Due to valid Research & Evidence
Black Women been openly fukkin & marrying White men Not sayin we didn't have bm & wm relations but they were notable figures like Frederick Douglas & Entertainers Etc...
You Think You Had it Rough?! Check Out This WWII Swirl Couple - Beyond Black & White
Swirling and History Part Six: Lucy Parsons - Beyond Black & White
Swirling in History Part Nine: Anna Kingsley - Beyond Black & White
Swirling in History Part Seven: Mahala Lynch Davis - Beyond Black & White
Mahala Lynch Davis, married her former slave owner Isaac P. Davis in 1857. On the right is their daughter Martha Davis Wilson (b. 1848) holding her baby Julia Wilson (Car). Davis freed Mahala and then married her moving from his former Virginia plantation to Chilicothe, southern Ohio. Many free blacks, former plantation owners, and former slaves including two of Thomas Jefferson’s mulatto children moved to towns in southern Ohio in antebellum times. Facinating coordination by Beverly Gray Coordinator, Southern Region Ohio Underground Railroad Association
Swirling in History Part Five: Agatha Alphosin Ganteaume - Beyond Black & White
Swirling in History Part Three: Lucinda and George Stevens - Beyond Black & White
George Stevens, whose mother was Spanish, was born in 1839 in Lorad County, Mexico, and came to Utah in 1860. In 1872 he married Lucinda Vilate Flake, born 2 December 1854 in Union, Utah, the daughter of Green and Martha Crosby Flake. George was freighting through S.L.C. when he met Lucinda at a square dance gathering. Lucinda was known as Cinda. Sixteen years later, such a union between the two races would be against Utah law. Read the fascinating history of “The Prohibition of Interracial Marriage in Utah, 1888-1963” in the spring 2008 issue of Utah Historical Quarterly. Photo: Utah Historical Society
Swirling in History Part Two: Mattie Bell Castner and Mattie Byers Novotny Welch - Beyond Black & White
Swirling in History Part One: Sarah Gammon Bickford, Former Slave, Married Well. - Beyond Black & White
Swirling in History Part One: Sarah Gammon Bickford, Former Slave, Married Well.
Black Women’s History: Euro-African Marriages in Ghana and the Gold Coast – New Narratives
A 1915 photograph by Basel Mission of French colonial officers from the Ivory Coast with their Ghanaian wives and children, used as the cover illustration for Carina E. Ray’s Crossing the Color Line: Race, Sex, and the Contested Politics of Colonialism in Ghana, Ohio University Press/Swallow Press, 2015. Photo Courtesy Ohio University Press/Swallow Press.
History: Swirling for the Sake of the Children (and Yourselves) - Beyond Black & White
Swirling In History - Colonial, Antebellum, Reconstruction and Beyond
This first portrait I included in a post about Colonial Swirl Casta paintings. It is not a casta, but it is colonial.
Christian Protten (1715-1769) and Rebecca (1718-1780) an ex-slave and Moravian convert were married in Germany in 1740; shown also is their child, Anna Maria Protten. Christian is the child of a Danish father and African mother. He was born in Denmark. This gem was found at The Atlantic Slave Trade and Slave Life of the America’s page website. They have many priceless portraits of Black History’s leaders, legends and heroes.
James William Evans (1814-1883), his wife Mary Eliza Hoggard, and their children William, John and Mary Evans. Mary Eliza Hoggard was a descendant of the free African American Cobb and Bazemore families of Bertie County, North Carolina. James William Evans was from Dorchester County, Maryland. Theirs is an interesting story.
Just sum quick links I foundStraight Myth of all relations between black women & white men were rape in them days
That ether, nikkas better take notice of this and stop livin in denial especially if you dark skin.
Dont play yourself