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Colored Me – The Aporetic. This is the marriage license of my great- great grandfather. His race, you’ll notice, is given as “colored.” Since when are Irishmen colored?
![Shanty Irish [1916] Shanty Irish [1916]](http://irishpost.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/christina-noble-n-500x333.jpg)
Mark Mulholland is a writer. A Mad And Wonderful Thing is published by Scribe Publications of Melbourne and London.
My father found this when he started doing family history after he retired. We mostly laughed, a lot, when he revealed it at a family Christmas party: that year he sent us all Kwanza cards as a joke. But being a historian I couldn’t help but be fascinated. I’d read some of the literature on “whiteness,” notably Ignatiev’s How the Irish Became White, and I’d been HIGHLY skeptical. It seemed to me to be sort of related to the kind of whining white college kids did about how they were discriminated against because they did not have a “white studies program” on campus. That’s not what Ignatiev had in mind, but I thought the “Irish were not white” bit was wildly overstated.
![Shanty Irish [1916] Shanty Irish [1916]](http://easypiano.cz/cs/system/files/styles/medium/private/FoggyDew1.gif?itok=wfDWClG6)
I was clearly wrong, and looking into it a little more resulted in a whole class lesson around the image of the Irish in the 1. Irish nativism. It focused on the malleability of stereotypes, and how what seems “natural” and obvious in one era seems odd in the next. But still how to explain this document?
It was his marriage certificate: surely even the greenest Irish immigrant knew enough to avoid being classed as “colored.”If you take a close look at it, it gets more and more interesting. Here is the full scan: Right away there are some oddities–his wife Hester Holland, a Virginia native, is also listed as colored.
On behalf of the Irish Culture Club of D E, Our sincere appreciation goes out to the hard work by the DE FEIS co-chairs, Nora Smith and Eileen Paulson, to the DE FEIS. Business Directory on Greystones Guide
Perhaps she was known to be colored, and they could not legally marry unless they were both considered colored? Seems very unlikely–here’s the loving couple on or about their wedding day. The document is a copy issued in 1. But what about that notation on the bottom line of text, reading “Date Record Fi. Ied: July 1. 94. 0?” That’s odd. In this capacity Plecker was a strong southern progressive: he did important work on public health and sanitation, and embarked on a an extremely aggressive program of inspections, cautioning Virginians about the importance of vaccination and the dangers of contaminated drinking water. He gave speeches, he wrote articles in national journals and newspapers.
He explained where to build latrines and outhouses, and how to properly wash and cook to prevent disease. Plecker’s commitment to hygiene extended to racial hygiene as well. He was an absolutely hard- core racist with a deep commitment to eugenics, the science of “racial hygiene.” Plecker believed absolutely in the natural, genetic superiority of the the Anglo Saxon race; though he only a vague understanding of genetics, he insisted that any “amalgamation,” or mingling of the races, would have disastrous effects on general public health. It would undermine the nation itself, by destroying its natural leaders. The problem, for men like Plecker, came from persons who looked white but possessed “black blood.” Such persons could pass for white but they. The law further forbid racial “intermarriage” and made it legal to “sexually sterilize” the inmates of state institutions, to prevent them from passing on bad genes.“In the past,” the public health bulletin says, “it has been possible for these people to declare themselves white.” Thus emboldened, “they have demanded admittance or their children into the white schools” and have even, in a few cases, “intermarried with white people.”Plecker’s allies in this battle for racial integrity included the Virginia composer John Powell.
Trained in Europe as a concert pianist, Powell made a name for himself as a composer. He had a sharp interest in American musical forms, and his Negro Rhapsody of 1. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot. But by 1. 92. 4 Powell too had become obsessed with racial purity. He called the immigrant “melting pot” a “witches cauldron” and began insisting that “negro melodies” were actually stolen from German folksongs: that they represented the musical genius of the Anglo Saxon race. He and Plecker corresponded frequently: together they founded a group of organizations known as the “National Anglo Saxon Clubs.”Virginia’s new law gave Plecker the power to prevent the racially suspect from marrying. He set about the job with obsessive zeal.
Plecker’s zeal for Eugenics was extreme, but not unusual. Throughout the nation, the American Eugenics Society sponsored “Fitter Families” contests, in which teams of experts selected the family with the best and purest bloodlines. From Popular Science Monthly, August 1. Fitter Family” contests, accompanied by educational demonstrations on the dangers of impure blood and racial intermarriage, appeared at state and county fairs all over the country in the 1. The American Eugenics Society pushed to have its materials included in high school and college classrooms. Eugenics was never uncritically accepted. The quest for “fitter families” was sometimes mocked.
But Eugenics enjoyed a national and international vogue. This clipping, from the New York Times, May 2. Eugenics theory to be tried out in Germany.” The first, but certainly not the last.
When Nazi scientists looked for evidence to support their eugenic theories, they generally turned to the advanced work Americans were doing on the subject. American eugenicists would often use the phrase “final solution” when talking about the problem of the unfit. They meant the elimination of the genetically inferior, through educational campaigns, restrictive laws or by programs of involuntary sterilization. Plecker saw his role as policing who could and could not count as white., and giving Virginia a reliable racial map.
In this letter, Plecker far exceeded his actual authority. By the end of his career, he had been sued several times by Virginians who resented his willingness to appoint himself judge and jury and executioner in deciding the citizen’s racial destiny. Historians know Plecker best through his campaign against Virginia’s Indians. Mongrel Virginians, published in 1. Indians in Virginia: the original Indians had so intermarried with negros and low whites that they no longer fit the name.
The book invented a new term, the “Win” tribe, to describe. Fearing that African Americans were trying to escape segregation by calling themselves Indians, and believing that no “racially pure” Indians remained, he ordered state agencies to rewrite the historical record. Letter from Plecker to VA state officials, 1. In 1. 94. 3, for example. Plecker wrote to “Local Registrars, Physicians, Health Officers, Nurses, School Super- intendents, and Clerks of the Courts” in Virginia, warning that “mongrels, finding that they have been able to sneak in their birth certificates un- challenged as Indians are now making a rush to register as white.
This list should be preserved by all, even by those in counties and cities not included, as these people are moving around over the State and changing race at the new place.”Plecker continued: “all certificates of these people showing “Indian” or “white” are now being rejected and returned to the physician or midwife, but local registrars hereafter must not permit them to pass their hands uncorrected or unchallenged and without a note of warning to us. One hundred and fifty thousand other mulattoes in Virginia are watching eagerly the attempt of their pseudo- Indian brethren, ready to follow in a rush when the first have made a break in the dike.”Plecker rewrote the documentary record of history to suit his own arbitrary prejudices, and to keep the “dike” of racial segregation intact. So to return to the marriage license of Patrick O’Malley and Hester Holland.
The form has a space for “color,” in the left hand column: it says simply “white.”This is the form Plecker or one of his clerks would have seen, and I assume “refiled,” in 1. I can reasonably conclude that Plecker or one of his clerks simply decided that Patrick O’Malley, being Irish, was not white, and that Hester (my Father knew her as “Esther”) Holland must have been the product of some tangled skein of intermarriage that made her also non- white in the State’s eyes.
Rail crossing where Patrick and Hester lived. While in Suffolk County I drove out to the address given for Patrick O’Malley and Hester Holland.
I asked around in the small town near this crossroads, and people told me there were lots of Hollands still living there, both colored and white. Perhaps Plecker regarded Patrick as white, but wanted to make doubly sure no child of the mongrel Hester’s marriage could ever claim white identity. Perhaps he thought that a woman degraded enough to marry an Irishman off the boat had forfeited the claim to whiteness. Plecker supported the 1. Johnson- Reed Act, which virtually halted immigration to the US from countries, mostly southern and eastern European, then regarded as genetically inferior. Ireland was not among them: by 1. Irish Americans in positions of political power to make that possible.
I have not been able to find any evidence of specifically anti- Irish animus in Plecker, but I have not done much hard research yet. Racial theorist regarded the Irish as a “celtic,” not an “anglo saxon” people: if anglo saxon equaled “white,” then the Irish did not quite qualify, and neither did the Jews, the Italians, the Russians and Poles and Greeks. I plan to do further research on Plecker and his compadre, Powell, to see if I can find a better- documented answer. But one sense it hardly matters: Plecker failed completely. Patrick O’Malley’s descendants left Virginia, after a series of railroad- related land speculations apparently failed: no one ever questioned their whiteness again, and while his children felt themselves, as Irish Americans, to be somewhat apart, no one ever doubted their white credentials.
That Hester Holland was named as “colored” confirms what others, particularly Edwin Black in War Against the Weak, have already documented: that Plecker used a rigid and arbitrary sense of racial purity to reclassify Virginians at his own whim. Plecker was motivated by white supremacy and by the fear that African Americans.