre, he said that he knew the deceased man but was uncertain about Ducre's race. "Well," he told the court, "I wasn't a native over there, but he was always considered colored, but of course I never looked in--had no occasion to look up whether he was or not." (74) Another witness who knew Drauzin Ducre said that "he might be a white man, he never told me, but he always used go with the white people, never come amongst us [colored] at all." (75) Another witness testified that Fanny's other son, Toussaint Ducre, was a "Negro" but looked like a white man. "He could pass anywhere for a white man," she told the court, "and I can prove it because he worked for a white man and went to the St. Charles [Hotel] with him." (76) When the registrar of Lacombe answered questions about Verna Cassagne's mother, Stella Cusachs, she said, "The hearsay hearsay: see evidence. was always they [the Cusachs] were colored and that I couldn't prove." When asked whether this was majority opinion in Lacombe, she could say only that "amongst the white people they were always considered colored." (77) That the testimony about relatives several generations back should be contradictory is perhaps not surprising, but more striking were the conditional terms with which witnesses deployed racial categories with respect to themselves or the defendants. When a resident of Lacombe, who testified as an acquaintance of Fanny Ducre, was asked whether she herself was "colored," she replied, "Well, I will tell you the truth, I can't tell you I am colored and I can't tell you I am white, because I may be Italian, my mother and father, and l can't say if they were white or colored, you understand, a person should come with the truth." The court declared her "light tan or light brown" but did not admit whether she was "colored" or "white." Interestingly, this witness was nevertheless certain about what race Fanny Ducre's daughter should be: "She always did go for white, but she wasn't. She was colored." (78) A friend of the Cassagnes, Pauline Roubion, who lived with Stella Cassagne when the newlywed Sunseris moved in, described herself as being of "Italian descent"--ordinarily a marker for whiteness--but was surprisingly noncommittal when asked about her "race." Asked whether she was white, she replied: "I think I am.... Well, maybe, some might think I am colored because I am supposed to be staying with colored people or I stayed with colored people [the Cassagnes]." However, she had never heard anyone say that the Cassagnes were "colored." Verna Cassagne's attorney declared that Roubion was white; Cyril Sunseri's attorney admitted only that "she has the appearance of a white person." (79) Even Sunseri, when asked about his friends, who were not subjects of the proceedings at hand, answered vaguely and said only "I knew them as being white." (80) Neighbors, according to an acquaintance of the Cassagnes, had called them "Negroes," and though the Cassagnes allegedly threatened to file charges, they never did. (81) Verna Cassagne said she had "been taught" that she was of French, Spanish, and English descent. Sunseri's attorneys claimed that the Cassagnes had become known as white only when they moved to New Orleans. (82) The manner in which witnesses described race was striking--resembling the observations of historians more than the answers one might expect from people living under segregation. However, mid-twentieth-century Louisianans did not believe that race was simply a social construction; most of the people in court, whether they identified themselves as "white" or "colored"--and certainly the ones who ventured speculation about people passing as white--probably did believe that there were genuine categories of "colored" and "white." Their testimony also indicated that they believed that there was a right answer about who belonged in which one. But they also believed that they could be wrong and seem to have intuitively understood the fluidity of one measure and the rigidity of the other. The operative phrase for many was "to know someone as." Many of the witnesses implicitly recognized the distance between an epistemological understanding of race as something "known" and a kind of absolute, hidden essence of race that supposedly lay behind the legally valid, official designation. Yet they still seemed committed to the metaphysical view that there really was a racial fact of the matter. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently they admitted that they could not read race on a body or know race with certainty when they encountered a person in day-to-day life. Until a person landed in court or official records were checked, social knowledge was the information that mattered. Even the Louisiana Supreme Court, which had granted Verna Cassagne a second opportunity to gather evidence to prove her whiteness, acknowledged the significance of such social validation. In the first trial, the court concluded, "the evidence, while persuasive, is not conclusive and does not warrant us in holding that defendant is a member of the colored race, particularly in view of the overwhelming testimony that she and her immediate associates have always been regarded as members of the white race and have associated with persons of that race." Both the court and the witnesses thus implicitly recognized two sorts of identity, neither of which could be absolutely determined by physical descriptions or, in this case, by documentary records. Unfortunately for Verna Cassagne, on a second hearing the court determined that birth and marriage certificates identifying her mother, her aunts, and herself as colored were more persuasive than testimony from friends and neighbors. Those documents left the court "no alternative" but to conclude that she had "a traceable amount of [N]egro blood" and to annul an·nul tr.v. an·nulled, an·nul·ling, an·nuls 1. To make or declare void or invalid, as a marriage or a law; nullify. 2. the marriage. (83) Such logical conundrums had roots in Louisiana's unique history, a past with which many witnesses in this and other twentieth-century cases had direct experience. The enduring controversy over the racial meaning of Creole, for example, illustrated both the ambiguity of racial categories in Louisiana and the long history of white Louisianans' discomfort with that uncertainty. A term adopted in the early nineteenth century to describe Louisiana residents of European descent and to distinguish them from new American settlers, Creole was not originally a racial or racially exclusive category. Although, much to the consternation of white Creoles, outsiders occasionally assumed that Creole implied mixed blood, locals did not initially insist that the term apply to whites only. Rather, as historian Joseph G. Tregle Jr. notes, white New Orleanians constructed an elaborate myth about Creoles in contrast to Americans, as an exclusive local aristocracy descended from French and Spanish nobility The Spanish nobility are the persons who possess the legal status of nobility, and the system of titles and honours of Spain and of the former kingdoms that constitute it. Some nobles possess various titles that may be inherited, but the inheritance and creation of titles is , "renowned for ... cultural refinement and worldly sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. ...." In doing so, they felt no need to limit their use of Creole to whites, as they "perceived no danger from common acceptance of blacks and whites under the creole rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t. , [and] no risk that such definitional partnership might diminish the social status or prerogative of the dominant class." (84) After the Civil War, however, white Creoles no longer "feigned feigned adj. 1. Not real; pretended: a feigned modesty. 2. Made-up; fictitious. Adj. 1. unconcerned amusement" when outsiders mistakenly assumed that Creole meant something other than white. In the late nineteenth century, the post-Reconstruction surge of white supremacy, the imposition of segregation, and the fame of George Washington Cable's writings on Louisiana Creoles This is a list of famous Louisiana Creole people.
Marriage law took on a substantial part of the burden in drawing and policing the line between black and white. It was one of the few places where the state could bridge the gap between epistemological and metaphysical understandings of race and impose the final authority of its own definition. In Cassagne's case, regulation of marriage had become the tool to prevent any further descendants of the Cassagne family from passing as white in Louisiana. Moreover, it established the standard of proof to be met by any other plaintiff accused of passing or claiming to be legally white. In Sunseri v. Cassagne, the court determined that claims against the accuracy of state documents must produce sufficient evidence such that there could be "no room for doubt" that the original classification was wrong. This was an exceptionally stringent burden of proof, as legal scholars have noted, even "more difficult to carry than the criminal 'beyond a reasonable doubt' standard," but the ruling determined judgments in later cases. (87) The final case considered here, Villa v. Lacoste, an annulment case heard before the Louisiana Supreme Court in 1948, revealed ongoing tensions within Louisianans' concepts of racial identity, as witnesses repeatedly demonstrated their adherence to more complex and contingent appraisals of race than the law would allow. This case also underlined the significance of socially understood racial identity, since the evidence suggests that if the couple had not separated, Josephine Lacoste's status as white would have never been questioned. As in the Sunseri case, the "discovery" of race happened long after the fact. In order to avoid paying alimony to support his wife, Josephine Lacoste, and their six-year-old son, Charles Stephen Charles Stephen is a famous indian hockey player. Villa sued for an annulment and a disclaimer of paternity, claiming that his wife was Negro, on the basis of a birth certificate identifying her as "colored." The issue for the court was Josephine Lacoste's maternal line. Her father was French and therefore white, but her mother, Catherine Lacoste Catherine Lacoste (born on June 27, 1945 in Paris, France) is a French golfer. She won the 1967 U.S. Women's Open as a 22 year old amateur, playing in just her third professional golf tournament. , was the child of a white woman and an immigrant from the Philippines. (88) How to classify Filipinos in the racial system of New Orleans had been a "bone of contention" among the staff of the board of health for some time. (89) Other persons of Asian descent, including Chinese and Japanese immigrants, were registered by nationality, but Filipino immigrants, who were uncommon outside the western United States Noun 1. western United States - the region of the United States lying to the west of the Mississippi River West Santa Fe Trail - a trail that extends from Missouri to New Mexico; an important route for settlers moving west in the 19th century and, in the context of Louisiana, certainly exotic, were a gray area for the board of health. (90) Catherine Lacoste had the misfortune of having the birth of her daughter Josephine registered by a deputy recorder who recognized only two categories, white and colored, and considered Asians to be the latter. Although the elder Lacoste, who had registered her grandson's birth on behalf of her daughter, worked in a white job in a white department store, was registered to vote in white Democratic primaries, and was registered as white on her marriage certificate, she obeyed when the recorder said that she could not register the birth of her daughter or grandson as white. "When the man told me to put colored," she explained to the court, "I put colored." (91) She could just as easily have been told to register the child as white because the deputy recorder's successor regarded Filipinos as white. (92) Although nine states had laws prohibiting marriages between Filipinos and whites, Filipinos were not directly addressed in Louisiana's anti-miscegenation statute, which, as written and litigated, reflected its ties to segregation and had applied only to persons of African descent. (93) Rather than arguing in favor of a more abstract "racial integrity" in order to annul the marriage, Villa's attorneys revealed their own commitment to the black-white binary by arguing that Filipinos were actually "Negroes." Citing Webster's Dictionary Webster's Dictionary - Hypertext interface. , the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and anthropological texts on the Philippines, Villa's lawyers attempted to prove "the existence of Negroes or blacks or Negroid or negritoes in the Philippine Islands, since 'negritoes' was 'Spanish' for 'little Negroes.'" Lacoste's witnesses included an eighty-six-year-old friend of her grandfather, who had emigrated with him, and the elderly man made a point of emphasizing that Lacoste's grandfather was a "Blanco Blanco (meaning the color white in Spanish) is an adjective often used in Spanish surnames. Below is a list of famous people and places associated with the word. Filipino," or white Filipino. Indulging in a little scientific racism of their own, Lacoste's attorneys argued that "in no event can plaintiff's counsel locate an acceptable authority that a 'Filipino Blanco' can be a Negrito. The dwarfish, backward, wholly uncivilized Negritos have virtually no commerce or contact with other inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. of the Philippine Islands, and if a single one has come to the United States, it was doubtless as a chained or caged captive." (94) Undaunted, Villa's attorneys still pressed the Negro line, asking her grandfather's Filipino friend whether there were "any colored people at all on the Philippine Islands?" and whether he had ever "seen a Negro in the Philippine Islands?" (95) Evidence accepted in district court concerning this case, like that considered in Sunseri, consisted of both documentary and social evidence of race, and the social evidence took up much of the proceedings. Charles Villa and Josephine Lacoste had known each other since they were teenagers, having met in a hosiery hosiery Knit or woven coverings for the feet and legs, worn inside shoes. In the 8th century BC, Hesiod referred to linings for shoes; the Romans wrapped their feet, ankles, and legs in long strips of leather or woven cloth. factory where both had worked in "white" jobs. Lacoste had attended white schools; her baby had been delivered in a white maternity ward. She always kept to the white side of the segregation line in public conveyances. When the court asked her if she sat in the white section of the theater, she answered, "Why not? I always placed myself as white." Furthermore, no one "had ever questioned her color." (96) Villa himself said he "never had any suspicion about her color." "It all come up," he told the court, when "a cousin of mine and a relation of hers that ran away and they got married, and a remark was passed [that] they were colored." His mother, who had heard rumors about the color of the Lacostes, "went up there [to the board of health] to satisfy herself, to find out whether it was true or not as far as my wife was concerned." (97) There, she discovered the "colored" birth certificates. Interestingly, Villa's attorneys did not try to prove that Filipinos generally, rather than "negritoes" specifically, were "colored" or even that they were "Malay," which would have made the marriage illegal in several other states. (98) Neither side referred to resolutions of the issue in states other than Louisiana. For all the witnesses, as well as the lower and higher courts, the important issues were whiteness and blackness. Villa's attorneys tried to link Lacoste to "colored" people in New Orleans, where the family lived. Villa claimed that his wife and mother-in-law visited with a "colored family that lived on the corner .... They allow my baby to go in and out the house, like it is one of the family." Visiting might not be proof of sharing the same racial identity, so Villa's attorney's asked him: "They sit down and eat at the same table?" Villa admitted that he had never seen them eating together. Catherine Lacoste, falling back on another Louisiana standby for describing racial ambiguity, said the family on the corner was "Spanish," which in this context also meant white. Another witness for Villa, however, gestured toward another social indicator of race commonly recognized in court, claiming that he knew the neighbors in question were colored because the wife had worked for his mother as household help. Lacoste's counsel brought their white friends forward to attest to the Lacoste family's whiteness. One family friend, asked if she was white, said, "I hope I am." She reported that she had visited the Lacoste home "quite often" and had "never seen any niggers there." (99) Charles Villa, who had sought the annulment, apparently also had more flexible views of race than his suit allowed. Two weeks after filing for an annulment, he went to visit Josephine Lacoste, she said, and suggested "we go away, leave town, pack up and leave town." Apparently he believed the rumors about her "colored" blood but nevertheless wanted to reconcile and live somewhere the marriage would be legal. His wife told him "it was no use, that it would still be hanging over my head." She had always been accepted and had access to all the benefits of being white in New Orleans, but she felt it necessary to prove that she was not "colored." (100) The state supreme court obliged and ruled that the Filipino Lacoste family was mistakenly registered as "colored." (101) In Louisiana, if a person was "not Negro," that was all that mattered for the sake of marriage to a white person. But the court's willingness to override the documentary evidence in this case did not in any way indicate a slackening of the justices' racial views. If anything, it confirmed the significance of the black-white line and the real intent of anti-miscegenation statutes, which was to prevent one kind of interracial marriage. As it happened, the rigidity of Louisiana justice on the black/ white line served Josephine Lacoste well. In the late 1950s the state turned the accoutrements ac·cou·ter·ment or ac·cou·tre·ment n. 1. An accessory item of equipment or dress. Often used in the plural. 2. Military equipment other than uniforms and weapons. Often used in the plural. 3. of antimiscegenation law--its records and licensing functions--even more directly to the defense of segregation. Ironically, it was the impending im·pend intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends 1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending. 2. collapse of segregation in other parts of society that led Louisiana state authorities to adopt more stringent procedures to strengthen anti-miscegenation law. The shoring up Noun 1. shoring up - the act of propping up with shores propping up, shoring supporting, support - the act of bearing the weight of or strengthening; "he leaned against the wall for support" of broad segregation laws and their concurrent discouragement of miscegenation may have contributed to the slim numbers of miscegenation cases in state courts. In the 1950s and early 1960s, in the interest of "racial integrity" and in defiance of school desegregation, Louisiana's legislature passed 131 additional segregation statutes, far more than any other southern state. New laws New Laws: see Las Casas, Bartolomé de. segregated "all public parks, recreation centers, playgrounds, community centers and other such facilities" and prohibited racial interactions in situations ranging from interracial sporting competition, to shared eating utensils This is a list of eating and serving utensils.
n. The yellow or gray-yellow, protein-containing fluid portion of blood in which the blood cells and platelets are normally suspended. in hospitals. (102) The newly fortified fortified (fôrt adj containing additives more potent than the principal ingredient. segregation laws strengthened anti-miscegenation efforts by prohibiting the sort of casual contact that many believed led to relationships like that between Lucille Brown and James Aymond and by introducing new measures to prevent accidental unions similar to the one between "white" Cyril Sunseri and "Negro" Verna Cassagne. Significantly, many of the new statutes, including the law determining eligibility for a marriage certificate, placed a much heavier emphasis on the legal designation of race, requiring an official state birth certificate, with seal, designating the applicant's race. In 1955 the state legislature made official documentation of race a requirement for public school registration. In 1958 it became mandatory for marriage license applications. Stoked stoked adj. Slang 1. Exhilarated or excited. 2. Being or feeling high or intoxicated, especially from a drug. by massive resistance, the state's attention to the law of racial identity intensified in the decade prior to Loving v. Virginia. (103) In keeping with Louisiana's new segregation laws, in 1957 the New Orleans Board of Health introduced a working "race list" of surnames known to the board as historically "Negro," against which all requests for marriage licenses and other documents were to be double-checked for racial accuracy. (104) This policy aimed to prevent intentional miscegenation and also provided the state a new method to prevent inadvertent interracial marriage and to expose those who, like the members of the Lacoste family, had been "passing" as white. Although it is impossible to know how many marriage licenses were denied as a result, the staff of the board of health were notoriously thorough, conducting extensive genealogical ge·ne·al·o·gy n. pl. ge·ne·al·o·gies 1. A record or table of the descent of a person, family, or group from an ancestor or ancestors; a family tree. 2. Direct descent from an ancestor; lineage or pedigree. research, even in records out of the state. Between 1957 and 1965, Louisiana court records indicate that a minimum of 4,720 applications for certified copies those which are made or attested by officers having charge of the originals, and authorized to give copies officially. - Abbot. See also: Copy of birth certificates, undoubtedly many from engaged couples seeking a marriage license, were "flagged" for further inquiry and held back by the board because of questions about race. On a peak day, the board of health office in New Orleans would process as many as seven hundred requests for documents. (105) If a question about race arose, the deputy registrar and office staff simply refused to issue a marriage license. By interposing themselves between men and women who, until the 1950s, would have identified each other as members of the same race and might have been able to marry, the administrators of the law actually introduced a much stricter application of the anti-miscegenation laws. In doing so, the board began to compensate for many of the law's weaknesses and, it could be argued, actually contributed to a substantial redefinition of what comprised miscegenation in marriage. The new segregation laws also represented a historic turning point in the construction of race, by enhancing the state's ability to control the terms of definition in Louisiana. In public schools, for example, where "social evidence" had once prevailed and Cyril Sunseri first met Verna Cassagne, the state now enacted a screening process for all pupils and (106) required for entry an official birth certificate designating race. Therefore, such records permitted state officials not only to enforce customary segregation but also to enforce segregation laws according to a strict legal definition of black and white. Rigorous bureaucratic bu·reau·crat n. 1. An official of a bureaucracy. 2. An official who is rigidly devoted to the details of administrative procedure. bu procedures also allowed the state to make such determinations of race first and thus circumvent the usual social process of racial definition by imposing stricter separation between those people it chose to define as white or black. In the 1960s the board's defenders argued that race was not "an accidental quality which can be acquired by association with other races ... through fraud, misrepresentation misrepresentation In law, any false or misleading expression of fact, usually with the intent to deceive or defraud. It most commonly occurs in insurance and real-estate contracts. False advertising may also constitute misrepresentation. and deceit." It was "substance of the being, an inherited trait, acquired from ancestry genetically." (107) As this examination of miscegenation case law has demonstrated, however, such definitions had not always prevailed in Louisiana. For the first half of the twentieth century, race was, in spite of the one-drop designation, "known" as it was brokered, negotiated, tested, and asserted in day-to-day life between individuals. The state held that there was a meaningful difference between being "known as" one race and "legally" belonging to a racial category, but case studies of miscegenation prior to the 1960s reveal the inability, and perhaps unwillingness in some cases, of ordinary folks to make such distinctions when they courted, became engaged, or simply had sex. In the guise of other relationships, some Louisiana couples like J. W. Jones and Amanda Kyle and James Brown and Lucille Aymond circumvented the law's intent. But even when it came to conventional and legally sanctioned relationships like marriage, the successful separation of races depended upon the "proper" outcome of countless situations and personal exchanges in school admissions, housing rentals, hotel registrations, voter registrations, the streets, workplaces, bars, dance halls, and all other public spaces. The small numbers of miscegenation prosecutions in the twentieth century may indicate that Louisianans accepted prohibitions on sexual relationships with people socially defined as racially different, but there are also suggestions that Marcus Christian's hunches were probably right. Anti-miscegenation law repeatedly failed. As Eva Saks has argued, anti-miscegenation law has historically been "committed to the separation of looked like (possession of whiteness without legal title to it) from was (good title to whiteness)." (108) The many witnesses called on behalf of miscegenation proceedings--and undoubtedly an even greater number of betrothed who never appeared in court--repeatedly demonstrated the failure of the people to uphold or respect that commitment. In doing so, ordinary Louisianans not only crafted and enforced their own definition of acceptable marriages but also became the primary, if only temporary, architects of the construction of race at mid-century. (1) "Sheep Gnats and Passer Pour Blanches," unpublished manuscript by Marcus Christian, Folder "Ebony Magazine research re passe pas·sé adj. 1. No longer current or in fashion; out-of-date. 2. Past the prime; faded or aged. [French, past participle of passer, to pass, from Old French; see pour blanc," Box 12. Series XIII. 1: Historical Manuscripts. Marcus Bruce Christian Papers (Special Collections In library science, special collections (often abbreviated to Spec. Coll. or S.C.) is the name applied to a specific repository within a library which stores materials of a "special" nature. . Earl K. Long Library, University of New Orleans History UNO was founded in 1958 as the New Orleans branch of Louisiana State University, originally as "Louisiana State University in New Orleans" or "LSUNO", but became more independent and changed the name to "University of New Orleans" in 1974. ; hereinafter here·in·af·ter adv. In a following part of this document, statement, or book. hereinafter Adverb Formal or law from this point on in this document, matter, or case Adv. 1. cited as Christian Papers). On Christian, see Marilyn S. Hessler, "Marcus Christian: The Man and His Collection," Louisiana History, 28 (Winter 1987), 37-55: and Jerah Johnson, "Marcus B. Christian and the WPA WPA: see Work Projects Administration. WPA in full Works Progress Administration later (1939–43) Work Projects Administration U.S. work program for the unemployed. History of Black People in Louisiana," Louisiana History, 20 (Winter 1979), 113-15. I would like to thank Jennifer Gonzalez for her research assistance and Andrew Milne, Krystyn Moon, and the anonymous readers for the Journal of' Southern History for their criticisms and suggestions. (2) Christian saved the clipping of an August 22, 1959, death notice for a man named Ernest Joubert and wrote to himself "Mercy Hospital Mercy Hospital or Mercy Medical Center could refer to the following hospitals in:
n`), city (1990 pop. 10,633), Pearl River co., S Miss., near the Pearl River and the La. line; inc. 1904. , also"; on a
clipping dated September 8, 1959, Christian circled the name
"Joubert" in an ad for a "colored" apartment and
wrote to himself: "The man who died, Sr.?" See
Christian's clippings from the New Orleans Times-Picayune, dated
(handwritten on each clipping) August 22, August 23, and September 8,
1859, in Folder "January-July 1960," Box 16, all in Series VI:
Clippings, Christian Papers; emphasis appears in originals (as
underlining un·der·lin·ing n. 1. The act of drawing a line under; underscoring. 2. Emphasis or stress, as in instruction or argument. ). For the 1960 photograph of the fiftieth-anniversary celebration, see a clipping dated January 28, 1960, in the same folder. (3) Interracial marriage was prohibited by both French and Spanish colonial authorities in Louisiana. American lawmakers maintained that prohibition, outlawing interracial marriage in 1808. More detail on the legal history of interracial sex follows below. For a discussion of the myths of racial purity in Louisiana, see Virginia R. Dominguez, White by Definition: Social Classification in Creole Louisiana (New Brunswick New Brunswick, province, Canada New Brunswick, province (2001 pop. 729,498), 28,345 sq mi (73,433 sq km), including 519 sq mi (1,345 sq km) of water surface, E Canada. , N.J., 1986), 185-204. (4) See, for example, the Citizens' Council's pamphlet "What is the Citizens' Council? Defender of Racial Integrity, States Rights, and the Constitution," in Folder "Citizen's Council of Greater New Orleans," Series 1963, Box $63-5, in Mayor Victor H. Schiro Victor Hugo "Vic" Schiro (May 6, 1904 - August 29, 1992), was an Italian-American New Orleans, Louisiana, politician who served on the City Council and as Mayor from 1961 - 1970. Records (Louisiana Division, City Archives and Special Collections, New Orleans Public Library The New Orleans Public Library (NOPL) is the public library service of the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. History The system began in 1896 as the Fisk Free and Public Library in a building on Lafayette Square. ; hereinafter cited as New Orleans Public Library): "Citizen Council Canvass Slated," New Orleans Times-Picayune, January 27, 1956, p. 13, col. 1; and Glen Jeansonne, Leander Perez Leander Henry Perez, Sr., (July 16, 1891 - March 19, 1969) was the Democratic "political boss" of Plaquemines and St. Bernard parishes, Louisiana, in the first half of the twentieth century. : Boss of the Delta (Baton Rouge Baton Rouge (băt`ən r zh) [Fr.,=red stick], city (1990 pop. 219,531), state capital and seat of East Baton Rouge parish, SE La. , 1977), 222-25.
(5) The statute under which Brown and Aymond were charged was La. R.S. 14:79 (Article 79 of Louisiana's revised statutes A body of statutes that have been revised, collected, arranged in order, and reenacted as a whole. The legal title of the collection of compiled laws of the United States, as well as some of the individual states. , criminal code). The code and the legal punishment are cited in State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond, 236 La. 562, 108 So. 2d 233 (1959). The full text of the statute appears in the published Louisiana Revised Civil Code, 1128-1130 (1949). Older copies of published Louisiana statutes (which are no longer valid) are available for research at the Louisiana State Supreme Court Library in New Orleans. (6) As numerous scholars have argued, miscegenation law is not a mere byproduct by·prod·uct or by-prod·uct n. 1. Something produced in the making of something else. 2. A secondary result; a side effect. Noun 1. of racial ideas; it contributes to the construction and reconstruction of those ideas. See, for example, Eva Saks, "Representing Miscegenation Law." Raritan, 8 (Fall 1988), 39-69; Peggy Pascoe, "Miscegenation Law, Court Cases, and Ideologies of 'Race' in Twentieth-Century America," Journal of American History The Journal of American History (sometimes abbreviated as JAH), is the official journal of the Organization of American Historians. It was first published in 1914 as the Mississippi Valley Historical Review , 83 (June 1996), 44-69: Peter W. Bardaglio, "'Shamefull Matches': The Regulation of Interracial Sex and Marriage in the South before 1900," in Martha Hodes, ed., Sex, Love, Race: Crossing Boundaries in North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. History (New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , 19991, 112--38: and Barbara J. Fields Barbara Jeanne Fields is a professor of American history at Columbia University. Her focus is on the history of the American South, 19th century social history, and the transition to capitalism in the United States. She received her B.A. . "Ideology and Race in American History," in J. Morgan Kousser and James M. McPherson
James M. McPherson (born October 11, 1936) is an American Civil War historian, and is the George Henry Davis '86 Professor Emeritus of United States History at Princeton University. , eds., Region, Race, and Reconstruction: Essays in Honor of C. Vann Woodward (New York, 1982), 143-77. (7) Pascoe, "Miscegenation Law," 7. (8) A note on the language of race in this essay: Though I regard race as nothing more than a social construction, as a historian I also recognize the significance, power, and reality of a racial label or designation in its historical context. Accordingly, 1 use the words of contemporaries since that is the meaning or designation that matters historically, if they describe someone as "Negro," or "colored." so do I. Although some may find this antiquated racial language of the courts problematic, I think that recognizing race as a social construction requires a scholar to treat the idea as historically bounded and thus refuse to translate their words/ideas into seemingly equivalent twenty-first-century terms. The only change that I have made as a concession to style is to regularize reg·u·lar·ize tr.v. reg·u·lar·ized, reg·u·lar·iz·ing, reg·u·lar·iz·es To make regular; cause to conform. reg the capitalization of Negro. My approach to the cases concerning racial identity is similar. I do not make any claims as to what might be the "proper" racial designation for a person, since I do not believe that there is one. What mattered historically was the designation that prevailed at the time, either in the court or in a subject's community more generally. Similarly, if a person was regarded as one race by their peers and another by the courts, the person did, in a very real sense, possess two racial identities. Self-identity, social identity, and legal identity were separate entities, and each possessed very real historical implications that demand that scholars recognize the validity of each. (9) For a discussion of the limitations of legal records see note 30 and text below. (10) A. Leon Higginbotham Jr. and Barbara K. Kopytoff, "Racial Purity and Interracial Sex in the Law of Colonial and Antebellum Virginia," in Werner Sollors, ed., Interracialism: Black-White Intermarriage in American History, Literature, and Law (New York, 2000), 81-139 (quotation on p. 84). (11) Bardaglio, "'Shamefull Matches,'" 112-38 (quotation on p. 113); Peter Wallenstein, Tell the Court I Love My Wife: Race, Marriage and the Law--An American History (New York, 2002), 13-38. On the South specifically, see Charles F. Robinson, Dangerous Liaisons: Sex and Love in the Segregated South (Fayetteville, Ark., 2003), 1-21. On the legal treatment of miscegenation in the colonial period Colonial Period may generally refer to any period in a country's history when it was subject to administration by a colonial power.
Clinton completed her dissertation on under the direction of James M. McPherson at Princeton University. and Michele Gillespie Michele Gillespie is Kahle Family Associate Professor of history at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. She specializes in American history, focusing on gender, race, class, and region in the American South from 1790-1920. Gillespie. , eds., The Devil's Lane: Sex and Race in the Early South (New York, 1997), 124-35; Karen A. Getman, "Sexual Control in the Slaveholding slave·hold·er n. One who owns or holds slaves. slave hold ing adj. South:
The Implementation and Maintenance of a Racial Caste System,"
Harvard Women's Law Journal, 7 (1984), 121-34; Joel Williamson, New
People: Miscegenation and Mulattoes in the United States (New York,
1980), chap. 1; A. Leon Higginbotham Jr., In the Matter of Color: Race
and the American Legal Process. Vol. I: The Colonial Period (New York,
1978), 44-47, 108, 139, 231, 269, 286, 309; and Higginbotbam and
Kopytoff, "Racial Purity and Interracial Sex."
(12) Robinson, Dangerous Liaisons, 2-4 (quotation on p. 4). (13) Getman, "Sexual Control," 126; Anne Firor Scott, The Southern Lady: From Pedestal to Politics, 1830-1930 (Chicago, 1970), chap. 1: Catherine Clinton, The Plantation Mistress: Woman's World Woman's World is a popular American supermarket weekly magazine with a circulation of 1.6 million readers. Generally marketed with other tabloid papers, it concentrates on short stories about popular woman-focused subjects such as weight loss, relationship advice and in the Old South (New York, 1982), 87-94: Brown, Good Wires. Nasty Wenches, and Anxious Patriarchs, 187-211; Hodes, White Women, Black Men, 4-5. (14) Robinson provides an instructive overview that reveals the great diversity of state statutes and enforcement practices. In general, states seem to have acted to preserve white male authority, as laws were enforced and penalties assigned at white lawmakers' discretion. In practice this meant that most cases punished public relationships between white women and black men. See Robinson, Dangerous Liaisons, 8-20: and Wallenstein, Tell the Court I Love My Wife, 51-123. (15) Louisiana and South Carolina were exceptions to the law of racial definition, as South Carolina did not introduce a strict legal definition of blackness and whiteness and Louisiana still recognized more than two racial categories. F. James Davis James Davis is the name of several people:
(16) For a comparative and synthetic account of such legal conceptions of race and blood, see Davis, Who Is Black? 1-16, 61-80. For a discussion of the relationship between "blood" and miscegenation, see Saks, "Representing Miscegenation Law": and Davis, Who Is Black? 17-30. On Louisiana, see Dominguez, White by Definition, chap. 3; and Anthony G. Barthelemy, "Light, Bright, Damn Near White: Race, the Politics of Genealogy genealogy (jē'nēŏl`əjē, –ăl`–, jĕ–), the study of family lineage. Genealogies have existed since ancient times. , and the Strange Case of Susie Guillory," in Sybil Kein Sybil Kein (a.k.a. Dr. Consuela Provost) is a Louisiana Creole poet, playwright, scholar, and musician. Dr. Provost largely created the field of Creole Studies through her early publications and presentations. . ed., Creole: The History and Legacy of Louisiana's Free People of Color (Baton Rouge, 2000), 252-75. (17) According to Jennifer M. Spear, French authorities' preference for intraracial relationships was motivated by a number of concerns, but primary among them was the belief that Indian women's sexuality and their willingness to abandon unhappy conjugal Pertaining or relating to marriage; suitable or applicable to married people. Conjugal rights are those that are considered to be part and parcel of the state of matrimony, such as love, sex, companionship, and support. unions made them ill-suited to the establishment of family and farm, two projects essential to imperial success in the Louisiana/French system of racial classification. Spear, "'They Need Wives': Metissage and the Regulation of Sexuality in French Louisiana The term French Louisiana refers to two distinct regions: first, to colonial French Louisiana, comprised of the massive, middle section of North America claimed by France; and, second, to modern French Louisiana, which stretches across the southern extreme of the present-day state , 1699-1730," in Hodes, ed., Sex, Love, Race, 35-59. (18) On the history and development of anti-miscegenation law in Louisiana under French, Spanish, and American authorities, see Charles F. Robinson II, "The Antimiscegenation Conversation: Love's Legislated Limits (1868-1967)" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Houston, 1998), 112-15; and Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, Africans in Colonial Louisiana: The Development of Afro-Creole Culture, in the Eighteenth Century (Baton Rouge, 1992). (19) Monique Guillory. "Some Enchanted en·chant tr.v. en·chant·ed, en·chant·ing, en·chants 1. To cast a spell over; bewitch. 2. To attract and delight; entrance. See Synonyms at charm. Evening on the Auction Block: The Cultural Legacy of the New Orleans Quadroon Balls" (Ph.D. dissertation, New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the , 1999). On quadroon balls, see also Joan M. Martin, "Placage and the Louisiana Gens de Couleur Gens de couleur is a French term meaning "people of color." This is often a short form of gens de couleur libres ("free people of color"). In practice, it can refer to creoles of color with Latin blood, and certain other free blacks. Libre: How Race and Sex Defined the Lifestyles of Free Women of Color," in Kein, ed., Creole, 57-70; Marcus Christian, "Manuscript 19," Folder "White Men and Negro Women," Box 14, Series XIlI.1: Historical Manuscripts, Christian Papers; Dominguez, White by Definition. 131-41; Davis, Who Is Black? 45; and John W. Blassingame, Black New Orleans: 1860-1880 (Chicago, 1973), 17-19. (20) As Robinson notes, this was the general trend, but again, generalizations are defied by a few exceptional states. Robinson, Dangerous Liaisons, 8-9. Massachusetts eliminated antimiscegenation law in 1843, and Iowa eliminated its law in 1851. Many state laws continued from the colonial period, as in the case of Virginia and Maryland, Massachusetts reenacted its colonial law in 1786. Maine and Rhode Island Rhode Island, island, United States Rhode Island, island, 15 mi (24 km) long and 5 mi (8 km) wide, S R.I., at the entrance to Narragansett Bay. It is the largest island in the state, with steep cliffs and excellent beaches. enacted laws in 1821 and 1798, respectively. For a discussion of the spread of state laws and specific state statutes in the early national period, see Wallenstein, Tell the Court I Love My Wife, chap. 3. On Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode Island, Virginia, and Maryland, see ibid., 40-41. (21) Robinson, "Antimiscegenation Conversation," 114-17: Harriet Spiller Daggett, Legal Essays on Family Law (Baton Rouge, 1935), 25-29. (22) On the frequent appearance of the subject of interracial sex in mid-nineteenth-century political discourse, see Wallenstein, Tell the Court I Love My Wife, 50-63. (23) On the origin of the term miscegenation, see Sidney Kaplan, "The Miscegenation Issue in the Election of 1864," Journal of Negro History, 34 (July 1949), 274-343; Hodes, White Women, Black Men, 144; and Wallenstein, Tell the Court I Love My Wife, 51-52. (24) Robinson, Dangerous Liaisons. 30 (quotation). Robinson notes that Redemption ushered in many new state anti-miscegenation laws, but the impact of these laws was limited and primarily aimed at formal relationships such as marriage. His survey of southern legal cases indicates that enforcement was uneven, as white authorities feared federal intervention Federal intervention (Spanish: Intervención federal) is an attribution of the federal government of Argentina, by which it takes control of a province in certain extreme cases. Intervention is declared by the President with the assent of the National Congress. and were reluctant to circumscribe cir·cum·scribe tr.v. cir·cum·scribed, cir·cum·scrib·ing, cir·cum·scribes 1. To draw a line around; encircle. 2. To limit narrowly; restrict. 3. To determine the limits of; define. interracial sex between white men and black women. Ibid., 49-59. (25) Edward L. Ayers. The Promise of the New South: Life a after Reconstruction (New York, 1992). 140 (first quotation), 139 (other quotations). On anxieties related to women's increased presence in public spheres of work and amusement, see Glenda Gilmore Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore is an award-winning historian of the American South at Yale University. She taught history at Queens College in Charlotte, North Carolina before joining the Yale faculty as an assistant professor in 1994. , Gender and Jim Crow: Women and the Polities of White Supremacy in North Carolina, 1896-1920 (Chapel Hill, 1996), 72-76. (26) Paul A. Lombardo, "Medicine, Eugenics, and the Supreme Court: From Coercive Sterilization sterilization Any surgical procedure intended to end fertility permanently (see contraception). Such operations remove or interrupt the anatomical pathways through which the cells involved in fertilization travel (see reproductive system). to Reproductive Freedom," Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy, 13 (Fall 1996), 21 (quotations); Lisa Lindquist Doff, "Ann in Arm: Gender, Eugenics, and Virginia's Racial Integrity Acts of the 1920s," Journal of Women's History The Journal of Women’s History is an academic journal founded in 1989. It is the first journal devoted exclusively to the field of international women’s history. It explores multiple perspectives of feminism rather than promoting a single unifying form. , 11 (Spring 1999), 143; Pascoe, "Miscegenation Law"; Paul A. Lombardo, "Miscegenation, Eugenics, and Racism: Historical Footnotes to Loving v. Virginia," U.C. Davis Law Review, 21 (Winter 1988), 421-52; Richard B. Sherman, "'The Last Stand': The Fight for Racial Integrity in Virginia in the 1920s," Journal of Southern History, 54 (February 1988), 69-92. (27) The state's complex and conspiratorial con·spir·a·to·ri·al adj. Of, relating to, or characteristic of conspirators or a conspiracy: a conspiratorial act; a conspiratorial smile. system of policing the practice of self-identification of race is perhaps the most notorious in modern America. The state's practices regarding racial identity have received an extraordinary amount of scholarly and public attention since the early 1980s, when Susan Guillory Phipps, a Louisiana native, unsuccessfully sued the state to have her racial designation changed to white. On Phipps, see Barthelemy, "Light, Bright, Damn Near White," 259-66; Calvin Trillin, "American Chronicles American Chronicles is a documentary television program which was run by Fox Broadcasting Company as part of its 1990 fall lineup. American Chronicles : Black or White." New Yorker, April 14, 1986, pp. 62-78: and Dominguez. White by Definition, 52-53. (28) Dominguez, White by Definition, 574;2 (first quotation on p. 57: second quotation on p. 62). (29) Analyzing the evolution of Louisiana's anti-miscegenation jurisprudence, Robinson remarks, "It appears that for Louisiana any abhorrence that whites might have felt for interracial sex was balanced by the undeniable fact of its frequent occurrence." "Antimiscegenation Conversation," 128-31 (quotation on p. 128; figures on p. 131). Civil cases involving miscegenation outnumbered criminal cases throughout the U.S. Peggy Pascoe has systematically examined all appeals court cases in which miscegenation played a role, and among these cases she found 132 civil cases and 95 criminal cases. See Pascoe, "Miscegenation Law," 50n15. (30) The paucity of cases at this level also points to a number of problems in relying on legal records, and appellate cases in particular. Though appellate cases provide quick access to essential cases that established subsequent case law and, equally important, have the advantage of being published, indexed, and complete with full records of testimony, exhibits, and briefs, they are in Pascoe's words, "by definition atypical." Chosen for their legal merits, they are in no way a representative sample. Nor can they be used to gauge the frequency of illegal sex or the number of civil suits and local prosecutions related to miscegenation. Nor, as Randall Kennedy Randall L. Kennedy is a professor at Harvard Law School. He is the author of Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word, Race, Crime, and the Law and Interracial Intimacy. argues, do they reveal much about the influence of miscegenation law on "the way in which people actually lived their lives," since other factors like social disapproval and, for black men, the fear of lynching may have been more significant. For a discussion of appellate cases, see Pascoe, "Miscegenation Laws," 50n15: and on the limitations of the law as a source, see Randall Kennedy, "The Enforcement of Anti-Miscegenation Laws," in Sollors, ed., Interracialism, 140-62 (quotation on p. 146). However, in the 1930s, at least one scholar argued that antimiscegenation laws, coupled with social sanctions, may have been a deterrent. Daggett, Legal Essays on Family Law, especially chap. 1, "The Legal Aspect of Amalgamation in Louisiana." (31) Robinson, "Antimiscegenation Conversation," 128 (quotation); Robinson, Dangerous Liaisons, 113. (32) Those cases were State v. Treadaway et al., 126 La. 300, 52 So. 500 (1910); State v. Daniel, 141 La. 900, 75 So. 836 (1917); State v. Harris, 150 La. 383, 90 So. 686 (1922); City of New Orleans v. Miller et al., 142 La. 163, 76 So. 596 (1917); State v. Brown, 236 La. 562, 108 So. 2d. 233 (1959). There are some inherent difficulties in counting eases, however, including how one decides which cases to count. Some cases clearly involve miscegenation, such as the divorce cases cited below in which the race of one party determined the legality of the marriage, but the case itself does not cite miscegenation or miscegenation law explicitly. In other examples, the case may mention miscegenation and in so doing document an accusation or an occurrence of miscegenation (and therefore the state's knowledge of an accusation of miscegenation), but the case itself involves a different legal matter. A sixth criminal case, State v. Bertrand et al., 123 La. 575, 49 So. 199 (1909), does cite a couple indicted for criminal miscegenation, but the legal matter in this particular appellate case concerns the forfeiture of bail, because the defendant, Eugene Bertrand, failed to appear in court. The case does not mention whether the couple was convicted but does note that the accused, Eugene Bertrand, was in jail at the time. The miscegenation case would have been before the district, rather than the appellate court A court having jurisdiction to review decisions of a trial-level or other lower court. An unsuccessful party in a lawsuit must file an appeal with an appellate court in order to have the decision reviewed. . Another case appearing indirectly in the appellate records is that of Edward and Ezilda Von Buelow, who were charged with criminal miscegenation, but the case itself concerns an insurance claim. Edward Von Buelow committed suicide before his trial, and his widow sued her life insurance company for his benefits. Ezilda Von Buelow, Testamentary Executrix executrix (pl. executrices) n. Latin for female executor. However, the term executor is now unisex. EXECUTRIX, A woman who has been appointed by. will to execute such will or testament. See Executor. v. The Life Insurance Company Of Virginia, 9 Teiss. 143 (1912). (33) Brief on Behalf of the Defendants, in case files of State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond, 236 La. 562, 108 So. 2d 233 (1959), Louisiana Supreme Court Records (Louisiana Supreme Court Clerk's Office, New Orleans). (34) Quotations from transcript of testimony of David Blalock before the civil district court, May 29, 1958, Avoyelles Parish; Brief on Behalf of the State of Louisiana, Plaintiff-Appellee, both in case files of State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond. (35) Quoted in transcript of testimony of David Blalock, ibid. (36) Rosabeth Moss Kanter, for example, notes that the relationship is often highly personalized and compared to that between man and wife. See Kanter, Men and Women of the Corporation (New York, 1977), 76, 86-91. (37) Quoted in transcript of testimony of David Blalock before the civil district court, May 29, 1958, Avoyelles Parish; Brief on Behalf of the State of Louisiana, Plaintiff-Appellee, both in case files of State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond. (38) Brown and Aymond confessions, as cited in Brief on Behalf of the Defendants, in case files of State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond. (39) State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond, 236 La. at 567. (40) Brief on Behalf of the Defendants, in case files State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond. (41) La R.S. 14:79 as cited in State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond. (42) State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond, 236 La. at 569 (first and second quotations) and 575 (third quotation). (43) On the creation of the myth of white female purity, see Hodes, White Women, Black Men, 5, 160-61, 177, 181, 186, 197-202, 261n25. Hodes links the evolution of white beliefs about interracial sex, white women's purity, and black men's sexual predation predation Form of food getting in which one animal, the predator, eats an animal of another species, the prey, immediately after killing it or, in some cases, while it is still alive. Most predators are generalists; they eat a variety of prey species. to escalating violence against black men. Ibid., 178 208. (44) Andrea D. Perez et al. v. W. G. Sharp, 32 Cal. 2d 711, 198 P. 2d 17 (1948) ruled that California's laws prohibiting marriages between whites and members of other racial groups was invalid. In the case, Perez, a "white" woman, and Sylvester Davis, a "Negro" man, were denied license to marry by the Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. clerk of court Clerk of Court clerk n → Protokollführer(in) m(f) . However, California did not remove the anti-miscegenation law from the California Civil Code until 1959. On Perez, see Pascoe "Miscegenation Law," 61-63; and Leti Volpp. "American Mestizo mestizo (māstē`sō) [Span.,=mixture], person of mixed race; particularly, in Mexico and Central and South America, a person of European (Spanish or Portuguese) and indigenous descent. : Filipinos and Antimiscegenation Laws in California," U.C. Davis Law Review, 33 (Summer 2000), 824. (45) See for example, New Orleans Times-Picayune, July 7, 1959; and Christian's clippings from the Times-Picayune dated (handwritten on the clippings) October 18, January 28, May 5, and May 26, 1959, in Folder "Jan-June 1959," Box 14; and September 11, 1960, in Folder "July Dec 1960," Box 16, both boxes in Series VI: Clippings, Christian Papers. (46) On Dupas see Michelle Brattain, "Passing, Racial Boundaries, and the Social Construction of Race in Twentieth Century New Orleans," paper presented at conference entitled "Race, Place, and the American Experience American Experience (sometimes abbreviated AmEx) is a television program airing on the PBS network in the United States. The program airs documentaries about important or interesting events and people in American history, many of which have won impressive ," Tuscaloosa, Alabama Tuscaloosa is a city in west central Alabama in the southern United States. Located on the Black Warrior River, it is the seat of Tuscaloosa CountyGR6 and the fifth-largest city in Alabama with a population of 83,052 (2006 U.S. Census Bureau Estimate). , March 10, 2002: and "Miscegenation Charges Denied," New Orleans Times-Picayune, July 12, 1956, p. 5, col. 5. (47) On the demonization de·mon·ize tr.v. de·mon·ized, de·mon·iz·ing, de·mon·iz·es 1. To turn into or as if into a demon. 2. To possess by or as if by a demon. 3. of black male sexuality in the twentieth century, see Jacquelyn Dowd Hall. "'The Mind that Burns in Each Body': Women, Rape, and Racial Violence," in Ann Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson, eds., Powers of Desire: The Politics of Sexuality (New York, 1983), 328-49; Randall Kennedy, Interracial Intimacies: Sex, Marriage, Identity, and Adoption (New York, 2003), 189-200: and James Goodman
(48) For an extended discussion of the court's treatment of concubinage, see Succession of Lannes, 187 La. 17.40 (quotation), 174 So. 94 (1936). (49) See Christian, unpublished manuscript chapter titled "White men, Negro women," p. 202, in Folder "White men, Negro Women." Box 14, Series XIII: Historical Manuscripts, Christian Papers. (50) Every case that I found concerned a white man and a black woman. Presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. the same sorts of disguises might have hidden relationships between black men and white women, although black female employees more typically held jobs that would have required them to live in a white household. On black women's household employment, see Jacqueline Jones Jacqueline Jones (born 1948) is a Truman Professor of American Civilization at Brandeis University, Massachusetts, United States. She is an expert in American social history in addition to writing on economics (also feminist economics), women, and class. , Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow: Black Women, Work, and the Family from Slavery to the Present (New York, 1985); Elizabeth Clark-Lewis, Living In. Living Out: African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. Domestics in Washington, D.C., 1910-1940 (Washington, D.C, 1994); Brenda Clegg Gray, Black Female Domestics During the Depression in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. , 1930-1940 (New York, i993); and Tera W. Hunter, To 'Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Women's Lives and Labors after the Civil War (Cambridge, Mass., 1997). (51) Jones et al. v. Kyle, 168 La. 728, 733 (first, second, and third quotations), 735 (other quotations), 123 So. 306 (1929). In determining the "open" or "secret" status of the relationship between Jones and Kyle, the state relied upon the decision in Succession of Jahraus, 114 La. 456, 38 So. 417 (1905), which provided an extended discussion of the legal history of this distinction from the original French law to the state of Louisiana's civil code and Louisiana case law up to 1905. As the court explained in Jahraus, the framers of the Louisiana Civil Code had two concerns. They wished to discourage "unseemly scandals which resulted from permitting scrutiny into the private lives of people who were dead and no longer able to defend themselves," but they also wished "in the interests of public morals, of making some distinction between people who lived together as man and wife under the solemn sanction of marriage, and those who maintained practically the same status, openly and publicly, without the sanction of marriage." Succession of Jahraus, 114 La. at 462. See also Succession of Lannes, 187 La. 17, which provides another extended discussion of the history of the law regarding "open concubinage" and its intent to discourage public immorality IMMORALITY. that which is contra bonos mores. In England, it is not punishable in some cases, at the common law, on, account of the ecclesiastical jurisdictions: e. g. adultery. But except in cases belonging to the ecclesiastical courts, the court of king's bench is the custom morum, and . (52) Jones et al. v. Kyle, 168 La. at 735. (53) See also. for example, the case of Hodges' Heirs v. Kell et al., 125 La. 87, 51 So. 77 (1910). In Hodges, the dispute over the estate of John E. Hodges resulted from the long-term relationship between Hodges, white, and his partner, Eliza Kline, Negro, who lived with him as an employee for nearly thirty years. In his will, Hodges identified Kline as "my true and faithful servant who has been in my employ for the last 28 years" (page 94), but he left his entire estate to Kline and their seven children. (54) See Grace Elizabeth Hale, Making Whiteness: The Culture of Segregation in the South, 1890-1940 (New York, 1998), 94-114. (55) See various clippings in Series VI: Clippings from American and English Publications, Christian Papers. (56) Louisiana had two bureaus of vital statistics, one serving New Orleans and the other serving the rest of the state. (57) See, for example, the appeals recorded in Minutes of the Board of Health, bound volume, New Orleans Health Department Records (New Orleans Public Library); Naomi Drake v. Department of Health, City of New Orleans Civil Service Commission, Appeal No. 391, in Civil Service Department Minutes, Classified City Employees, 1965, microfilm A1300, roll #66-155 (New Orleans Public Library). (58) On whiteness and law, see Ian Haney Lopez, White by Law: The Legal Construction of Race (New York, 1996): Davis, Who Is Black?; Cheryl I. Harris, "Whiteness as Property," Harvard Law Review The Harvard Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship published by an independent student group at Harvard Law School. Overview The Review is one of the most cited law reviews in the United States and considered by many to be the most prestigious. , 106 (June 1993), 1707-91. Kimberle Crenshaw cren·shaw also cran·shaw n. A variety of winter melon (Cucumis melo var. inodorus) having a greenish-yellow rind and sweet, usually salmon-pink flesh. [Origin unknown.] et al., eds., Critical Race Theory Critical race theory is a school of sociological thought and legal studies that emphasizes the socially constructed nature of race, considers judicial conclusions to be the result of the workings of power, and opposes the continuation of racial subordination. : The Key Writings that Formed the Movement (New York, 1995); and Richard Delgado Richard Delgado is the University Distinguished Professor of Law & Derrick Bell Fellow at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He is an expert in civil rights law and critical race theory, a critic of law and literature movement. , ed., Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge (Philadelphia, 1995). On New Orleans see Kennedy, Interracial Intimacies, 324-25; Dominguez, White by Definition; Paul Finkelman, "The Crime of Color," Tulane Law Review, 67 (June 1993), 2063-112; Raymond T. Diamond and Robert J. Cottrol, "Codifying Caste: Louisiana's Racial Classification Scheme and the Fourteenth Amendment Fourteenth Amendment, addition to the U.S. Constitution, adopted 1868. The amendment comprises five sections. Section 1 Section 1 of the amendment declares that all persons born or naturalized in the United States are American citizens and citizens ," Loyola Law Review, 29 (Spring 1983), 255-85: and Robert Westley, "First-Time Encounters: "Passing' Revisited and Demystification as a Critical Practice," Yale Law and Policy Review, 18 (2000), 297. (59) Saks, "Representing Miscegenation Law"; Pascoe, "Miscegenation Law." (60) State v. Treadaway et al., 126 La. 300, 301 (second and third quotations), 52 So. 500 (1910). The law cited in Treadaway is section 1 of Act No. 87 of 1908. Quotations are taken from the text of the Treadaway decision to indicate the court's technical language for racial identities. Octave Treadaway's companion is identified as Josephine Lightell in the case file of State v. Octave Treadaway et al., Louisiana Supreme Court Records, 1813-1920 (Special Collections, Earl K. Long Library, University of New Orleans). (61) Dominguez, White by Definition, 31-32 (quotation on p. 32). See also Christian, editorial notes, undated un·dat·ed adj. 1. Not marked with or showing a date: an undated letter; an undated portrait. 2. , Folder "Ebony Magazine research re passe pour blanc," Box 12, Series XIII.1: Historical Manuscripts, Christian Papers. (62) Dominguez, White by Definition, 30-38. (63) Sunseri v. Cassagne, 191 La. 209, 185 So. 1 (1938). On the legal significance of this standard, see Diamond and Cottrol, "Codifying Caste." (64) Brief on Behalf of the State of Louisiana, Plaintiff-Appellee, in case files of State of Louisiana v. James Brown and Lucille Aymond. (65) Sunseri v. Cassagne. 191 La. at 211 (quotation): Sunseri v. Cassagne, 195 La. 19, 196 So. 7 (1940); Saks, "Representing Miscegenation Law." (66) See transcript of testimony of Cyril Cassagne, Case No 219-350, Civil District Court Orleans Parish. 1936, included in case files of Sunseri v. Cassagne, 191 La. 209, Louisiana Supreme Court Records (Louisiana Supreme Court Clerk's Office). (67) Sunseri v. Cassagne, 191 La. at 214. (68) Brief on behalf of Verna Cassagne. included in case files of Sunseri v. Cassagne. The status of Indians as white people or persons of color changed over time. In 1810 the superior court in the territory of Orleans decided in Adelle v. Beauregard that Indians were considered persons of color. Marriage between whites and Indians was illegal until Louisiana's anti-miscegenation law was repealed in 1870. In 1894, when anti-miscegenation laws were reenacted, Indians were still classified as persons of color and therefore not permitted to marry whites. In 1920, state law declared marriage between Indians and persons "colored and black" miscegenation, and after that Indians were treated as not "colored." Virginia Dominguez points out that in the 1930s the attorney general was "explicitly stating that marriage between white persons and Indians was not prohibited...." For a full account, see Dominguez, White by Definition, 34. Given that marriage between whites and Indians or whites and persons of color was prohibited in 1837, in theory Fanny Ducre should not have been able to marry Leander Ducre if she was identified as either an Indian or a person of color, but the record does not explain the circumstances of the marriage. (69) Petition and Affadavit from Cyril P. Sunseri v. Verna Cassagne, No 219-350, Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans, included in case files of Sunseri v. Cassagne. See also the transcript of the testimony of Stella Casagne before the civil district court, ibid. (70) The nine quotations (in order) are from transcripts of the testimony of Toussaint Ducre; Mane Atlow; Rose Green Ducre; C. Harry Culbertson; Marie Atlow; Marie Atlow; Marie Atlow; Mary Parker; Rene Pierre, all before the civil district court, ibid. (71) Transcript of testimony of Mary Parker before the civil district court, ibid. (72) The court, in transcript of testimony of Mary Parker before the civil district court, ibid. (73) The court (second and third quotations) and Rose Green Ducre (first quotation), in transcript of testimony of Rose Green Ducre before the civil district court, ibid. (74) Transcript of testimony of P. Henry Lanause before the civil district court, ibid. (75) Transcript of testimony of Rene Pierre before the civil district court, ibid. (76) Transcript of testimony of Rose Green Ducre before the civil district court, ibid. (77) Transcript of testimony of Mrs. Emma Villarrubia, registrar of Lacombe, before the civil district court, ibid. (78) Transcript of testimony of Marie Atlow before the civil district court, ibid. (79) Transcript of testimony of Pauline Roubion before the civil district court, ibid. (80) Transcript of testimony of Cyril Sunseri before the civil district court, ibid. (81) Transcript of testimony of Mrs. George Obitz before the civil district court, ibid. (82) Sunseri v. Cassagne, 195 La. 19 (1938). Quotation from Transcript of testimony of Verna Cassagne before the civil district court, included in case files of Sunseri v. Cassagne. (83) Sunseri v. Cassagne, 191 La. at 222 (first quotation); Sunseri v. Cassagne, 195 La. at 21 (third quotation), 27 (second quotation). (84) Joseph G. Tregle Jr., "Creoles and Americans," in Arnold R. Hirsch and Joseph Logsdon, eds., Creole New Orleans: Race and Americanization (Baton Rouge, 1992), 134-35 (first quotation on p. 135), 139 (second quotation). (85) Tregle, "Creoles and Americans," 139 (quotations), 172-81. (86) On the "Creole controversy," see Dominguez, White by Definition, 149-81 (quotations on p. 159). (87) Sunseri v. Cassagne, 195 La. at 22 (first quotation): Diamond and Cottrol. "Codifying Caste," 282 (second quotation). Raymond T. Diamond and Robert J. Cottrol have argued that the state's racial classification system served primarily to prevent a person "'labeled black because of heredity heredity, transmission from generation to generation through the process of reproduction in plants and animals of factors which cause the offspring to resemble their parents. That like begets like has been a maxim since ancient times. " from escaping such categorization. See Diamond and Cottrol, "Codifying Caste," 281-85 (quotation on p. 282). (88) Villa v. Lacoste et al., 213 La. 654. 35 So. 2d 419 (1948). When Lacoste sued Villa for support, he answered her suit by attacking the marriage as null and void because she was "colored." The circumstances surrounding the case are explained in the Brief on behalf of Villa. March 13. 1948, in case files of Villa v. Lacoste et al., 213 La. 654, 35 So. 2d 419 (1948), Louisiana Supreme Court Records (Louisiana Supreme Court Clerk's Office). (89) Quotation is from transcript of testimony of Mr. Prudhomme, deputy recurder, before the civil district court, included in case files of Villa v. Lacoste et al. Apparently the issue had also appeared in civil district court on a number of occasions, according to Lacoste's attorney. See brief on behalf of Josephine Lacoste, March 29. 1948, included in case files of Villa v. Lacoste et al. (90) Although the United States had a considerable number of Filipino immigrants in 1948, the majority of them resided in the West, with more than three-quarters of them living in California. According to U.S. law. Filipinos were U.S. nationals, free to migrate between the Philippines and the U.S. but ineligible for naturalization naturalization, official act by which a person is made a national of a country other than his or her native one. In some countries naturalized persons do not necessarily become citizens but may merely acquire a new nationality. . U.S. policy had, since 1790, limited naturalization to "free white persons" with the exception of African Americans and African immigrants, who were naturalized nat·u·ral·ize v. nat·u·ral·ized, nat·u·ral·iz·ing, nat·u·ral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To grant full citizenship to (one of foreign birth). 2. To adopt (something foreign) into general use. , by the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868 and the Naturalization Act Naturalization Act may refer to:
(91) Brief on behalf of Josephine Lacoste, March 29, 1948, included in case files of Villa v. Lacoste et al. (92) Ibid. (93) Nine states had laws prohibiting marriage between "Malays," the racial group to which Filipinos were traditionally assigned, and "whites." Arizona, California, Maryland California is a census-designated place and community in St. Mary's County, Maryland, United States. The population was 9,307 at the 2000 census. California continues to grow with the spread of population out from the older adjacent community of Lexington Park and the growth in . Nevada, South Dakota South Dakota (dəkō`tə), state in the N central United States. It is bordered by North Dakota (N), Minnesota and Iowa (E), Nebraska (S), and Wyoming and Montana (W). , Utah, and Wyoming had statutes specifically prohibiting white-Malay marriages. Georgia and Virginia laws on marriage did not specifically prohibit Malay white marriages, but those states did prohibit marriages between whites and non-whites and in other laws defined Malays as not white. See Volpp, "American Mestizo," 800-801: and Rachel F. Moran, Interracial Intimacy: The Regulation of Race and Romance (Chicago, 2001), 38-41. (94) Brief on behalf of Josephine Lacoste, March 29. 1948, included in case files of Villa v. Lacoste et al. (95) Transcript of testimony of Raymond Cabilash, ibid. (96) Transcript of testimony of Josephine Lacoste, ibid. (97) Transcript of testimony of Charles Villa, ibid. (98) For a more contemporary discussion of the racial status of Filipinos, see Emory S. Bogardus Emory S. Bogardus (born near Belvidere, Illinois, February 21, 1882 – August 21, 1973) was a prominent figure in the history of American sociology. Bogardus founded one of the first sociology departments at an American university, at the University of Southern California in , "What Race Are Filipinos?" Sociology and Social Research, 16 (January-February 1932), 274-79. (99) Transcript of testimony of Stephen Villa; and transcript of testimony of Mrs. John J. Gilbert, included in case files of Villa v. Lacoste et al. (100) Transcript of testimony of Josephine Lacoste, ibid. (101) Villa v. Lacoste et al., 213 La. 654. (102) See Brattain, "Passing, Racial Boundaries, and the Social Construction of Race in Twentieth Century New Orleans"; and Jeansonne. Leander Perez, 233-35. (103) On schools, see Marcus Christian's notes on Bush v. Orleans Parish School Board, Folder "Bush v. Orleans." Box 5, Series XI, Historical source materials Noun 1. source materials - publications from which information is obtained source - a document (or organization) from which information is obtained; "the reporter had two sources for the story" , Christian Papers; and New Orleans Times-Picayune, September 8, 1955, p. 26, col. 3. The new requirements for marriage licenses were implemented by Act 160, House Bill 596, approved July 1, 1958. (104) On the race list, see Dominguez, White by Definition, 36-37; Trillin, "American Chronicles," 62-78; and Brattain, "Passing, Racial Boundaries, and the Social Construction of Race in Twentieth Century New Orleans." (105) Naomi M. Drake v. Dept. of Health (1965), appeal from the Civil Service Commission of the City of New Orleans, no. 391, transcript of hearings, vol. 1, p. 16, Civil Service Files (New Orleans Public Library). (106) On the requirement of birth certificates for school registration, see New Orleans Times-Picayune, September 8. 1955. p. 26, col. 3. (107) Brief on behalf of Drake, in Naomi M. Drake v. Dept of Health (1965), transcript of hearings, vol. 3, pp. 722-23, Civil Service Files. (108) Saks, "Representing Miscegenation Law," 58. MS. BRATTAIN is an associate professor of history at Georgia State University History Georgia State University was founded in 1913 as the Georgia School of Technology's "School of Commerce." The school focused on what was called "the new science of business. . I applaud your article and assure you that it will be read and re-read for many years to come. You worked very hard and your efforts equal your reward. Brilliant!<br>Traci A. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

r'ĭspr
d`əns)
white
tra·le
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion