Native American Netroots
Menu
Border


Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Search




Advanced Search


Active Users
Currently 0 user(s) logged on.

Native American Netroots


...A Forum for American Indian Issues...

Native American Netroots

Marriage between Indians and Non-Indians

by: Ojibwa

Wed Dec 22, 2010 at 16:46:02 PM PST


( - promoted by navajo)

In 1808, President Thomas Jefferson told an Indian delegation who was visiting Washington:

"You will unite yourselves with us and we shall all be Americans. You will mix with us by marriage. Your blood will run in our veins and will spread with us over this great Island."

We don't know what response the Indians had to Jefferson's words, but many non-Indians tended to be less than enthusiastic about marriage with Indians and about the children which might result from these unions. While the large fur trading companies at this time-Hudson's Bay Company and the North West Company-encouraged their traders to marry Indian women as a way of gaining trading partners, there was strong opposition to the idea of Indian men marrying non-Indian women.  

Ojibwa :: Marriage between Indians and Non-Indians
Jesuit missionary Lawrence Palladino, writing in 1893, stated:

"Experience has amply proven that the Indian cannot be civilized except on Christian principles, through Christian methods, in Christian schools, by Christian teachers."

Christian missionaries, both Protestant and Catholic, in their attempts to convert Indians, ranted against Indian forms of marriage such as polygyny (the marriage of a man to more than one women), the sexual freedom of Indian women, and the ease of Indian divorce. They preached that Indians needed to be married in the Christian fashion. While the missionaries were attempting drag Indians into "civilization," they did not view the Indians as equals and they discouraged marriage between Indians and non-Indians.

In 1816 the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions declared that it proposed for the Cherokee-

"To make the whole tribe English in their language, civilized in their habits, and Christian in their religion."

In 1817, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions established the Foreign Mission School at Cornwall, Connecticut to provide an education for young men from "heathen" nations. The following year, two Cherokee men-John Ridge and Elias Boudinot-enrolled in the Foreign Missions boarding school. The two men were cousins who had completed all the education the mission schools in the Cherokee Nation could provide. They hungered for more education, and the missionaries selected them for further training with an eye on making them into missionaries.  What the missionaries didn't envision, however, was love and marriage.

In 1824, John Ridge married a non-Indian, Sarah Bird Northrup. The local newspapers denounced the couple. In the local churches, the marriage was denounced on racial grounds by Christian preachers from their pulpits. Following the marriage ceremony, the couple immediately left the area to avoid being mobbed.

The following year, Harriet Gold, the nineteen-year-old daughter of one of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions' Foreign Mission School board, asked permission to marry Elias Boudinot. Community residents as well as agents of the school openly and vocally opposed the marriage. The citizens of Cornwall, led by the bride's brother, rallied to burn the couple in effigy on the village green. Agents for the school voiced their opposition to all such marriages and labeled the couple's conduct as "criminal." They complained that such marriages were an affront to community sensibilities and violated guidelines of proper decorum.

Jeremiah Everts, the corresponding secretary for the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions defended the marriage. He wrote:

Can it be pretended, at this age of the world, that a small variance of complexion is to present an insuperable barrier to matrimonial connexions? or that the different tribes of men are to be kept forever and entirely distinct?

In order to prevent such marriages in the future, the school was closed.

The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions was not the only Christian missionary group to be troubled by the marriage between an Indian man and a non-Indian woman. In 1933, in New York City, Ojibwa Christian minister Peter Jones married a non-Indian. The New York press reported:

"It was the first time we ever heard the words 'man and wife' sound hatefully."

Other newspapers called the marriage "improper and revolting."

During the nineteenth and much of the twentieth centuries many states passed laws which prohibited the marriage between Indians and non-Indians. In 1855, for example, the Washington Territorial Legislature passed the Color Act which declared void all marriages between non-Indians and persons of "more than one-half Indian blood." The law decreed penalties for any clergyman or territorial official who solemnized such marriages. This law was repealed in 1868. Some of the other states which prohibited marriage with Indians included:

Maine: law enacted in 1821 and repealed in 1883

Massachusetts: law enacted in 1705 and repealed in 1843

Rhode Island: law enacted in 1798 and repealed in 1881

Arizona: law enacted in 1865 and repealed in 1962. The Arizona law actually prohibited anyone of a mixed racial heritage from marrying anyone.  

Idaho: law enacted in 1864 and repealed in 1959

Nevada: law enacted in 1861 and repealed in 1959

Oregon: law enacted in 1852 and repealed in 1951

North Carolina: law enacted in 1715 and overturned by the Supreme Court in 1967

Tennessee: law enacted in 1741 and overturned by the Supreme Court in 1967

Tags: , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email

In Memoriam
Flora Sombrero Lind In honor of my mother, THE FLORA SOMBRERO LIND NAVAJO ENDOWMENT FUND has been set up to accept your donations. American Indian College Fund This scholarship endowment has been established at the American Indian College Fund to honor Flora Sombrero Lind, as an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation who was born at Inscription House, Arizona of the Many Goats clan circa 1925. This scholarship endowment is funded by Flora's family and friends who want to see Navajo students pursue higher education and carry on their great Navajo heritage.

Please leave a comment here if you donate.

Site Donations
- Please specify what your donation is for in the notes section of the PayPal window. Either propane for Pine Ridge or Rosebud or Hosting fees for this blog. --navajo
If you like to help Aji and Wings please mail a check to them at the address here: wingssilverwork.com Click the contact tab for address.

About
Border

Native American
Netroots


...a forum for the discussion of political, social and economic issues affecting the indigenous peoples of the United States, including their lack of political representation, economic deprivation, health care issues, and the on-going struggle for preservation of identity and cultural history



ABOUT US :

Publisher/Founder
navajo (Neeta Lind)

Executive Editor
Meteor Blades
(Timothy Lange)

Contributing
Editors

oke
Aji

Senior Historian & Writer
Ojibwa

Featured Writers
cacamp
winter rabbit
Mark Trahant
exmearden
Land of Enchantment

Veterans Affairs Correspondent
DaNang65

Contributing
Writers

SarahLee
Bill in MD
DeepHarm
TiaRachel
Kitsap River
4Freedom
No Way Lack of Brain
More...


NDN News & Links
Border

Native American Rights Fund
The Native American Rights Fund (NARF) is a non-profit 501c(3) organization that provides legal representation and technical assistance to Indian tribes, organizations and individuals nationwide - a constituency that often lacks access to the justice system. NARF focuses on applying existing laws and treaties to guarantee that national and state governments live up to their legal obligations. DONATE ONLINE


Border

Censored News :: Brenda Norrell
Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights News
by
Brenda Norrell


Border

Wampum

Border

Reznet News
Reporting From Native America


Border

Indigenous Action Media

Border

Indianz

Border

Indian Country Today

Border

Defenders of the Black Hills

Border

Leonard Peltier Defense Committee Leonard Peltier Defense Committee

Border

Native Vote
National Congress
of
American Indians


Border

Native News

Border

Earthsongs

Border

Native America Calling Border

Native Biz

Border

American Indian Tribes Forum

Border

American Indian Tribes Forum American Indian Tribes Forum

Border

American Indian Tribes Forum

Border

BLOG FATHER
- DAILY KOS



Border

BLOG BROTHERS
- NATIVE APPROPRIATIONS

Border


Native American Netroots

-HOME-



Powered by: SoapBlox