Meeting the Queen

The New Museum

This past weekend the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture opened its doors to the public.  It was a herculean effort to create this magnificent museum, 13 years in the making, and it was led by Historian Dr. Lonnie Bunch.

It’s a grand structure which replicates the design of three-tiered crowns used in West African art forms. Close to 40,000 object and artifacts were collected to be showcased in the museum over time, about 10% of which are currently on display.

The museum is designed to showcase the past, present and future of the African American experience. Sixty percent of the museum is contained below ground.  Once at the ground level the structure then rises another 75 feet.

Visitors are encouraged to start deep in the museum’s basement which features exhibits on black America’s origins in Africa, the transatlantic slave trade, and the beginnings of chattel slavery in America.  Visitors can then work their way up through time from the bottom of the museum to the top.

I had the privilege of touring the museum with my family and (a few thousand of my closest friends) on it’s opening weekend.  As a person with a passion for genealogy, history and a drive to trace my own family roots back to Africa, I had an absolute ball exploring in the museum.  I naturally spent the most time exploring its bottom floors.

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Me with my sons visiting the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture for the first time.

Queen Nzinga

I was pleasantly surprised to discover that the basement floor featured Queen Nzinga of Ndongo (modern day Angola).  Queen Nzinga, who ruled Ndongo from 1624-1663, was known as a strong leader who fought against Portuguese colonialism and the expansion of the slave trade in order to protect her people.

The Kingdom of Ndongo was located on a plateau that lies in between the Lukala and Lutete rivers.  The Portuguese, led by general Luis Mendes de Vasconcelo, attacked the kingdom in 1618 on a hunt to capture Africans for sale into slavery.

The first Africans to arrive in Jamestown in 1619 were believed to have been captured in Ndongo, a result of this ongoing conflict between the Portuguese and the Ndongo.  They were forced onto Portuguese slave ships heading to the Caribbean sugar islands.   British pirates then intercepted the ships, re-directing them to Jamestown, VA.

In 1619, famous Jamestown settler John Rolfe (he’s most famous for being the husband of Pocahontas) penned a letter to Sir Edwin Sandys about the colony.  In it, he announces the arrival of “20 and Odd” Negroes.  This reference is believed to have documented the arrival of the first Africans in America. Our original ancestor Emanuell Cambow (Cumbo), is believed to be one of these first Africans to arrive in America, if not part of the first 20, arriving a few years after.

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Queen Nzinga featured in the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Connecting Cumbo Roots to Africa

One way to connect Cumbo descendants back to these first Africans in America is to examine DNA results.  Over generations Cumbos brances became quite ethnically blended, with branches embracing black, white and Native American racial identities.  But the power of YDNA testing is that the Y chromosome is passed down fully preserved from father to son. Therefore, analyzing a tester’s Y chromosome provides the opportunity to identify deep paternal ancestral roots that date back 500+ years, with the power of validating ancestral roots all the way back to Emanuell Cambow.

There is no comprehensive Y DNA study on direct paternal Cumbo descendants.  However, there is a public database called ysearch.org which allows you to search the YDNA results of men who tested with Family Tree DNA and uploaded their results to the site.

Here are result links from ysearch.org for testers claiming Cumbo ancestry.  All of these Cumbo descendants share the B haplogroup. Haplogroup B is one of the oldest population groups in the world, originating in sub-Saharan and West Africa.

Emanuell Cambow
http://www.ysearch.org/lastname_view.asp?uid=&letter=&lastname=cumbo&viewuid=GYGDS&p=0

Reuben Cumbie (1779-1855)
http://www.ysearch.org/lastname_view.asp?uid=&letter=&lastname=cumbo&viewuid=S5CWR&p=0

James Cumbie (1774-1860)
http://www.ysearch.org/lastname_view.asp?uid=&letter=&lastname=cumbie&viewuid=KEH82&p=0

http://www.ysearch.org/lastname_view.asp?uid=&letter=&lastname=cumbie&viewuid=VPPS2&p=0

Through research, I also discovered this sermon written by the Rev. Denise Cumbee Long.  In it, she talks about discovering that the Scottish ancestral story her family had told her was a complete fabrication. Her name had indeed been changed over the years, but it used to be “Cumbo”, not “MacCumbee”, and her paternal ancestors were all listed as mulatto or free people of color on census records that went back to 1790. She had her father take a Y DNA test. He was also a match for Haplogroup B.

I had the pleasure of meeting cousin Denise this summer at our 2016 Cumbo Family Reunion in Williamsburg, VA and together we shared stories of Cumbo family history.

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Me with cousin Denise Cumbee Long at the 2016 Cumbo Family Reunion

I hope to eventually get a Cumbo Y DNA project established and expand the number Y DNA tested Cumbos, starting with my known family members.  Through this project I hope to further substantiate the understanding that family origins for many Cumbo branches begin in Ndongo with the birth of Emanuell Cambow.

Family Trailblazers

What fuels your interest in genealogy? What drives my passion is the excitement of discovering new ancestors and relatives and learning their life stories and how they connect with history.

This past week I was sad to learn of the passing of my Cumbo cousin Jacqueline “Jackie” Majette Carson.  Fortunately, I had the honor of meeting her for the first time at our Cumbo Family Reunion this past summer.

Trailblazer.  Jackie Carson was a pioneering black woman in the field of science.  She was born in 1934 in Franklin, Southampton, Virginia to Vinton Majette and Magnolia “Maggie” Long of Northampton, North Carolina.  She graduated first in her class from high school at age 16.  She possessed an aptitude for science and went on to graduate from the Howard University School of Pharmacy at age 20.  While at Howard she was the President of her senior class and Student Council Secretary.  She would go on to enjoy a successful career in pharmacy, becoming the first black woman to be head of the Virginia Board of Pharmacy.  Her career would inspire many, women and people of color in particular, to enter the field of pharmacy. Her first pharmacist job out of college happened to be with Suffolk Professional Pharmacy which was owned and operated by James “Doc” Richards Sr. who was my grandfather.

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Jacqueline Majette Carson

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Jacqueline Majette Carson at our 2016 Cumbo Family Reunion in July

Community Man.  My grandfather James Edward Richards Sr. was born in in 1920 in Suffolk, Virginia to James Lee Richards and Annie Biggs, of Suffolk, VA.  He attended South Carolina State College graduating with a degree in chemistry in 1942.  He went on to serve his country in World War II.  After his military service he discovered that his race made it difficult for him to pursue a career in his chosen field of chemistry so he attended Howard University to train as a pharmacist. While at Howard he served as President of his senior class.  Upon graduation in 1950 he returned home to Suffolk VA to open its first and only black pharmacy so his community could get their prescriptions filled by walking in the front door. In the south prior to integration, black customers were forced to use the back or alley door entrances of white owned businesses, sill with no guarantee of being served.  You could characterize my grandfather as an entrepreneur, but he was much more of a community man.  He was part of a group of medical professionals who practiced in an area of Suffolk called The Fairgrounds.  They were committed to serving their community.  Many young people earned their first jobs at Suffolk Professional Pharmacy.  Sick community members were never turned away for prescriptions even if they didn’t have the money.  People could count on Doc to fill their prescriptions at any time of night if needed.  The pharmacy has since closed but its legacy continues to this day.  My grandfather died in 2009.

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James Edward “Doc” Richards Sr.

Cumbo Connection.  Now here’s the wonder of genealogical discovery.  It turns out that my grandfather James “Doc” Richards and Jackie Majette Carson were related and I had the pleasure of discovering it.  I uncovered it as I built out our Cumbos of Northampton, NC Family Tree.  My cousin Corrine whom I’d met doing Cumbo family research pointed out to me that her aunt Jackie had worked for Suffolk Professional Pharmacy.  Turns out Doc and Jackie worked alongside each other for many, many years, serving the community together, not ever knowing that they were third cousins.  They had so much in common.  He was a direct descendant of Junius Matthias “Bug” Cumbo, she was a direct descendant of Matthias’s brother Hezekiah Thomas Cumbo. Julius and Hezekiah were the sons of Britton and Mary Cumbo, free people of color of Potecasi, Northampton, North Carolina.  They were both Howard University School of Pharmacy graduates.  They were both accomplished, both trailblazers, both served their communities and both raised thriving families. I’m so proud and humbled to be connected to them both.

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James “Doc” Richards and Jacqueline Majette Carson relationship chart

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Hall Family History Etched In My DNA

I am a Cumbo through my grandfather and a Hall through my grandmother.  My Cumbo ancestors were free people of color who settled in Northampton County, North Carolina.  My Hall ancestors were free people of color who settled in bordering Hertford County, North Carolina.  This past weekend I attended the 2016 Hall Family Reunion.  I was honored when reunion organizers invited me to deliver brief remarks at the reunion banquet on DNA testing and genetic genealogy.  Here is what I presented.

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Family History Etched In Our DNA

My name is Andre Kearns, and I am a Hall.

But I didn’t know that I was a member of this amazing family until very recently.

You see I was born and raised in Washington DC.  My mother grew up in Suffolk,  VA, my dad in Raleigh, NC. I discovered that I was a Hall through family tree research.

Now as far as I can tell, I’m not directly descended from William Hall – which is probably 90% of you in this room — nor Allen Hall or Andrew Hall.  But I am a Hall just the same, and I’m related to most, if not all of you in this room.  And I’ll share with you how I can confidently say that in a little bit.

I relied on three main sources to uncover my Hall ancestry.  The first is family oral history that has been passed down to me.  The second is traditional genealogical research of census records, birth certificates, marriage licenses and death certificate.  The third, which I’ll spend the most time sharing about, is DNA testing.  So how did I discover my Hall ancestry?

Step 1, I started with Oral Family History

Since childhood I’ve known that my great-great grandmother was a woman named Martha Sharp. Her husband was Jenkins Sharp and they had 5 children together including my great grandmother Georgia Mae.  As far as any of us knew, they always lived in Suffolk.

Step 2, I extended the oral Family History with genealogy Research

I wanted to learn more about my great-great grandmother Martha Sharp so I started searching for information about her online.  I found a marriage record for her which listed her maiden name as Hall.  I then learned that Martha Hall had been born in Hertford County, in 1868, had grown up in Winton, and that her parents were Joseph and Emma Jane Hall.

Step 3, I validated my discoveries with DNA Testing

So what is DNA Testing? How does it work?  DNA testing services such as AncestryDNA, FamilyTree DNA and 23andMe will analyze your DNA and provide you information on your ancestry.  Test results tell you about your ethnic makeup and present you with a list of DNA matches to help you to identify new relatives.  Here’s how the process works.  First you chose a testing service, order a kit which arrives in the mail.  The kit comes with a cup.  You spit in the cup (your spit contains your DNA), then you send it back to the service and wait for your results as they compare your DNA to all of the samples they’ve collected around the world.  I’ve taken tests with AncestryDNA, FamilyTreeDNA and 23andMe.

Let me share a little bit about what I’ve learned about myself and my Hall ancestry through DNA Testing and what you can as well.

Here’s what I learned about my ethnic makeup

According to a recent study, African-Americans today are on average 82.1 percent African, 16.7 percent European and 1.2 percent Native American.  According to 23andMe I am 60% African, 38% European, 2.0% Native American and Asian. My individual results represent a slightly more diverse profile as compared to African Americans on average as identified in the study.   This diversity can be attributed in part to my multi ethnic Hall ancestry.  The Native American DNA that shows up in my results may also come from my Hall ancestry.

Here’s what I learned about who I am related to

As I reviewed the DNA match list which came with my results, I noticed that one of my top matches was a man named Robert Hall.  I reached out to him over email to figure out how we might be related. Turns out he descended from Richard Hall and Matilda Reynolds.  I believe Richard to be the brother of my great-great grandmother Martha Hall Sharp.

Another one of my top DNA matches was Allen Hall descendant Constance Mitchell.  I reached out to her and we started corresponding. She is the absolute best.  We haven’t figured out exactly how we are related but I’ll always be thankful to her because among other things she vouched for me so I could join the Hall Family of Ahoskie Facebook Page adroitly administered by cousin Monica Mason.  I’ve connected with so many of you and learned so much about our family from that page.

I discovered that another one of my DNA matches was Chief Wayne Brown who is Hall related.  In October I took a road trip to Ahoskie for my first Meherrin Pow Wow and I had the honor of meeting Chief Brown for the first time.

Another one of my DNA matches is Dr. Warren Milteer.  Our families lived next to each other for years in Suffolk, VA and through DNA testing we discovered that our families are also related.  Warren is a true scholar and has been an amazing advisor in helping me to uncover my Hall ancestry.  If you haven’t already, go get his book – Hertford County, North Carolina’s Free People of Color and Their Descendants.

As I reviewed my DNA matches I continued to uncover more and more connections to Halls and Hertford County.  This is why I can confidently say that I’m related to most if not all of you in this room.  It’s due to DNA Testing.  Yes many of the old Hertford County records have been destroyed (1830 Hertford County Courthouse Fire) or have gone missing.  Yes I may never figure out exactly how my 3x great-grandfather Joseph Hall is related to William, Allen and Andrew Hall.  But luckily our connection to each other has been etched in our DNA.

 As cousin McClary Hall Jr. once said to me, “It’s in the blood, it’s in the blood.”

If any of you are interested in DNA testing, I’d be happy to help.

I’d like to close by thanking the reunion committee for inviting me to speak.

One hundred twenty eight years after my great-great grandmother Martha Hall Sharp left Hertford County, it’s a true blessing to be able to reconnect with my family here this weekend at this family reunion.

Thank you and may God continue to bless the Hall Family.

MarthaHall

My great-great grandmother Martha Hall Sharp born in Hertford County around 1868 and who grew up in Winton.  Her parents were Joseph and Emma Jane Hall.

Joseph Hall

1850 Hertford County Census record for my great-great-great grandfather Joseph Hall, father of Martha Hall Sharp.  Because only free persons were recorded in census records in 1850, it means he lived as a free person of color.  His neighbors were the Manleys and the Nickens.  I believe this means there was a familial connection between the families.  DNA clues point to this as well. I hope to uncover the connection eventually through research.

Chief Brown

Here I am with Hall descendant and DNA cousin Chief Wayne Brown at Meherrin Pow Wow in October 2015.

Richards Grandparents

My grandparents. I am a Cumbo through my grandfather and a Hall through my grandmother.

Cumbo Family Reunion Group Photos

We celebrated our 2016 Cumbo Family Reunion July 15-17 in Williamsburg, Virginia. The reunion reconnected Cumbo family branches literally  separated by hundreds of years.  The weekend brought together at least two distinct family branches who trace their ancestry all the way back to Emanuell Cambow – the Cumbees of Brunswick County North Carolina and the Cumbos of Northampton County North Carolina.

The Brunswick Cumbees were represented by Denise Cumbee Long, whose great-great grandfather was Isom (Isham) Cumbo (Cumbee), born a free man of color in 1802. Isom lived in the Green Swamp area of Brunswick County where he had over a hundred acres of farmland and started a family. Isom’s grandfather was Cannon Cumbo of Roberson County, a great-grandson of Emmanuell Cambow.

The Northampton Cumbos were represented by most of the rest of us of the reunion attendees who trace their ancestry back to Britton Cumbo born a free person of color around 1825, who was orphaned as a young boy in 1837, and who died in 1898 as the Cumbo family patriarch and who owned 50 acres of farmland.   Britton Cumbo and his wife Mary had 7 children James Henry, Junius Matthias known as “Bug”, Sarah Frances known as “Puss”, Virginia Ellen, Hezekiah Thomas, William Britton known as “Shine” and Mary Ann known as “Mollie”. Reunion attendees represented descendants of 6 of the 7 branches of the family.

Here are our some group family photos from the reunion.

Cumbo Family group photo

Cumbo Family Reunion Photo

Isom Cumbee Branch

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James Henry Cumbo Branch

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Junius Matthias “Bug” Cumbo Branch

Cumbo Pope

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Sarah Frances “Puss” Cumbo Boone Branch

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Hezekiah Thomas “Tom” Cumbo Branch

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William Britton “Shine” Cumbo Branch

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Mary Ann “Mollie” Cumbo Manley Branch

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Mollie Cumbo Descendants 2

 

Meet Edith Cumbo, Nation Builder

We celebrated our 2016 Cumbo Family Reunion last weekend July 15-17 in Williamsburg, Virginia.  One of the reasons we chose Williamsburg was because Colonial Williamsburg features a historical figure – Edith Cumbo –  who is an ancestral family member.

Edith Cumbo, as far as I can tell, is my first cousin 9 times removed.  Continuing to trace back from my 5th great grandfather Britton Cumbo Sr. of Northampton, North Carolina  to our original ancestor Emanuell Cambow, the focus of my current research, will help me to confirm this.

Edith Cumbo was a mixed race, free woman of color born around 1735 to Richard Cumbo Jr., the grandson of Emanuell Cambow, and an Irish woman.  According to 18th-century Virginia law, the status of your mother determined whether you were born enslaved or free. Both of her parents were free and so was Edith.

The role of Edith Cumbo in Colonial Williamsburg was played masterfully by actor and historian Emily Jones.  We met her at the Lumber House at Colonial Williamsburg and spent the morning with her.  She walked and spun captivating stories of our Cumbo ancestors and their contributions to history.  It was amazing.

She shared how her father Richard Cumbo had fought in the the French and Indian War and for his service had been granted 50 acres of land in Williamsburg.  When he died he left his land to his daughter Edith Cumbo.  She then bought two horses and started a laundry business.  That’s right, Edith Cumbo was an entrepreneur.  She shared how Edith Cumbo, considered a “handsome” woman with means, attracted many suitors in her day, but that she never married essentially because of 18th century law.  According to the law, once a woman married, ownership of her property immediately passed on to her husband.  She went on to highlight this as the reason why she never married.  She wanted to maintain control of her property.  I’m currently reading Chernow’s epic biography on Alexander Hamilton and he cites this law as the primary reason why Hamilton and his mother, though she’d been born into a family with means, ended up destitute, because when she and her husband split, he essentially took everything.

While Edith never married, she did have a son Daniel Cumbo.  She shared how her son Daniel and many other Cumbos (John Cumbo, Michael Cumbo, Peter Cumbo, Richard Cumbo, Thomas Cumbo) as well as other free men of color served in the Revolutionary War side by side with General George Washington  at Valley Forge.  She shared how a great number of men of color fought in the war for independence, on both sides (enslaved men were offered their freedom by the British if they chose to take up arms for the Loyalist cause) and how this fact has been lost a bit in history.

She shared the significance of  historical events such as Bacon’s Rebellion. I remembered reading about the Rebellion in Zinn’s A People’s History of The United States, but Jones in her portrayal of Cumbo helped me to connect the dots on the event’s significance for our country and for my family’s history.

Bacon’s Rebellion was an armed rebellion in 1676 by Virginia settlers led by Nathaniel Bacon against the ruling class.  Prior to Bacon’s Rebellion, society was divided by class – the elites vs everyone else.  This meant that poor whites, poor free blacks, enslaved blacks and Native Americans lived togehter, celebrated together, struggled together and started families together.  This was the world Emanuell Cambow lived in.  After the rebellion ended in failure, the ruling class determined that the best way to protect its power was to divide the governed class by race – black and white, slave and free. This emerging racial caste system would further calcify through the passage of the Virginia Slave Codes of 1705. Events like this set in motion a racial divide in America which created a perilous life for my Cumbo ancestors, free men and women of color living first in colonial Virginia slave society, and then in segregated societies under the rule of Jim Crow throughout the American South.

I commend Colonial Williamsburg for making Edith Cumbo a prominent historical character and for bestowing upon her historical character Nation Builder status, equivalent to founding fathers such as George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.

Emily Jones delivers a wonderful and enlightening portrayal of Edith Cumbo.  I recommend that you visit Colonial Williamsburg, and when you do I highly recommend that you visit with her to experience her portrayal as Edith Cumbo.

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Photo Blog: Cumbo Reunion July 15, 2016

On July 15-17, over 200 Cumbo descendants gathered from across the nation and around the world in Williamsburg, VA for our 2016 Cumbo Family Reunion.  Here are photos from our Friday Meet and Greet event.

Here I am arriving in Williamsburg, quite excited.

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We hosted the reunion at the Williamsburg Woodlands Hotel.  Our Meet and Greet was hosted in the hotel’s conference center.  All in all  I give the hotel mixed reviews.  If you are interested in more details I’m happy to share.

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Printed Cumbo Family Tree documents and my blog posts on display for family members to review

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Family starts to arrive.  Meet and Greet begins!

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Family members digging into the Cumbo Family Trees and blog posts.

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Here I am making introductions and covering the agenda for the weekend.

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Cumbo Family Tree displays

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A Brief History of the Cumbo Family

Here is the family history I presented on July 16th at our 2016 Cumbo Family Reunion in Williamsburg, VA, where over 200 Cumbo descendants from across the nation and around the world gathered reuninting branches and generations of the Cumbo Family tree.

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A Brief History of the Cumbo Family

The origins of our Cumbo family in America begin with Emanuell Cambow, a black man from Angola, Africa who arrived in Jamestown, VA sometime in the 1600s likely on a Portuguese slave ship pirated by the British and re-directed to the Virginia Colony.  He first appears in Jamestown documents in September 1644 when he is made an indentured servant by the Virginia Assembly. He was freed from indentured servitude in 1665, granted 50 acres of land in James City County on April 18 1667 and started a family.  People who can trace their Cumbo ancestry to the Colonial period in America (1607-1763) likely descend from Emanuell.

Emanuell Cambow’s descendants lived on as free people of color and intermarried with whites and Native Americans throughout the Virginia and coastal North Carolina areas through the colonial period of America. As a result, over successive generations, many Cumbo family branches either maintained black or mixed race identities, passed as white (Melungeon or Portuguese) or fully embraced Native American (Lumbee or Tuscarora) identities.  Additionally, as the Cumbo family grew, so did variations of the name which expanded to Cumba, Cumbee, Cumby, Cumbia, Cumboe, Cumbow, Combo, Cumber and others.

The Cumbos are recognized throughout American history.  Cumbos fought in the Revolutionary War.  The names of Daniel Cumbo, John Cumbo, Michael Cumbo, Peter Cumbo and Richard Cumbo are memorialized on a commemorative headstone located in Jamestown, VA, dedicated to “Men of Color…Patriots who served in support of our nation’s war for independence.”  The story of Edith Cumbo, as a free woman of color born in 1735 to Richard Cumbo, the grandson of Emanuell Cambow, is featured in Colonial Williamsburg.  Native American Henry Berry Lowery born in 1848 to Mary Polly Cumbo is considered by many as a pioneer in the fight for civil rights and Native American tribal self-determination.

This weekend’s Cumbo Family Reunion is reuniting family branches literally  separated by hundreds of years.  This weekend brings together at least two distinct family branches who trace their ancestry all the way back to Emanuell Cambow – the Cumbees of Brunswick County North Carolina and the Cumbos of Northampton County North Carolina.

The Brunswick Cumbees are represented here by Denise Cumbee Long, whose great-great grandfather was Isom (Isham) Cumbo (Cumbee), born a free man of color in 1802. Isom lived in the Green Swamp area of Brunswick County where he had over a hundred acres of farmland and started a family. Isom’s grandfather was Cannon Cumbo of Roberson County, a great-grandson of Emmanuell Cambow.

The Northampton Cumbos are represented by most of the rest of us here who trace our ancestry back to Britton Cumbo born a free person of color around 1825, who was orphaned as a young boy in 1837, and who died in 1898 as the Cumbo family patriarch and who owned 50 acres of farmland.   Britton Cumbo and his wife Mary had 7 children James Henry, Junius Matthias known as “Bug”, Sarah Frances known as “Puss”, Virginia Ellen, Hezekiah Thomas, William Britton known as “Shine” and Mary Ann known as “Mollie”..  Most of us descend from one of these 7 branches and this reunion connects many of our branches for the first time.

Educational achievement is a strong Cumbo family value and has only grown stronger with successive generations. The Cumbo family has produced family members with college and advanced degrees from a wide range of both historically black colleges and majority institutions.  The Cumbo family represented here at this reunion includes entertainers, entrepreneurs, politicians, military officers, medical professionals, scientists, IT professionals, educators, ministers, law enforcement officers, civil servants, social workers, business executives, non-profit sector executives and athletes; professionals and workers across a wide range of career areas; all are successful in their chosen field and contribute to their communities and society according to their talents and abilities.

As Emanuell Cambow looks down on all of us today, surely he is proud of the contributions his descendants have made throughout American history and is thankful for the accomplishment, prosperity and strength of faith exhibited by our family represented here today.  Cumbo Family History is American History.  May God continue to bless our family.

Cumbo Family Reunion Photo

Adventures in Haiti

I’m on my last day of vacation in Haiti.  It’s been an amazing trip.

My wife was born in Port Au Prince, Haiti. Her ancestors were from Les Cayes.

Our two sons, born in Washington, D.C. like me, got a chance to experience their mother’s homeland for the first time.

Their DNA connects Haiti and America. Through their mother, they descend from Haitians who’ve lived free since the Haitian revolution (1791-1804).

Through me, they descend from formerly enslaved persons as well as free people of color who lived free in the American south from the Colonial period through the Cvil War.

I just discovered a historical connection between these Haitian and American free colored communities as well. At least two families from the Northampton County free community of color from which my Cumbo ancestors lived, moved to Haiti in the early 19th century as part of a movement to repatriate free blacks from America to Africa and the Caribbean.

In 1824 the American Colonization Society reached out to Jean-Pierre Boyer, the free born, mixed race President of Haiti with a plan to repatriate free people of color in America to Haiti. That year nearly 6,000 free people of color migrated from The United States to Haiti departing from ports such as New York, Baltimore and Philadelphia in search of a new life. Their stay however would be short lived as most returned to the US within months due to the poor living conditions they encountered upon their arrival.

Now to the Northampton County connection to the American repatriation movement to Haiti. I have many DNA matches who descend from the Newsoms, a free family of color from Northampton, North Carolina. The Newsoms (also spelled Newsome) and Cumbos lived together in Northampton and intermarried which could explain my genetic connection to the Newsom family.

Before my trip to Haiti, my DNA cousin and Newsom descendant Nikki Bass pointed out to me that she’d uncovered a passenger record for ancestral relative Nathan Newsom of Northampton returning from Cap- Haitien, Haiti to Philadelphia in the 1820s.

Nathan Newsom

Passenger record for Nathan Newsom from Haiti back to the U.S.

She also passed along that Paul Heinegg, author of Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina pointed out to her that the Morgans, another free African American family from Northampton County, N.C., went to live in Haiti for a while before returning to live in the U.S. and Canada.

So there were at least two Northampton families who repatriated from the US to Haiti and back.

There is nothing more exhilarating to me than when my life adventures and genealogical adventures intersect in unexpected ways.

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Jean-Pierre Boyer, President of Haiti (1818-1843) who worked with the Americam Colonization Society to repatriate free colored people from the United States to Haiti in the 1820s.

imageMe, my wife and sons on our trip to Haiti.  Here we are at The Citadelle, one of the largest fortresses in the Americas, which was built by Henri Christophe, founding father of Haiti and key leader in the Haitian Revolution.  Christophe would be succeeded by his rival Jean-Pierre Boyer as President of Haiti.  In 1982 The Citadelle would be designated by UNESCO as a world heritage site.

 

The Battle Over Britton Cumbo’s Estate

Britton Cumbo, my 4x Great grandfather and the root of the Cumbos of Northampton family from which I descend, was born a free person of color around 1825, orphaned as a young boy in 1837, and died in 1898 as a land owner and the Cumbo family patriarch.

What I’ve uncovered is that his death triggered a protracted court battle over his estate, the details of which were captured in a voluminous set of 1899 estate files, transcribed by Northampton court clerk J.T. Flythe, which I uncovered on Ancestry.com. For those of you who are not paid subscribers to Ancestry, estate records for your ancestors can also be found for free on familysearch.org.

His estate files are over 100 pages long. So with vacation time coming up I naturally decided to print them out and take them with me. Most people take a book with them on vacation, but, just so you know, genealogists take things like estate files.

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Here’s the story I uncovered. It begins in 1887, 11 years prior to Britton Cumbo’s death with the writing of his will.

Britton Cumbo Jr.’s Will & Affairs. In 1887 Britton Cumbo Jr. crafted his last will and testament. His father, Britton Cumbo Sr., had died with no will as far as I can tell, and his estate was sold off to pay his debts leaving Britton Jr. a penniless orphan. Perhaps this was Britton’s motivation behind establishing his own will. Whatever the motivation, I was proud to see that he’d had the foresight to get his estate in order. His will was drafted with a man named C.R. Harrell as one of the witnesses. Harrell, according to 1870 census, was a dry goods merchant, owner of Harrell Brothers and Company of Northampton, North Carolina. A dry goods store was essentially a country clothing store which sold products such as textiles, ready-to-wear clothing, and other sundries. Remember Harrell because he will be central to the fight over Brittons estate.

Britton Cumbo was a farmer with seven children and many more grandchildren, and by 1887 he owned approximately 50 acres of land. Interestingly enough, in his will, he chose to leave the bulk of his land to one of his descendants:

I then give and devise to my daughter Mary Bethenia Bowser 34 acres of land.

In the 1880 census for Northampton Mary Bethenia Bowser is listed as “Mattie B”, age 6, living with Britton and Mary Cumbo. Mattie was technically Britton’s granddaughter (the daughter of His daughter Virginia Ellen Cumbo and son in law Cordie Bowser) but Britton had helped to raise Mattie and they were quite close, so he referred to her throughout her life as his own daughter.

Britton’s will continued:

I give and bequeath to the balance of my children after my just debts are paid the balance of my property real or personal to equally divided between them.

The balance of his property available to his children, after netting out Mattie’s inheritance, was approximately 16 acres of land. The problem for them was that by the time Britton died, He was deeply indebted to, among others, Harrell Brothers and Company, likely due to clothing and household purchases he made over time on credit which then went unpaid and accumulated over the final years of his life. His estate records reveal at least 3 summary judgements issued by the Northampton County Justice of the Peace R.J. Ricks ruling in favor of Harrell against Britton Cumbo Jr. for unpaid bills. The debts totaled $127.78. Assuming 1898, the year of Brittons death as the initial year, in today’s dollars his debt would be worth approximately $3,770. Additionally, the judgements applied 8% compounded annual interest on the outstanding balances until they were fully repaid.  Here’s an example of a promissory note from Britton Cumbo to Harrell Brothers which was entered as evidence during the court battle.

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Estate Battle. On January 19,1899, a few months after Britton Cumbo’s death, B.F. Martin was appointed by the courts as the legal administrator for Britton Cumbo’s estate. He moved quickly to sell all of Britton Cumbo’s personal property with proceeds to be applied to repay outstanding debts. Then on August 17th, 1899 he commenced special proceedings against Britton Cumbo’s heirs for sale of the 16 acres. Here’s a summons posted in the Roanoke-Chowan Times in 1899 publicly informing the heirs of Britton Cumbo to sell the real estate they inherited from him in order to pay down his debt obligations.

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Interestingly enough, the court summons documents I discovered in Britton’s estate files are perhaps the most helpful genealogical documents I’ve uncovered in helping me to piece together Britton Cumbo’s family branches because they offer an exhaustive listing of every single heir of Britton Cumbo Jr.  Here’s the court summons which lists each Britton Cumbo heir.

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Martin then commenced a second lawsuit against Mary Bowser who had inherited the 34 acres from her grandfather. A court battle related to both lawsuits would extend over 5 years and not be resolved until 1905.

Mary Ends Up With It All. The attorney for Mary Bethenia Bowser who by the time of court proceedings had grown and had married a man named Thomas Britt, argued unsuccessfully over many years that judgements for Harrell and others should be barred based on insufficient evidence as well as the statute of limitations on claimed obligations.

So Britton Cumbo’s heirs were forced to sell their land. According to court records from the Northampton County Courts Spring 1905 session, here’s how the sale played out:

…The day of sale the land herein was offered by public auction to the highest bidder at the courthouse door in Jackson on the first Monday June 1905 when among other bidders appeared Mary [Bethenia Bowser] Britt who had the cash and highest bid in the sum of $74 for said land which…contains 16 acres more or less…Your court reports that $74 is a fair price for said land and recommends that the sale be confirmed.

After this sale Mary Britt then paid another $235 to exonerate the original 34 acres Britton had left her from his remaining debt obligations. With the sale of Britton’s personal property, rental income accrued on the land during the court proceedings, along with these two land transactions, Britton Cumbo’s estate debts and associated court costs were fully settled on August 22, 1905. Mary Britt ended up with all 50 acres of her grandfather’s land. I often wonder how Mary Britt came up with all of that money. I know she worked the 34 acres she’d inherited throughout the 5+ years of court proceedings. Perhaps she earned the money through farming over that time. Or perhaps her husband Thomas Britt came from a family with means. Whatever the source, I’m glad that she was able to keep the land in the family after Britton’s passing. While Britton had decided to leave her the bulk of his estate in 1887 when she was only 6 years old, he must have seen something special in her, even at that young age, that led him to believe that she would fight to keep his land in the family.  Here’s a map of Britton Cumbo’s 50 acres which officially came into the possession of Mary Bowser Britt when the court battle was resolved in 1905.  It’s bordered by the Futrell, Draper and Mulder properties to the north, south and west and the Beale’s Mill Swamp/ Pond on the east.

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Takeaways. This was the segregated Jim Crow South, but from what I can tell, this family of color was treated fairly through the adjudication process to settle Britton Cumbo’s estate. They were illiterate farmers, they all signed court records with an x, yet I can find no evidence that the courts or people involved in the case took advantage of my family in any way. This felt good to discover.

In 1667, Emanuell Cambow was granted 50 acres of land after serving as a slave and indentured servant in Jamestown. It’s amazing symmetry to think that one of his descendants, my 4x great grandfather, also owned 50 acres of land in Northampton NC to which his Cumbo ancestors had migrated from Virginia, and farmed it as a free man of color for many years and that through the efforts of Mary Bowser Britt the land stayed in the family for at least one more generation.

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The 7 Cumbo Tribes of Northampton, North Carolina

There were seven Cumbo Tribes of Northampton County, North Carolina. The biblical Abraham of our tribe was my great-great-great-great (4x) grandfather Britton Cumbo Jr who was born free colored in Northampton County around 1825. According to Northampton County Court records Britton Cumbo Jr. was orphaned as a young boy:

Monday, June 5th, 1837 Ordered by the court that Britton Cumbo, a boy of color about twelve years of age, orphan of Britton Cumbo Sr be bound an apprenticeship to Jesse Morgan who entered into bond in the penalty of two hundred dollars conditioned with Henry Deberry and Kinchen Powell securities.

By the time he died around 1898 he was a land owner and family patriarch. All Cumbos who trace their ancestry back to Northampton County likely descend from one of his 7 children.

Starting a Family.  On January 24th, 1842 Britton Cumbo Jr. married Mary Manley in Northampton County and they started a family together. Manley (also spelled Manly), along with Cumbo, represents a core surname for free colored families who lived in Northampton between the Colonial period through the Civil War.  By the 1850 census for Northampton County, Britton and Mary have 4 children and he is working as a farm laborer.

Land Ownership.  How Britton Cumbo Jr. became a land owner is still a mystery to me.  He likely didn’t own property in 1850.  I’ve not even been able to locate his family in  1860 census records.  The Civil War started in 1860 and the Cumbos were a free colored family living in North Carolina, so it’s understandable to me why they might have made themselves inconspicuous. By 1870 he’s listed on the census twice, first under dwelling #170 with a real estate value of $450 and a second time under dwelling #250 with a real estate value of $360.  How did Britton amass all of this land over that time-period?  Perhaps he’d been saving since his days as an apprentice.  Perhaps he inherited the land.  I know from court records that his father Britton Cumbo Sr’s estate was sold off to repay debts, so perhaps Britton inherited land through his mother.  This is an open question which I continue to research.

Potecasi.  Britton’s land was located in the town of Potecasi. The name had passed down in my family, but over generations it had become “Pultey Casey”.  Only through research did I discover the original name.  Potecasi is an Algonquian phrase meaning “parting of the waters”. The Potecasi Creek originates in Northampton County and flows east into neighboring Hertford County where it empties into the Meherrin River.  This creek not only connects the two counties but connected two historic North Carolina free communities of color. Just as the free colored community of Northampton was concentrated along the eastern border of the county, Hertford’s free colored community was concentrated along its western boarder within the township of Murfeesboro and extended east into the Winton township. The Cumbos settled into Hertford as well.  The root of the Hertford Cumbos traces back to a man named David Cumbo who was born around 1798 and who lived his life in Hertford.  What I’ve observed is that for many of his descendants, over time, the  family surname name morphed from Cumbo to Combo. I have a number of distant DNA matches who descend from David Cumbo so I believe Britton and David were related, likely connected by a common Cumbo ancestor who lived a generation or two prior in colonial Virginia.

The Seven Tribes.  Britton and Mary Cumbo had 7 children.  These children would grow up and  marry into the Bowsers, Popes, Boones, Waldens and Manleys, all core surnames for free colored Northampton families.  Most of Britton and Mary’s children remained in Northampton County.  Many branched up or down into neighboring townships such as Conway, Roanoke and Rich Square. One followed the Potecasi Creek in to Hertford.  Their children were:

  1. James Henry T Cumbo (b.1843) m. Martha Bowser 
  2. Junius Matthias “Bug” Cumbo (b.1845) m. Louisa Pope (my 3rd ggrandparents)
  3. Sarah Frances “Puss” Cumbo (b.1848) m. Elisha Boone
  4. Virginia Ellen Cumbo (b.1850) m. Cordie Bowser
  5. Hezekiah Thomas “Tom” Cumbo (b.1852) m. Cherry Manley
  6. William Britton “Shine” Cumbo (b.1853) m. Artensia Walden
  7. Mary Ann “Mollie” Cumbo (b.1858) m. Jesse Anderson Manley

The Cumbos of Northampton

Other children?  Two other children Margaret and James Cumbo show up in Britton and Mary’s households in 1870 then disappear in subsequent censuses.  They also do not show up as heirs in Britton Cumbo’s estate files in 1899 so I believe that they were relatives, perhaps a niece and nephew, living with Britton and Mary for a time.

Final Years. By 1880 Britton and Mary were an elderly couple living with their last daughter Mary and two of their grandchildren Noah (orphaned son of their first born James Henry who died as a young man) and “Mattie B” (Mary Bethenia Bowser, daughter of Virginia Ellen Cumbo and Cordie Bowser).  While Mattie was technically Britton’s granddaughter they were quite close and he referred to her throughout her life as his own daughter.  Remember this because after the death of Britton Cumbo Jr., family patriarch, Mattie B would find herself at the center of a family fight over the Britton Cumbo Jr. estate, which I will detail in an upcoming blog post.  Mary died prior to 1887 and Britton died in 1898.

1880 Census

Reuniting the Tribes. Through DNA testing I’ve connected with descendants from all 7 branches of the Britton and Mary Cumbo family.  We are all coming together along with other identified Cumbo family branches for a Cumbo Family Reunion July 15-17 in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia where we are Reuniting Branches and Generations.  I can’t wait.

Hezekiah Thomas Cumbo

Hezekiah Thomas Cumbo (b. 1858-1892) with an unidentified boy.  This is the only photo our family has of any of Britton and Mary’s  seven children.