Washington Post
1902
PHASE
IN ETHNOLOGY
Mr.
James Mooney
Investigates Early Portuguese Settlements.
Mr.
James Mooney,
who has just returned from Indian Territory, where he has
been
making a study of the Kiowa tribe for the Bureau of Ethnology, has also
during
his career as an anthropologist done considerable work in the way of
investigating
the Portuguese settlements along the Atlantic coast of the
United
States, a subject about which less is known than most any other phase
of
the modern ethnology of America. All along the southern coast there are
scattered
here and there bands of curious people, whose appearance, color,
and
hair seem to indicate a cross or mixture of the Indian, the white, and
the
negro. Such, for example, are the Pamunkeys of Virginia, the Croatan
Indians
of the Carolinas, the Malungeons of Tennessee, and numerous other
peoples
who in the days of slavery were regarded as free negroes and were
frequently
hunted down and enslaved. Since the war they have tried hard by
act
of legislature and other wise to establish their Indian ancestry.
Wherever
these people are found there also will the traveler or investigator
passing
through their region encounter the tradition of Portuguese blood or
descent,
and many have often wondered how these people came to have such a
tradition
or, in view of their ignorance, how they came to even know of the
name
of Portugal or the Portuguese. The explanation is, however, far
simpler
than one might imagine. In the first place, the Portuguese have
always
been a seagoing people, and according to Mr. Mooney,
who has looked
up
the subject, the early records of Virginia and the Carolinas contain
notices
of Portuguese ships having gone to wreck on the coasts of these
States
and of the crews settling down and marrying in with Indians and
mulattoes.
Moreover,
there are records of Portuguese ships having sailed into Jamestown
Bay
as early as 1655, and since then there has been more or less settlement
of
Portuguese fishermen and sailors from Maine to Florida. Now it has been
the
history of the Portuguese race that wherever they settled they mixed in
with
the darker peoples forming the aboriginal populations of the countries
occupied
by Portuguese settlers, and this is the reason and cause of the
Portuguese
admixture among the tribes along the coast of the United States.
In
further proof of this he calls attention to the case of a colony of
Portuguese
fishermen who settled on the coast of Massachusetts a few years
ago.
These settlers have nothing whatever to do with the white or Yankee
population
around them, but are intermarrying and intermixing among and with
the
small remnant of the Narragansett Indians who have survived down to the
present
day. In short, it has been the history of the Portuguese that
wherever
they settled along the Atlantic coast they have intermixed and
intermarried
among the remnants of the Indian tribes that were once the sole
proprietors
of that region.