What the Color ‘Haint Blue’ Means to the Descendants of Enslaved Africans

xoxodede

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In the Lowcountry, the unique shade is both protective talisman and source of unspeakable suffering.
BY SHOSHI PARKSJANUARY 14, 2020

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At this Gullah Geechee home on Daufuskie Island, South Carolina, painted doors and shutters keep out evil spirits called "haints." DAWNA MOORE / ALAMY

Beaufort
BEAUFORT COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA, A marshy world of low-lying coastal islands, is awash in blue. The cerulean of the skies that darken to shades of cobalt in storm-kissed summers. The blue-gray of the churning Atlantic. The sapphire waters of the rivers and saline estuaries that account for almost 40 percent of the county’s 923 square miles.

But while the color blue dominates Lowcountry skies and waters, for centuries it was nearly impossible for human hands to reproduce. Only indigo—a leggy green plant that emerges from the soil in bushy, tangled clumps—can generate the elusive jewel tones.

In Beaufort County and elsewhere in the Lowcountry of South Carolina and Georgia, blue had the power to protect enslaved Africans and their descendants, known as the Gullah Geechee, from evil spirits. But the color was also the source of incomparable suffering. Indigo helped spur the 18th-century transatlantic trade, resulting in the enslavement of thousands.


The town of Beaufort, the county seat of the eponymous Lowcountry district, is accented in blue. The elegant riverside town was one of the South’s wealthiest before the Civil War, and one of the few left standing by the Union Army, which set up a base of operations here after its residents skipped town in the Great Skedaddle of 1861.

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Natural indigo dyes are having a resurgence in Beaufort, South Carolina. HEATHER HODGES / GGCHC
Dozens of antebellum mansions still line the streets, restored to the opulence of their plantation days. The ceilings of their broad summer porches are painted almost universally in just one color: a soft, robin’s egg blue.

This “haint blue,” first derived from the dye produced on Lowcountry indigo plantations, was originally used by enslaved Africans, and later by the Gullah Geechee, to combat “haints” and “boo hags”—evil spirits who escaped their human forms at night to paralyze, injure, ride (the way a person might ride a horse), or even kill innocent victims. The color was said to trick haints into believing that they’ve stumbled into water (which they cannot cross) or sky (which will lead them farther from the victims they seek). Blue glass bottles were also hung in trees to trap the malevolent marauders.

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Blue glass bottles are another haint deterrent. BOB PARDUE, SC / ALAMY
While “haint blue” has taken on a life of its own outside the Gullah Geechee tradition—it’s currently sold by major paint companies like Sherwin-Williams, and marketed to well-to-do Southerners as a pretty color for a proper porch ceiling—the significance of the color to the descendents of the Lowcountry’s enslaved people still remains.

In Rantowles, a hamlet 14 miles south of Charleston, Gullah families like Alphonso Brown’s painted their homes in haint blue not just because it is customary, but because they fear the havoc that evil spirits might wreak if they abandoned the tradition.

Yet not all Gullah Geechee identify with the color’s use. Oral histories recorded as late as the 1930s and ’40s mention haint blue, but a lot was lost when the community became less isolated and more spread out during the mid-20th century.

“Haint blue was never mentioned in my family on Hilton Head Island,” says Louise Miller Cohen, founder of the island’s Gullah Museum. “People are saying that we paint our houses blue to ward off the evil spirits. If that was true, all the houses on the island would be painted blue.” Nevertheless, the museum—once the home where her father lived—is painted blue.

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Paint companies like Sherwin-Williams market haint blue to well-to-do Southerners, as a pretty color for porches. ODYSSEY INSPIRATIONS / ALAMY
“Indigo dye is deeply rooted in African culture,” says Heather Hodges, executive director of the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor National Heritage Area. So “is the symbolic use of the color blue to ward off ‘evil spirits.”

In her book Red, White, and Black Make Blue, Andrea Feeser describes West African spiritual traditions that included wearing blue beads or clothing for protection. “Fetishes,” powerful amulets made out of everyday objects, also often contained blue materials.

In some cultures, indigo itself has spiritual significance. In Blue Alchemy, director and producer Mary Lance’s film about indigo around the world, women at a Nigerian workshop are documented delivering a prayer to the Yoruba indigo deity Iyamapo.

Haints and boo hags, too, stem from African spiritual traditions—a spirituality in which conjure and color symbolism are essential, according to Rituals of Resistance, Jason R. Young’s book on African-Atlantic religion. Root workers, practitioners of these rituals who often go by the title Dr. Buzzard, were among those forced across the ocean in bondage.

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Indigo was first planted in South Carolina in 1739. Less than 30 years later, the colony was annually exporting a million pounds of indigo dyestuffs. FLORILEGIUS / ALAMY
Almost 300 years after their arrival, there aren’t many Dr. Buzzards left in South Carolina and Georgia. (There are a few, however, including a root worker in Atlanta whose grandparents chose him to train in their spiritual traditions. “I went to live with them when I was a year-and-a-half [old],” he says. “I was 16 when I quit school to do voodoo full time.”)

Yet within recent memory, Lowcountry root workers weren’t so hard to find. In the 1940s, Dr. Buzzard (aka Stepney Robinson) was a fixture at the Beaufort County Courthouse, where he sat at trials “chewing the root” to sway a judge’s ruling. In the 1980s, another Dr. Buzzard (aka Ernest Bratton) shot to fame with his video “Voo Doo, Hoo Doo, You Do,” appearing on Late Night with David Letterman and The Oprah Winfrey Show.

Root workers may have mostly moved on from Beaufort County, but HooDoo beliefs still remain. So does the significance of indigo and the color blue in shaping the Gullah Geechee community. Among their ancestors were over 70,000 men, women, and children brought from West and Central Africa to provide the labor required for the South’s roughly 40-year foray into the plant’s growth and production of indigo dye, according to Young’s book.

Indigo was first planted in South Carolina in 1739. Less than 30 years later, the colony was annually exporting a million pounds of indigo dyestuffs. Today they would be worth more than $30 million a year. At least some of the knowledge for processing indigo dye came from the enslaved themselves: Indigo traditions in West and Central Africa are at least five centuries old.

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In Kano, Nigeria, indigo dye pits dating back to 1498 are still in use today. AMINU ABUBAKAR / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
At the Nigerian workshop Lance features in her documentary, the plant is pounded with sticks that remove and crush the leaves, which are then formed into balls. The balls are sprinkled with wood ash, then left to dry for seven days before being combined with water in dye pits. In Kano, Nigeria, pits dating back to 1498 are still in use today.

South Carolina’s indigo production came to an abrupt halt at the end of the Revolutionary War. “The people in South Carolina were producing indigo exclusively for the British market,” says Lance. “So when [the United States] was no longer a British colony, they no longer had that market anymore.”

By the mid-19th century, when synthetic blue dye became available, indigo almost disappeared from Beaufort County and the rest of the Lowcountry. Almost. Now a Gullah Geechee movement to reclaim indigo and the blue dye it produces is afoot.

As a child, Cohen played among the remnant indigo planted by her enslaved ancestors. In 2016, she planted her first seeds at the museum.

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By the mid-19th century, when synthetic blue dye became available, indigo almost disappeared from Beaufort County and the rest of the Lowcountry. Almost. HEATHER HODGES / GGCHC
“The species that we grow have a peach-color flower,” she explains. Her hope is to grow enough of the plants to be able to process and produce dye to use in local workshops, strengthening her community’s connection to their ancestral past. “I’m interested in learning all I can about the crops that caused my people [the] loss of their freedom,” she says.

Cohen’s sentiment has blossomed elsewhere in the Lowcountry too. Though there aren’t many artisans around who know how to dye with indigo, Hodges says that the color “is widely used by Gullah Geechee visual artists and filmmakers as a way of expressing their shared Gullah Geechee heritage and history with indigo cultivation.” The film Daughters of the Dust; the novel Sassafrass, Cypress & Indigo [sic] by Ntozake Shange; and the artwork of Diane Britton Dunham all feature indigo or the color blue.

Hodges’ organization is in the midst of a year of events that introduce community members to the craft. The reintroduction of natural indigo dyes, she says, has sparked a lot of enthusiasm.

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A Gullah Geechee movement to reclaim indigo and the blue dye it produces is afoot. HEATHER HODGES / GGCHC
“Many of the West African techniques involve wax, starch, and stitch-resist techniques, sometimes using stamps,” says Hodges. “That can be difficult to teach. [But] we just did a popular workshop that encouraged people to dye African head wraps and scarves as a way of incorporating African cultural expressions.”

But as indigo undergoes a resurgence in the Lowcountry, along with other traditions including the Gullah language and foodways, the community hasn’t forgotten the inhumane conditions that led to their arrival and early life in the South.

“If [reparations were]* attached to indigo,” says Cohen, meaning if indigo were part of the discussion regarding what the Gullah Geechee are owed for the horrors their ancestors endured, “they would do everything possible to keep the word from ever being mentioned.”

* Correction: This quote was updated to correct a misstatement. “Repatriation” was changed to “reparations.”

What the Color 'Haint Blue' Means to the Descendants of Enslaved Africans
 

Samori Toure

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Indigo: The Indelible Color That Ruled The World
November 7, 20113:01 PM ET
Heard on Tell Me More
NPR STAFF

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You probably take the blue in your favorite jeans or denim bean bag chair for granted now, but it was once prized by slave traders, spiritual leaders, royalty and rag traders alike.

A decade ago, Catherine McKinley embarked on a trip through nine West African countries, armed with a fellowship and her fascination for the blue dye. She tells her story in her book Indigo: In Search of the Color that Seduced the World.

The History of Indigo

While indigo traces its roots to India, the African slave trade made it exceedingly valuable on that continent.

"Indigo was more powerful than the gun," McKinley tells Tell Me More host Michel Martin. "It was used literally as a currency. They were trading one length of cloth, in exchange for one human body."

Enslaved Africans carried the knowledge of indigo cultivation to the United States, and in the 1700s, the profits from indigo outpaced those of sugar and cotton.

"At the time of the America revolution, the dollar had no strength, and indigo cakes were used as currency," McKinley says.

The original American flag was also made from indigo textiles.

African Women and the Story of Cloth

Across the ocean, on the African continent, indigo-dyed cloth helped financially empower many African women. Although nowadays, most cloths on the continent are dyed with a much cheaper synthetic color, owning cloth is considered a huge asset. During her stay in Ghana, McKinley learned that cloth is valued more than many women's bank accounts and insurances.

"If you have 300 pieces of good cloth, like a real Madame, well then you have something. A person's spirit is in their cloth," McKinley says.

Each cloth has a name based on its pattern, and it usually tells a cautionary story full of folksy wit: "When my husband goes out, I go out," "Attending school does not mean one would be wise," or "My head is correct."

But for McKinley, tracing the significance of indigo also sets her a on a more personal journey.

"I learnt through looking at the dye pot and how cloth is used and worn, really the value of life and how the color represents life," she says.

NPR Choice page
 

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This is dope. I love ADOS mythology. It's so intriguing. Do the Guallah have a language or just a dialect?

I would say it's both. But, it's definitely a language. From my understanding it was a new language created by the Gullah people.

Gullah, also called Sea Island Creole or Geechee, English-based creole vernacular spoken primarily by African Americans living on the seaboard of South Carolina and Georgia (U.S.), who are also culturally identified as Gullahs or Geechees (see also Sea Islands). Gullah developed in rice fields during the 18th century as a result of contact between colonial varieties of English and the languages of African slaves. These Africans and their descendants created the new language in response to their own linguistic diversity. Then as now, Africa was marked by a multitude of languages. This made it almost impossible for slaves, who typically originated in different places, to find a single African language to use in common. They appropriated English as a common language, and it was in turn modified and influenced by the African languages they originally spoke.
The legendary Bessie Jones and Georgia Sea Island Singers:



 

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I have noticed some Whites trying to claim Bottle Trees as their folklore traditions -- but they know it's not true.

Like many of the South’s oldest and most colorful customs, the bottle tree tradition was brought to this country by African slaves and continued by Southern African American families and white rural folk.

What is now more of a decorative yard or garden feature was created for a paranormal purpose. According to legend, colorful bottles were talisman worn by trees. Once the spirits ventured inside the bottles they were trapped and then destroyed by morning sunlight. It’s told the howls and moans of the despairing ghosts can be heard when the wind blows through the trees. A variation of the legend tells that the people would cork the bottles in the morning in order to trap spirits who slipped inside during the previous night. Then, they would throw the bottles away.

Blue was the favored color of the original bottles—more specifically “haint” blue, which is close to the cobalt blue of Milk of Magnesia bottles or the Blue Nun wine many of us Baby Boomers drank in the ‘80′s. The history of haint blue is said to come from the Gullah/Geechee people, a community with ties to the enslaved Africans from the sea islands off South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. According to the Gullah/Geeche culture, this shade of blue represents water, which spirits can not pass over.

Even in Alabama and other Southern states, if you take a drive in the country, you are liable to see haint blue paint used on doors and porches for the same reason it’s used on bottle trees—to keep those scary spooks, hags and boogers at bay. It supposedly has the added benefit of repelling pesky insects (perhaps blue bottle flies?).


Original_Michelle-Reynolds-Bottle-Trees-Lead_H.jpg


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Samori Toure

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I have noticed some Whites trying to claim Bottle Trees as their folklore traditions -- but they know it's not true.

Like many of the South’s oldest and most colorful customs, the bottle tree tradition was brought to this country by African slaves and continued by Southern African American families and white rural folk.

What is now more of a decorative yard or garden feature was created for a paranormal purpose. According to legend, colorful bottles were talisman worn by trees. Once the spirits ventured inside the bottles they were trapped and then destroyed by morning sunlight. It’s told the howls and moans of the despairing ghosts can be heard when the wind blows through the trees. A variation of the legend tells that the people would cork the bottles in the morning in order to trap spirits who slipped inside during the previous night. Then, they would throw the bottles away.

Blue was the favored color of the original bottles—more specifically “haint” blue, which is close to the cobalt blue of Milk of Magnesia bottles or the Blue Nun wine many of us Baby Boomers drank in the ‘80′s. The history of haint blue is said to come from the Gullah/Geechee people, a community with ties to the enslaved Africans from the sea islands off South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. According to the Gullah/Geeche culture, this shade of blue represents water, which spirits can not pass over.

Even in Alabama and other Southern states, if you take a drive in the country, you are liable to see haint blue paint used on doors and porches for the same reason it’s used on bottle trees—to keep those scary spooks, hags and boogers at bay. It supposedly has the added benefit of repelling pesky insects (perhaps blue bottle flies?).


Original_Michelle-Reynolds-Bottle-Trees-Lead_H.jpg


f872d67e96f3ec979781582ad82cf400.jpg

Bottle trees are from the Bakongo people that were brought to the USA as slaves. It all the fault of African Americans that we don't learn or want to know our history. When our folks decline to learn it then White people will claim that history as theirs.

Bottle trees' lineage traced to Africa
Joe Eaton and Ron Sullivan

Published 4:00 am PDT, Sunday, May 10, 2009

Bottle tree on a rebar frame in a south Berkeley yard.
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Bottle tree on a rebar frame in a south Berkeley yard.

People in the Bay Area have remarkable things in their front yards: baroquely pruned trees, topiary squirrels and kangaroos, sheet-metal dinosaurs. Bottle trees are rare, though. We knew they had to be out there somewhere and, sure enough, one of Ron's Flickr contacts located a fine specimen - a living tree, which is unusual - in Albany, just off Solano Avenue.

We didn't want to disturb the resident, but we have to wonder if he or she is an expatriate Southerner, bottle trees being a Southern thing. A traditional form of African American yard art, the bottle tree has been embraced by Southern whites as well. The basic idea is to festoon a dead tree with cobalt-blue bottles. Variations include the Texas bluebonnet tree, with green bottles standing in for foliage and blue ones for the flowers.

The bottle tree has deep roots in Africa. Art historian Robert Farris Thompson traces it to the Bakongo people, whose homeland is near the mouth of the Congo River. Many of their customs survived the cruel filter of slavery and took hold in the Caribbean and U.S. South. The crossroads as a place of power and danger, where bluesmen went to have the devil tune their guitars, is straight out of Kongo cosmology.

Thompson writes in "Kongo Influences on African-American Artistic Culture," his essay in "Africanisms in American Culture," that a French priest reported a Bakongo custom of attaching broken pots to tree branches "to drive away sterility and the evil spirits" in 1776. Later, containers called nkisi were placed in trees around Bakongo homes as protection from thieves.

The bottle tree tradition traveled to Trinidad, the Bahamas and eventually to the American mainland. In "Bighearted Power," his essay in "Keep Your Head to the Sky: Interpreting African American Home Ground," Thompson says the most important bottle tree clusters today are in east Texas, southeastern Arkansas and southern Alabama.

Eudora Welty documented them in Mississippi and incorporated them into her story "Livvie": "Coming around up the path from the deep cut of the Natchez Trace below was a line of bare crape-myrtle trees with every branch of them ending in a colored bottle, green or blue." Welty's character Livvie "was familiar from the time she was born with the way bottle trees kept evil spirits from coming into the house - by luring them inside the colored bottles, where they cannot get out again."

There were other beliefs about bottle trees. John Biggers, quoted by Thompson in "Bighearted Power," was taught that the noise of the bottles would scare birds away from fruit trees and that "if you put pots on the trees at the right time of the moon the bottle-tree would bring rain."

Thompson writes that Southern whites adopted the custom, with variations: They were more likely to use cedar trees, with upward-reaching branches, than the traditional crape myrtle.

The tradition thrives in Texas, where Brenda Beust Smith passes on tips from bottle tree gurus: Some use PVC pipes to attach the bottles to the branches.

Smith recommends leaving the branches long enough to hold entire bottles so they won't fly off in the wind. She advises making sure they're far enough apart that they won't clang together (unless, of course, you're trying to repel birds rather than spirits). Wood posts with large nails or rebar rods can stand in for trees. There's an artificial bottle tree in a South Berkeley yard near the Ashby BART Station.

And although it's not in the front yard, we have to salute Berkeley artist Marcia Donahue and the blue vodka-bottle tree in her yard. She says she was inspired by an exhibition of art of the African diaspora at the Berkeley Art Museum.

We've never encountered evil spirits in her yard, so the nkisi must be doing their jobs.

Bottle trees' lineage traced to Africa
 
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