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{{Infobox ethnic group
{{Infobox ethnic group
|group = Multiracial Americans
| group = Multiracial Americans
| image =
</small>
| population = '''Mixed-race (any race)'''<br>{{increase}} '''33,848,943''' ([[2020 United States census|2020 Census]])<ref name="Mixed Population 2020">{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/library/visualizations/interactive/race-and-ethnicity-in-the-united-state-2010-and-2020-census.html|title=Race and Ethnicity in the United States|date=August 12, 2021 |publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]] |access-date=August 17, 2021}}</ref><br>{{increase}} 10.21% of the total U.S. population
|image = |image = <table border=0 align="center">
| caption =
<tr>
| popplace = Predominantly in the [[Southwestern United States]] and [[Florida]]
<td>[[File:Poster-sized portrait of Barack Obama.jpg|95x95px|Barack Obama]]</td>
| region1 = {{flagicon|California}} [[California]]
<td>[[File:Mariah Carey @ 2010 Academy Awards.jpg|95x95px|Mariah Carey]]</td>
| pop1 = 5,760,235
<td>[[File:Bobbyscott.jpg|95x95px|Bobby Scott (U.S. politician)]]</td>
| ref1 = <ref name="Mixed Population 2020"/>
</tr>
| region2 = {{flagicon|Texas}} [[Texas]]
<tr>
| pop2 = 5,133,738
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Barack Obama]]'''</small></td>
| ref2 = <ref name="Mixed Population 2020"/>
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Mariah Carey]]'''</small></td>
| region3 = {{flagicon|Florida}} [[Florida]]
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Bobby Scott (U.S. politician)|Robert Scott]]'''</small></td>
| pop3 = 3,552,072
</tr>
| ref3 = <ref name="Mixed Population 2020"/>
<tr>
| region4 = {{flagicon|New York (state)}} [[New York (state)|New York]]
<td>[[File:Kamala Harris Official Attorney General Photo.jpg|95x95px|Kamala Harris]]</td>
| pop4 = 1,767,463
<td>[[File:Halle Berry 10.jpg|95x95px|Halle Berry]]</td>
| ref4 = <ref name="Mixed Population 2020"/>
<td>[[File:Vanessa Hudgens 6, 2012.jpg|95x95px|Vanessa Hudgens]]</td>
| region5 = {{flagicon|Illinois}} [[Illinois]]
</tr>
| pop5 = 1,144,984
<tr>
| ref5 = <ref name="Mixed Population 2020"/>
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Kamala Harris]]'''</small></td>
| related = African Americans, [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Hispanic Americans]], [[Métis#Métis people in the United States|Métis Americans]], [[Louisiana Creole people|Louisiana Creoles]], [[Hapa]]s, [[Melungeons]]
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Halle Berry]]'''</small></td>
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Vanessa Hudgens]]'''</small></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>[[File:Moon_bloodgood_crop.jpg|95x95px|Moon Bloodgood]]</td>
<td>[[File:John Ensign, official Congressional photo portrait, 2007.jpg|95x95px|John Ensign]]</td>
<td>[[File:Tiger Woods in 2009.jpg|95x95px|Tiger Woods]]</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Moon Bloodgood]]'''</small></td>
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[John Ensign]]'''</small></td>
<td><div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small>'''[[Tiger Woods]]'''</small></td>
</tr>
</table>
|caption=
|poptime =
([[2010 United States Census|2010 Census]])<br />'''Multiracial Americans'''<br />
'''9,000,000'''<ref>2010 census, based on self-identification</ref>
<br>(2.9% of the U.S. population)
|caption =
|popplace = [[Western United States|Western US]] 2.4 million (3.4%)<br />
[[Southern United States|Southern US]] 1.8 million (1.6%)<br />
[[Midwestern United States|Midwestern US]] 1.1 million (1.6%)<br />
[[Northeastern United States|Northeastern US]] 0.8 million (1.6%)<br />
<small>(2006 [[American Community Survey]])</small>
}}
}}


'''Multiracial Americans''', also known as '''Mixed Americans''', are [[Americans]] who have mixed ancestry of two or more [[Race and ethnicity in the United States|races]]. The term may also include Americans of [[multiracial people|mixed-race]] ancestry who [[ethnic group|self-identify]] with just one group culturally and socially (cf. the [[one-drop rule]]). In the [[2020 United States census]], 33.8&nbsp;million individuals or 10.2% of the population, self-identified as multiracial.<ref name="2020CensusData">{{cite web |url=https://census.gov/library/stories/2021/08/improved-race-ethnicity-measures-reveal-united-states-population-much-more-multiracial.html |title=2020 Census Illuminates Racial and Ethnic Composition of the Country |work=[[United States census]] |access-date=2021-08-13}}</ref> There is evidence that an accounting by genetic ancestry would produce a higher number.
'''Multiracial Americans''' are [[People of the United States|Americans]] who identify as [[Multiracial|of "two or more races"]]. The term may also include Americans of mixed-race ancestry who identify with just one group culturally and socially. On the 2010 [[US census]], approximately 9 million individuals, or 2.9% of the population, self-identified as multiracial.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.census.gov/prod/2001pubs/c2kbr01-6.pdf |title=The Two or More Races Population: 2000. Census 2000 Brief |accessdate=2008-05-08 |last=Jones |first=Nicholas A. |coauthors=Amy Symens Smith |format=[[Portable Document Format|PDF]] |publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/DTTable?_bm=y&-context=dt&-ds_name=ACS_2006_EST_G00_&-CONTEXT=dt&-mt_name=ACS_2006_EST_G2000_B02001&-tree_id=306&-redoLog=false&-currentselections=ACS_2006_EST_G2000_B02001&-currentselections=ACS_2006_EST_G2000_B02003&-currentselections=ACS_2006_EST_G2000_C02003&-geo_id=01000US&-geo_id=02000US1&-geo_id=02000US2&-geo_id=02000US3&-geo_id=02000US4&-search_results=01000US&-format=&-_lang=en |title=B02001. RACE - Universe: TOTAL POPULATION |work=2006 [[American Community Survey]] |accessdate=2008-01-30 |publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]}} has 6.1 million (2.0%)</ref> There is evidence that an accounting by genetic ancestry would produce a higher number, but people live according to social and cultural identities, not DNA. Historical reasons, including slavery creating a racial caste and the European-American suppression of Native Americans, often led people to identify or be classified by only one ethnicity, generally that of the culture they were raised in.<ref name="GatesHenry">Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. ''Faces of America: How 12 Extraordinary Americans Reclaimed Their Pasts'' (New York University Press, 2010)</ref> Prior to the mid-20th century, many people hid their multiracial heritage because of racial discrimination against minorities.<ref name="GatesHenry" /> While many Americans may be technically multi-racial, they often do not know it or do not identify so culturally, any more than they maintain all the differing traditions of a variety of national ancestries.<ref name="GatesHenry" />


The multiracial population is the fastest growing demographic group in the United States, increasing by 276% between 2010 and 2020.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Over Half a Million People Self-Identified as Brazilian in 2020 Census |url=https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2023/10/2020-census-dhc-a-some-other-race-population.html |access-date=2024-07-09 |website=Census.gov}}</ref> This growth was driven largely by [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Hispanic or Latino Americans]] identifying as multiracial, with this group increasing from 3 million in 2010 to over 20 million in 2020, making up almost two thirds of the multiracial population.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Tavernise |first=Sabrina |last2=Mzezewa |first2=Tariro |last3=Heyward |first3=Giulia |date=2021-08-13 |title=Behind the Surprising Jump in Multiracial Americans, Several Theories |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/13/us/census-multiracial-identity.html |access-date=2024-07-09 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Most multiracial Hispanics identified as [[White Americans|white]] and "[[Some Other Race|some other race]]" in combination, with this group increasing from 1.6 million to 24 million between 2010 and 2021, a trend has been attributed to changes in the Census Bureau's methodology on counting write-in ancestry responses, as well as growing racial diversity among the Hispanic population.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Passel |first=Mark Hugo Lopez, Jens Manuel Krogstad and Jeffrey S. |date=2023-09-05 |title=Who is Hispanic? |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/09/05/who-is-hispanic/ |access-date=2024-07-09 |website=Pew Research Center |language=en-US}}</ref>
After a period of racial segregation in the former Confederacy following Reconstruction and social segregation in many areas of the country, more people are forming interracial unions again. Social conditions have changed and increasingly diverse immigration has brought new groups to the United States. The number of acknowledged interracial couples and mixed-race children has increased in the United States. In addition, since the 1980s, the United States has had a growing multiracial identity movement.<ref>Root, ''Multiracial Experience'', pp. xv-xviii</ref> Because of citizen requests, the 2000 census for the first time allowed residents to identify as multiracial by checking more than one ethnicity. In 2008 [[Barack Obama]] was elected as the first multiracial [[President of the United States]]; he has an acknowledged multiracial background and identifies as African American.<ref>[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/07/20/MNGC11PND8.DTL Obama raises profile of mixed-race Americans] ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'' 21 July 2008.</ref>

The impact of historical racial systems, such as that created by admixture between white [[colonial history of the United States|European colonists]] and Native Americans, has often led people to identify or be classified by only one ethnicity, generally that of the culture in which they were raised.<ref name="GatesHenry">{{cite book |last=Gates, Jr.|first=Henry Louis |title=Faces of America: How 12 Extraordinary Americans Reclaimed Their Pasts |publisher=[[New York University Press]] |year=2010}}</ref> Prior to the mid-20th century, many people hid their multiracial heritage because of [[discrimination in the United States|racial discrimination]] against minorities.<ref name="GatesHenry" /> While many Americans may be considered multiracial, they often do not know it or do not identify so culturally, any more than they maintain all the differing traditions of a variety of national ancestries.<ref name="GatesHenry" />

[[File:Obama08acceptance.jpg|thumb|[[Barack Obama]] was the first Mixed American to be president of the [[United States]] (son of a black father and a white mother).]]
After a lengthy period of formal [[racial segregation]] in the former Confederacy following the [[Reconstruction Era]] and [[anti-miscegenation laws|bans on interracial marriage in various parts of the country]], more people are openly forming interracial unions. In addition, social conditions have changed and many multiracial people do not believe it is socially advantageous to try to "[[passing (racial identity)|pass]]" as [[White Americans|white]]. Diverse immigration has brought more mixed race people into the United States, such as a significant population of [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Hispanics]]. Since the 1980s, the United States has had a growing multiracial identity movement (cf. [[Loving Day]]).<ref>Root, ''Multiracial Experience'', pp. xv–xviii</ref> Because more Americans have insisted on being allowed to acknowledge their mixed racial origins, the [[2000 United States census|2000 census]] for the first time allowed residents to check more than one ethno-racial identity and thereby identify as multiracial. In 2008, [[Barack Obama]], who is of Luo (Kenyan) and Scottish lineage, was elected as the first biracial President of the United States; he acknowledges both sides of his family and identifies as African-American.<ref>[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/07/20/MNGC11PND8.DTL "Obama raises profile of mixed-race Americans"], ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'' July 21, 2008.</ref>

Today, multiracial individuals are found in every corner of the country. Multiracial groups in the United States include many African Americans, [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Hispanic Americans]], [[Métis#Métis people in the United States|Métis Americans]], [[Louisiana Creole people|Louisiana Creoles]], [[Hapa]]s, [[Melungeons]] and several other communities found primarily in the [[Eastern United States|Eastern US]]. Many Native Americans are multiracial in ancestry while identifying fully as members of federally recognized tribes.


==History==
==History==
{{See|Jim Crow laws|Mulatto|Colored|Interracial marriage in the United States}}
{{Further|Jim Crow laws|Miscegenation|Mulatto|Colored|Interracial marriage in the United States}}


The American people are mostly multi-ethnic descendants of various culturally distinct immigrant groups, many of which have now developed nations. Some consider themselves multiracial, while acknowledging race as a social construct. [[Creolization]], [[cultural assimilation|assimilation]] and [[racial integration|integration]] have been continuing processes. The [[African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968)]] and other social movements since the mid-twentieth century worked to achieve social justice and equal enforcement of civil rights under the constitution for all ethnicities. In the 2000s, less than 5% of the population identified as multiracial. In many instances, mixed racial ancestry is so far back in an individual's family history (for instance, before the Civil War or earlier), that it does not affect more recent ethnic and cultural identification.
The American people are mostly multi-ethnic descendants of various culturally distinct immigrant groups, many of which have now developed nations. Some consider themselves multiracial, while acknowledging race as a social construct. [[Creolization]], [[cultural assimilation|assimilation]] and [[racial integration|integration]] have been continuing processes. The [[Civil Rights Movement]] and other social movements since the mid-twentieth century worked to achieve social justice and equal enforcement of civil rights under the constitution for all ethnicities. In the 2000s, less than 5% of the population identified as multiracial. In many instances, mixed racial ancestry is so far back in an individual's family history (for instance, before the Civil War or earlier), that it does not affect more recent ethnic and cultural identification.
[[File:Olaudah Equiano - Project Gutenberg eText 15399.png|thumb|105px|right|Olaudah Equiano]]


Interracial relationships, common-law marriages and marriages have occurred since the earliest colonial years, especially before [[slavery]] hardened as a racial caste associated with people of [[African]] descent in the British colonies. Virginia and other colonies passed laws in the 17th century that gave children the social status of their mother, according to the principle of ''[[partus sequitur ventrem]],'' regardless of the father's race or citizenship. This overturned the principle in English [[common law]], that a man gave his status to his children - this had enabled communities to demand that fathers support their children, whether legitimate or not. The change increased white men's ability to use slave women sexually, as they had no responsibility for the children. If the master as well as father of the mixed-race children, they could use them as servants or laborers or sell them as slaves. In some cases, white fathers provided for their multiracial children providing for education or apprenticeships and freeing them, particularly during the two decades following the [[American Revolution]]. (The practice of providing for the children was more common in French and Spanish colonies, where a Creole class developed who became educated and property owners.) Many other white fathers abandoned the mixed-race children and their mothers to slavery.
Interracial relationships, common-law marriages and marriages occurred since the earliest [[Colonial history of the United States|colonial years]], especially before [[Slavery in the colonial history of the United States|slavery]] hardened as a racial caste associated with people of [[List of ethnic groups of Africa|African]] descent in Colonial America. Several of the [[Thirteen Colonies]] passed laws in the 17th century that gave children the social status of their mother, according to the principle of ''[[partus sequitur ventrem]]'', regardless of the father's race or citizenship. This overturned the precedent in [[common law]] by which a man gave his status to his children this had enabled communities to demand that fathers support their children, whether legitimate or not. The change increased white men's ability to use slave women sexually, as they had no responsibility for the children. As master as well as father of mixed-race children born into slavery, the men could use these people as servants or laborers or sell them as slaves. In some cases, white fathers provided for their multiracial children, paying or arranging for education or apprenticeships and freeing them, particularly during the two decades following the [[American Revolutionary War|Revolutionary War]]. (The practice of providing for the children was more common in [[French colonial empire|French]] and [[Spanish Empire|Spanish colonies]], where a class of free people of color developed who became educated and property owners.) Many other white fathers abandoned the mixed race children and their mothers to slavery.


The researcher Paul Heinegg found that most families of free people of color in colonial times were founded from the unions of white women, whether free or indentured servants, and African men, slave, indentured or free. In the early years, the working class peoples lived and worked together. Their children were free because of the status of the white women. This was in contrast to the pattern in the post-Revolutionary era, in which most mixed-race children had white fathers and slave mothers.<ref>[http://www.freeafricanamericans.com Paul Heinegg, ''Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware'', 1995-2010]</ref>
The researcher Paul Heinegg found that most families of free people of color in colonial times were founded from the unions of white women, whether free or indentured servants and African men, slave, indentured or free.<ref name="heinegg"/> In the early years, the working-class peoples lived and worked together. Their children were free because of the status of the white women. This was in contrast to the pattern in the post-Revolutionary era, in which most mixed-race children had white fathers and Black mothers.<ref name="heinegg">{{Cite web|url=https://www.freeafricanamericans.com/|title=Home Page|website=www.freeafricanamericans.com}}</ref>


[[Anti-miscegenation]] laws were passed in most states during the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, but this did not prevent white slaveholders from taking slave women as concubines and having multiracial children with them. Patterns of Asian immigration and Latino residents led white legislators in [[California]] and the [[Western United States|western US]] to pass laws prohibiting marriage between [[European-Americans|European]] and [[Asian American|Asian Americans]] until the 1950s.
[[Anti-miscegenation]] laws were passed in most states during the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, but this did not prevent white slaveholders, their sons, or other powerful white men from taking slave women as concubines and having multiracial children with them. In California and the rest of the [[Western United States|American West]], there were greater numbers of Latin American and Asian residents. These were prohibited from official relationships with whites. White legislators passed laws prohibiting marriage between [[European Americans|European]] and Asian Americans until the 1950s.


===Early United States history===
===Early United States history===
[[File:Olaudah Equiano - Project Gutenberg eText 15399.png|thumb|upright|Olaudah Equiano]]
Interracial relationships have had a long history in North America and the United States, beginning with the intermixing of European explorers and soldiers, who took native women as companions. After European settlement increased, traders and fur trappers often married or had unions with women of native tribes. In the 17th century, faced with a continuing, critical labor shortrage, colonists primarily in the Chesapeake Bay Colony, imported Africans as laborers, sometimes as indentured servants and, increasingly, as slaves. African slaves were also imported into New York and other northern ports by the Dutch and later English. Some African slaves were freed by their masters during these early years.


Interracial relationships have had a long history in North America and the United States, beginning with the intermixing of European explorers and soldiers, who took native women as companions. After European settlement increased, traders and fur trappers often married or had unions with women of native tribes. In the 17th century, faced with a continuing, critical labor shortage, colonists primarily in the Chesapeake Bay Colony, imported Africans as laborers, sometimes as indentured servants and, increasingly, as slaves. African slaves were also imported into New York and other northern ports by European colonists. Some African slaves were freed by their masters during these early years.
In the colonial years, while conditions were more fluid, white women, indentured servant or free, and African men, servant, slave or free, made unions. Because the women were free, their mixed-race children were born free; they and their descendants formed most of the families of free people of color during the colonial period in Virginia. The scholar Paul Heinegg found that eighty percent of the free people of color in North Carolina in censuses from 1790-1810 could be traced to families free in Virginia in colonial years.<ref>Paul Heinegg, ''Free African Americans in Virginia, North Carolin, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware'', 1995-2012</ref>


In the colonial years, while conditions were more fluid, white women, indentured servant or free, and African men, servant, slave or free, made unions. Because the women were free, their mixed-race children were born free; they and their descendants formed most of the families of [[free people of color]] during the [[Colony of Virginia|colonial period in Virginia]]. The scholar Paul Heinegg found that eighty percent of the free people of color in North Carolina in censuses from 1790 to 1810 could be traced to families free in Virginia in colonial years.<ref>Paul Heinegg, ''Free African Americans in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware'', 1995–2012</ref>
In 1789 [[Olaudah Equiano]], a former slave from Nigeria who was enslaved in North America, published his autobiography. He advocated interracial marriage between whites and blacks.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.antislavery.org/2007/campaigners%20equiano.htm |title=Campaigners From History: Olaudah Equiano |accessdate=2008-06-18 |year=2007 |publisher=Anti-Slavery International |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080603135700/http://www.antislavery.org/2007/campaigners+equiano.htm |archivedate = 2008-06-03}}</ref> By the late eighteenth century, visitors to the Upper South noted the high proportion of mixed-race slaves, evidence of miscegenation by white men.


In 1789, [[Olaudah Equiano]], a former slave from modern-day [[Nigeria]] who was enslaved in North America, published his autobiography. He advocated interracial marriage between whites and blacks.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.antislavery.org/2007/campaigners%20equiano.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070328201413/http://www.antislavery.org/2007/campaigners%20equiano.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=March 28, 2007 |title=Campaigners From History: Olaudah Equiano |access-date=June 18, 2008 |year=2007 |publisher=Anti-Slavery International }}</ref> By the late eighteenth century, visitors to the Upper South noted the high proportion of mixed-race slaves, evidence of miscegenation by white men.
In 1790, the first federal population census was taken in the United States. Enumerators were instructed to classify free residents as white or "other." Only the heads of households were identified by name in the federal census until 1850. Native Americans were included among "Other;" in later censuses, they were included as "Free people of color" if they were not living on [[Indian reservations]]. Slaves were counted separately from free persons in all the censuses until the Civil War and end of slavery. In later censuses, they were classified as [[mulatto]] (which recognized mixed ancestry) or black.


In 1790, the first federal population census was taken in the United States. Enumerators were instructed to classify free residents as white or "other." Only the heads of households were identified by name in the federal census until 1850. Native Americans were included among "Other;" in later censuses, they were included as "[[Free people of color]]" if they were not living on [[Indian reservations]]. Slaves were counted separately from free persons in all the censuses until the Civil War and end of slavery. In later censuses, people of African descent were classified by appearance as [[mulatto]] (which recognized visible European ancestry in addition to African) or black.
After the [[American Revolutionary War]], the number and proportion of free people of color increased markedly in the North and the South. Most northern states abolished slavery, sometimes, like New York, in programs of gradual emancipation that took more than two decades to be completed. The last slaves in New York were not freed until 1827. In connection with the Second Great Awakening, Quaker and Methodist preachers in the South urged slaveholders to free their slaves. Revolutionary ideals led many men to free their slaves, some by deed and others by will, so that from 1782 to 1810, the percentage of [[free people of color]] rose from less than one percent to nearly 10 percent of blacks in the South.<ref>Peter Kolchin, ''Slavery in America, 1619-1877'', Hill and Wang, 1993</ref>

After the [[American Revolutionary War]], the number and proportion of free people of color increased markedly in the North and the South as slaves were freed. Most northern states abolished slavery, sometimes, like New York, in programs of gradual emancipation that took more than two decades to be completed. The last slaves in New York were not freed until 1827. In connection with the [[Second Great Awakening]], Quaker and Methodist preachers in the South urged slaveholders to free their slaves. Revolutionary ideals led many men to free their slaves, some by deed and others by will, so that from 1782 to 1810, the percentage of [[free people of color]] rose from less than one percent to nearly 10 percent of blacks in the South.<ref>{{cite book |first=Peter |last=Kolchin |title=Slavery in America, 1619–1877 |location=New York |publisher=Hill and Wang |year=1993 |isbn=0-8090-2568-X }}</ref>


===19th century: American Civil War, emancipation, Reconstruction and Jim Crow===
===19th century: American Civil War, emancipation, Reconstruction and Jim Crow===
[[File:Freedoms Banner Charley a slave boy from New Orelans 1864.jpg|thumb|upright|Charley Taylor holding an American flag. Charley was the son of [[Alexander Withers]] and one of Withers's slaves. Withers sold Charley to a slave dealer and he was sold again in New Orleans.]]
Of numerous relationships between male slaveholders, overseers, or master's sons and slaves, the most notable is likely that of President [[Thomas Jefferson]] with his slave [[Sally Hemings]]. She was of mixed race with three-quarters European ancestry, and was likely the half sister of the late Martha Jefferson by their father [[John Wayles]]. As noted in the 2012 collaborative [[Smithsonian]]-[[Monticello]] exhibit, ''Slavery at Monticello: The Paradox of Liberty'', Jefferson, then a widower, took Hemings as his concubine for nearly 40 years. They had six children of record; four Hemings children survived into adulthood, and he freed them all, among the very few slaves he freed. Two were allowed to "escape" to the North in 1822, and two were granted freedom by his will upon his death in 1826. Seven-eighths white by ancestry, all four moved to northern states as adults; three of the four entered the white community, and all their descendants identified as white. Of the descendants of [[Madison Hemings]], who continued to identify as black, some in future generations eventually identified as white and "married out", while others identified as African American. It was socially advantageous then for the Hemings children to identify as white. Although born into slavery, the Hemings children were legally white under Virginia law of the time.

Of numerous relationships between male slaveholders, overseers, or master's sons and women slaves, the most notable is likely that of President [[Thomas Jefferson]] with his slave [[Sally Hemings]]. As noted in the 2012 collaborative [[Smithsonian]]-[[Monticello]] exhibit, ''Slavery at Monticello: The Paradox of Liberty'', Jefferson, then a widower, took Hemings as his concubine for nearly 40 years. They had six children of record; four Hemings children survived into adulthood, and he freed them all, among the very few slaves he freed. Two were allowed to "escape" to the North in 1822, and two were granted freedom by his will upon his death in 1826. Seven-eighths white by ancestry, all four of his Hemings children moved to northern states as adults; three of the four entered the white community, and all their descendants identified as white. Of the descendants of [[Madison Hemings]] who continued to identify as black, some in future generations eventually identified as white and "married out," while others continued to identify as African American. It was socially advantageous for the Hemings children to identify as white, in keeping with their appearance and the majority proportion of their ancestry. Although born into slavery, the Hemings children were legally white under Virginia law of the time.


===20th century===
===20th century===
Racial discrimination continued to be enacted in new laws in the 20th century, for instance the [[one-drop rule]] was enacted in Virginia's 1924 [[Racial Integrity Law]] and in other southern states, in part influenced by the popularity of [[eugenics]] and fading memories of how many whites had multiracial ancestry. Many families were, in fact, multiracial. Similar laws had been proposed but not passed in the late nineteenth century in South Carolina and Virginia, for instance. After regaining political power in Southern states by disfranchising blacks, white Democrats passed laws to impose [[Jim Crow]] and racial segregation to achieve [[white supremacy]]. They maintained these until forced to change in the 1960s by federal legislation enforcing the constitutional rights of African Americans and other minority citizens.


Racial discrimination continued to be enacted in new laws in the 20th century, for instance the [[one-drop rule]] was enacted in Virginia's 1924 [[Racial Integrity Act of 1924|Racial Integrity Law]] and in other southern states, in part influenced by the popularity of [[eugenics]] and ideas of racial purity. People buried fading memories that many whites had multiracial ancestry. Many families were multiracial. Similar laws had been proposed but not passed in the late nineteenth century in South Carolina and Virginia, for instance. After regaining political power in Southern states by [[Disfranchisement after Reconstruction era|disenfranchising blacks]], white Democrats passed laws to impose [[Jim Crow]] and racial segregation to restore [[white supremacy]]. They maintained these until forced to change in the 1960s and after by enforcement of federal legislation authorizing oversight of practices to protect the constitutional rights of African Americans and other minority citizens.
In 1967 the United States [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] case, ''[[Loving v. Virginia]]'' ruled that anti-miscegenation laws were unconstitutional.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/mixed/ |title=Jefferson’s Blood: Mixed Race America |accessdate=2008-06-18 |author=PBS |date=May 1999 |publisher=WGBH Educational Foundation }}</ref>


In 1967 the United States [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] case ''[[Loving v. Virginia]]'' ruled that anti-miscegenation laws were unconstitutional.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/mixed/ |title=Jefferson's Blood: Mixed Race America |access-date=June 18, 2008 |author=PBS |date=May 1999 |publisher=WGBH Educational Foundation}}</ref>
In the twentieth century up until 1989, social service organizations typically assigned multiracial children to the racial identify of the minority parent, which reflected social practices of hypodescent.<ref name="Beverly">{{cite book|last=Yuen Thompson|first=Beverly|title=The Politics of Bisexual/Biracial Identity: A Study of Bisexual and Mixed Race Women of Asian/Pacific Islander Descent |publisher=Snakegirl Press |year=2006 |edition=Reprint|url=http://snakegrrl.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/microsoft-word-final-book-bisexual-biracial-identity.pdf |accessdate=2008-07-18 |pages =25-26 |oclc=654851035}}</ref> Black social workers had influenced court decisions on regulations related to identity; they argued that, as the biracial child was socially considered black, it should be classified that way in order to identify with the group and learn to deal with discrimination.<ref name="Nitardy">{{cite web|url=http://cehd.umn.edu/EdPA/licensure/leader/2004Fall/identity.html|title=Identity Problems in Biracial Youth|last=Nitardy|first=Charlotte|date=2008-05-14|publisher=University of Minnesota|accessdate=2008-07-14}}</ref>


In the twentieth century up until 1989, social service organizations typically assigned multiracial children to the racial identity of the minority parent, which reflected social practices of [[hypodescent]].<ref name="Beverly">{{cite book|last=Yuen Thompson|first=Beverly|title=The Politics of Bisexual/Biracial Identity: A Study of Bisexual and Mixed Race Women of Asian/Pacific Islander Descent |publisher=Snakegirl Press |year=2006 |edition=Reprint|url=http://snakegrrl.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/microsoft-word-final-book-bisexual-biracial-identity.pdf |access-date=July 18, 2008 |pages =25–26 |oclc=654851035}}</ref> Black social workers had influenced court decisions on regulations related to identity; they argued that, as the biracial child was socially considered black, it should be classified that way to identify with the group and learn to deal with discrimination.<ref name="Nitardy1">{{cite web|url=http://cehd.umn.edu/EdPA/licensure/leader/2004Fall/identity.html|title=Identity Problems in Biracial Youth|last=Nitardy|first=Charlotte|date=May 14, 2008|publisher=University of Minnesota|access-date=July 14, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110720092135/http://www.cehd.umn.edu/EdPA/licensure/leader/2004Fall/identity.html|archive-date=July 20, 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref>
By 1990, the Census Bureau included more than a dozen ethnic/racial categories on the census, reflecting not only changing social ideas about ethnicity, but the wide variety of immigrants who had come to reside in the United States due to changing historical forces and new immigration laws in the 1960s. With a changing society, more citizens have begun to press for acknowledging multiracial ancestry. The [[Census Bureau]] changed its data collection by allowing people to self-identify as more than one ethnicity. Some ethnic groups are concerned about the potential political and economic effects, as federal assistance to historically underserved groups has depended on Census data.


By 1990, the Census Bureau included more than a dozen ethnic/racial categories on the census, reflecting not only changing social ideas about ethnicity, but the wide variety of immigrants who had come to reside in the United States due to changing historical forces and new immigration laws in the 1960s. With a changing society, more citizens have begun to press for acknowledging multiracial ancestry. The [[Census Bureau]] changed its data collection by allowing people to self-identify as more than one ethnicity. Some ethnic groups are concerned about the potential political and economic effects, as federal assistance to historically underserved groups has depended on Census data. According to the Census Bureau, as of 2002, 75% of all African Americans had multiracial ancestries.<ref name="Quintana">{{cite book|editor1-first=Stephen M. |editor1-last=Quintana |editor2-first=Clark |editor2-last=McKown |title=Handbook of Race, Racism, and the Developing Child|date=2008|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-0470189801|page=211|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d34N68eY-3QC|access-date=January 1, 2015}}</ref>
The proportion of multiracial children in the United States is growing. Interracial partnerships are on the rise, as are transracial adoptions. In 1990, about 14% of 18- to 19-year-olds, 12% of 20- to 21-year-olds and 7% of 34- to 35-year-olds were involved in interracial relationships (Joyner and Kao, 2005).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Nov05/interracial.couples.ssl.html|title=Interracial relationships are on the increase in U.S., but decline with age, Cornell study finds|last=Lang|first=Susan S.|date=2005-11-02|work=Chronicle Online|publisher=Cornell University|accessdate=2008-07-14}}</ref>

The proportion of acknowledged multiracial children in the United States is growing. Interracial partnerships are on the rise, as are transracial adoptions. In 1990, around 14% of 18- to 19-year-olds, 12% of 20- to 21-year-olds, and 7% of 34- to 35-year-olds were involved in interracial relationships (Joyner and Kao, 2005).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Nov05/interracial.couples.ssl.html|title=Interracial relationships are on the increase in U.S., but decline with age, Cornell study finds|last=Lang|first=Susan S.|date=November 2, 2005|work=Chronicle Online|publisher=Cornell University|access-date=July 14, 2008}}</ref> The number of [[interracial marriage]]s as a proportion of new marriages has increased from 11% in 2010 to 19% in 2019.<ref>{{cite news |title=Interracial marriages now more common, but not without challenges |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/interracial-marriages-now-more-common-but-not-without-challenges/ |work=CBS News |date=June 13, 2021}}</ref>


==Demographics==
==Demographics==
{{update section|date=June 2024}}
{{See|Racial and ethnic demographics of the United States}}
{{Further|Racial and ethnic demographics of the United States}}According to estimates from the 2022 American Community Survey, there are 41,782,288 people identifying as with multiple races in the US, making up 12.5% of the population. Excluding responses of "[[Some Other Race|some other race]]" in combination with a single recognized category, this number is reduced to 13,658,099, or 4.1% of the population.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Grid View: Table B02001 - Census Reporter |url=https://censusreporter.org/data/table/?table=B02001&geo_ids=01000US&primary_geo_id=01000US#valueType%7Cpercentage |access-date=2024-07-09 |website=censusreporter.org}}</ref> Almost 90% of Americans identifying as "[[Some Other Race|some other race]]" in combination were Hispanic/Latino in 2022, making up over 90% of the multiracial Hispanic population and over half of the total multiracial population in the US.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Grid View: Table B03002 - Census Reporter |url=https://censusreporter.org/data/table/?table=B03002&geo_ids=01000US&primary_geo_id=01000US#valueType%7Cestimate |access-date=2024-07-09 |website=censusreporter.org}}</ref> The largest multiracial groups in the US in 2022 are:<ref>{{Cite web |title=Grid View: Table B02003 - Census Reporter |url=https://censusreporter.org/data/table/?table=B02003&geo_ids=01000US&primary_geo_id=01000US#valueType%7Cpercentage |access-date=2024-07-09 |website=censusreporter.org}}</ref>
Multiracial people who wanted to acknowledge their full heritage won a victory of sorts in 1997, when the [[Office of Management and Budget]] (OMB) changed the federal regulation of racial categories to permit multiple responses. This resulted in a change to the 2000 [[United States Census]], which allowed participants to select more than one of the six available categories, which were, in brief: "[[White American|White]]," "[[African American|Black or African American]]," "[[Asian American|Asian]]," "[[Native Americans in the United States|American Indian or Alaskan Native]]," "[[Pacific Islander American|Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander]]," and "Other." Further details are given in the article: [[Race (U.S. census)]]. The OMB made its directive mandatory for all government forms by 2003.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Combination
In 2000, Cindy Rodriguez reported on reactions to the new census:
!Number as of 2022
{{quote|To many mainline civil rights groups, the new census is part of a multiracial nightmare. After decades of framing racial issues in stark black and white terms, they fear that the multiracial movement will break down longstanding alliances, weakening people of color by splintering them into new subgroups.<ref name="Seattlepi">{{cite news|url=http://www.seattlepi.com/national/cens16.shtml|title=The US Census now recognizes multiracial entries|last=Rodriguez|first=Cindy|date=2000-12-16|publisher=Seattle Post-Intelligencer|accessdate=2008-07-14}}</ref>}}
!% Total
|-
|[[White Americans|White]] and "[[Some Other Race]]"
|26,317,236
|7.9%
|-
|White and [[African Americans|Black]]
|3,831,683
|1.1%
|-
|White and [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]]
|3,012,849
|0.9%
|-
|White and [[Asian Americans|Asian]]
|2,865,504
|0.9%
|-
|Black and "Some Other Race"
|1,194,056
|0.4%
|-
|[[Black Indians in the United States|Black and Native American]]
|464,679
|0.1%
|-
|Native American and "Some Other Race"
|338,757
|0.1%
|-
|[[Afro-Asians|Black and Asian]]
|300,787
|0.1%
|-
|White and [[Pacific Islander Americans|Pacific Islander]]
|247,141
|0.1%
|-
|Three races
|2,298,469
|0.7%
|-
|Four races
|256,913
|0.1%
|}
[[File:Two or more races population pyramid in 2020.svg|thumb|Two or more races population pyramid in 2020]]
Multiracial people who wanted to acknowledge their full heritage won a victory of sorts in 1997, when the [[Office of Management and Budget]] (OMB) changed the federal regulation of racial categories to permit multiple responses. This resulted in a change to the 2000 [[United States Census]], which allowed participants to select more than one of the six available categories, which were, in brief: "[[White Americans|White]]," "[[African Americans|Black or African-American]]," "[[Asian Americans|Asian]]," "[[Native Americans in the United States|American Indian or Alaskan Native]]," "[[Pacific Islands Americans|Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander]]" and "Other." Further details are given in the article: [[Race and ethnicity in the United States Census]]. The OMB made its directive mandatory for all government forms by 2003.


Some multiracial individuals feel marginalized by U.S. society. For example, when applying to schools or for a job, or when taking standardized tests, Americans are sometimes asked to check boxes corresponding to [[Race (classification of human beings)|race]] or [[ethnicity]]. Typically, about five race choices are given, with the instruction to "check only one." While some surveys offer an "other" box, this choice groups together individuals of many different multiracial types (ex: European Americans/African-Americans are grouped with Asian/Native American Indians).
In 2000, Cindy Rodriguez reported on reactions to the new census:<ref>{{Cite news |last=Rodriguez |first=Cindy |date=December 8, 2000 |title=Civil rights groups wary of Census data on race |work=[[The Boston Globe]] |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/442438657/ |access-date=April 17, 2022}}</ref>{{blockquote|To many mainline civil rights groups, the new census is part of a multiracial nightmare. After decades of framing racial issues in stark black and white terms, they fear that the multiracial movement will break down longstanding alliances, weakening people of color by splintering them into new subgroups.}}{{Citation needed span|text=Some multiracial individuals feel marginalized by U.S. society. For example, when applying to schools or for a job or when taking standardized tests, Americans are sometimes asked to check boxes corresponding to race or ethnicity. Typically, about five race choices are given, with the instruction to "check only one." While some surveys offer an "other" box, this choice groups together individuals of many different multiracial types (ex: European Americans/African-Americans are grouped with Asian/Native American Indians).|date=April 2022}}


The 2000 U.S. Census in the write-in response category had a code listing which standardizes the placement of various write-in responses for automatic placement within the framework of the U.S. Census's enumerated races. Whereas most responses can be distinguished as falling into one of the five enumerated races, there remains some write-in responses which fall into the "''Mixture''" heading which cannot be racially categorized. These include "Bi Racial, Combination, Everything, Many, Mixed, Multi National, Multiple, Several and Various".<ref name="Umich">{{cite web|url=http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/cicdoc/cen90app/ancestry.htm|title=Census 1990: Ancestry Codes|publisher=University of Michigan|accessdate=2008-07-18 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080502183239/http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/cicdoc/cen90app/ancestry.htm |archivedate = 2008-05-02}}</ref>
The 2000 U.S. Census in the write-in response category had a code listing which standardizes the placement of various write-in responses for automatic placement within the framework of the U.S. Census's enumerated races. Whereas most responses can be distinguished as falling into one of the five enumerated races, there remains some write-in responses which fall into the "''Mixture''" heading which cannot be racially categorized. These include "Bi Racial, Combination, Everything, Many, Mixed, Multi National, Multiple, Several and Various".<ref name="Umich">{{cite web|url=http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/cicdoc/cen90app/ancestry.htm|title=Census 1990: Ancestry Codes|publisher=University of Michigan|access-date=July 18, 2008 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080502183239/http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/cicdoc/cen90app/ancestry.htm |archive-date = May 2, 2008}}</ref>


In 1997, Greg Mayeda, a member of the Board of Directors person for the [[Hapa]] Issues Forum, attended a meeting regarding the new racial classifications for the 2000 U.S. Census. He was arguing against a multiracial category and for multiracial people being counted as all of their races. He argued that a
In 1997, Greg Mayeda, a member of the board of directors person for the [[Hapa]] Issues Forum, attended a meeting regarding the new racial classifications for the 2000 U.S. Census. He was arguing against a multiracial category and for multiracial people being counted as all of their races. He argued that a
<blockquote>"separate Multiracial Box does not allow a person who identifies as mixed race the opportunity to be counted accurately. After all, we are not just mixed race. We are representatives of all racial groups and should be counted as such. A stand alone Multiracial Box reveals very little about the person's background checking it."<ref name="Tate">{{cite web|url=http://multiracial.com/site/content/view/822/2|title=Multiracial Group Views Change to Census as a Victory |last=Tate|first=Eric|date=1997-07-08|publisher=The Multiracial Activist|accessdate=2008-07-18}}</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>separate Multiracial Box does not allow a person who identifies as mixed race the opportunity to be counted accurately. After all, we are not just mixed race. We are representatives of all racial groups and should be counted as such. A stand alone Multiracial Box reveals very little about the person's background checking it.<ref name="Tate">{{cite web|url=http://multiracial.com/index.php/1997/07/08/multiracial-group-views-change-to-census-as-a-victory/|title=Multiracial Group Views Change to Census as a Victory |last=Tate|first=Eric|date=1997-07-08|publisher=The Multiracial Activist|access-date=2008-07-18}}</ref></blockquote>


[[File:US Census Two or More Races.png|thumb|upright=1.5|US Census reporting of Two or Mixed Races 2010 – 2017]]
According to James P. Allen and Eugene Turner from [[California State University]], Northridge, who analyzed the 2000 Census, most multiracial people identified as part white. In addition, the breakdown is as follows:
* white/Native American and Alaskan Native, at 7,015,017,
* white/black at 737,492,
* white/Asian at 727,197, and
* white/Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander at 125,628.<ref name="csupomona.edu">http://www.csupomona.edu/~mreibel/2000_Census_Files/Allen-Turner.doc</ref>


According to James P. Allen and Eugene Turner from [[California State University]], Northridge, who analyzed the 2000 Census, most multiracial people identified as part white. In addition, the breakdown is as follows:
In 2010, 1.6 million Americans checked both "black" and "white" on their census forms, a figure 134 percent higher than the number a decade earlier.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1953/multi-race-2010-census-obama|title=Multi-Race and the 2010 Census|accessdate=2011-04-26 |last=Cohn|first=D'Vera }}</ref> The number of interracial marriages and relationships, and transracial and international adoptions has increased the proportion of multiracial families.<ref>[http://www.aacap.org/cs/root/facts_for_families/multiracial_children Multiracial Children]</ref> In addition, more individuals may be identifying multiple ancestries, as the concept is more widely accepted.
* white/Native American and Alaskan Native, at 7,015,017,
* white/black at 737,492,
* white/Asian at 727,197, and
* white/Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander at 125,628.<ref name="csupomona.edu">{{cite web|url=http://www.csupomona.edu/~mreibel/2000_Census_Files/Allen-Turner.doc |title=Archived copy |access-date=November 9, 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081002234040/http://www.csupomona.edu/~mreibel/2000_Census_Files/Allen-Turner.doc |archive-date=October 2, 2008 }}</ref>


In 2010, 1.6&nbsp;million Americans checked both "black" and "white" on their census forms, a figure 134% higher than the number a decade earlier.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1953/multi-race-2010-census-obama|title=Multi-Race and the 2010 Census|access-date=April 26, 2011 |last=Cohn|first=D'Vera|date=April 6, 2011}}</ref> The number of interracial marriages and relationships, and transracial and international adoptions has increased the proportion of multiracial families.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aacap.org/cs/root/facts_for_families/multiracial_children|title=Multiracial Children|website=aacap.org|access-date=October 22, 2017}}</ref> In addition, more individuals may be identifying multiple ancestries, as the concept is more widely accepted.
==Identity==
{{Over-quotation|section|date=July 2008}}
Given the variety of the familial and general social environments in which multiracial children are raised, along with the diversity of their appearance and heritage, generalizations about multiracial children's challenges or opportunities are not very useful.


===Multi-racial identity===
==Multiracial American identity==
{{Further|Biracial and multiracial identity development|Multiracialism}}
The [[social identity]] of children and of their parents in the same multiracial family may vary or be the same.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.intermix.org.uk/word_up/word_up_07_thandie.asp|title=Thandie Newton - Actress|work=Mixed-Race Celebrities|publisher=Intermix|accessdate=2008-07-14}}</ref> Some multiracial children feel pressure from various sources to "choose" or to identify as a single racial identity. Others may feel pressure not to abandon one or more of their ethnicities, particularly if identified with culturally.


===Political history===
Some multiracial individuals attempt to claim a new category. For instance, the athlete [[Tiger Woods]] has said that he is not only African American but "Cablinasian," as he is of Caucasian, African American, Native American, and Asian descent.<ref name=KevinR>{{cite web |url=http://multiracial.com/site/content/view/382/27/ |title=Multiracialism: The Final Piece of the Puzzle |accessdate=2008-07-14 |first=Kevin R.|last=Johnson |date=August 2000 |work=How Did You Get to Be Mexican, A White/Brown Man's Search for Identity }}</ref>
Despite a long history of miscegenation within the U.S. political territory and American continental landscape, advocacy for a unique social race classification to recognize direct, or recent, multiracial parentage did not begin until the 1970s. After the [[Civil Rights Era]] and rapid integration of African-Americans into predominately European-American institutions and residential communities, it became more socially acceptable for White-identified women to date, marry and procreate children fathered by non-White men. This trend evolved a political push that offspring of interracial unions fully inherit the social race classifications of both parents, regardless of the racial classification of the maternal parent. This advocacy countered what had been practiced in the United States since the early 1800s where a newborn's racial classification defaulted to that of their mother, which was by a variety of classifications differing from state to state over the past two centuries. In some states 3/4ths African ancestry determined African identity, in some it was more qualified, or less. The hypodescent or one-drop rule, meaning one African ancestor identified as black was adopted by Virginia in 1924. This one-drop rule was not adopted as law by South Carolina, Louisiana and other states where Creole were or had been slaveowners. White supremacist in effect practicing the one-drop rule during [[chattel slavery]], the rule delegated the racial classification of offspring produced by White male slave masters and female slaves to be slaves, failing to acknowledge the male parentage. Similarly laws were passed punishing free people of mixed heritage, the same as free black men and women, denying their basic rights. Voting, for example, which free blacks could and did do under French rule, were denied after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 within a few years time. About ten percent of the slave population, according to observers, looked to be white, but had known African ancestors. After the end of slavery most of these people disappeared into the white population simply by moving. Walter White, President of the NAACP in 1920 reported that passing for white from 1880 to 1920 involved about 400,000 descendents of slaves. See Helen Catterall, editor, Judicial Cases Concerning American Slavery and the Negro, 5 Volumes, 1935 and A Man Called White, autobiography by Walter White, first President of NAACP.


===Contemporary interracial marriage===
Some children grow up without race being a significant issue in their lives.
{{Further|Interracial marriage in the United States|Loving v. Virginia}}
{{quote|[B]eing multiracial can still be problematic. Most constructions of race in America revolve around a peculiar institution known as the 'one-drop rule' ... The one-drop conceit shapes both racism—creating an arbitrary 'caste'—and the collective response against it. To identify as multiracial is to challenge this logic, and consequently, to fall outside both camps.<ref name="Leland">{{cite news|url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/107055/output/print|title=In Living Colors|last=Leland|first=John|authorlink=John Leland (journalist) | coauthors=Beals, Gregory|date=2008-02-01|publisher=Newsweek|accessdate=2008-07-18}}</ref>}}


In 2009, Keith Bardwell, a [[justice of the peace]] in [[Robert, Louisiana]], refused to officiate a wedding for an interracial couple and was summarily sued in federal court. See [[refusal of interracial marriage in Louisiana]].
{{quote|[M]any monoracials do view a multiracial identity as a choice that denies loyalty to the oppressed racial group. We can see this issue enacted currently over the debate of the U.S. census to include a multiracial category— some oppressed monoracial groups believe this category would decrease their numbers and 'benefits.'<ref name=Beverly />}}


About 15% of all new marriages in the United States in 2010 were between spouses of a different race or ethnicity from one another, more than double the share in 1980 (6.7%).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2012/02/16/the-rise-of-intermarriage/|title=The Rise of Intermarriage|date=February 16, 2012|work=Pew Research Center's Social & Demographic Trends Project|access-date=March 17, 2015}}</ref>
{{quote|Many students who called themselves 'half-Asian/Black/etc.' came to college in search of cultural knowledge but found themselves unwelcome in groups of peers that were 'whole' ethnicities.' (Renn, 1998) She found that as a result of this exclusion, many multiracial students expressed the need to create and maintain a self-identified multiracial community on campus. Multiracial people may identify more with each other, because "they share the experience of navigating campus life as multiracial people," (Renn, 1998) than with their component ethnic groups. Multiracial students of different ancestries have their own experiences in common. <ref name="Chris">{{cite web|url=http://www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/hapa/paper.html|title=Recognizing the Legitimacy of Multiracial Individuals Through Hapa Issues Forum and the UCLA Hapa Club|last=Thiphavong|first=Chris|publisher=UCLA Hapa Club|accessdate=2008-07-26}} {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref>}}
<center><gallery>
File:KeanuReevesLakehouse.jpg|[[Keanu Reeves]] has an [[English people|English]] mother and a father of [[English American|English]], [[Irish American|Irish]], [[Portuguese American|Portuguese]], [[Native Hawaiians|Hawaiian]], and [[Chinese American|Chinese]] descent.<ref>{{cite web|accessdate=May 10, 2008|url=http://www.filmreference.com/film/25/Keanu-Reeves.html|title=Keanu Reeves Film Reference biography|publisher=Film Reference}}</ref><ref name=reulu>{{Cite news|last=Hoover|first=Will|title=Rooted in Kuli'ou'ou Valley|publisher=Honolulu Advertiser|date=August 18, 2002|url=http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2002/Aug/18/ln/ln07a.html|accessdate=December 8, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newenglandancestors.org/research/services/articles_gbr77.asp|title=NEHGS – Articles|publisher=Newenglandancestors.org |accessdate=May 5, 2010}}</ref>
File:Charles Mingus 1976.jpg|[[Charles Mingus]] was born to a mother of Chinese and English descent and a father of African-American and Swedish descent.<ref>''Myself When I am Real: The Life and Music of Charles Mingus,'' Gene Santoro (Oxford University Press, 1994) ISBN 0-19-509733-5</ref><ref name="autogenerated1991">Mingus, Charles: ''Beneath the Underdog: His Life as Composed by Mingus''. New York, NY: Vintage, 1991.</ref>
File:Laura Richardson, official portrait, 111th Congress.jpg|[[Laura Richardson]] has a white mother and a black father.<ref>Mitchell, John L. "Racial issues take a back seat in 37th, 'Multiracial support has Laura Richardson poised to represent a largely Latino district. Her take: `We are a new America, very diverse,'" ''[[Los Angeles Times]]''. July 3, 2007. Accessed July 16, 2007.</ref>
File:Hansen Clarke, Official Portrait, 112th Congress.jpg|[[Hansen Clarke]] has an African-American mother and [[Bangladesh]]i father.<ref>[http://thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=16936 :The Daily Star: Internet Edition]</ref>
File:NellaLarsen1928.jpg|[[Nella Larsen]] had a Danish mother and [[Danish West Indies|black Danish West Indian]] father.<ref name="Pinckney">Pinckney, Darryl. "Shadows"] (review of ''In Search of Nella Larsen: A Biography of the Color Line'', by George Hutchinson), ''Nation'' 283, no. 3 (July 17, 2006), pp. 26-28</ref>
File:Drake Bluesfest.jpg|[[Drake (entertainer)|Aubrey Graham]] has an [[African-American]] father and a [[History of the Jews in Canada|Jewish Canadian]] mother.<ref name="bea1">{{cite news|last=Barshad|first=Amos |title=Drake: The Heeb Interview|work=Heeb|date=June 2010|url=http://www.heebmagazine.com/the-heeb-interview-with-drake-the-worlds-first-black-jewish-hip-hop-star/|accessdate=June 7, 2010}}</ref><ref name=hiphopcanada>{{cite web|url=http://www.hiphopcanada.com/_site/entertainment/interviews/ent_int314.php |title=Interview with Drake – July 12th 2006 |publisher=HipHopCanada.com |accessdate=February 21, 2011}}</ref><ref name="Barrable1">{{cite journal | last =Jones| first=Jen| title =School's In for Degrassi| journal=JVibe| publisher=Jewish Family & Life | month=December |year=2006 | url =http://www.jvibe.com/Pop_culture/Degrassi.php| id =ISSN| author=link =|accessdate =December 15, 2006 }}</ref>
File:Rob_Schneider,_USO_tour,_Nov_16_2001.jpg|[[Rob Schneider]] has a European-[[Filipino people|Filipino]] mother and white father.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.filmreference.com/film/92/Rob-Schneider.html|title=Rob Schneider Biography (1963–2008)|publisher=filmreference.com|accessdate=September 18, 2007}}</ref><ref name="ref0992">{{cite news|last=Shister|first=Gail|coauthors=|title=SCHNEIDER GETS NO TIME OFF FOR GOOD BEHAVIOR|pages=|publisher=Chicago Tribune|date=August 5, 1996|url=http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/17412558.html?dids=17412558:17412558&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Aug+05%2C+1996&author=Gail+Shister%2C+Knight-Ridder%2FTribune.&pub=Chicago+Tribune+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=SCHNEIDER+GETS+NO+TIME+OFF+FOR+GOOD+BEHAVIOR&pqatl=google|accessdate=October 11, 2009}}</ref><ref>http://www.interfaithfamily.com/site/apps/nl/content2.asp?c=ekLSK5MLIrG&b=297403&ct=1490277</ref><ref name="ref099">{{cite news|last=Gray Streeter|first=Leslie|coauthors=|title=HOW ROB SCHNEIDER BECAME THE HOT CHICK|pages=|publisher=Palm Beach Post|date=December 11, 2002|url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=PBPB&p_theme=pbpb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0F8203ABA58EFD21&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|accessdate=October 11, 2009}}</ref>
File:Lenny Kravitz 2011.jpg|[[Lenny Kravitz]] has a [[Jewish American]] father and an [[Afro-Bahamian]] mother.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article3245845.ece | work=The Times | location=London | title=The face | first=Sophie | last=Heawood | date=January 25, 2008 | accessdate=May 7, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Marlow Stern |url=http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/08/29/lenny-kravitz-s-black-white-album-funk-soul-r-b-with-jay-z.html |title=Lenny Kravitz’s ‘Black & White’ Album: Funk, Soul & R&B, With Jay-Z |publisher=The Daily Beast |date=2011-08-29 |accessdate=2012-03-31}}</ref>
</gallery></center>


===Multiracial families and identity issues===
===African Americans===
Given the variety of the familial and general social environments in which multiracial children are raised, along with the diversity of their appearance and heritage, generalizations about multiracial children's challenges or opportunities are not very useful. A 1989 article written by Charlotte Nitary revealed that parents of mixed raced children often struggled between teaching their children to identify as only the race of their non-white parent, not identifying with social race at all, or identifying with the racial identities of both parents.<ref name="Nitardy2">{{quote="Wardle (1989) says that today, parents assume one of three positions as to the identity of their interracial children. Some insist that their child is 'human above all else' and that race or ethnicity is irrelevant, while others choose to raise their children with the identity of the parent of color. Another growing group of parents is insisting that the child have the ethnic, racial, cultural and genetic heritage of both parents."}}</ref>
{{See also|Atlantic Creole|Black Indians|Black Hispanic and Latino Americans|Black Irish (southern United States)|Black Seminoles|Brass Ankles|Cherokee freedmen}}
{{See also|Choctaw Freedmen|Chestnut Ridge people|Free people of color|Hypodescent|Louisiana Creole people|Melungeon|Mulatto|Redbone (ethnicity)|We-Sorts}}


The [[social identity]] of children and of their parents in the same multiracial family may vary or be the same.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.intermix.org.uk/word_up/word_up_07_thandie.asp|title=Thandie Newton – Actress|work=Mixed-Race Celebrities|publisher=Intermix|access-date=July 14, 2008}}</ref> Some multiracial children feel pressure from various sources to "choose" or to identify as a single racial identity. Others may feel pressure not to abandon one or more of their ethnicities, particularly if identified with culturally.
Americans with [[Sub-Saharan Africa]]n ancestry for historical reasons: [[slavery]], ''[[partus sequitur ventrem]]'', [[one-eighth law]], the [[one-drop rule]] of 20th-century legislation, have frequently been classified as black (historically) or [[African American]], even if they have significant [[European American]] or [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] ancestry. As slavery became a racial caste, those who were enslaved and others of any African ancestry were classified by what is termed "[[hypodescent]]" according to the lower status ethnic group. Many of majority European ancestry and appearance "married white" and assimilated into white society for its social and economic advantages, such as generations of families identified as [[Melungeons]], now generally classified as white but demonstrated genetically to be of European and sub-Saharan African ancestry.


Some children grow up without race being a significant issue in their lives because they identify against the one-drop-rule construct.
The rise of the [[Civil Rights Movement]] and [[Black Power]] put pressure on multiracial people in a different way - the movements wanted to claim all people of any African descent both because of historical oppression and in order to have more political power. It has been a reverse kind of one-drop rule.
<ref name="Leland">{{cite magazine|url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/107055/output/print|title=In Living Colors|last=Leland|first=John|author-link=John Leland (journalist) |author2=Beals, Gregory|date=February 1, 2008|magazine=Newsweek|access-date=2008-07-18|quote="Being multiracial can still be problematic. Most constructions of race in America revolve around a peculiar institution known as the 'one-drop rule' ... The one-drop conceit shapes both racism—creating an arbitrary 'caste'—and the collective response against it. To identify as multiracial is to challenge this logic, and consequently, to fall outside both camps."}}</ref> This approach to addressing plural racial heritage is something U.S. society has slowly become socialized into as the general consensus among monoracially identified individuals is plural racial identity is a choice and presents disingenuous motives against the more oppressed inherited racial identity.<ref name="Beverly1">{{blockquote|"Many monoracials do view a multiracial identity as a choice that denies loyalty to the oppressed racial group. We can see this issue enacted currently over the debate of the U.S. census to include a multiracial category— some oppressed monoracial groups believe this category would decrease their numbers and 'benefits."}}</ref> By the 1990s, as more multiracial identified students attended colleges and university, many were met with alienation from culturally and racially homogenous groups on campus. This common national trend saw the launch of many multi-racial campus organizations across the country. By the 2000s, these efforts for self-identification soon reached beyond educational institutions and into mainstream society.<ref name="Chris">{{cite web|url=http://www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/hapa/paper.html|title=Recognizing the Legitimacy of Multiracial Individuals Through Hapa Issues Forum and the UCLA Hapa Club|last=Thiphavong|first=Chris|publisher=UCLA Hapa Club|access-date=2008-07-26|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060905111842/http://www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/hapa/paper.html|archive-date=September 5, 2006|quote="Many students who called themselves 'half black/Asian/etc.' came to college in search of cultural knowledge but found themselves unwelcome in groups of peers that were 'whole' ethnicities.' (Renn, 1998) She found that as a result of this exclusion, many multiracial students expressed the need to create and maintain a self-identified multiracial community on campus. Multiracial people may identify more with each other, because "they share the experience of navigating campus life as multiracial people," (Renn, 1998) than with their component ethnic groups. Multiracial students of different ancestries have their own experiences in common."}}</ref>


In her book ''Love's Revolution: Interracial Marriage'', Maria P. P. Root suggests that when interracial parents divorce, their mixed-race children become threatening in circumstances where the custodial parent has remarried into a union where an emphasis is placed on racial identity.<ref name="Root">{{cite book|last=Root|first=Maria P. P.|title=Love's Revolution: Interracial Marriage|publisher=Temple University Press|page=138|isbn=978-1-56639-826-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-im2X0hbpv8C&pg=PA138|access-date=2018-06-20|year=2001|quote=Women with children, especially biracial children, have fewer chances for remarriage than childless women. And because the children of divorce tend to remain with mothers, becoming incorporated into new families when their mothers remarry, interracial children are more threatening markers of race and racial authenticity for families in which race matters.}}</ref>
Sometimes people of mixed African-American and Native American descent report having had elder family members withholding pertinent genealogical information.<ref name="lin">{{cite news |url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1546/is_n4_v11/ai_18953815|title=The Indian connection|author=Mary A. Dempsey|accessdate=2008-09-19 |year=1996 |publisher= American Visions}} {{Dead link|date=September 2010|bot=RjwilmsiBot}}</ref> Tracing the genealogy of African Americans can be a very difficult process, as censuses did not identify slaves by name before the American Civil War, meaning that most African Americans did not appear by name in those records. In addition, many white fathers who used slave women sexually, even those in long-term relationships like [[Thomas Jefferson]]'s with [[Sally Hemings]], did not acknowledge their mixed-race slave children in records, so paternity was lost.


Some multiracial individuals attempt to claim a new category. For instance, the athlete [[Tiger Woods]] has said that he is not only African-American but "Cablinasian," as he is of Caucasian, African-American, Native American and Asian descent.<ref name=KevinR>{{cite web|url=http://multiracial.com/index.php/2000/08/01/multiracialism-the-final-piece-of-the-puzzle/ |title=Multiracialism: The Final Piece of the Puzzle|access-date=July 14, 2008|first=Kevin R.|last=Johnson|date=August 2000|work=How Did You Get to Be Mexican, A White/Brown Man's Search for Identity}}</ref>
Colonial records of French and Spanish slave ships and sales, and plantation records in all the former colonies, often have much more information about slaves, from which researchers are reconstructing slave family histories. Genealogists have begun to find plantation records, court records, land deeds and other sources to trace African-American families and individuals before 1870. As slaves were generally forbidden to learn to read and write, black families passed along oral histories, which have had great persistence. Similarly, Native Americans did not generally learn to read and write English, although some did in the nineteenth century. <ref name="lin"/> Until 1930, census enumerators used the terms [[free people of color]] and mulatto to classify people of apparent mixed race. When those terms were dropped, as a result of the lobbying by the Southern Congressional bloc, the Census Bureau used only the binary classifications of black or white, as was typical in segregated southern states.


<gallery mode="packed" heights="180">
In the 1980s, parents of mixed-race children began to organize and lobby for the addition of a more inclusive term of racial designation that would reflect the heritage of their children. When the U.S. government proposed the addition of the category of "bi-racial" or "multiracial" in 1988, the response from the public was mostly negative. Some African-American organizations, and African-American political leaders, such as Congresswoman [[Diane Watson]] and Congressman [[Augustus Hawkins]], were particularly vocal in their rejection of the category, as they feared the loss of political and economic power if African Americans reduced their numbers by self identification.<ref name="sad">Daniel (2002) p. 128f.</ref>
File:Auli'i Cravalho December 2016.jpg|[[Auliʻi Cravalho]] is of [[Native Hawaiians|Hawaiian]], [[Irish Americans|Irish]], [[Puerto Ricans|Puerto Rican]], [[Portuguese Americans|Portuguese]] and [[Chinese Americans|Chinese]] descent.<ref>{{cite magazine|last1=Wallace|first1=Don|title="Moana" Star Auli'i Cravalho is Not Your Average Disney Princess|url=http://www.honolulumagazine.com/Honolulu-Magazine/November-2016/Moanas-Aulii-Cravalho-is-Not-Your-Average-Disney-Princess/|magazine=Honolulu Magazine|access-date=December 17, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite tweet|user=auliicravalho|number=822964481407881216|date=January 21, 2017|title=Yes indeed! I've got the luck of the Irish}}</ref><ref name="Wang">{{cite news|last1=Wang|first1=Frances Kai-Hwa|author-link=Frances Kai-Hwa Wang|title=The Next Disney Princess is Native Hawaiian AuliCravalho |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/next-disney-princess-native-hawaiian-aulii-cravalho-n440131|access-date=February 27, 2017|work=NBC News|publisher=NBCUniversal|date=October 7, 2015|location=New York}}</ref>
File:Charles Mingus 1976 cropped.jpg|[[Charles Mingus]] was born to a mother of English and Chinese descent and a father of African-American and Swedish descent.<ref>''Myself When I am Real: The Life and Music of Charles Mingus,'' Gene Santoro (Oxford University Press, 1994) {{ISBN|0-19-509733-5}}</ref><ref name="autogenerated1991">Mingus, Charles: ''[[Beneath the Underdog|Beneath the Underdog: His Life as Composed by Mingus]]''. New York, NY: Vintage, 1991.</ref>
File:President Barack Obama.jpg|[[Barack Obama]]'s [[Ann Dunham|mother]] was of mostly English and Irish ancestry and his [[Barack Obama Sr.|father]] was from Kenya.
File:Jennifer Beals at GLAAD Awards cropped.jpg|[[Jennifer Beals]] was born to an Irish-American mother and an African-American father.<ref name="afterellen1">{{cite web|url=http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/People/jenniferbeals.html|title=Jennifer Beals Tackles Issues of Race, Sexuality on The L Word|publisher=[[AfterEllen]]|access-date=February 27, 2011|author=Sarah Warn|date=December 2003|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110826082854/http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/People/jenniferbeals.html|archive-date=August 26, 2011}}</ref>
File:Kamala Harris Vice Presidential Portrait.jpg|[[Kamala Harris]] was born in [[Oakland, California]] to a [[Tamils|Tamil]] Indian mother<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.desiclub.com/community/culture/culture_article.cfm?id=467|title=The New Face of Politics…An Interview with Kamala Harris|publisher=DesiClub|access-date=February 2, 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101211152014/http://www.desiclub.com/community/culture/culture_article.cfm?id=467|archive-date=December 11, 2010}}</ref> and an [[Afro-Jamaicans|Afro-Jamaican]] father.<ref>{{cite news|title=PM Golding congratulates Kamala Harris-daughter of Jamaican – on appointment as California's First Woman Attorney General|publisher=Jamaican Information Service|date=December 2, 2010|url=http://www.jis.gov.jm/news/opm-news/26176-officePM-pm-golding-congratulates-kamala-harris-daughter-of-jamaican-on-appoint|access-date=February 2, 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120115023007/http://www.jis.gov.jm/news/opm-news/26176-officePM-pm-golding-congratulates-kamala-harris-daughter-of-jamaican-on-appoint|archive-date=January 15, 2012}}</ref>
File:Tiger Woods 2007.jpg|[[Tiger Woods]] was born to an African American father with partial European and Native American ancestry and a [[Thai people|Thai]] mother with partial Chinese and Dutch ancestry.
File:Rebecca Hall Berlinale 2010 cropped.jpg|[[Rebecca Hall]] was born to a [[Maria Ewing|mother]] of English, German, Dutch and African-American extraction and an English [[Peter Hall (director)|father]].<ref name="cbl">{{Cite news|last=Hattenstone|first=Simon|title=Who, me? Why everyone is talking about Rebecca Hall|work=The Guardian|date=June 12, 2010|url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2010/jun/12/rebecca-hall-interview|access-date=September 27, 2010|location=London}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Isenberg|first=Barbara|title=MUSIC No-Risk Opera? Not Even Close Maria Ewing, one of the most celebrated sopranos in opera, leaps again into the role of Tosca, keeping alive her streak of acclaimed performances while remaining true to herself|work=Los Angeles Times|date=November 8, 1992|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1992-11-08-ca-1-story.html|access-date=May 8, 2011}}</ref><ref name="ref2">{{cite news|last=McLellan|first=Joseph|title=Article: Extra-Sensuous Perception;Soprano Maria Ewing, a Steamy 'Salome'|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=November 15, 1990|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1158782.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121022180005/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1158782.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 22, 2012|access-date=February 6, 2010}}</ref><ref name="ref3">{{cite news|last=Marsh|first=Robert C.|title=Growth of Maria Ewing continues with 'Salome' // Role of princess proves crowning achievement|newspaper=Chicago Sun-Times|date=December 18, 1988|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3919649.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121022180018/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3919649.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 22, 2012|access-date=February 6, 2010}}</ref><ref name="fdr1">Stated on ''Finding Your Roots'', January 4, 2022</ref>
</gallery>


==Native American identity==
Since the 1990s and 2000s, the terms mixed-race, biracial, and multiracial have been used more frequently in society. It is still most common in the United States (unlike some other countries with a history of slavery) for people with visible African features to identify as or be classified solely as blacks or African Americans, regardless of other also obvious ancestry.
{{See also|Boricua|Chicano|Cherokee|Choctaw|Genetic history of indigenous peoples of the Americas|Haliwa-Saponi|Lumbee|Houma people}}
In the 2010 Census, nearly 3 million people indicated that their race was Native American (including Alaska Native).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?src=CF|title=American FactFinder – Results|publisher=United States Census Bureau|website=factfinder.census.gov|access-date=October 22, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721034521/http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=DEC_10_PL_GCTPL2.ST13&prodType=table|archive-date=July 21, 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> Of these, more than 27% specifically indicated "Cherokee" as their [[ethnic origin]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nerve.com/life/why-do-so-many-people-claim-they-have-cherokee-in-their-blood|title=Why Do So Many People Claim They Have Cherokee In Their Blood? – Nerve|website=www.nerve.com|access-date=October 22, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/history/2015/10/cherokee_blood_why_do_so_many_americans_believe_they_have_cherokee_ancestry.html|title=Why Do So Many Americans Think They Have Cherokee Blood?|author1-link=Gregory D. Smithers|first=Gregory D.|last=Smithers|date=October 1, 2015|access-date=October 22, 2017|journal=Slate}}</ref> Many of the [[First Families of Virginia#Pocahontas|First Families of Virginia claim descent from Pocahontas]] or some other "[[Indian princess]]". This phenomenon has been dubbed the "Cherokee Syndrome".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailyyonder.com/cherokee-syndrome/2011/02/10/3170/|title=The Cherokee Syndrome – Daily Yonder|website=www.dailyyonder.com|access-date=October 22, 2017|date=February 10, 2011}}</ref> Across the US, numerous individuals cultivate an [[Ethnic option|opportunistic ethnic identity]] as Native American, sometimes through [[Cherokee heritage groups]] or [[Indian Wedding Blessing]]s.<ref name="auto">{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/21/magazine/the-newest-indians.html|title=The Newest Indians|first=Jack|last=Hitt|date=August 21, 2005|access-date=October 22, 2017|via=www.nytimes.com|newspaper=The New York Times}}</ref>


Levels of [[Native American ancestry]] (distinct from [[Native American identity]]) differ. The genomes of self-reported African Americans averaged to 0.8% Native American ancestry, those of [[European American]]s averaged to 0.18%, and those of [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Latino]]s averaged to 18.0%.<ref name="The Genetic">{{Cite journal |last1=Bryc |first1=Katarzyna |last2=Durand |first2=Eric Y. |last3=Macpherson |first3=J. Michael |last4=Reich |first4=David |last5=Mountain |first5=Joanna L. |date=January 2015 |title=The Genetic Ancestry of African Americans, Latinos, and European Americans across the United States |journal=The American Journal of Human Genetics |volume=96 |issue=1 |pages=37–53 |doi=10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.11.010 |pmid=25529636 |pmc=4289685 |issn=0002-9297 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Carl Zimmer |title=White? Black? A Murky Distinction Grows Still Murkier |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/25/science/23andme-genetic-ethnicity-study.html |url-access=subscription |access-date=October 21, 2018 |work=The New York Times |date=December 24, 2014 |quote=The researchers found that European-Americans had genomes that were on average 98.6 percent European, .19 percent African, and .18 Native American. |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181021013125/https://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/25/science/23andme-genetic-ethnicity-study.html |archive-date= October 21, 2018 }}</ref>
President [[Barack Obama]] is of [[East Africa]]n and [[European American]] ancestry; he identifies as African American,<ref>writing in ''[[Dreams from My Father]]'' that he had resolved to
<blockquote>"never emulate white men and brown men whose fates didn't speak to my own. It was into my father’s image, the black man, son of Africa, that I’d packed all the attributes I sought in myself, the attributes of Martin and Malcolm, DuBois and Mandela."</ref></blockquote> A 2007 poll when Obama was a presidential candidate identified his mother as white. Americans differed in their responses as to how they classified him: a majority of White and Hispanics classified him as biracial, but a majority of African Americans classified him as black.<ref>61% of Hispanics and 55% of White Americans classify Obama as biracial when they are told that he has a white mother, while 66% of African Americans consider him black. ({{cite news|url=http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |title=Williams/Zogby Poll: Americans' Attitudes Changing Towards Multiracial Candidates |date=2006-12-22 |accessdate=2007-09-23 |publisher=BBSNews.com |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070403062350/http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |archivedate = 2007-04-03}}) Obama describes himself as "black" or "African American", using both terms interchangeably ({{cite news|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/02/11/60minutes/main2458530.shtml |title=Transcript excerpt: Senator Barack Obama on Sixty Minutes |publisher=CBS News |date=2007-02-11 |accessdate=2008-01-29}})</ref>


Many tribes, especially those in the Eastern United States, are primarily made up of individuals with an unambiguous [[Native American identity]], despite being predominantly of European ancestry.<ref name="auto"/> Point in case, more than 75% of those enrolled in the [[Cherokee Nation]] have less than one-quarter Cherokee blood.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/03/us/03cherokee.html|title=Putting to a Vote the Question 'Who Is Cherokee?'|first=Evelyn|last=Nieves|date=March 3, 2007|access-date=October 22, 2017 |url-access=subscription |newspaper=The New York Times |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180620051204/https://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/03/us/03cherokee.html |archive-date= Jun 20, 2018 }}</ref> Former [[Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation]], [[Bill John Baker]], is 1/32 Cherokee, amounting to about 3%.
A 2003 study found an average of 18.6% (±1.5%) European admixture in a population sample of 416 African Americans from Washington, DC.<ref>Shriver, Mark D. et al. [http://backintyme.com/admixture/shriver01.pdf "Skin pigmentation, biogeographical ancestry and admixture mapping"], ''Human Genetics'' (2003) 112: 387–399.</ref> Studies of other populations in other areas have found differing percentages of ethnicity.


Historically, non-Native governments have forced numerous Native Americans to [[Cultural assimilation of Native Americans|assimilate into colonial and later American society]], e.g. through [[language shift]]s and [[Praying Indians|conversions to Christianity]]. In many cases, this process occurred through [[forced assimilation]] of children sent off to [[American Indian boarding schools|special boarding schools]] far from their families. Those who could [[passing (racial identity)|pass]] for white had the advantage of [[white privilege]].<ref name="auto"/> Today, after generations of [[racial whitening]] through [[hypergamy]], a number of Native Americans may have fair skin like [[White Americans]].
Twenty percent of African Americans have more than 25% European ancestry, reflecting the long history of unions between the groups. The "mostly African" group is substantially African, as 70% of African Americans in this group have less than 15% European ancestry. The 20% of African Americans in the "mostly mixed" group (2.7% of US population) have between 25% and 50% European ancestry.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Collins-Schramm|first=Heather E.|coauthors=Kittles, Rick A.; Operario, Darwin J.; Weber James L.; Criswell, Lindsey A.; Cooper, Richard S.; Seldin, Michael F.|date=December 2002|title=Markers that discriminate Between European and African Ancestry show Limited Variation Within Africa|journal=Human Genetics|publisher=Springer|location=Berlin|volume=111|issue=6|pages=566–9|issn=0340-6717|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12436248|accessdate=2008-07-18|doi=10.1007/s00439-002-0818-z|pmid=12436248}}</ref>
Native Americans are more likely than any other racial group to practice [[Interracial marriage in the United States|racial exogamy]], resulting in an ever-declining proportion of indigenous blood among those who claim a Native American identity.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-14089253|title=Blood affects US Indian identity|first=Paul|last=Adams|date=July 10, 2011|access-date=October 22, 2017|newspaper=BBC News}}</ref> Some tribes [[Tribal disenrollment|disenroll tribal members]] unable to provide proof of Native ancestry, usually through a [[Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood]]. Disenrollment has become a contentious issue in [[Native American reservation politics]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/native-news/what-percentage-indian-do-you-have-to-be-in-order-to-be-a-member-of-a-tribe-or-nation/|title=What Percentage Indian Do You Have to Be in Order to Be a Member of a Tribe or Nation? – Indian Country Media Network|website=indiancountrymedianetwork.com|access-date=October 22, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171021152949/https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/native-news/what-percentage-indian-do-you-have-to-be-in-order-to-be-a-member-of-a-tribe-or-nation/|archive-date=October 21, 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/politics/disappearing-indians-part-ii-the-hypocrisy-of-race-in-deciding-whos-enrolled/|title=Disappearing Indians, Part II: The Hypocrisy of Race In Deciding Who's Enrolled – Indian Country Media Network|website=indiancountrymedianetwork.com|access-date=October 22, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170922094009/https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/politics/disappearing-indians-part-ii-the-hypocrisy-of-race-in-deciding-whos-enrolled/|archive-date=September 22, 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref>
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
File:ChiefBillJohnBakerByPhilKonstantin.jpg|[[Bill John Baker]], who is 3.13% [[Cherokee]],<ref>{{Cite web|title = How much Cherokee is he?: Editor's Note. ''Cherokee Phoenix''|url = http://www.cherokeephoenix.org/Article/Index/4922|date=June 1, 2011|access-date=August 1, 2011}}</ref> was the [[Principal Chiefs of the Cherokee|Principal Chief]] of the [[Cherokee Nation]] from 2011 to 2019.
File:Billy Bowlegs III 3c25031u.jpg|[[Seminole]] elder [[Billy Bowlegs III]] was also of [[Muscogee]], African-American and Scottish descent through his maternal grandfather [[Osceola]].<ref name=SmithsonianNMAI>{{cite web|last=Bell|display-authors=etal|first=Steve|title=IndiVisible: African-Native American Lives in the Americans – Shared Spirits|url=http://nmai.si.edu/exhibitions/indivisible/shared_spirits.html|work=Billy Bowlegs III (1862–1965) This Seminole Indian elder and historian, said to be a descendant of African American intermarriage with the Seminole, adopted the name of the legendary resistance fighter Billy Bowlegs II (1810–64). The "patchwork" pattern covering his turban expresses the influence of African ovpispisi (bits and pieces)—sewing typical of the Suriname Maroons and Ashanti who married into the tribe.|publisher=Smithsonian Institution: National Museum of the American Indian|access-date=May 7, 2012|archive-date=January 23, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120123115106/http://www.nmai.si.edu/exhibitions/indivisible/shared_spirits.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:Radmilla cody.jpeg|[[Radmilla Cody]] is an enrolled member of the [[Navajo Nation]] and of [[African Americans|African-American]] descent.<ref name="codynet">[http://www.radmillacody.net/bio.html Biography] ramillacody.net. Accessed July 15, 2010.</ref>
File:Charles Curtis-portrait.jpg|[[Charles Curtis]], Vice President of the United States, was a Native American, born to a [[Kaw people|Kaw]], [[Osage Nation|Osage]], a [[Potawatomi]] and [[French Americans|French]] mother and an [[English Americans|English]], [[Scottish Americans|Scots]] and [[Welsh Americans|Welsh]] father.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/charles-curtis/12029|title=Kansapedia: Charles Curtis|publisher=Kansas Historical Society|access-date=January 13, 2012}}</ref>
File:SecretaryDebHaaland.jpg|[[Deb Haaland]] is from the [[Laguna Pueblo]] people and is the first Native American Cabinet Secretary as [[United States Secretary of the Interior|Secretary of Interior]]. Her father is [[Norwegian Americans|Norwegian-American]].<ref name=alb>{{cite web|url=http://obits.abqjournal.com/obits/show/151921|title=Obituaries: Haaland|date=March 4, 2005|access-date=June 22, 2018|work=[[Albuquerque Journal]]}}</ref>
File:Buu Nygren, 2023.jpg|President of the [[Navajo Nation]] [[Buu Nygren]] was born in [[Utah]] to a [[Navajo]] mother and a [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]] father.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-10-31 |title=Buu Nygren explains why he should get Navajo votes ahead of presidential election |url=https://www.kunm.org/local-news/2022-10-31/buu-nygren-explains-why-he-should-get-navajo-votes-ahead-of-presidential-election |access-date=2024-02-14 |website=KUNM |language=en}}</ref>
File:U.S. Representative Mary Peltola, 117th Congress.jpg|[[Mary Peltola]] was born to a [[Yup'ik]] mother and a [[German Americans|German American]] father.<ref>{{Cite web |first=Iris |last=Samuels |date=August 9, 2022 |title=For two candidates, Alaska's U.S. House race is an opportunity to make history |url=https://www.adn.com/politics/2022/08/08/for-two-candidates-alaskas-us-house-race-is-an-opportunity-to-make-history/ |access-date=2024-02-14 |website=Anchorage Daily News |language=en}}</ref>
File:Booboo Stewart in 2017.jpg|[[Booboo Stewart]] was born to a father of [[Blackfoot Confederacy|Blackfoot]], [[Russians|Russian]], and [[Scottish people|Scottish]] ancestry and a mother of [[Koreans|Korean]], [[Chinese people|Chinese]], and [[Japanese people|Japanese]] ancestry.<ref>{{Citation |title=Booboo Stewart {{!}} Asian Pacific American Heritage Month {{!}} Disney Channel | date=May 23, 2017 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KG3x0o3VwcE |access-date=2024-02-14 |language=en}}</ref>
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===Native American lineage and admixture in Black and African-Americans===
The writer Sherrel W. Stewart's assertion that "most" African Americans have significant Native American heritage,<ref name="dstu">{{cite web|url=http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/bawnews/stateof/nativeroots109|title=More Blacks are Exploring the African-American/Native American Connection|author=Sherrel Wheeler Stewart |accessdate=2008-08-06 |year=2008 |publisher=BlackAmericaWeb.com}} {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref> is not supported by genetic researchers who have done extensive population mapping studies. The TV series on African-American ancestry, hosted by the scholar [[Henry Louis Gates, Jr.]], had genetics scholars who discussed in detail the variety of ancestries among African Americans. They noted there is popular belief in a high rate of Native American admixture that is not supported by the data that has been collected. (Reference is coming)
{{See also|Black Indians in the United States|Black Seminoles|Brass Ankles|Cherokee Freedman|Choctaw Freedmen|Louisiana Creole people|Mardi Gras Indians|We-Sorts|Redbone (ethnicity)|hypodescent}}
<gallery mode="packed" heights="180">
File:Redd Foxx 1966.JPG|[[Redd Foxx]]'s mother was half [[Seminole]] and his father was [[African Americans|African-American]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=a7vcX2uNPK4C&pg=PA18|title=Black and Blue|access-date=March 17, 2015|isbn=9781557838520|last1=Starr|first1=Michael Seth|date=September 1, 2011|publisher=Applause Theatre & Cinema }}</ref>
File:Jimi Hendrix 1967.png|[[Jimi Hendrix]] was born to a [[Cherokee]] mother and was part English, African-American, Irish and German.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.blackpast.org/?q=perspectives/blood-entertainers-life-and-times-jimi-hendrixs-paternal-grandparents|title=The Blood of Entertainers: The Life and Times of Jimi Hendrix's Paternal Grandparents - The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed|access-date=March 17, 2015|date=March 11, 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nmai.si.edu/exhibitions/indivisible/being.html|title=Being and Belonging – Indivisble – African-Native American Lives in the Americas|publisher=National Museum of the American Indian|access-date=January 16, 2012|archive-date=January 13, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113091738/http://www.nmai.si.edu/exhibitions/indivisible/being.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/jimihendrixelect00shap|url-access=registration|title = Jimi Hendrix: Electric Gypsy|last1 = Shapiro|first1 = Harry|last2 = Glebbeek|first2 = Caesar|publisher=St. Martin's Press|year = 1995|pages = [https://archive.org/details/jimihendrixelect00shap/page/5 5]–6, 13|isbn=978-0-312-13062-6|access-date=September 30, 2011}}</ref>
File:Edmonia Lewis by Henry Rocher.jpg|[[Edmonia Lewis]] was of [[Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation|Mississauga Ojibwe]], African-American and Haitian descent.<ref name=w12>Wolfe, 12</ref>
File:Claudia-McNeil.jpg|[[Claudia McNeil]] was born to an [[Apache]] mother and an African-American father.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.baltimoresun.com/1993/12/01/claudia-mcneil-stage-screen-actress/|title= Claudia McNeil, stage, screen actress|author= Oliver, Myrna|date= December 1, 1993|work= The Baltimore Sun|access-date= 19 December 2012|archive-date= May 16, 2012|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120516134302/http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1993-12-01/news/1993335082_1_claudia-mcneil-poitier-adoptive-parents|url-status= live}}</ref>
File:Rosaparks.jpg|[[Rosa Parks]] was of [[Cherokee]]-[[Muscogee|Creek]],<ref>Douglas Brinkley, ''Rosa Parks'', Chapter 1, excerpted from the book published by Lipper/Viking (2000), {{ISBN|0-670-89160-6}}. [http://partners.nytimes.com/books/first/b/brinkley-parks.html Chapter excerpted] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171019200239/http://partners.nytimes.com/books/first/b/brinkley-parks.html|date=October 19, 2017 }} on the site of the ''New York Times''. Retrieved July 1, 2008</ref> African-American and [[Scotch-Irish Americans|Scots-Irish]] descent.<ref name=Webb>James Webb, [http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2004/edition_10-03-2004/featured_0 "Why You Need to Know the Scots-Irish"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090704152512/http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2004/edition_10-03-2004/featured_0|date=July 4, 2009 }}, ''[[Parade (magazine)|Parade]]'', October 3, 2004. Retrieved July 1, 2008.</ref>
File:Della Reese 1998.jpg|[[Della Reese]] was born to a mother of Cherokee descent and an African-American father.<ref>{{cite web|title=Della Reese Biography|url=http://www.filmreference.com/film/64/Della-Reese.html|work=filmreference|year=2009|access-date=2009-12-27}}</ref><ref name="nyc">{{cite news|author=Hilary de Vries|title=Della Reese: Earning Her Wings|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1998/06/14/tv/cover-story-della-reese-earning-her-wings.html|work=The New York Times|date=June 14, 1998|access-date=2009-12-27}}</ref><ref name="msn">{{cite web|author=Andrea LeVasseur|title=Della Reese: Biography|url=http://movies.msn.com/celebrities/celebrity-biography/della-reese|work=All Movie Guide|publisher=MSN|year=2009|access-date=2009-12-27|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203114412/http://movies.msn.com/celebrities/celebrity-biography/della-reese/|archive-date=December 3, 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:James Earl Jones (8516667383).jpg|[[James Earl Jones]] has said in interviews that his parents were both of mixed African-American, Irish and Native American ancestry.
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Interracial relations between Native Americans and African-Americans is a part of [[United States History|American history]] that has been neglected.<ref name="lin"/> The earliest record of African and Native American relations in the Americas occurred in April 1502, when the first Africans kidnapped were brought to [[Hispaniola]] to serve as slaves. Some escaped and somewhere inland on Santo Domingo, the first Black Indians were born.<ref name="first">{{cite web|url=http://www.africanamericans.com/BlackIndians.htm|title=Black Indians|author=William Loren Katz|access-date=August 11, 2008|year=2008|publisher=AfricanAmericans.com|archive-date=June 10, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080610211623/http://www.africanamericans.com/BlackIndians.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> In addition, an example of African slaves' escaping from European colonists and being absorbed by Native Americans occurred as far back as 1526. In June of that year, [[Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón]] established a Spanish colony near the mouth of the [[Pee Dee River]] in what is now eastern [[South Carolina]]. The Spanish settlement was named [[San Miguel de Gualdape]]. Among the settlement were 100 enslaved Africans. In 1526, the first African slaves fled the colony and took refuge with local Native Americans.<ref>''Muslims in American History : A Forgotten Legacy'' by Dr. Jerald F. Dirks. {{ISBN|1-59008-044-0}} Page 204.</ref>
Genetic testing of direct male and female lines evaluates only two out of an individual's lines of ancestry.<ref name="true2">{{cite web |url=http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071018145955.htm|title=Genetic Ancestral Testing Cannot Deliver On Its Promise, Study Warns|author=ScienceDaily|accessdate=2008-10-02 |year=2008 |publisher=ScienceDaily}}</ref> For this reason, individuals on the Gates show had fuller DNA testing.


European colonists created treaties with Native American tribes requesting the return of any [[Fugitive slaves in the United States|runaway slaves]]. For example, in 1726, the governor of [[Province of New York|New York]] exacted a promise from the Iroquois to return all runaway slaves who had joined them. This same promise was extracted from the Huron people in 1764, and from the Delaware people in 1765, though there is no record of slaves ever being returned.<ref>Katz WL 1997 p103</ref> Numerous advertisements requested the return of African-Americans who had married Native Americans or who spoke a Native American language. The primary exposure that Native Americans and Africans had to each other came through the institution of slavery.<ref name="msc">{{cite web |url=http://members.aol.com/angelaw859/tri_racials.html|title=Tri-Racials: Black Indians of the Upper South|author=Angela Y. Walton-Raji |access-date=August 20, 2008 |year=2008 |publisher=Design}}</ref> Native Americans learned that Africans had what Native Americans considered 'Great Medicine' in their bodies because Africans were virtually immune to the Old-World diseases that were decimating most native populations.<ref name="nadis">{{cite web|url=http://www.djembe.dk/no/19/08biwapi.html |title=Black indians want a place in history |author=Nomad Winterhawk |access-date=May 29, 2009 |year=1997 |publisher=Djembe Magazine |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090714113317/http://www.djembe.dk/no/19/08biwapi.html |archive-date=July 14, 2009 }}</ref> Because of this, many tribes encouraged marriage between the two groups, to create stronger, healthier children from the unions.<ref name="nadis"/>
The critic Troy Duster, writing in ''[[The Chronicle of Higher Education]]'', thought Gates' series ''[[African American Lives]]'' should have told people more about the limitations of genetic SNP testing. He says that not all ancestry may show up in the tests, especially for those who claim part-[[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] descent.<ref name="true2"/><ref name="hur">{{cite web |url=http://www.geneticsandsociety.org/article.php?id=3908|title=Deep Roots and Tangled Branches|author=Troy Duster|accessdate=2008-10-02 |year=2008 |publisher=Chronicle of Higher Education}}</ref> Other experts disagree.<ref name="sj">{{cite web |url=http://www.ipcb.org/publications/briefing_papers/files/identity.html|title=Genetic Markers Not a Valid Test of Native Identity|author=Brett Lee Shelton, J.D. and Jonathan Marks, Ph.D.
|accessdate=2008-10-02 |year=2008 |publisher=Counsel for Responsible Genetics}}</ref>


For African-Americans, the [[one-drop rule]] was a significant factor in ethnic solidarity. African-Americans generally shared a common cause in society regardless of their multiracial admixture or social/economic stratification. Additionally, African-Americans found it, near, impossible to learn about their Native American heritage as many family elders withheld pertinent genealogical information.<ref name="lin"/> Tracing the genealogy of African-Americans can be a very difficult process, especially for descendants of Native Americans, because African-Americans who were slaves were forbidden to learn to read and write and a majority of Native Americans neither spoke English, nor read or wrote it.<ref name="lin"/>
Population testing is still being done. Some Native American groups that have been sampled may not have shared the pattern of markers being searched for. Geneticists acknowledge that DNA testing cannot yet distinguish among members of differing cultural Native American nations. There is genetic evidence for three major migrations into North America, but not for more recent historic differentiation.<ref name="hur"/> In addition, not all Native Americans have been tested, so scientists do not know for sure that Native Americans have only the genetic markers they have identified.<ref name="true2"/><ref name="hur"/>


===Native American lineage and admixture in White and European-Americans===
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{{See also|Boricua|Chicano|Métis in the United States|hyperdescent|Slavery among Native Americans in the United States}}
File:Whitney Houston Welcome Home Heroes 1 cropped.jpg|[[Whitney Houston]] was part [[African-American]], [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] and [[Dutch people|Dutch]].<ref name=ancestry>{{Cite news| first= Cissy | last= Houston | title= Visionary Project Video Interview (bottom of page) - Cissy Houston: My Family, go to the 1:00 mark | date=September 2, 2009 | url= http://www.visionaryproject.org/houstoncissy/ | accessdate=February 11, 2012 }}</ref>
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File:Beyonce Knowles with necklaces.jpg|[[Beyoncé Knowles]] is part African, Native American, Irish, [[Louisiana Creole people|Louisiana Creole]] and [[Acadians|French-Acadian]]. <ref name="FOX">{{cite news|url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,204978,00.html?sPage=fnc/entertainment/beyonce |title=Beyoncé Knowles' Biography |publisher=[[Fox News Channel|Fox News]] |date=April 15, 2008 |archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/654LsV4gD |archivedate=January 30, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Smolenyak|first=Megan|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/megan-smolenyak-smolenyak/a-peek-into-blue-ivy-cart_b_1200346.html |title=A Peek into Blue Ivy Carter's Past |publisher=[[The Huffington Post]]. [[AOL]] |date=January 12, 2012 |accessdate=January 30, 2012}}</ref>
File:BenNCampbell.jpg|[[Ben Nighthorse Campbell]] was born to an [[Portuguese Americans|Azorean Portuguese]] mother and father of [[Northern Cheyenne]], [[Apache]] and [[Puebloans|Pueblo Indian]] descent.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/1690263/detail.html|title=INS Delays Deporting Honor Student|date=September 27, 2002|access-date=August 1, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606124216/http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/1690263/detail.html|archive-date=June 6, 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:Joe Louis by van Vechten.jpg|[[Joe Louis]] was born to a mother who was half African-American and half-Cherokee and a father of known European and African ancestry.<ref name="Bak">{{cite book |location=New York |url=http://books.google.com/?id=EcnyAHpBNDsC&pg=PT1&dq=%22joe+louis%22+biography |title=Joe Louis: The Great Black Hope |last=Bak |first=Richard |year=1998 |publisher=Perseus Publishing |isbn=978-0-306-80879-1}}</ref>
File:Portrait (Front) of Faunceway Baptiste or Battice (Mixed Blood) 1868.jpg|Faunceway Baptiste was a multi-racial Native American of Choctaw and Euro-American heritage. He was a lieutenant colonel in the Civil War.
File:Redd Foxx 1966.JPG|[[Redd Foxx]]'s mother was half [[Seminole]] and his father was [[African-American]].<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=a7vcX2uNPK4C&pg=PA18&dq=Redd+Foxx+%22draft%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=7u4RT4m3KoHd0QHg1tDGAw&ved=0CEIQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=Redd%20Foxx%20%22draft%22&f=false Black and Blue: The Redd Foxx Story]</ref>
File:Rogers-Will-LOC.jpg|[[Will Rogers]] was born in the [[Cherokee Nation]] to mixed race parents of [[Cherokee]] and English descent.
File:Vanessa Williams homezfoo.jpg|[[Vanessa L. Williams|Vanessa Williams]] is of African American, Welsh, and Native American descent.<ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxB7Sc4rwNs</ref><ref>[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1354054/Vanessa-Williamss-ancestry-revealed-Who-Do-You-Think-You-Are.html www.dailymail.co.uk]</ref>
File:Ruth Gordon 1919.jpg|[[Ruth Gordon]]'s ancestor Parthena was an African mistress of Joseph Pendarvis a member of the notable, Native American descended, [[Cassique#Identified landgraves, landgravines and cassiques|Landgrave family]] of [[South Carolina]].<ref name="vansalee" /><ref name="pendarvis" />
File:Kitt.jpg|[[Eartha Kitt]] was born to a mother of [[Cherokee]] and [[African-American]] descent and a father of German and Dutch ancestry.<ref name=times>{{cite news | author=James Bone | title=Legendary seductress Eartha Kitt — The Original Pussycat Doll | url=http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article3722562.ece |work=[[The Times]] | date=2008-04-11 | accessdate=2008-07-31 | location=London}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://indiancountrynews.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5814&Itemid=57 |title=News From Indian Country - Eartha Kitt, Chanteuse, Cherokee, and a seducer of audiences, Walked On at 81 |publisher=Indiancountrynews.net |date=1927-01-17 |accessdate=2010-07-11}}</ref>
File:Maria Tallchief 1961.png|[[Maria Tallchief]] was a member of the [[Osage Nation]] and of [[Ulster Scots people|Ulster-Scots]] descent.<ref name=NYT_obit>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/13/arts/dance/maria-tallchief-brilliant-ballerina-dies-at-88.html|title=Maria Tallchief, a Dazzling Ballerina and Muse for Balanchine, Dies at 88|last=Anderson|first=Jack|date=April 12, 2013|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=April 13, 2013}}</ref>
File:Malcolm X NYWTS 2a.jpg|[[Malcolm X]] was born to an African-American father and a mother of African/Scots-Irish descent.<ref>Perry, pp. 2–3.</ref>
File:Heather Locklear (2078349596) (cropped).jpg|[[Heather Locklear]] is of [[Lumbee]] descent.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/locklear.html|title=Frontline: Locklear|publisher=Pbs.org|access-date=April 8, 2010}}</ref>
File:Rosaparks.jpg|[[Rosa Parks]] was of [[African]], [[Cherokee]]-[[Creek people|Creek]],<ref>Douglas Brinkley, ''Rosa Parks'', Chapter 1, excerpted from the book published by Lipper/Viking (2000), ISBN 0-670-89160-6. [http://partners.nytimes.com/books/first/b/brinkley-parks.html Chapter excerpted] on the site of the ''New York Times''. Retrieved July 1, 2008</ref> and [[Scotch-Irish American|Scots-Irish]] descent.<ref name=Webb>James Webb, [http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2004/edition_10-03-2004/featured_0 "Why You Need to Know the Scots-Irish"], ''[[Parade (magazine)|Parade]]'', October 3, 2004. Retrieved July 1, 2008.</ref>
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Interracial relations among Native Americans and Europeans occurred from the earliest years of [[European colonization of the Americas|colonization]]. European impact was immediate, widespread and profound—more than any other race that had contact with Native Americans during the early years of colonization and nationhood.<ref name="nawomen"/>


Some early male settlers married Native American women or had informal unions with them. Early contact between Native Americans and Europeans was often charged with tension, but also had moments of friendship, cooperation and intimacy.<ref name=white_red_relations>{{cite web|url=http://www.artsofcitizenship.umich.edu/sos/topics/native/early.html |title=Native Americans: Early Contact |access-date=May 19, 2009 |publisher=Students on Site |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080820003735/http://www.artsofcitizenship.umich.edu/sos/topics/native/early.html |archive-date=August 20, 2008 }}
====Admixture====
</ref> Several marriages took place in European colonies between European men and Native women. For instance, on April 5, 1614, [[Pocahontas]], a [[Powhatan]] woman in present-day Virginia, married the Virginian colonist [[John Rolfe]] of [[Jamestown, Virginia|Jamestown]]. Their son [[Thomas Rolfe]] was an ancestor to many descendants in [[First Families of Virginia]]. As a result, discriminatory laws (such as those against African Americans) often excluded Native Americans during this period. In the early 19th century, the Native American woman [[Sacagawea]], who would help translate for and guide the [[Lewis and Clark Expedition]] in the West, married the French-Canadian trapper [[Toussaint Charbonneau]].
:''Main [[Miscegenation#Genetic_studies_of_racial_admixture|Admixture in the US]], [[One-drop rule]] and [[African Americans#Who is African American?|Who is African American]]''
On census forms, the government depends on individuals' self-identification. Contemporary African Americans possess varying degrees of admixture with European ancestry. A percentage also have various degrees of [[Native Americans of the United States|Native American]] ancestry.<ref>"[http://www.familytreedna.com/pdf/ParraAJHG1998.pdf Estimating African American Admixture Proportions by Use of Population-Specific Alleles]." ''Am. J. Hum. Genet.'' 63:1839–1851, 1998</ref><ref>[http://www.familytreedna.com/pdf/HammerFSIinpress.pdf Population structure of Y chromosome SNP haplogroups in the United States and forensic implications for constructing Y chromosome STR databases]. ''[[Forensic Science International]]''. Received August 17, 2005. Received in a revised form and accepted November 8, 2005.</ref>


Some Europeans living among Native Americans were called "White Indians". They "lived in native communities for years, learned native languages fluently, attended native councils, and often fought alongside their native companions."<ref name=white_indians>
Many free African American families descended from unions between white women and African men in colonial Virginia. Their free descendants migrated to the frontier of Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina in the 18th and 19th centuries. There were also similar free families in Delaware and Maryland, as documented by Paul Heinegg.<ref>[http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/ Paul Heinegg, ''Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware''], 2005, accessed Feb 15, 2008.</ref>
{{cite web|url=http://www.galafilm.com/1812/e/background/nat_white_ind.html|title="White Native Americans", A First Nations Perspective|access-date=February 5, 2008 |publisher=Galafilm|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071226024218/http://www.galafilm.com/1812/e/background/nat_white_ind.html|archive-date=December 26, 2007 }}</ref> European traders and trappers often married Native American women from tribes on the frontier and had families with them. Sometimes these marriages were done for political reasons between a Native American tribe and the European traders. Some traders, who kept bases in the cities, had what were called "country wives" among Native Americans, with legal European-American wives and children at home in the city. Not all abandoned their "natural" mixed-race children. Some arranged for sons to be sent to European-American schools for their education. Early European colonists were predominately men and Native American women were at risk for rape or sexual harassment especially if they were enslaved.<ref name="udayu">{{cite web |url=http://academic.udayton.edu/Race/05intersection/Gender/rape.htm|title="The Realities of Enslaved Female Africans in America", excerpted from ''Failing Our Black Children: Statutory Rape Laws, Moral Reform and the Hypocrisy of Denial'' |author=Gloria J. Browne-Marshall |access-date=2009-06-20 |year=2009 |publisher=University of Daytona}}</ref>


Most marriages between Europeans and Native Americans were between European men and Native American women. The social identity of the children was strongly determined by the tribe's kinship system. This determined how easy it would be for the child assimilated into the tribe. Among the [[matrilineal]] tribes of the Southeast, such as the [[Muscogee|Creek]] and [[Cherokee]], the mixed race children generally were accepted as and identified as Indian, as they gained their social status from their mother's clans and tribes and often grew up with their mothers and their male relatives. By contrast, among the patrilineal Omaha, for example, the child of a white man and Omaha woman was considered "white"; such mixed-race children and their mothers would be protected, but the children could formally belong to the tribe as members only if adopted by a man.
In addition, many Native American women turned to African American men due to the decline in the number of Native American men due to disease and warfare.<ref name="nawomen">{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=UYWs-GQDiOkC&pg=PA214&lpg=PA214&dq=indian+women+married+black+men&source=bl&ots=1E_JSZAfDk&sig=RzwOe3U5dehXn0DbTHVKxLSX9ws&hl=en&ei=xbwhSu-rKKPYMdG79ZkJ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6#PPA214,M1|title=Women in early America|author=Dorothy A. Mays|page=214|accessdate=2008-05-29 |year=2008 |publisher=ABC-CLIO
}}</ref> Some Native American women bought African slaves but, unknown to European sellers, the women freed the African men and married them into their respective tribes.<ref name="nawomen"/> If an African American man had children by a Native American woman, their children were free because of the status of the mother.<ref name="nawomen"/>


In those years, a Native American man had to get consent of the European parents to marry a white woman. When such marriages were approved, it was with the stipulation that "he can prove to support her as a white woman in a good home".<ref name=white_reds>
In their attempt to ensure [[white supremacy]] decades after [[emancipation]], in the early 20th century, most southern states created laws based on the [[one-drop rule]], defining as black, persons with any known African ancestry. This was a stricter interpretation than what had prevailed in the nineteenth century; it ignored the many mixed families in the state and went against commonly accepted social rules of judging a person by appearance and association. Some courts called it "the traceable amount rule." Anthropologists called it an example of a [[hypodescent]] rule, meaning that racially mixed persons were assigned the status of the socially subordinate group.
{{cite book| url = https://archive.org/details/takingassimilati0000elli | url-access = registration | page = [https://archive.org/details/takingassimilati0000elli/page/6 6] | title= Taking assimilation to heart| publisher = U of Nebraska Press | isbn = 978-0-8032-1829-1| author1 = Ellinghaus, Katherine| year = 2006}}</ref>


In the early twentieth century in the West, "intermarried whites" were listed in a separate category on the [[Dawes Rolls]], when members of tribes were listed and identified for allocation of lands to individual heads of households in the break-up of tribal communal lands in [[Indian Territory]]. This increased intermarriage as some white men married Native Americans to gain control of land. In the late 19th century, three European-American middle-class female teachers married Native American men they had met at [[Hampton Institute]] during the years when it ran its Indian program.<ref name=white_red_marriages>
Prior to the one-drop rule, different states had different laws regarding color. More importantly, social acceptance often played a bigger role in how a person was perceived and how identity was construed than any law. In frontier areas there were fewer questions about origins. The community looked at how people performed, whether they served in the militia and voted, which were the responsibilities and signs of free citizens. When questions about racial identity arose because of inheritance issues, for instance, litigation outcomes often were based on how people were accepted by neighbors.<ref>[http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/lhr/25.3/gross.html Ariela Gross, "Of Portuguese Origin": Litigating Identity and Citizenship among the 'Little Races' in Nineteenth-Century America",] ''Law and History Review'', Vol.25 (3), The History Cooperative. Retrieved June 22, 2008.</ref>
{{cite web| url = http://www.vahistorical.org/publications/Abstract_1083_ellinghaus.htm| title = Virginia Magazine of History and Biography| access-date = May 19, 2009| publisher = Virginia Historical Society| url-status = dead| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081018202023/http://www.vahistorical.org/publications/Abstract_1083_ellinghaus.htm| archive-date = October 18, 2008}}</ref> In the late nineteenth century, [[Charles Eastman]], a physician of Sioux and European ancestry who trained at [[Boston University]], married [[Elaine Goodale]], a European-American woman from New England. They met and worked together in [[Dakota Territory]] when she was Superintendent of Indian Education and he was a doctor for the reservations. His maternal grandfather was [[Seth Eastman]], an artist and Army officer from New England, who had married a Sioux woman and had a daughter with her while stationed at [[Fort Snelling]] in Minnesota.


==Black and African-American identity==
In [[Virginia]] prior to 1920, for example, a person was legally white if having seven-eights or more white ancestry. The one-drop rule originated in some Southern United States in the late 19th century, likely in response to whites' attempt to limit black political power following the Democrats' regaining control of state legislatures in the late 1870s.<ref>Sweet, Frank W. ''Legal History of the Color Line''. 2005, p. 11.</ref><ref name=dd>D'Souza, Dinesh. ''The End of Racism''. 1996, p. 181.</ref> The first year in which the U.S. Census dropped the mulatto category was 1920; that year enumerators were instructed to classify people in a binary way as white or black. This was a result of the Southern-dominated Congress convincing the Census Bureau to change its rules.<ref name=dd />
{{See also|Atlantic Creole|Brass Ankles|Chestnut Ridge people|Free people of color|High yellow|Hypodescent|Louisiana Creole people|Melungeon|Mulatto|Redbone (ethnicity)|We-Sorts}}
Americans with [[sub-Saharan Africa]]n ancestry for historical reasons: [[slavery]], ''[[partus sequitur ventrem]]'', [[one-eighth law]], the [[one-drop rule]] of 20th-century legislation, have frequently been classified as black (historically) or [[African Americans|African-American]], even if they have significant [[European Americans|European-American]] or Native American ancestry. As slavery became a racial caste, those who were enslaved and others of any African ancestry were classified by what is termed "[[hypodescent]]" according to the lower status ethnic group. Many of majority European ancestry and appearance "married white" and assimilated into white society for its social and economic advantages, such as generations of families identified as [[Melungeons]], now generally classified as white but demonstrated genetically to be of European and sub-Saharan African ancestry.


Sometimes people of mixed Native American and African-American descent report having had elder family members withholding pertinent genealogical information.<ref name="lin">{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1546/is_n4_v11/ai_18953815 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050609074754/http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1546/is_n4_v11/ai_18953815 |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 9, 2005 |title=The Indian connection |author=Mary A. Dempsey |access-date=September 19, 2008 |year=1996 |publisher=American Visions }}</ref> Tracing the genealogy of African-Americans can be a very difficult process, as censuses did not identify slaves by name before the American Civil War, meaning that most African Americans did not appear by name in those records. In addition, many white fathers who used slave women sexually, even those in long-term relationships like [[Thomas Jefferson]]'s with [[Sally Hemings]], did not acknowledge their mixed race slave children in records, so paternity was lost.
After the Civil War, racial segregation forced African Americans to share more of a common lot in society than they might have given widely varying ancestry, educational and economic levels. The binary division altered the separate status of the traditionally [[free people of color]] in Louisiana, for instance, although they maintained a strong Louisiana Créole culture related to French culture and language, and practice of Catholicism. African Americans began to create common cause—regardless of their [[multiracial]] admixture or social and economic stratification. In 20th-century changes, during the rise of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements, the African-American community increased its own pressure for people of any portion of African descent to be claimed by the black community to add to its power.


Colonial records of French and Spanish slave ships and sales and plantation records in all the former colonies, often have much more information about slaves, from which researchers are reconstructing slave family histories. Genealogists have begun to find plantation records, court records, land deeds and other sources to trace African-American families and individuals before 1870. As slaves were generally forbidden to learn to read and write, black families passed along oral histories, which have had great persistence. Similarly, Native Americans did not generally learn to read and write English, although some did in the nineteenth century.<ref name="lin"/> Until 1930, census enumerators used the terms [[free people of color]] and mulatto to classify people of apparent mixed race. When those terms were dropped, as a result of the lobbying by the Southern Congressional bloc, the Census Bureau used only the binary classifications of black or white, as was typical in segregated southern states.
By the 1980s, parents of mixed-race children (and adults of mixed-race ancestry) began to organize and lobby for the ability to show more than one ethnic category on Census and other legal forms. They refused to be put into just one category. When the U.S. government proposed the addition of the category of "bi-racial" or "multiracial" in 1988, the response from the general public was mostly negative. Some African American organizations and political leaders, such as Senator [[Diane Watson]] and Representative [[Augustus Hawkins]], were particularly vocal in their rejection of the category. They feared a loss in political and economic power if African Americans abandoned their one category.


In the 1980s, parents of mixed race children began to organize and lobby for the addition of a more inclusive term of racial designation that would reflect the heritage of their children. When the U.S. government proposed the addition of the category of "biracial" or "multiracial" in 1988, the response from the public was mostly negative. Some African-American organizations and African-American political leaders, such as Congresswoman [[Diane Watson]] and Congressman [[Augustus Hawkins]], were particularly vocal in their rejection of the category, as they feared the loss of political and economic power if African-Americans reduced their numbers by self-identification.<ref name="sad"/>
This reaction is characterized as "historical irony" by Daniel (2002). The African American self-designation had been a response to the one-drop rule, but then people resisted the chance to claim their multiple heritages. At the bottom was a desire not to lose political power of the larger group. Whereas before people resisted being characterized as one group regardless of ranges of ancestry, now some of their own were trying to keep them in the same group.<ref name="sad">{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/?id=9tP7_3j3WrkC&pg=PA129&dq=most+african+americans+may+have+native+american+heritage|title=More Than Black?:Multiracial|author=G. Reginald Daniel|accessdate=September 19, 2008 |year=2002 |publisher= Temple University Press |isbn=978-1-56639-909-8}} p. 128f.</ref>
<center><gallery>
File:Ethel Waters crop.jpg|[[Ethel Waters]] was of mixed-race ancestry.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://afroamhistory.about.com/od/ethelwaters/a/bio_waters_e.htm|title=Remembering the Career of Ethel Waters|author=Jessica McElrath|accessdate=July 23, 2009}}</ref>
File:GloriaHendry11.14.08ByLuigiNovi.jpg|[[Gloria Hendry]] is of [[Seminole]], [[Chinese people|Chinese]], [[Creek Indian]], [[Irish people|Irish]] and [[Africans|African]] descent.<ref name=ancestry>{{Cite news| first= Gloria | last= Hendry | title= IMDB.com - Gloria Hendry: Biography | url= http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0376914/ bio| accessdate=February 12, 2012 }}</ref>
File:Bessie Coleman, First African American Pilot - GPN-2004-00027.jpg|[[Bessie Coleman]] was part Cherokee and African-American.<ref>{{cite web | author= | title=Texas Roots | url=http://www.bessiecoleman.com/Other%20Pages/texas.html | work=BessieColeman.com |publisher=Atlanta Historical Museum | year=2008 | accessdate=2008-01-22}}</ref>
File:LangstonHughe 25.jpg|[[Langston Hughes]] was of African-American, Scottish, Jewish, French, English, and Native American descent.<ref name=Berry>[http://books.google.com/?id=4pibsBTGIssC&pg=PA3&dq=james+mercer+langston+%221888%22+%229+As+lawyer,+politician,+Freedman%27s+Bureau+appointee,+college+administrator,+diplomat+and,+in+1888,+the+first+Afro-American+Representative+to+Congress+from+Virginia,+Langston+had+become+a+legend+in+his+own+time.+%22#PPA1,M1 Faith Berry, ''Langston Hughes, Before and Beyond Harlem''], Westport, CT: Lawrence Hill & Co., 1983; reprint, Citadel Press, 1992, p. 1, accessdate 24 July 2010</ref>
File:Muhammad Ali NYWTS.jpg|[[Muhammad Ali]] is of African-American, [[Irish American|Irish]] and English descent.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/boxing/1810535.stm |title=Ali has Irish ancestry |publisher=BBC News |date=February 9, 2002 |accessdate=August 5, 2009}}</ref>
File:James E. O'Hara.jpg|[[James E. O'Hara]] was born to an Irish merchant father and a West Indian mother.<ref>Treese, Ragsdale (1996), p. 105</ref>
File:Lena Horne 1961.JPG|[[Lena Horne]] was of African American, Native American and European American descent.<ref name="horne">{{cite web|url=http://www.answers.com/topic/lena-horne|title=Artist: Lena Horne Biography|author=William Ruhlmann|accessdate=2008-08-010|year=2008|work=Allmusic}}</ref><ref name="jck1">{{cite news|url=http://www.economist.com/node/16160124?story_id=16160124|title=Lena Horne, entertainer, died on May 9th, aged 92|author=The Economist|accessdate=2010-07-23|work=BlackAmericaWeb|date=May 20, 2010}}</ref>
File:James Earl Jones 2010 Crop.jpg|[[James Earl Jones]] is part African, Irish, Cherokee and Choctaw. <ref name="jamesearljones01">[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/hardtalk/9655708.stm James Earl Jones on his 'racist grandmother'], interview with [[Stephen Sackur]], BBC News, December 7, 2011.</ref><ref name="jamesearljones02">{{Cite journal | last=Levesque | first=Carl | title=Unconventional wisdom: James Earl Jones speaks out | journal=Association Management | publisher=The Gale Group | url=http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/summary_0199-1928105_ITM | date=August 1, 2002 | accessdate=February 20, 2008}}</ref>
</gallery></center>


Since the 1990s and 2000s, the terms '''mixed race''', '''multiracial''' and '''biracial''' have been used more frequently in society. It is still most common in the United States (unlike some other countries with a history of slavery) for people seen as "African" in appearance to identify as or be classified solely as "Black" or "African-Americans", for cultural, social and familial reasons.
====Definition of African American====
Since the late twentieth century, the number of African and Caribbean ethnic African immigrants have increased in the United States. Together with publicity about the ancestry of President Barack Obama, whose father was from Kenya, some black writers have argued that new terms are needed for recent immigrants. They suggest that the term "African-American" should refer strictly to the descendants of African slaves and free people of color who survived the slavery era in the United States.<ref name="Dickerson">{{cite journal |url=http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/feature/2007/01/22/obama/ |title=Colorblind - Barack Obama would be the great black hope in the next presidential race -- if he were actually black | publisher= [[salon.com]] |author=Debra J. Dickerson |date=22 January 2007|accessdate=7 October 2010 }}</ref> They argue that grouping together all ethnic Africans regardless of their unique ancestral circumstances would deny the lingering effects of slavery within the American slave descendant community.<ref name="Dickerson"/> They say recent ethnic African immigrants need to recognize their own unique ancestral backgrounds.<ref name="Dickerson"/>


President [[Barack Obama]] is of [[European Americans|European-American]] and East African ancestry; he identifies as African-American.<ref>writing in ''[[Dreams from My Father]]'' that he had resolved to<blockquote>"never emulate white men and brown men whose fates didn't speak to my own. It was into my father's image, the black man, son of Africa, that I'd packed all the attributes I sought in myself, the attributes of Martin and Malcolm, DuBois and Mandela."</blockquote></ref> A 2007 poll, when Obama was a presidential candidate, found that Americans differed in their responses as to how they classified him: a majority of White and Hispanics classified him as biracial, but a majority of African-Americans classified him as black.<ref>61% of Hispanics and 55% of White Americans classify Obama as biracial when they are told that he has a white mother, while 66% of African-Americans consider him black. ({{cite news|url=http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |title=Williams/Zogby Poll: Americans' Attitudes Changing Towards Multiracial Candidates |date=December 22, 2006 |access-date=September 23, 2007 |publisher=BBSNews.com |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070403062350/http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |archive-date = April 3, 2007}}) Obama describes himself as "black" or "African American", using both terms interchangeably ({{cite news|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/02/11/60minutes/main2458530.shtml |title=Transcript excerpt: Senator Barack Obama on Sixty Minutes |work=CBS News |date=February 11, 2007 |access-date=January 29, 2008}})</ref>
[[Stanley Crouch]] wrote in a ''New York Daily News'' piece "Obama's mother is of white U.S. stock. His father is a black Kenyan," in a column entitled "What Obama Isn't: Black Like Me." During the 2008 campaign, the African-American columnist [[David Ehrenstein]] of the ''[[Los Angeles Times|LA Times]]'' accused white liberals of flocking to Obama because he was a "[[Magic Negro]]", a term that refers to a black person with no past who simply appears to assist the mainstream white (as cultural protagonists/drivers) agenda.<ref name="Obama the 'Magic Negro'">{{cite news| url=http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-ehrenstein19mar19,0,5335087.story?coll=la-opinion-center | work=The Los Angeles Times | title=Obama the 'Magic Negro' | date=March 19, 2007 | first=David | last=Ehrenstein}}</ref> Ehrenstein went on to say "He's there to assuage white 'guilt' they feel over the role of slavery and racial segregation in American history." <ref name="Obama the 'Magic Negro'"/>


A 2003 study found an average of 18.6% (±1.5%) European admixture in a population sample of 416 African-Americans from Washington, D.C.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Shriver | first1 = Mark D. |display-authors=etal | year = 2003 | title = Skin pigmentation, biogeographical ancestry and admixture mapping | url = https://homepages.uc.edu/~nortonhr/MoCHA/Publications_files/Shriver%20et%20el%202003.pdf | journal = Human Genetics | volume = 112 | issue = 4| pages = 387–399 | doi = 10.1007/s00439-002-0896-y| pmid = 12579416 | s2cid = 7877572 }}</ref> Studies of other populations in other areas have found differing percentages of ethnicity.
Reacting to media criticism of Michelle Obama during the 2008 presidential election, [[Charles Kenzie Steele, Jr.]], CEO of the [[Southern Christian Leadership Conference]] said, “Why are they attacking Michelle Obama, and not really attacking, to that degree, her husband? Because he has no slave blood in him."<ref name="ajc.com">{{cite web |url=http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/shared-blogs/ajc/politicalinsider/entries/2008/06/21/sclc_head_michelle_obama_treat.html |title=? }}{{dead link|date=October 2010}}</ref> He later claimed his comment was intended to be "provocative" but declined to expand on the subject.<ref name="ajc.com"/> Former Secretary of State [[Condoleezza Rice]] (who was famously mistaken for a "recent American immigrant" by French President [[Nicolas Sarkozy]]<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,309218,00.html | work=Fox News | title=Nicolas Sarkozy Mistakes Condoleezza Rice for Recent Immigrant | date=November 7, 2007}}</ref>), said "descendants of slaves did not get much of a head start, and I think you continue to see some of the effects of that." She has also rejected an immigrant designation for African Americans and instead prefers the term "black" or "white" .<ref>{{cite web |url=http://bbaaghs.org/news/?p=10 |title=Book Excerpt: Condoleezza Rice: An American Life |author=Elisabeth Bumiller |date=December 22, 2007 |accessdate=7 October 2010}}</ref>


Twenty percent of African-Americans have more than 25% European ancestry, reflecting the long history of unions between the groups. The "mostly African" group is substantially African, as 70% of African-Americans in this group have less than 15% European ancestry. The 20% of African Americans in the "mostly mixed" group (2.7% of US population) have between 25% and 50% European ancestry.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Collins-Schramm|first=Heather E.|author2=Kittles, Rick A. |author3=Operario, Darwin J. |author4=Weber James L. |author5=Criswell, Lindsey A. |author6=Cooper, Richard S. |author7= Seldin, Michael F. |date=December 2002|title=Markers that discriminate Between European and African Ancestry show Limited Variation Within Africa|journal=Human Genetics|volume=111|issue=6|pages=566–9|issn=0340-6717|doi=10.1007/s00439-002-0818-z|pmid=12436248|s2cid=30319228}}</ref>
===Native Americans===
{{See also|Boricua|Haliwa-Saponi|Hapa|Louisiana Creole people|Lumbee|Melungeon|Métis people (United States)|Redbone (ethnicity)|We-Sorts}}
====White Native Americans====
Interracial relations among [[Native Americans in the United States|Native Americans]] and Europeans occurred from the earliest years of Spanish, French and British exploration. explorers and trappers. European impact was immediate, widespread, and profound—more than any other race that had contact with Native Americans during the early years of colonization and nationhood.<ref name="nawomen">{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/?id=UYWs-GQDiOkC&pg=PA214&lpg=PA214&dq=indian+women+married+black+men#PPA214,M1|title=Women in early America|author=Dorothy A. Mays|accessdate=2008-05-29 |year=2008 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-85109-429-5
}}</ref>


The writer Sherrel W. Stewart's assertion that "most" African-Americans have significant Native American heritage,<ref name="dstu">{{cite web|url=http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/bawnews/stateof/nativeroots109 |title=More Blacks are Exploring the African-American/Native American Connection |author=Sherrel Wheeler Stewart |access-date=August 6, 2008 |year=2008 |publisher=BlackAmericaWeb.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071105200515/http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/bawnews/stateof/nativeroots109 |archive-date=November 5, 2007 }}</ref> is not supported by genetic researchers who have done extensive population mapping studies. The TV series on African-American ancestry, hosted by the scholar [[Henry Louis Gates Jr.]], had genetics scholars who discussed in detail the variety of ancestries among African-Americans. They noted there is popular belief in a high rate of Native American admixture that is not supported by the data that has been collected.{{Citation needed|date=March 2019}}
Some Europeans living among Native Americans were called "white Indians". They "lived in native communities for years, learned native languages fluently, attended native councils, and often fought alongside their native companions."<ref name=white_indians>
{{cite web
| url = http://www.galafilm.com/1812/e/background/nat_white_ind.html
| title = "White Native Americans", A First Nations Perspective
| accessdate = 2008-02-05
| publisher = Galafilm
}}
</ref>
More numerous and typical were traders and trappers, who married Native American women from tribes on the frontier and had families with them. Some traders, who kept bases in the cities, had what ware called "country wives" among Native Americans, with legal European-American wives and children at home in the city. Not all abandoned their "natural" mixed-race children. Some arranged for sons to be sent to European-American schools for their education.


[[Genetic testing]] of direct male and female lines evaluates only direct male and female descent without accounting for many ancestors.<ref name="true2">{{cite news |url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071018145955.htm|title=Genetic Ancestral Testing Cannot Deliver On Its Promise, Study Warns|author=ScienceDaily|access-date=October 2, 2008 |year=2008 |website=ScienceDaily}}</ref> For this reason, individuals on the Gates show had fuller DNA testing.
The social identity of the children was strongly determined by the tribe's kinship system. Among the [[matrilineal]] tribes of the Southeast, the mixed-race children generally were accepted as and identified as Indian, as they gained their social status from their mother's clans and tribes, and often grew up with their mothers and their male relatives. By contrast, among the patrilineal Omaha, for example, the child of a white man and Omaha woman was considered "white"; such mixed-race children and their mothers would be protected, but the children could formally belong to the tribe as members only if adopted by a man.


The critic Troy Duster, writing in ''[[The Chronicle of Higher Education]]'', thought Gates' series ''[[African American Lives]]'' should have told people more about the limitations of genetic SNP testing. He says that not all ancestry may show up in the tests, especially for those who claim part-Native American descent.<ref name="true2"/><ref name="hur">{{cite news |url=http://www.geneticsandsociety.org/article.php?id=3908|title=Deep Roots and Tangled Branches|author=Troy Duster|access-date=October 2, 2008 |year=2008 |newspaper=Chronicle of Higher Education}}</ref> Other experts also agree.<ref name="sj">{{cite web |url=http://www.ipcb.org/publications/briefing_papers/files/identity.html|title=Genetic Markers Not a Valid Test of Native Identity|author1=Brett Lee Shelton |author2=J.D. and Jonathan Marks | access-date = October 2, 2008 |year=2008 |publisher=Counsel for Responsible Genetics}}</ref>
In the early twentieth century in the West, "intermarried whites" were listed in a separate category on the [[Dawes Rolls]], when members of tribes were listed and identified for allocation of lands to individual heads of households in the break-up of tribal communal lands in [[Indian Territory]]. There was increased intermarriage after this time as white men tried to gain control over Native American lands.
<center><gallery>
File:Heather Locklear cropped.jpg|[[Heather Locklear]] is of [[Lumbee]] descent.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/locklear.html |title=Frontline: Locklear |publisher=Pbs.org |accessdate=April 8, 2010}}</ref>
File:Thorpe.jpg|[[Jim Thorpe]] had a [[Sac and Fox Nation|Sac and Fox]]-[[Irish people|Irish]] father and a [[Potawatomi]]-[[French people|French]] mother.<ref name="County">O'Hanlon-Lincoln. pg. 129</ref>
File:JohnBHarrington.jpg|[[John Herrington]] is a member of the [[Chickasaw Nation]].<ref>{{Include-NASA|article=Astronaut Bio: John Bennett Herrington (8/2005)|url=http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/herringt.html|accessdate=January 15, 2012}}</ref>
File:Rue McClanahan book signing.jpg|[[Rue McClanahan]] was part Choctaw and Irish.<ref name=Palm>{{cite book| url=http://www.fictionwise.com/ebooks/b45261/My-First-Five-Husbands--And-the-Ones-Who-Got-Away/Rue-Mcclanahan/?si=0 |title=palm eBook store: Excerpt from ''My First Five Husbands ... And the Ones Who Got Away'' |first=Rue |last=McClanahan |authorlink= |publisher=[[Broadway Group]], [[Doubleday (publisher)|Doubleday Books]], [[Random House]] |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-7679-2694-2}}</ref>
File:Eiganotomo-avagardner-dec1953.jpg|[[Ava Gardner]] was of [[Tuscarora (tribe)|Tuscarora]], Scots-Irish, English and Irish descent.<ref>[http://www.pophistorydig.com/?tag=ava-gardner-1940s Ava Gardner 1940s], The Pop History Dig</ref><ref>[http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/participant.jsp?spid=68501 Ava Gardner], [[Turner Classic Movies|TCM]] website</ref>
File:Burt Reynolds 1991 portrait crop.jpg|[[Burt Reynolds]] is Cherokee and Irish-American.<ref name="bravo">{{cite episode|title = Burt Reynolds|episodelink = Inside the Actors Studio|series = Inside the Actors Studio|serieslink = Inside the Actors Studio|network = [[Bravo (US TV channel)|Bravo]]|airdate = |season = |number = }}; can be viewed at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YY3cuILM698</ref>
File:CarrieUnderwoodACM10.jpg|[[Carrie Underwood]] is an enrolled member of the [[Creek tribe|Muscogee (Creek) Nation]].<ref>La Bella, Laura. [http://books.google.com/books?id=Jj7XE4QcBxoC&pg=PA15&lpg=PA15&dq=muscogee+creek+nation+%22carrie+underwood%22&source=bl&ots=eAzqd8lZ8W&sig=glWlXpX1f7Rc_GFh5gZ7GvGOH0Q&hl=en&ei=tDfZSaX8DYfqtAP8yL2oCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8 ''Carrie Underwood''], New York: Rosen Publishing, 2008: 15. ISBN 978-1-4042-1370-8. (retrieved through Google Books, 5.April.2009)</ref><ref>[http://www.free-press-release.com/news/200702/1171488993.html "Creek Nation Tribal Member Carrie Underwood Wins Grammy"], ''Free Press.'' 14.Feb.2007 (retrieved 5.April.2009)</ref>
File:PresleyPromo1954PhotoOnly.jpg|[[Elvis Presley]] was part Cherokee, French, Scottish, Scots-Irish and German.{{sfn|Dundy|2004|pp=13, 16, 20–22, 26}}{{ref|fn b|b}}
</gallery></center>
Some early male settlers married Native American women and had informal unions with them. Early contact between Native Americans and Europeans was often charged with tension, but also had moments of friendship, cooperation, and intimacy.<ref name=white_red_relations>
{{cite web
| url = http://www.artsofcitizenship.umich.edu/sos/topics/native/early.html
| title = Native Americans: Early Contact
| accessdate = 2009-05-19
| publisher = Students on Site
}} {{Dead link|date=November 2010|bot=H3llBot}}
</ref> Marriages took place in both English and Latin colonies between European men and Native women. For instance, on April 5, 1614, [[Pocahontas]], a [[Powhatan]] woman in present-day Virginia, married the Englishman [[John Rolfe]] of [[Jamestown]]. Their son [[Thomas Rolfe]] was an ancestor to many descendants in [[First Families of Virginia]]. As a result, English laws did not exclude people with some Native American ancestry from being considered English or white.


Population testing is still being done. Some Native American groups that have been sampled may not have shared the pattern of markers being searched for. Geneticists acknowledge that DNA testing cannot yet distinguish among members of differing cultural Native American nations. There is genetic evidence for three major migrations into North America, but not for more recent historic differentiation.<ref name="hur"/> In addition, not all Native Americans have been tested, so scientists do not know for sure that Native Americans have only the genetic markers they have identified.<ref name="true2"/><ref name="hur"/>
In the early 19th century, the Native American woman [[Sacagawea]], who would help translate for and guide the [[Lewis and Clark Expedition]] in the West, married the French trapper [[Toussaint Charbonneau]]. Most marriages between Europeans and Native Americans were between European men and Native American women. Depending on the kinship system of the woman's tribe, their children would be more or less easily assimilated into the tribe. Nations that had [[matrilineal]] systems, such as the [[Creek]] and [[Cherokee]] in the Southeast, gave the mixed-race children status in their mother's clans and tribes. If the tribe had a [[patrilineal]] system, like the [[Omaha]], the children of white fathers were considered white. Unless they were specifically adopted into the tribe by an adult male, they could have no social status in it.

In those years, a Native American man had to get consent of the European parents in order to marry a white woman. When such marriages were approved, it was with the stipulation that "he can prove to support her as a white woman in a good home".<ref name=white_reds>
{{cite book| url = http://books.google.com/?id=3VCc9XEiFt4C&pg=PA176&lpg=PA176&dq=native+american+and+white+interracial+affairs#PPA6,M1| title= Taking assimilation to heart| isbn = 978-0-8032-1829-1| author1 = Ellinghaus, Katherine| year = 2006}}</ref>


===Admixture===
In the late 19th century, three European-American middle-class female teachers married Native American men they had met at [[Hampton Institute]] during the years when it ran its Indian program.<ref name=white_red_marriages>
{{Main|Admixture in the United States|Miscegenation|One-drop rule|African Americans}}
{{cite web| url = http://www.vahistorical.org/publications/Abstract_1083_ellinghaus.htm|title= Virginia Magazine of History and Biography| accessdate = 2009-05-19| publisher = Virginia Historical Society}}</ref> In the late nineteenth century, [[Charles Eastman]], a physician of European and Sioux ancestry who trained at [[Boston University]], married [[Elaine Goodale]], a European-American woman from New England. They met and worked together in [[Dakota Territory]] when she was Superintendent of Indian Education and he was a doctor for the reservations. His maternal grandfather was [[Seth Eastman]], an artist and Army officer from New England, who had married a Sioux woman and had a daughter with her while stationed at [[Fort Snelling]] in Minnesota.
On census forms, the government depends on individuals' self-identification. Contemporary African-Americans possess varying degrees of admixture with European (and other) ancestry. They also have various degrees of Native American ancestry.<ref>{{cite journal|first1=Esteban J.|last1=Parra|first2=Amy|last2=Marcini|first3=Joshua|last3=Akey|first4=Jeremy|last4=Martinson|display-authors=1|title=Estimating African American Admixture Proportions by Use of Population-Specific Alleles|journal=[[American Journal of Human Genetics]]|volume=63|issue=6|pages=1839–1851|year=1998|doi=10.1086/302148|pmid=9837836|pmc=1377655}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first1=Michael F.|last1=Hammer|first2=Veronica F.|last2=Chamberlain|first3=Veronica F.|last3=Kearney|first4=Daryn|last4=Stover|display-authors=1|title=Population structure of Y chromosome SNP haplogroups in the United States and forensic implications for constructing Y chromosome STR databases|journal=[[Forensic Science International]]|volume=164|issue=1|year=2006|pages=45–55|doi=10.1016/j.forsciint.2005.11.013|pmid=16337103}}</ref> In addition to being found to have 8% Asian and 19.6% European ancestry, African-Americans, who were sampled in 2010, were found to be 72.5% African; the Asian ancestry serving as a proxy for Native-American.<ref name="Murray">{{cite journal |last1=Murray |first1=Tanda |display-authors=etal |title=African and non-African admixture components in African Americans and an African Caribbean population |journal=Genetic Epidemiology |date=August 17, 2010 |volume=34 |issue=6 |pages=561–568 |doi=10.1002/gepi.20512 |pmid=20717976 |pmc=3837693 |s2cid=21326600 }}</ref>


Many free African-American families descended from unions between white women and African men in colonial Virginia. Their free descendants migrated to the frontier of Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina in the 18th and 19th centuries. There were also similar free families in Delaware and Maryland, as documented by Paul Heinegg.<ref>[http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/ Paul Heinegg, ''Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware''], 2005, accessed February 15, 2008.</ref>
====Black Native Americans====
{{See also|Black Indians|Black Seminoles|Brass Ankles|Cherokee Freedman|Choctaw Freedmen|Louisiana Creole people|Mardi Gras Indians}}
Interracial relations between Native Americans and African Americans has been a part of [[United States History|American history]] that has been neglected.<ref name="lin"/> The earliest record of African and Native American relations occurred in April 1502, when the first Africans kidnapped were brought to [[Hispaniola]] to serve as slaves. Some escaped, and somewhere inland on Santo Domingo, the first Black Indians were born.<ref name="first">{{cite web |url=http://www.africanamericans.com/BlackIndians.htm|title=Black Indians|author=William Loren Katz |accessdate=2008-08-11 |year=2008 |publisher=AfricanAmericans.com }}</ref> In addition, an example of African slaves' escaping from European colonists and being absorbed by Native Americans occurred as far back as 1526. In June of that year, Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon established a Spanish colony near the mouth of the [[Pee Dee River]] in what is now eastern [[South Carolina]]. The Spanish settlement was named [[San Miquel de Guadalupe]]. Amongst the settlement were 100 enslaved Africans. In 1526, the first African slaves fled the colony and took refuge with local Native Americans.<ref>''Muslims in American History : A Forgotten Legacy'' by Dr. Jerald F. Dirks. ISBN 1-59008-044-0 Page 204.</ref>
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File:Billy Bowlegs III 3c25031u.jpg|[[Seminole]] elder [[Billy Bowlegs III]] was of [[Osceola]] and African-American descent.<ref name=SmithsonianNMAI>{{cite web|last=Bell, et. al|first=Steve|title=IndiVisible: African-Native American Lives in the Americans - Shared Spirits|url=http://nmai.si.edu/exhibitions/indivisible/shared_spirits.html|work=Billy Bowlegs III (1862–1965) This Seminole Indian elder and historian, said to be a descendant of African American intermarriage with the Seminole, adopted the name of the legendary resistance fighter Billy Bowlegs II (1810–64). The “patchwork” pattern covering his turban expresses the influence of African ovpispisi (bits and pieces)—sewing typical of the Suriname Maroons and Ashanti who married into the tribe.|publisher=Smithsonian Institute: National Museum of the American Indian|accessdate=7 May 2012}}</ref>
File:James Brown Tampa.jpg|[[James Brown]] was of [[Apache]], [[African American]] and [[Asian American|Asian]] descent.<ref name="roll">{{cite web |url=http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/being-james-brown-rolling-stones-2006-cover-story-20101224 |title=Being James Brown: Rolling Stone's 2006 Story |author=Jonathan Lethem |accessdate=January 27, 2011 |date=December 24, 2010 |publisher=[[Rolling Stone Magazine]]}}</ref><ref name="newh">{{cite web |url=http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/mndwebpages/james%20brown.s%20indian%20heritage|title=James Brown&nbsp;— James Brown's Indian Heritage|author=Contact Music|accessdate=2009-04-09 |year=2004 |publisher=[[Contact Music]] }}</ref>
File:Motto edmonia lewis original.jpg|[[Edmonia Lewis]] was of [[Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation|Mississauga Ojibwe]], African-American and Haitian descent.<ref name=w12>Wolfe, 12</ref>
File:George Bonga.png|[[George Bonga]] was born to an [[Ojibwe]] mother and an African-American slave father.<ref>[http://www.aaregistry.org/historic_events/view/george-bonga-early-settler-minnesota African American Registry: George Bonga, an early settler in Minnesota]</ref>
File:Jimi Hendrix 1967.png|[[Jimi Hendrix]] was of [[Cherokee]], African-American, Irish, English and German descent.<ref>http://www.blackpast.org/?q=perspectives/blood-entertainers-life-and-times-jimi-hendrixs-paternal-grandparents </ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nmai.si.edu/exhibitions/indivisible/being.html |title=Being and Belonging - Indivisble – African-Native American Lives in the Americas |publisher=National Museum of the American Indian |date= |accessdate=2012-01-16}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=JB1W2dn31rwC&lpg=PP1&dq=jimi%20hendrix&pg=PA6#v=onepage&q&f=false|title = Jimi Hendrix: Electric Gypsy|last1 = Shapiro|first1 = Harry|last2 = Glebbeek|first2 = Caesar|publisher=St. Martin's Press|year = 1995 Updated edition|pages = 5–6, 13.|isbn=0-312-13062-7|accessdate=2011-09-30}}</ref>
File:Radmilla cody.jpeg|[[Radmilla Cody]] is a [[Navajo Nation|Navajo national]] of African-American descent.<ref name="codynet">[http://www.radmillacody.net/bio.html Biography] ramillacody.net. Accessed 2010-07-15.</ref>
File:Winddance2008.JPG|[[France Winddance Twine]] is a registered [[Muscogee (Creek) Nation]] member of African-American descent.<ref>[http://www.soc.ucsb.edu/bhavanicv07.pdf “Curriculum Vitae.”] . Retrieved 10 July 2010. {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref>
File:Tina turner 21021985 01 350.jpg|[[Tina Turner]] is of [[Navajo people|Navajo]], [[Cherokee]] and African-American descent.<ref>{{cite video|people=Bullock, Zelma|title=Tina Turner: Girl from Nutbush|medium=video|date=1993|publisher=Strand Video Entertainment}}</ref><ref>http://www.contactmusic.com/news/happy-birthday-tina-turner_1123815</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Celebrities of Native American Heritage |url=http://www.hud.gov/offices/pih/ih/codetalk/onap/celebrities.cfm |publisher=U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development |accessdate=2010-02-09}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title=African American Lives | url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWzsSg4TUMw&feature=iv&annotation_id=annotation_352527 }}</ref><ref name="lives">{{cite episode|title=The Past Is Another Country| series=African American Lives 2|episodelink=|url=http://www.pbs.org/previews/aalives2/|serieslink=African American Lives 2|credits=[[Henry Louis Gates, Jr.]]|network=[[Public Broadcasting Service|PBS]]|airdate=2008-02-13|number=4}}</ref>
</gallery></center>
European colonists created treaties with Native American tribes requesting the return of any [[runaway slaves]]. For example, in 1726, the British governor of New York exacted a promise from the Iroquois to return all runaway slaves who had joined them. This same promise was extracted from the Huron Nation in 1764, and from the Delaware Nation in 1765, though there is no record of slaves ever being returned.<ref>Katz WL 1997 p103</ref> Numerous advertisements requested the return of African Americans who had married Native Americans or who spoke a Native American language. The primary exposure that Africans and Native Americans had to each other came through the institution of slavery.<ref name="msc">{{cite web |url=http://members.aol.com/angelaw859/tri_racials.html|title=Tri-Racials: Black Indians of the Upper South|author=Angela Y. Walton-Raji |accessdate=2008-08-20 |year=2008 |publisher=Design © 1997}}</ref> Native Americans learned that Africans had what Native Americans considered 'Great Medicine' in their bodies because Africans were virtually immune to the Old-World diseases that were decimating most native populations.<ref name="nadis">{{cite web |url=http://www.djembe.dk/no/19/08biwapi.html|title=Black indians want a place in history|author=Nomad Winterhawk |accessdate=2009-05-29 |year=1997 |publisher= Djembe Magazine}}</ref> Because of this many tribes encouraged marriage between the two groups, to create stronger, healthier children from the unions.<ref name="nadis"/>


In addition, many Native American women turned to African-American men due to the decline in the number of Native American men due to disease and warfare.<ref name="nawomen">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UYWs-GQDiOkC&pg=PA214|title=Women in early America|author=Dorothy A. Mays|page=214|access-date=May 29, 2008|year=2008|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=9781851094295}}</ref> Some Native American women bought African slaves but, unknown to European sellers, the women freed the African men and married them into their respective tribes.<ref name="nawomen"/> If an African-American man had children by a Native American woman, their children were free because of the status of the mother.<ref name="nawomen"/>
For African Americans, the [[one-drop rule]] was a significant factor in ethnic solidarity. African Americans generally shared a common cause in society regardless of their [[multiracial]] admixture, or social/economic stratification. Additionally, African Americans found it, near, impossible to learn about their Native American heritage as many family elders withheld pertinent genealogical information.<ref name="lin"/> Tracing the genealogy of African Americans can be a very difficult process, especially for descendants of Native Americans, because African Americans who were slaves were forbidden to learn to read and write, and a majority of Native Americans neither spoke English, nor read or wrote it.<ref name="lin"/>


In their attempt to ensure [[white supremacy]] decades after [[Abolitionism in the United States|emancipation]], in the early 20th century, most southern states created laws based on the [[one-drop rule]], defining as black persons with any known African ancestry. This was a stricter interpretation than what had prevailed in the 19th century; it ignored the many mixed families in the state and went against commonly accepted social rules of judging a person by appearance and association. Some courts called it "the traceable amount rule." Anthropologists called it an example of a [[hypodescent]] rule, meaning that racially mixed persons were assigned the status of the socially subordinate group.
===American Pacific Islanders===
{{See also|American Samoan|Métis people (United States)|History of Guam|Pacific Islander}}


Prior to the one-drop rule, different states had different laws regarding color. More importantly, social acceptance often played a bigger role in how a person was perceived and how identity was construed than any law. In frontier areas, there were fewer questions about origins. The community looked at how people performed, whether they served in the militia and voted, which were the responsibilities and signs of free citizens. When questions about racial identity arose because of inheritance issues, for instance, litigation outcomes often were based on how people were accepted by neighbors.<ref>{{cite journal|first=Ariela|last=Gross|title='Of Portuguese Origin': Litigating Identity and Citizenship among the 'Little Races' in Nineteenth-Century America|journal=Law and History Review|volume=25|issue=3|year=2007|pages=467–512|doi=10.1017/S0738248000004259|s2cid=144084310}}</ref>
During the 1800s Christian missionaries from Great Britain and the United States followed traders to the Hawaiian islands. They caused Hawaiian royal women to become self-conscious about their traditional looks: their dark skin and ample bodies had both been considered signs of nobility for centuries. No matter how Westernized their manners, the women were seen by some US missionaries as similar to "Hawaiian [[squaws]]." By the last half of the 19th century, Hawaiian women were going in two different directions. Many European men married Hawaiian women as they found them exotic, and favored those who were thinner and had pale complexions.<ref name="Colonialism's Daughters">{{cite book |title= Pacific Diaspora: Island Peoples in the United States and Across the Pacific |chapter= Colonialism's Daughters |author= Karina Kahananui Green |editors= Paul R. Spickard, Joanne L. Rondilla, Debbie Hippolite Wright |pages= 242–248 |publisher= University of Hawaii Press |year=2002 |isbn= 0-8248-2619-1 |url= http://books.google.com/books?id=lnIYIXyIP8QC }}</ref>


The first year in which the U.S. Census dropped the mulatto category was 1920; that year enumerators were instructed to classify people in a binary way as white or black. This was a result of the Southern-dominated Congress convincing the Census Bureau to change its rules.<ref>{{cite journal|first=Paul|last=Schor|title=Mobilising for pure prestige? Challenging Federal census ethnic categories in the USA (1850–1940)|journal=International Social Science Journal|volume=57|issue=183|year=2005|pages=89–101|doi=10.1111/j.0020-8701.2005.00533.x|url=https://zenodo.org/record/834011}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Paul|last=Schor|chapter=The Disappearance of the "Mulatto" as the End of Inquiry into the Composition of the Black Population of the United States|title=Counting Americans: How the US Census Classified the Nation|location=New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2017|isbn=978-0-19-991785-3|pages=155–168}}</ref>
While some American Pacific Islanders continue traditional cultural endogamy, many within this population now have mixed racial ancestry, sometimes combining European, [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]], and [[Asia|Asian]] ancestry as well. The [[Hawaiian language|Hawaiian]]s originally described the mixed-race descendants as ''[[hapa]]''. The term has evolved to encompass all people of mixed [[Asia|Asian]] and/or [[Pacific Islander]] ancestry, as many ethnic Chinese settled in the islands and also married into the Pacific Islander populations.


After the Civil War, racial segregation forced African Americans to share more of a common lot in society than they might have given widely varying ancestry, educational and economic levels. The binary division altered the separate status of the traditionally [[free people of color]] in Louisiana, for instance, although they maintained a strong Louisiana Créole culture related to French culture and language, and practice of Catholicism. African Americans began to create common cause—regardless of their [[multiracial people|multiracial]] admixture or social and economic stratification. In 20th-century changes, during the rise of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements, the African-American community increased its own pressure for people of any portion of African descent to be claimed by the black community to add to its power.
<center><gallery>
File:Kamehamehaiii.jpg|[[Kamehameha III]] was of [[House of Kamehameha|royal aboriginal Hawaiian]], [[John Young (Hawaii)|Scotts-British]], [[Alexander Adams (Hawaii)|Scottish]] and [[Isaac Davis (Hawaii)|Welsh]] ancestry.
File:Virginia Kaihikapumahana Wilcox.jpg|[[Virginia Kaihikapumahana Wilcox]] was part [[House of Laanui|noble Hawaiian]], English through her father, and French through her maternal grandfather [[Jean Baptiste Rives]].<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.royalark.net/Hawaii/wilcox.htm |title= Hawaii: Wilcox-Salazar Genealogy |author=Christopher Buyers |accessdate= November 21, 2010 |work= Royal Ark web site }}</ref>
File:Kaiulani in San Francisco, retouched photo by J. J. Williams.jpg| [[Kaʻiulani|Princess Kaʻiulani]] was of indigenous Hawaiian and Scots-American descent. <ref name="Hawaiian Kingdom 1874-1893">{{cite book |title=Hawaiian Kingdom 1874-1893, the Kalakaua Dynastism |author=Ralph S. Kuykendall |year=1967 |isbn=978-0-87022-433-1 |publisher=University of Hawaii Press |page=477}}</ref>
File:Dwayne Johnson at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival.jpg|Actor [[Dwayne Johnson]]'s mother is [[Samoan]] and his father is [[Black Nova Scotians|Black Nova Scotian]] (descended from [[Black Loyalists]] from the Thirteen Colonies).<ref name=mh>{{cite journal|title=Grandmother of 'The Rock,' promoter|first=Elinor J.|last=Brecher|publisher=[[The Miami Herald]]|date=October 25, 2008}}</ref><ref name="yahoo">{{cite web|url=http://movies.yahoo.com/feature/through-the-years-the-rock.html|title=Through The Years – Dwayne 'Not Just The Rock' Johnson|date=March 12, 2008|last=Crow|first=Jonathan|accessdate=March 13, 2009|publisher=Yahoo Movies}}</ref><ref name=tsom>{{Cite news|last=Young|first=Graham|title=The Rock's on a roll in Hollywood|publisher=The Birmingham Post|date=April 10, 2010|url=http://www.birminghampost.net/life-leisure-birmingham-guide/postfeatures/2009/04/10/the-rock-s-on-a-roll-in-hollywood-65233-23360885/|accessdate=November 10, 2010}}</ref><ref name="islandconnections">{{cite web|url=http://www.islandconnections.com/edit/dwayne_johnson.htm|title=Dwayne Johnson – How The Rock Transformed from Pro Wrestler to Bankable Movie Star|accessdate=December 29, 2006|publisher=Island Connections|author=Morgan, Kaya}}</ref>
File:Abigail Kuaihelani Campbell.jpg|[[Abigail Kuaihelani Campbell]] was of indigenous Hawaiian and European ancestry.<ref>{{cite web|title=Abigail Kuaihelani Maipinepine|work=Our Family History and Ancestry|publisher=Families of Old Hawaii|url=http://familiesofoldhawaii.com/getperson.php?personID=I4539&tree=Ano|accessdate= 2010-03-25}}</ref>
File:LouDiamondPhillipsByPhilKonstantinPublicDomain.jpg|[[Lou Diamond Phillips]] is of [[Chinese people|Chinese]], [[Japanese settlement in the Philippines|Japanese]], [[Filipino people|Filipino]], [[Native Hawaiians|Hawaiian]], [[Cherokee]], [[Spanish people|Spanish]], and [[Scotch-Irish American]] ancestry.<ref name="newsref2">{{cite news|last=|first=|coauthors=|title=The Return of the Native|pages=|publisher=Starweek Magazine|year=1999|url=|accessdate=2009-11-28}}; no longer online, transcript at http://www.ritchievalens.org/thereturnofthenative.html</ref><ref name="newsref3">[http://www.2g.org/home/news/meettheartist/currentnews-loudiamondphilips.shtml Second Generation]</ref><ref name="newsref1">{{cite news|last=Honeycutt|first=Kirk|coauthors=|title=Lou Diamond Phillips: From Young Gun to Young Writer|pages=|publisher=Los Angeles Times|date=1990-08-19|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1990-08-19/entertainment/ca-3055_1_young-guns|accessdate=2009-11-28}}</ref>
File:Queen Emma of Hawaii, retouched photo by J. J. Williams.jpg|[[Queen Emma of Hawaii]] was of [[House of Kamehameha|Hawaiian Nobility]], [[John Young (Hawaii)|Scotts-British]], and [[Isaac Davis (Hawaii)|Welsh]] ancestry.<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamehameha_III#Family_Tree</ref>
File:Jason Momoa 2011.jpg|[[Jason Momoa]] was born to a father of [[Native Hawaiian|Indigenous Hawaiian]] ancestry, and a mother of German, Irish, and Native American ancestry.<ref name=ref1>Staff (July 19, 2004). [http://telepixtvcgi.warnerbros.com/dailynews/extra/0704/07_19c.html "Momoa Makes Hawaii Hot"], ''[[Extra (TV series)|Extra]]'', Retrieved August 18, 2011.</ref>
</gallery></center>


By the 1980s, parents of mixed race children (and adults of mixed race ancestry) began to organize and lobby for the ability to show more than one ethnic category on Census and other legal forms. They refused to be put into just one category. When the U.S. government proposed the addition of the category of "biracial" or "multiracial" in 1988, the response from the general public was mostly negative. Some African-American organizations and political leaders, such as Senator [[Diane Watson]] and Representative [[Augustus Hawkins]], were particularly vocal in their rejection of the category. They feared a loss in political and economic power if African-Americans abandoned their one category.
===Amerasian===
{{Main|Amerasian}}
In its original meaning, an '''Amerasian''' is a person born in [[Asia]], to a [[Military of the United States|U.S. military]] father and an [[Asian people|Asian]] mother. Colloquially, the term has sometimes been considered [[synonym]]ous with [[Asian American]], to describe any person of mixed Asian and [[United States|American]] parentage, regardless of the circumstances.


This reaction is characterized as "historical irony" by Reginald Daniel (2002). The African-American self-designation had been a response to the one-drop rule, but then people resisted the chance to claim their multiple heritages. At the bottom was a desire not to lose political power of the larger group. Whereas before people resisted being characterized as one group regardless of ranges of ancestry, now some of their own were trying to keep them in the same group.<ref name="sad">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9tP7_3j3WrkC&pg=PA129|title=More Than Black?:Multiracial|author=G. Reginald Daniel|access-date=September 19, 2008|year=2002|publisher= Temple University Press|isbn=978-1-56639-909-8}} p. 128f.</ref>
====Eurasian Americans====
{{Main|Eurasian American}}
According to the [[United States Census Bureau]], concerning multi-racial families in 1990, the number of children in interracial families grew from less than one-half million in 1970 to about two million in 1990. In 1990, for interracial families with one White partner, the other parent ... was Asian for 45 percent [of all children.]<ref>[http://www2.census.gov/census_2000/datasets/CQS/B.3.pdf U.S. Census Bureau, 2000]</ref>


<gallery mode="packed" heights="140">
According to James P. Allen and Eugene Turner from California State University, Northridge, by some calculations the largest part white bi-racial population is white/American Indian and Alaskan Native, at 7,015,017; followed by white/black at 737,492; then white/Asian at 727,197; and finally white/Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander at 125,628.<ref name="csupomona.edu"/>
File:James Brown (1977).jpg|[[James Brown]] was of [[Apache]], [[African Americans|African-American]] and [[Asian Americans|Asian]] descent.<ref name="roll">{{cite magazine|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/being-james-brown-rolling-stones-2006-cover-story-20101224|title=Being James Brown: Rolling Stone's 2006 Story|author=Jonathan Lethem|access-date=January 27, 2011|date=December 24, 2010|magazine=[[Rolling Stone]]}}</ref><ref name="newh">{{cite web|url=http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/mndwebpages/james%20brown.s%20indian%20heritage|title=James Brown&nbsp;— James Brown's Indian Heritage|author=Contact Music|access-date=April 9, 2009|year=2004|publisher=[[Contact Music]]}}</ref>
File:Muhammad Ali NYWTS.jpg|[[Muhammad Ali]] was of English, African-American and [[Irish Americans|Irish]] descent.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/boxing/1810535.stm |title=Ali has Irish ancestry |work=BBC News |date=February 9, 2002 |access-date=August 5, 2009}}</ref>
File:Whitney Houston Welcome Home Heroes 1 cropped.jpg|[[Whitney Houston]] was part Native American, [[African Americans|African-American]] and [[Dutch people|Dutch]].<ref name="ancestry">{{Cite news|first= Cissy|last= Houston|title= Visionary Project Video Interview (bottom of page) – Cissy Houston: My Family, go to the 1:00 mark|date=September 2, 2009|url= http://www.visionaryproject.org/houstoncissy/|access-date=February 11, 2012}}</ref>
File:Martin Luther King Jr NYWTS.jpg|[[Martin Luther King Jr.]] was of Irish and African descent.<ref name="thegrio.com">{{cite web |url=http://thegrio.com/2011/01/13/dna-used-to-reveal-mlk-and-garveys-african-lineage/ |title=DNA used to reveal MLK and Garvey's European lineage |work=theGrio |date=January 13, 2011 |access-date=March 17, 2015}}</ref><ref name="africanancestry.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.africanancestry.com/blog/category/partners/|title=Partners « African Ancestry Blog|access-date=July 14, 2013|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130630095007/http://www.africanancestry.com/blog/category/partners/|archive-date=June 30, 2013 }}</ref>
File:John Mercer Langston - Brady-Handy.jpg|[[John Mercer Langston]] was of English, Native American and African descent.<ref>[http://history.house.gov/People/Detail?id=16682 Black Americans in Congress: John Mercer Langston] Office of the Historian of the United States House of Representatives</ref>
File:Oprah Winfrey (2004).jpg|[[Oprah Winfrey]] is 89% Sub-Saharan African, 8% Native American and 3% East Asian.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/findingoprahsroo00gate/page/154 |title=Finding Oprah's Roots: Finding Your Own |first=Henry Louis |last=Gates |year=2007 |page=154 |publisher=Crown |isbn=9780307382382 |via=[[Internet Archive]]}}</ref>
</gallery>


===Definition of African-American===
The US Census categorizes Eurasian responses in the "Some other race" section as part of the Asian race.<ref name=Umich /> The Eurasian responses which the US Census officially recognizes are Indo-European, Amerasian, and Eurasian.<ref name=Umich>[http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/cicdoc/cen90app/ancestry.htm University of Michigan. Census 1990: Ancestry Codes. August 27, 2007]</ref>
{{Disputed|African American definition section|date=November 2014|}}
Since the late twentieth century, the number of African and Caribbean ethnic African immigrants have increased in the United States. Together with publicity about the ancestry of President Barack Obama, whose father was from Kenya, some black writers have argued that new terms are needed for recent immigrants. There is a consensus that suggests that the term '''African-American''' should refer strictly to the descendants of American Colonial Era [[chattel slavery|chattel slave]] descendants which includes various, subsequent, ''Free People of Color'' ethnic groups who survived the [[Slavery in the United States|Chattel Slavery Era in the United States]].<ref name="Dickerson">{{cite journal |url=http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/feature/2007/01/22/obama/ |title=Colorblind – Barack Obama would be the great black hope in the next presidential race – if he were actually black | journal= [[salon.com]] |author=Debra J. Dickerson |date=January 22, 2007|access-date=October 7, 2010}}</ref> It's been recognized that grouping together all Afrodescent ethnicities, regardless of their unique ancestral circumstances, would deny the lingering effects of slavery within the American Colonial Era [[chattel slavery|chattel slave]] descended community.<ref name="Dickerson"/> A growing sentiment within the ''Descendants of American Colonial Era Chattel Slaves (DOS)'' population insists that ethnic African immigrants as well as all other Afro-descent and [[Atlantic slave trade|Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade]] descendants and those relegated, or self-designated, to the Black race social identity or classification recognize their own unique familial, genealogical, ancestral, social, political and cultural backgrounds.<ref name="Dickerson"/>


[[Stanley Crouch]] wrote in a ''New York Daily News'' piece "Obama's mother is of white U.S. stock. His father is a black Kenyan," in a column entitled "What Obama Isn't: Black Like Me." During the 2008 campaign, the mixed-race columnist [[David Ehrenstein]] of the ''[[Los Angeles Times|LA Times]]'' accused white liberals of flocking to Obama because he was a "[[Magic Negro]]", a term that refers to a black person with no past who simply appears to assist the mainstream white (as cultural protagonists/drivers) agenda.<ref name="Obama the 'Magic Negro'">{{cite news| url=https://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-ehrenstein19mar19,0,5335087.story?coll=la-opinion-center | work=Los Angeles Times | title=Obama the 'Magic Negro' | date=March 19, 2007 | first=David | last=Ehrenstein}}</ref> Ehrenstein went on to say "He's there to assuage white 'guilt' they feel over the role of slavery and racial segregation in American history."<ref name="Obama the 'Magic Negro'"/>
<center><gallery>
File:Jennifer Tilly1.jpg|[[Jennifer Tilly]] is part Chinese, Irish, Native-American, and [[Finnish people|Finnish]].<ref>[http://www.asiancemagazine.com/2011/03/17/meg-tilly-is-asian-irish "Meg Tilly is Asian Irish"], ''Asiance magazine''March 2011, </ref><ref>{{cite web|author=BankrollBoost.com|url=http://www.bankrollboost.com/jennifer-tilly.php|title=Jennifer Tilly – Poker Pro Bio, Pictures and Poker Videos|publisher=Bankrollboost.com|accessdate=February 15, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/jennifer-tilly-little-voice-big-talent-533709.html|location=London|work=The Independent|title=Jennifer Tilly: Little voice, big talent|date=November 19, 2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.officialmegtilly.com/blog/P15|title=Official Meg Tilly Website|publisher=Officialmegtilly.com|accessdate=February 15, 2011}}</ref>
File:Carrie Ann Inaba.jpg|[[Carrie Ann Inaba]] is part Chinese, Japanese, and Irish.<ref>http://www.womenshealthexperience.com/pdf/WHT_Christ_WIN09.pdf</ref>
File:Tia Carrere 2009.jpg|[[Tia Carrere]] is part [[Filipino people|Filipino]], [[Chinese people|Chinese]] and [[Spaniards|Spanish]].<ref>{{cite web|title=BrainyQuote|url=http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/t/tia_carrere.html}}</ref>
File:Kip fulbeck.jpg|[[Kip Fulbeck]] is part [[Cantonese people|Cantonese]], English, Irish, and Welsh.<ref name="nichibeitimes.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.nichibeitimes.com/?p=1692 |title=Nichi Bei Times |publisher=Nichi Bei Times |date=September 10, 2009 |accessdate=October 18, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mxroots.org/Home/loving-prize |title=Loving Prize |publisher=Mxroots.org |date=June 11, 2011 |accessdate=October 18, 2011}}</ref><ref>http://geogweb.berkeley.edu/ProjectsResources/CaliforniaThinkers/profiles/fulbeck.html</ref>
File:Moon bloodgood crop.jpg|[[Moon Bloodgood]] is part [[Korean people|Korean]], Dutch and Irish.<ref>[http://www.complex.com/index.php?task=Articles&id=392&section=2&issue=1&PHPSESSID=fd94e00c8e01 My Complex: Adam Goldberg]</ref><ref>http://iamkoream.com/rising-moon/</ref>
File:Sean Lennon Nice 2007 bw 1.jpg|[[Sean Lennon]] is half [[Japanese people|Japanese]], and part Irish and English. <ref>{{cite news| author=Dekel, Jonathan| url=http://www.spinner.com/2010/10/08/sean-lennon-interview-john-yoko-plastic-ono-band/ | work=[[Spinner.com|Spinner]] | title=Sean Lennon on Singing John's Songs, Making Music and Yoko Ono's Legacy | date=2010-10-08}}</ref>
File:Tila Tequila 2008.jpg|[[Tia Tequila]] is part [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]] and [[French people|French]].<ref>{{cite book|last = Tequila|first= T|title = Hooking Up With Tila Tequila|publisher= Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group|year= 2008|page= 6}}</ref>
File:Olivia Munn.JPG|[[Olivia Munn]] is part [[Cantonese people|Cantonese]], German and Irish.<ref>Farley, Christopher John. [http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2010/06/05/daily-show-correspondent-olivia-munn-on-joining-the-show/ "‘Daily Show’ Correspondent Olivia Munn on Joining the Program"], ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]'', June 5, 2010</ref><ref>[http://www.zimbio.com/Olivia+Munn/articles/60/Tokyo+Dance+Trooper+G4TV+Olivia+Munn Tokyo Dance Trooper with G4TV's Olivia Munn] from ZimBio.com</ref>
</gallery></center>


Reacting to media criticism of Michelle Obama during the 2008 presidential election, [[Charles Steele Jr.]], CEO of the [[Southern Christian Leadership Conference]] said, "Why are they attacking Michelle Obama and not really attacking, to that degree, her husband? Because he has no slave blood in him."<ref name="ajc.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/shared-blogs/ajc/politicalinsider/entries/2008/06/21/sclc_head_michelle_obama_treat.html |title=? |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110503234305/http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/shared-blogs/ajc/politicalinsider/entries/2008/06/21/sclc_head_michelle_obama_treat.html |archive-date=May 3, 2011 }}</ref> He later claimed his comment was intended to be "provocative" but declined to expand on the subject.<ref name="ajc.com"/> Former Secretary of State [[Condoleezza Rice]] (who was famously mistaken for a "recent American immigrant" by French President [[Nicolas Sarkozy]]<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,309218,00.html | work=Fox News | title=Nicolas Sarkozy Mistakes Condoleezza Rice for Recent Immigrant | date=November 7, 2007}}</ref>), said "descendants of slaves did not get much of a head start, and I think you continue to see some of the effects of that." She has also rejected an immigrant designation for African-Americans and instead prefers the terms '''black''' or '''white'''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://bbaaghs.org/news/?p=10 |title=Book Excerpt: Condoleezza Rice: An American Life |author=Elisabeth Bumiller |date=December 22, 2007 |access-date=October 7, 2010}}</ref>
====Afro-Asian Americans====
{{Main|Afro-Asian}}
Chinese men entered the United States as laborers, primarily on the West Coast and in western territories. Following the [[Reconstruction era]], as blacks set up independent farms, white planters imported Chinese laborers to satisfy their need for labor. In 1882, the [[Chinese Exclusion Act]] was passed, and [[Chinese people|Chinese]] workers who chose to stay in the U.S. were unable to have their wives join them. In the South, some Chinese married into the black and mulatto communities, as generally discrimination meant they did not take white spouses. They rapidly left working as laborers, and set up groceries in small towns throughout the South. They worked to get their children educated and socially mobile.<ref name=ChineseBlacks>{{cite web
|url = http://www.colorq.org/MeltingPot/article.aspx?d=America&x=ChineseBlacks
|work= Chinese Blacks in the Americas
|title = The United States
|accessdate = 2008-07-21
|publisher = Color Q World}}</ref>


==White and European-American identity==
As of the census of 2000, there were 106,782 Afro-Asian individuals in the United States.<ref name=nation>
{{See also|Admixture in the United States|Race and genetics|White Hispanic and Latino Americans|Amerasian|hyperdescent}}
Some of the most notable{{Vague|date=June 2024}} families include the [[Anthony Janszoon van Salee|Van Salees]],<ref name="vansalee">
{{cite web
{{cite web
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/vansallees.html
|url=http://www.asian-nation.org/multiracial.shtml
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – The van Salee Family
|title= Multiracial/Hapa Asian Americans
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|accessdate= 2008-07-21
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> [[Vanderbilt family|Vanderbilts]], [[Whitney family|Whitneys]], [[Frank S. Black|Blacks]],<ref name="blacks">
|last= Le
{{cite web
|first= C. N.
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Black
|publisher= Asian-Nation: The Landscape of Asian America
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/black.html
|quote= According to the [[2000 United States Census|2000 census]], out of the 281,421,906 people living in the U.S., 10,242,998 of them identified themselves as entirely of Asian race (3.6%). Additionally, there were 1,655,830 people who identified themselves as being part Asian and part one or more other races. Asian and Black/African American ... 106,782 ... 0.64% (percentage of total multiracial Asians)}}</ref>
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
<center><gallery>
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> [[Wentworth Cheswell|Cheswells]],<ref name="cheswells">
File:ChanelIman.jpg|[[Chanel Iman]] was born to a half Korean mother and African American father.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.style.com/vogue/feature/041607/page2.html |title=Hit Girls |publisher=style.com |accessdate=2007-08-02 |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070420221850/http://www.style.com/vogue/feature/041607/page2.html |archivedate=2007-04-20}}</ref>
{{cite web
File:Ne-Yo in the studio.jpg|[[Ne-Yo]] is part Chinese and African-American.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.stcloudstate.edu/news/pressreleases/default.asp?storyID=26749|title=Ne-Yo: Grammy-winning singer to perform at Halenbeck Hall|date=2008-09-25|publisher=St. Cloud State University|accessdate=2008-10-14}}</ref>
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Cheswell
File:Bryan Clay Doha 2010-2.jpg|[[Bryan Clay]] is half Japanese and half African-American.<ref name=Azusa03>{{cite video |people= Bryan Clay|date= 2003|title= Bryan Clay ’03|url= http://www.apu.edu/stories/bclay/|format= |medium= Documentary|publisher= [[Azusa Pacific University]]|accessdate=2008-08-24}}</ref>
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/cheswell.html
Clay is a devout Christian.<ref>[http://www.bryanclay.com/clay/about]</ref>
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
File:Crystal Kay 10th Anniversary Tour CK10.jpg|[[Crystal Kay]] was born in Japan to a Korean mother (considered a minority there) and African-American father.<ref name="JPTimes">{{cite news|url=http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fm20091016r1.html#|author=Robert Michael Poole|title="Crystal Kay is having a ball" |date=October 16, 2009|work=Japan Times|accessdate=2009-10-16}}</ref>
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> Newells,<ref name="newells">
File:Kelis 1.jpg|[[Kelis]] is of Chinese, Puerto Rican and African-American descent.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mtv.co.uk/artists/kelis |title=Kelis |publisher=[[MTV (UK and Ireland)|MTV UK]]. [[MTV Networks Europe]] |accessdate=February 27, 2011}}</ref>
{{cite web
File:Sugarpie de santo.jpg|[[Sugar Pie DeSanto]] was born to an African-American mother and Filipino father.<ref name=desanto>
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Newell
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/newell.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> Battises,<ref name="battises">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Battis
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/battis.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> Bostons,<ref name="bostons">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Boston
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/boston.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> Eldings<ref name="eldings">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Elding
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/elding.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> of the [[Northern United States|North]]; the [[Robert Stafford|Staffords]],<ref name="staffords">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Stafford
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/stafford.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> [[Randall L. Gibson|Gibsons]],<ref name="gibsons">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Gibson
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/gibsonfamily.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> Locklears, Pendarvises,<ref name="pendarvis">
{{cite web
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/pendarvis.html
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Pendarvis
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation
| access-date = September 9, 2012|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}
</ref> [[Emanuel Driggus|Driggers]],<ref name="driggers01">
{{cite web
| title = Slavery and the Making of America – Emmanuel Driggus
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wnet/slavery/experience/family/spotlight.html
| publisher = Educational Broadcasting Corporation
}}</ref><ref name="driggers02">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Drigger
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/drigger.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> [[George Galphin|Galphins]],<ref name="galphins">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Galphin
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/galphin.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> [[George William Fairfax|Fairfaxes]],<ref name="fairfaxes">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Fairfax
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/fairfax.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> [[Elizabeth Key Grinstead|Grinsteads]] (Greenstead, Grinsted and Grimsted),<ref name="grinstead">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Greenstead
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/greenstead.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> Johnsons, Timrods, Darnalls of the [[Southern United States|South]] and the [[Pico family of California|Picos]],<ref name="picos">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Pico
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/pico.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> [[Charles Stillman#M Kenedy and Co.|Yturrias]]<ref name="yturrias">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Yturria
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/yturria.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref> and [[George Washington Bush|Bushes]] of the [[Western United States|West]].<ref name="bushes">
{{cite web
| title = Frontline: The Blurred Racial Lines of Famous Families – Bush
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/secret/famous/bush.html
| publisher = WGBH Educational Foundation| access-date=September 9, 2012
|author1=Valdes y Cocom |author2=Mario de }}</ref>

DNA analysis shows varied results regarding non-European ancestry in self-identified White Americans. A 2003 DNA analysis found that about 30% of self-identified [[White Americans#Admixture|White Americans]] have less than 90% European ancestry.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Stearns |first1=Stephen C. |last2=Koella |first2=Jacob C. |title=Evolution in Health and Disease |date=2008 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-920745-9 |page=50 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d_-0LsF3OBsC&dq=shriver+genetics+self-identified&pg=PA50 |language=en}}
"Thus, while the West African contribution to an African American's ancestry averages about 80%, its range is wide (i.e., ~20–100%) (Shriver, et al. 2003). The genetic composition of self-identified European Americans also varies, with ~30% of self-identified European Americans estimated to have < 90% European ancestry."</ref> A 2014 study performed on data obtained from [[23andme]] customers found that the percentage of African or American Indian ancestry among White Americans varies significantly by region, with about 5% of White Americans living in Louisiana and South Carolina having 2% or more African ancestry.<ref name="The Genetic"/>

Some biographical accounts include the autobiography ''Life on the Color Line: The True Story of a White Boy Who Discovered He Was Black'' by [[Gregory Howard Williams]]; ''One Drop: My Father's Hidden Life—A Story of Race and Family Secrets'' written by Bliss Broyard about her father [[Anatole Broyard]]; the documentary ''Colored White Boy''<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9evkxEdfocY | title=Colored White Boy | date=March 17, 2009 | publisher=Door Knob Films | access-date=October 1, 2012}}</ref> about a white man in North Carolina who discovers that he is the descendant of a white plantation owner and a raped African slave and the documentary on ''The Sanders Women''<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9evkxEdfocY | title=The Sanders Women | date=March 17, 2009 | publisher=Lianig | access-date=October 1, 2012}}</ref> of [[Shreveport, Louisiana]].

<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
File:George_Herriman_and_fans.jpg|[[George Herriman]], who was born into a mixed-race [[Louisiana Creole people|Creole]] family, wore a hat to conceal his [[afro-textured hair|hair texture]], and sometimes self-identified as [[Greeks|Greek]], [[Turkish people|Turkish]], or [[Irish people|Irish]]. His death certificate identified him as [[Caucasian race|Caucasian]].<ref name=telegraph>{{cite news|first=Sarah|last=Boxer|title=Herriman: Cartoonist who equalled Cervantes|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3666365/Herriman-Cartoonist-who-equalled-Cervantes.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3666365/Herriman-Cartoonist-who-equalled-Cervantes.html |archive-date=January 12, 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|quote=In 1971, however, the Krazy world changed. While researching an article on Herriman for the ''Dictionary of American Biography,'' the sociologist Arthur Asa Berger got a copy of Herriman's birth certificate. Although Herriman died listed as Caucasian in 1944 in Los Angeles, he was classified as "colored" when born to two mixed race or Creole parents in New Orleans in 1880, which had legal segregation. In 1880 Herriman would have been considered a [[mulatto]]. By the turn of the century, when he was a fledgling cartoonist, the newspaper bullpens "were open to immigrants but not to blacks".|newspaper=[[The Daily Telegraph]]|date=July 7, 2007|access-date=February 3, 2009|location=London}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
File:Patrick Francis Healy solitaire.jpeg|[[Patrick Francis Healy]] was born to an Irish-American plantation owner and his biracial slave. He and his siblings identified as white in their formative years and most made careers in the Catholic Church in the North.<ref>A summary of the ethnic self-identity of the Healys, taken from various sources, is available in A.D. Powell, ''Passing for Who You Really Are'' (Palm Coast FL, 2005) {{ISBN|0-939479-22-2}}.</ref>
File:Carolchanning.jpg|[[Carol Channing]] was born to a white mother and a half African-American and German father. She passed for white during the height of her career and later publicly acknowledged her mixed race origins.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=88IDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA38|access-date=April 21, 2008|title=Carol Channing reveals her father was Black|date=November 4, 2002|magazine=Jet}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0211/27/lkl.00.html|work=CNN|title=CNN}}</ref>
File:Mary Ellen Pleasant.gif|[[Mary Ellen Pleasant]], born to a slave and the youngest son of [[James Pleasants]], contributed to advancing the [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionist]] movement.
</gallery>

===Racial passing and ambiguity===
{{Main|Passing (racial identity)}}
'''Passing''' is a phenomenon most widely noted in the United States, which occurs when a person who may be literally classified as a member of one racial group (by law or frequent social convention applied to others with similar ancestry) is accepted or perceived ("passes") as a member of another.

The phenomenon known as "passing as white" is difficult to explain in other countries or to foreign students. Typical questions are: "Shouldn't Americans say that a person who is passing as white '''is''' white or nearly all white and has previously been passing as black?" or "To be consistent, shouldn't you say that someone who is one-eighth white is passing as black?" ... A person who is one-fourth or less American Indian or Korean or Filipino is not regarded as passing if he or she intermarries with and joins fully the life of the dominant community, so the minority ancestry need not be hidden... It is often suggested that the key reason for this is that the physical differences between these other groups and whites are less pronounced than the physical differences between African blacks and whites and therefore are less threatening to whites... [W]hen ancestry in one of these racial minority groups does not exceed one-fourth, a person is not defined solely as a member of that group.<ref name="Davis">
{{cite news
{{cite news
| url = https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/mixed/onedrop.html
|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/12/12/DDGREMSLJK1.DTL&ao=2
| title = Who is Black? One Nation's Definition
|title= The fire killed her husband and destroyed everything. But not Sugar Pie's spirit.
| last = Davis
|accessdate= 2012-03-31
| first = F. James
|last= Selvin
| work = Frontline
|first= Joel
|publisher= [[San Francisco Chronicle]]
| publisher = PBS
| access-date = July 18, 2008
|quote=Her Filipino father worked making mattresses. Her African American mother was from Philadelphia.
}}</ref>
}}</ref>
File:Sonja Sohn at Harvard Law School.jpg|[[Sonja Sohn]] is part Korean and African-American.<ref name=sonjasohn>
{{cite web
|url=http://www.racialicious.com/2006/12/05/interview-with-the-wires-sonja-sohn-not-%E2%80%98your-typical-black-girl%E2%80%99/
|title= Interview with ‘The Wire’s’ Sonja Sohn: Not ‘Your Typical Black Girl’
|accessdate= 2012-03-31
|last= contributor
|first= guest
|publisher= Racialicious
|quote=A husky-voiced woman of African American and Korean parentage, Sohn (who’s straight, in case you’re wondering) got her start in the New York slam-poetry circuit (including the Def Poetry Jam) before moving on to the TV and movie game (check her out in Shaft).
}}</ref>
File:Jero comes to Pitt, 82708.jpg|[[Jero]] is part Japanese and African-American.<ref name="jero-ap">[http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9779KP80&show_article=1 Japanese enka star to perform at DC festival], [[Associated Press]], March 28, 2009</ref>
</gallery></center>


<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
===Hispanic and Latino Americans===
File:G. K. Butterfield, Official Portrait, 112th Congress.jpg|[[G. K. Butterfield]] was born to two mixed race black identified parents of [[Portuguese people|Portuguese(white)]] and [[List of ethnic groups of Africa|African(black)]] descent from the [[Azores#Population|Azores]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna28216005|title=Obama's true colors: Black, white ... or neither?|author=G. Wayne Miller|date=December 24, 2008|publisher=Associated Press}}</ref>
{{See|Hispanic and Latino Americans|Black Hispanic and Latino Americans|Mestizo|Mulatto}}
File:Robert Purvis daguerreotype BPL.jpg|[[Robert Purvis]] was born to a part Moorish, German Jewish and Sephardic Jewish [[free people of color|free woman of color]] and an English father. He identified as black and worked to serve his community.<ref>{{cite book|first=Margaret Hope|last=Bacon|title=But One Race: The Life of Robert Purvis|location=Albany|publisher=State University of New York|year=2007|pages=7–8|isbn=978-0-7914-7007-7 }}</ref><ref>Bob Bankard, "The Passage to Freedom: The Underground Railroad", March 3, 2008 {{cite web|url=http://www.phillyburbs.com/undergroundrailroad/purvis.shtml|title=The Underground Railroad|access-date=May 3, 2008|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080705184847/http://www.phillyburbs.com/undergroundrailroad/purvis.shtml|archive-date=July 5, 2008 }}, accessed May 3, 2008</ref><ref name="query.nytimes.com">{{cite news|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B02EEDF1139E433A25755C1A9629C94699ED7CF|title=Robert Purvis Dead; Anti-Slavery Leader Expires in Philadelphia, Aged 87 —His Work for the Black Race|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=April 16, 1898|access-date=May 3, 2008 }}</ref>
The majority of Hispanic/Latino Americans are multiracial, with varying degrees of mixture from the different ethnic groups mentioned above: ''mestizo'' (mixed white and Native American), ''mulatto'', (mixed white and African), and/or triracial (mixed white, African, and Native American), as well as ''[[zambo]]'' (Black Native American). Chinese and Japanese laborers went to South America as well as North America: Peru and Chile attracted the most Chinese and Japanese. A minority of multiracial Latino Americans are part-Asian, with ancestries including Eurasian, Afro-Asian, Asian-Native American, and European-African-Asian-Native American. A typical Latino American family may have members with a wide range of racial phenotypes, meaning a Hispanic couple may have children who look white and African and/or Native American and/or Asian.<ref>[http://www.politicsincolor.com/node/96 "For Latinos "being white" is more of a state of mind than skin tone"], Politics in Color</ref> Latino Americans have several self-identifications; most Latinos identify as [[white Hispanic and Latino Americans|white]] in terms of race, while others identify as [[black Hispanic and Latino Americans|black]] and/or Native American and/or [[asian Hispanic and Latino Americans|Asian]]. Latinos who do not want to identify as one of those identify simply as Hispanic and/or ''some other race'' as their race.
File:Imitation of Life (1934) trailer 8.jpg|''[[Imitation of Life (1934 film)|Imitation of Life]]'' star [[Fredi Washington]] portrayed a woman who [[passing (racial identity)|passed]] in the famous film, but was against passing in her own life.<ref>Fay M. Jackson, "I don't want to pass because I can't stand insincerities and shams. I am just as much Negro as any of the others identified with the race.", (1911–1950), Pittsburgh, Pa.: April 14, 1934</ref>
File:Walter_Francis_White.jpg|[[Walter Francis White]] belonged to a middle-class [[hyperdescent]] African-American chattel slave descended family who remained black-identified.
File:Daniel Hale Williams.jpg|[[Daniel Hale Williams]] was of African-American and Scots-Irish ancestry. Although members of his family passed as white, he exclusively served and identified with African-Americans.
</gallery>


Laws dating from 17th-century colonial America defined children of African slave mothers as taking the status of their mothers and born into slavery regardless of the race or status of the father, under ''[[partus sequitur ventrem]]''. The association of slavery with a "race" led to slavery as a racial caste. But, most families of [[free people of color]] formed in Virginia before the [[American Revolution]] were the descendants of unions between white women and African men, who frequently worked and lived together in the looser conditions of the early colonial period.<ref>[http://www.freeafricanamericans.com Paul Heinegg, ''Free African Americans in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware''], 1995–2005</ref> While interracial marriage was later prohibited, white men frequently took sexual advantage of slave women, and numerous generations of multiracial children were born. By the late 1800s it had become common among African Americans to use passing to gain educational opportunities as did the first African-American graduate of [[Vassar College]], [[Anita Florence Hemmings]].<ref name="manchini">{{cite web | url=http://vq.vassar.edu/issues/2002/01/features/passing-as-white.html | title=Passing as White: Anita Hemmings 1897 | publisher=Vassar College | work="There were large numbers of African Americans at that time and into the turn of the century [for whom passing] was a means to gain opportunities in education," said Bickerstaff, who is now working on a book about the Hemmings family, tentatively titled Dark Beauty. "The country was under laws of segregation, and those families who had risen to that level of educational aspiration or economics were still excluded from most of the elite institutions." | year=2001 | access-date=September 30, 2012 | author=Mancini, Olivia}}</ref> Some 19th-century categorization schemes defined people by proportion of African ancestry: a person whose parents were black and white was classified as [[mulatto]], with one black grandparent and three white as [[quadroon]], and with one black great-grandparent and the remainder white as [[octoroon]]. The latter categories remained within an overall black or colored category, but before the Civil War, in Virginia and some other states, a person of one-eighth or less black ancestry was legally white.<ref name="Jordan">Winthrop Jordan, ''Black Over White'', ch. IV, "The Fruits of Passion."</ref> Some members of these categories passed temporarily or permanently as white.
European Americans socially have tended to group Latinos or Spanish-speakers within the U.S. as of one ethnicity (usually mixed race). Many [[Latin Americans|Latin American]] migrants have been mestizo, Amerindian, or other mixed race.<ref>[http://www.pbs.org/newshour/essays/june97/rodriguez_6-18.html "A CULTURAL IDENTITY: An essay on the meaning of the ''Hispanic'' label"], PBS, [[Richard Rodriguez]].</ref> Non-white-identified Hispanics have limited media visibility. Critics have accused the U.S. Hispanic media of overlooking the brown-skinned indigenous and mixed-race Hispanic and black Hispanic populations by over-representation of [[White Hispanic and Latino Americans|Hispanics and Latinos with European physical features]], such as [[blond hair]] and [[eye color#blue|blue eyes]]/[[eye color#green|green eyes]] (who resemble [[Scandinavians]] and other [[Northern Europe]]ans rather than they look like white Hispanics mostly of typical [[Southern Europe]]an features), and also [[White Hispanic and Latino Americans|light-skinned mulatto and mestizo Hispanic and Latino Americans]] (often deemed as white persons in U.S. Hispanic and Latino populations if achieving the middle class or higher social status), especially some of the actors on the [[telenovela]]s.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/58525?tid=relatedcl |title=Y Tu Black Mama Tambien |accessdate=2008-05-02 |last=Quinonez |first=Ernesto |date=2003-06-19}}</ref><ref>[http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A19009-2000Aug1¬Found=true "The Blond, Blue-Eyed Face of Spanish TV"]</ref><ref>[http://latinola.com/story.php?story=9009 "Blonde, Blue-Eyed Euro-Cute Latinos on Spanish TV"]</ref><ref>[http://www.vidadeoro.com/2010/10/latinos-not-reflected-on-spanish-tv.html "Latinos Not Reflected on Spanish TV"]</ref><ref>[http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art40221.asp "What are Telenovelas? – Hispanic Culture"]</ref><ref>[http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2000-08-06/news/0008060066_1_spanish-latino-leaders-caste Racial Bias Charged On Spanish-Language TV]</ref><ref>[http://www.blackelectorate.com/articles.asp?ID=281 Black Electorate]</ref><ref>[http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2004/08/19/pride_or_prejudice/ "Skin tone consciousness in Asian and Latin American populations"], ''Boston Globe''</ref><ref>[http://www.pbs.org/pov/corpus/film_description.php "Corpus: A Home Movie For Selena"], PBS</ref> Most rare empowered persons of color represented in U.S. Hispanic media possess typically Caucasian features due to a mix of racist standards of [[beauty]], [[colourism]] and [[lookism]].


After whites regained power in the South following [[Reconstruction Era of the United States|Reconstruction]], they established [[racial segregation]] to reassert [[white supremacy]], followed by laws defining people with any apparent or known African ancestry as black, under the principle of [[hypodescent]].<ref name="Jordan"/>
<center><gallery>
File:Rosie Perez portrait 2009.jpg|[[Rosie Perez]] was born in [[Bushwick, Brooklyn|Brooklyn]] to two [[African immigration to Puerto Rico|Puerto Rican]] parents of partial African descent. <ref>{{cite news| url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C00EFDA153CF931A15750C0A962958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=2 | work=The New York Times | title=Quake or No Quake, the Show Must Go On | first=Bernard | last=Weinraub | date=March 22, 1994 | accessdate=May 22, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/2000/07/08/2000-07-08_rosie_helped_mom__aids_group.html | location=New York | work=Daily News | title=Rosie Helped Mom, Aids Groups Say | date=July 8, 2000}}</ref><ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/2000/07/07/2000-07-07_rosie__her_mom___aids_activi.html | location=New York | work=Daily News | title=ROSIE, HER MOM & AIDS Activist Perez shuns mom who's dying of the disease | date=July 7, 2000}}</ref>
File:Tatyana Ali in Zuhair Murad and Swarovski Inauguration Night 2.JPG|[[Tatyana Ali]] is half [[Afro-Panamanians|Afro-Panamanian]] and half [[Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonian|Indo-Trinidadian]].<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.latina.com/entertainment/tv/tatyana-ali-pressures-being-star-tv-show | work=Latina Magazine | title=Tatyana Ali On the Pressures of Being the Star of a TV Show | first=Amaris | last=Castillo | date=October 17, 2011 | accessdate=March 9, 2012}}</ref>
File:CA2010PREIMRE.jpg|[[Christina Aguilera]] was born to an [[Ecuadorian]] father and a mother of German, Irish, Welsh, and Dutch ancestry.<ref name="time">{{cite news|author=Elaine Rivera|title=What A Woman Wants|work=Time|date=September 15, 2001|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1000774,00.html|accessdate=December 3, 2007}}</ref><ref name=puooreb>{{Cite book|last=Dominguez|first=Pier|title=Christina Aguilera: A Star is Made: The Unauthorized Biography|publisher=Amber Communications Group, Inc.|year=2002|pages=1–2|month=December|url=|isbn=978-0-9702224-5-9}}</ref>
File:Carly Simon (1989).jpg|[[Carly Simon]] is of Cuban, African, Jewish and French descent.<ref name="Kors">{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1285/is_6_34/ai_n6095018/pg_3 |title=Carly Simon: romance, pain, anticipation—if it's a human impulse, then Carly Simon has sung about it.|publisher=''[[Interview (magazine)|Interview]]''|author=Kors, Michael|authorlink=Michael Kors|month=July | year=2004}} {{Dead link|date=September 2010|bot=RjwilmsiBot}}<br /> {{cite news|url=http://www.carlysimon.net/board/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=835&start=0|title=Carly in INTERVIEW 2004|month=July|year=2004|author=Kors, Michael|work=Interview|publisher=Carly Simon Online|accessdate=4 September 2011}}</ref>
File:Shar Jackson LF2.JPG|[[Shar Jackson]] is of Puerto Rican, Mexican, African-American and Native American descent.<ref name="MSN2">{{cite web |url=http://www.buzzle.com/articles/shar-jackson.html|title=Shar Jackson|author=Ranjan Shandilya|accessdate=2008-09-05 |year=2008 |publisher=Buzzle }}</ref>
File:Dionne Warwick 3.jpg|[[Dionne Warwick]] is part Brazilian, Native American, African-American and Dutch.<ref name=ancestry>{{Cite news| first= Cissy | last= Houston | title= Visionary Project Video Interview (bottom of page) - Cissy Houston: My Family, at the 1:00 mark | date=September 2, 2009 | url= http://www.visionaryproject.org/houstoncissy/ | accessdate=February 11, 2012 }}</ref>
File:Gina Torres 2008.jpg|[[Gina Torres]] was born to two Cuban-American parents.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gina-torres.com |title=Gina Torres |publisher=Gina Torres |date= |accessdate=2010-04-09}}</ref>
File:Carlos Mencia hat.jpg|[[Carlos Mencia]] is part Mexican, Hondurian, German, British and Cayman Islander.<ref name="nprref2">{{cite news|last=Inskeep|first=Steve|coauthors=|title=Conversations on Immigration: Carlos Mencia|pages=|publisher=NPR|date=2006-06-12|url=http://m.npr.org/news/front/5478147?singlePage=true|accessdate=2010-03-18}}</ref>
</gallery></center>


However, since several thousand blacks have been crossing the color line each year, millions of white Americans have relatively recent African ancestors (of the last 250 years). A statistical analysis done in 1958 estimated that 21 percent of the white population had some African ancestors. The study concluded that the majority of Americans of African descent were today classified as white and not black.<ref>[https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/bitstream/1811/4532/1/V58N03_155.pdf AFRICAN ANCESTRY OF THE WHITE AMERICAN POPULATION], Ohio State University</ref>


==Hispanic and Latino American identity==
===Passing===
{{Further|Garifuna Americans|Hispanic and Latino Americans|Black Hispanic and Latino Americans||Casta}}
{{Main|Passing (racial identity)}}
"[[Passing (racial identity)|Passing]]" is a term for a person whose ancestry is mostly that of the dominant group with some ancestry of a subordinate group, and who is perceived as being part of the majority group, when social conventions would classify the person with the subordinate group.


A typical Latino American family may have members with a wide range of racial phenotypes, meaning a Latino couple may have children who look white and black and/or Native American and/or Asian.<ref>[http://www.politicsincolor.com/node/96 "For Latinos "being white" is more of a state of mind than skin tone"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130511155202/http://www.politicsincolor.com/node/96|date=May 11, 2013}}, Politics in Color</ref> Latino Americans have several self-identifications; most Latinos identify as "[[Race and ethnicity in the United States census|Some other race]]", while others identify as [[White Hispanic and Latino Americans|white]] and/or [[Black Hispanic and Latino Americans|black]] and/or Native American and/or [[Asian Hispanic and Latino Americans|Asian]].[https://www.census.gov/data/developers/data-sets/acs-1year.2021.html#form-dropdown-1471773036][https://www.npr.org/2021/09/30/1037352177/2020-census-results-by-race-some-other-latino-ethnicity-hispanic]
The phenomenon known as "passing as white" is difficult to explain in other countries or to foreign students. Typical questions are: "Shouldn't Americans say that a person who is passing as white '''is''' white, or nearly all white, and has previously been passing as black?" or "To be consistent, shouldn't you say that someone who is one-eighth white is passing as black?" ... A person who is one-fourth or less American Indian or Korean or Filipino is not regarded as passing if he or she intermarries with and joins fully the life of the dominant community, so the minority ancestry need not be hidden. ... It is often suggested that the key reason for this is that the physical differences between these other groups and whites are less pronounced than the physical differences between African blacks and whites, and therefore are less threatening to whites. ... [W]hen ancestry in one of these racial minority groups does not exceed one-fourth, a person is not defined solely as a member of that group.<ref name="Davis">{{cite news|url=http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/mixed/onedrop.html|title=Who is Black? One Nation's Definition|last=Davis|first=F. James|work=Frontline|publisher=PBS|accessdate=2008-07-18}}</ref>


Latinos of darker skin tones are noted as having limited media appearance; critics and Latinos of color have accused Latin American media of overlooking dark-skinned individuals in favor of those that are of lighter complexion, blonde-haired and blue/green-eyed {{endash}} especially in regards to actors and actresses on [[telenovela]]s {{endash}} rather than the typical nonwhite Latin Americans.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/58525?tid=relatedcl|title=Y Tu Black Mama Tambien|access-date=May 2, 2008|last=Quinonez|first=Ernesto|website=[[Newsweek]]|date=June 19, 2003}}</ref><ref>[https://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A19009-2000Aug1¬Found=true "The Blond, Blue-Eyed Face of Spanish TV"]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://latinola.com/story.php?story=9009|title=LatinoLA – Forum :: Blonde, Blue-Eyed, Euro-Cute Latinos on Spanish TV|work=LatinoLA|access-date=March 17, 2015|archive-date=September 2, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170902161618/http://latinola.com/story.php?story=9009|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vidadeoro.com/2010/10/latinos-not-reflected-on-spanish-tv.html|title=Vida de Oro: Latinos not reflected on Spanish TV|access-date=March 17, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art40221.asp|title=What are Telenovelas?|access-date=March 17, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2000-08-06/news/0008060066_1_spanish-latino-leaders-caste|title=Racial Bias Charged On Spanish-language Tv|work=tribunedigital-sunsentinel|access-date=March 17, 2015|archive-date=September 15, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120915015308/http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2000-08-06/news/0008060066_1_spanish-latino-leaders-caste|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.blackelectorate.com/articles.asp?ID=281|title=BlackElectorate.com|website=www.blackelectorate.com|access-date=October 22, 2017}}</ref><ref>[https://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2004/08/19/pride_or_prejudice/ "Skin tone consciousness in Asian and Latin American populations"], ''Boston Globe''</ref><ref>[https://www.pbs.org/pov/corpus/film_description.php "Corpus: A Home Movie For Selena"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924151037/http://www.pbs.org/pov/corpus/film_description.php |date=September 24, 2015 }}, PBS</ref>
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File:Robert Purvis daguerreotype BPL.jpg|[[Robert Purvis]] appeared white as he was three-quarters white, but chose to identify as black and work for that community. was born to a [[Free people of color|free woman of color]] and an English father.<ref>Margaret Hope Bacon, ''But One Race: The Life of Robert Purvis'', Albany: State University of New York, 2007, pp.7-8</ref><ref>Bob Bankard, "The Passage to Freedom: The Underground Railroad", 3 March 2008 [http://www.phillyburbs.com/undergroundrailroad/purvis.shtml], accessed 3 May 2008</ref><ref name="query.nytimes.com">[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B02EEDF1139E433A25755C1A9629C94699ED7CF] "ROBERT PURVIS DEAD.; Anti-Slavery Leader Expires in Philadelphia, Aged 87 --His Work for the Black Race", New York Times, 16 April 1898, accessed 3 May 2008</ref>
File:Harry Shum Jr. podczas San Diego ComicCon 2017.jpg|[[Harry Shum Jr.]] was born in Limón, Costa Rica, the son of Chinese immigrants. His mother is a native of Hong Kong and his father is from Guangzhou, China.
File:Stacey Dash.jpg|[[Stacey Dash]] is the daughter of a Mexican-American mother Linda Dash (née Lopez;<ref name=tvg>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.tvguide.com/celebrities/stacey-dash/bio/175079/|title= Stacey Dash|magazine=[[TV Guide]]|access-date= February 7, 2016|archive-date=October 1, 2015|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20151001034719/http://www.tvguide.com/celebrities/stacey-dash/bio/175079/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name=DAS /> d. 2017)<ref>{{cite twitter|user=realstaceydash|number=934427721068883968|first= Stacey|last= Dash|title=My mother died overnight|date= November 25, 2017}}</ref> and Dennis Dash, an African-American.<ref name=DAS>{{cite web|url= https://dashtodc.com/about/|title= About Stacey Lauretta Dash|publisher= Stacey Dash [for] Congress|access-date= March 14, 2018|archive-date= March 14, 2018|archive-url= https://archive.today/20180314214254/https://dashtodc.com/about/|url-status= live}}</ref>
File:GeraldoRiveraSept2010.jpg|[[Geraldo Rivera]] is half Puerto Rican and [[Ashkenazi Jews|Ashkenazi]] [[History of the Jews in Russia|Russian Jew]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/WaterCooler/story?id=4339477&page=1|title=Excerpt: "His Panic"|work=ABC News|date=February 26, 2008|access-date=March 28, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0729273/bio/|title=Geraldo Rivera|website=IMDb|access-date=October 22, 2017}}</ref><ref>[http://www.interfaithfamily.com/site/apps/nl/content2.asp?c=ekLSK5MLIrG&b=297403&ct=415783 Do the Jews Need Geraldo] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927004757/http://www.interfaithfamily.com/site/apps/nl/content2.asp?c=ekLSK5MLIrG&b=297403&ct=415783|date=September 27, 2007 }}. Interfaithfamily.com. Retrieved on July 14, 2013.</ref>
File:Adrian Grenier June 2014.jpg|[[Adrian Grenier]] mother is Mexican (Spanish, [[Indigenous peoples of Mexico|Indigenous]]) and some French.<ref name=hgatesbookref1/> His father is of English, Scottish, Irish and German ancestry.<ref name=hgatesbookref1>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IDVcBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT382|page=382|title=Finding Your Roots: The Official Companion to the PBS Series|last=Gates| first=Henry Louis Jr. |year=2014|publisher=UNC Press Books|isbn=9781469618012}}</ref>
File:Chita Rivera 1.jpg|[[Chita Rivera]]'s mother was of Scottish and Italian descent and her father was [[Puerto Ricans|Puerto Rican]].<ref name="N">{{cite news|last=Ratner-Arias|first=Sigal|url=http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=1048958&lang=eng_news|title=Q&A: Chita Rivera reflects on life in the theater|work=[[Taiwan News]]|agency=Associated Press|date=September 4, 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304113810/http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=1048958&lang=eng_news|archive-date=2016-03-04}}</ref>
File:Rosa Salazar by Gage Skidmore.jpg|[[Rosa Salazar]] is of French and [[Peruvians|Peruvian]] descent.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/rosa-salazar-abbreviated-bird-box-role-james-camerons-alita-1174582|title=Rosa Salazar: From "Abbreviated" 'Bird Box' Role to James Cameron's 'Alita'|magazine=The Hollywood Reporter|date=January 11, 2019|access-date=January 15, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190114030948/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/rosa-salazar-abbreviated-bird-box-role-james-camerons-alita-1174582|archive-date=January 14, 2019|url-status=live}}</ref>
File:John Sununu 2015.jpg|[[John H. Sununu]] was born to a [[Salvadorans|Salvadoran]] mother of [[Lebanese people|Lebanese]] descent and an American father of [[Palestinians|Palestinian]] and [[Lebanese people|Lebanese]] descent.
File:Eva Longoria Cannes 2015.jpg|According to [[DNA test]]ing, [[Eva Longoria]]'s Mexican-American ancestry consists of 70% European, 27% Asian and [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Indigenous]] and 3% [[Black people|African]] origin.<ref name="LM">{{cite web|url=http://www.latina.com/entertainment/celebrity/faces-america-reveals-eva-longoria-parkers-surprising-roots|title="Faces of America" Reveals Eva Longoria Parker's Surprising Roots|last=Miller|first=Gerri|date=February 2, 2010|work=[[Latina (magazine)|Latina magazine]]|access-date=March 13, 2011|archive-date=April 1, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100401075119/http://www.latina.com/entertainment/celebrity/faces-america-reveals-eva-longoria-parkers-surprising-roots|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:Sal Vulcano in 2017.png|Comedian [[Sal Vulcano]] is of [[Italians|Italian]], [[Puerto Ricans|Puerto Rican]], and [[Cubans|Cuban]] ancestry.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Bucholtz |first=Meg |date=2019-11-05 |title=What Sal Vulcano Was Doing Before Impractical Jokers Took Off |url=https://www.looper.com/173442/what-sal-vulcano-was-doing-before-impractical-jokers-took-off/ |access-date=2024-02-14 |website=Looper |language=en-US}}</ref>
File:Bruno Mars portrait.jpg|[[Bruno Mars]] was born in [[Hawaii]] to a father of [[Puerto Ricans|Puerto Rican]] and Hungarian and Ukrainian [[Jews|Jewish]] ancestry and a mother of [[Filipinos|Filipino]] and [[Spaniards|Spanish]] ancestry.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-01-30 |title=Mr. Everything |url=http://www.latina.com/featured/magazine/2017/bruno-mars/ |access-date=2024-02-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170130174719/http://www.latina.com/featured/magazine/2017/bruno-mars/ |archive-date=January 30, 2017 }}</ref>
</gallery>


==Pacific Islander American identity==
File:FrancisPatrick.jpg|[[Patrick Francis Healy]] was born to an Irish-American plantation owner and his bi-racial slave; he and his siblings identified as white in their formative years and most made careers in the Catholic Church in the North.<ref>A summary of the ethnic self-identity of the Healys, taken from various sources, is available in A.D. Powell, ''Passing for Who You Really Are'' (Palm Coast FL, 2005) ISBN 0-939479-22-2.</ref>
{{See also|Demographics of American Samoa|History of Guam|Pacific Islander}}
File:Adam Clayon Powell Jr.jpg|[[United States|American]] politician [[Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.]] was born to two mixed-race parents of [[Africans|African]] and [[Europeans|European]] descent. He briefly [[passing (racial identity)|passed]] for [[White people|white]] in college.<ref>{{cite book
|title=King of the Cats: The Life and Times of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.
|chapter=Chapter One
|url=http://www.worldcat.org/wcpa/servlet/DCARead?standardNo=0060842415&standardNoType=1&excerpt=true
|accessdate=2012-02-08
|authorlink=Wil Haygood |first=Wil |last=Haygood
|publisher=[[HarperCollins Publishers Inc.]]
|year=2006
|isbn=0-06-084241-5
}}
</ref>
File:Elizabeth Keckly UNC.gif|[[Elizabeth Keckley]], the first woman of color to work in the [[White House]], passed as white to get the job. She was a daughter of [[Armistead Burwell]] and one of his slaves. <ref>*{{cite book|first=Jennifer |last=Fleischner|title=Mrs. Lincoln and Mrs. Keckley: The Remarkable Story of the Friendship between a First Lady and a Former Slave|publisher=Broadway Books|year=2003|pages=29, 88|isbn=0-7679-0259-9 |ref=Fleischner}}</ref>
File:HooverJoven.jpg|Although FBI pioneer [[J. Edgar Hoover]] lived his life as a white man; one of his grandparents was classified as [[colored]] by the U.S. Census.<ref name="McGhee">{{cite news|url=http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/mixed/onedrop.html|title=Secrets Uncovered, J Edgar Hoover - Passing For White? |last=McGhee|first=Millie L.|publisher=Allen Morris}}</ref>
File:Merle Oberon-publicity.JPG|[[Merle Oberon]] identified as white, but was the first Hollywood actress of partial [[East Indians|East Indian]] ancestry.<ref name=merleoberon>{{cite web|last=Staff|first=Publication|title="Hollywood's first Indian actress: Merle Oberon"|url=http://sapnamagazine.com/?p=537|publisher=SAPNA Magazine Winter 2009|accessdate=5 May 2012}}</ref>
File:Herrcar.jpg|[[George Herriman]], born into a [[Louisiana Creole people|Creole]] [[mixed-race]] family, he wore a hat to conceal his [[afro-textured hair|hair texture]]. His death certificate identified him as [[Caucasian race|Caucasian]].<ref name=telegraph>{{cite news|first=Sarah|last=Boxer|authorlink=|coauthors=|title=Herriman: Cartoonist who equalled Cervantes|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3666365/Herriman-Cartoonist-who-equalled-Cervantes.html|quote=In 1971, however, the Krazy world changed. While researching an article on Herriman for the ''Dictionary of American Biography,'' the sociologist Arthur Asa Berger got a copy of Herriman’s birth certificate. Although Herriman died listed as Caucasian in 1944 in Los Angeles, he was classified as "colored" when born to two mixed-race or Creole parents in New Orleans in 1880, which had legal segregation. In 1880 Herriman would have been considered a [[mulatto]]. By the turn of the century, when he was a fledgling cartoonist, the newspaper bullpens "were open to immigrants but not to blacks".|work=[[The Daily Telegraph]]|date=July 7, 2007|accessdate=2009-02-03|location=London}}</ref>
File:Billy Daniels, London Palladium 1952.jpg|[[Billy Daniels]] was among a selection of black entertainers who publicly spoke against passing. He was a descendant of frontiersman [[Daniel Boone]], and of African-American, Choctaw and Portuguese descent. <ref name="jet01101952">{{cite news|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=WY8DAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA62&dq=negro+singers+who+refuse+to+pass&hl=en&sa=X&ei=nW_1T5miDca-rQHf1szpAw&ved=0CDsQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=negro%20singers%20who%20refuse%20to%20pass&f=false|title="Negro Singers Who Refuse to Pass", pp. 62-64|publisher=Jet Magazine}}</ref>
</gallery></center>


During the 19th century, Christian missionaries from Europe and the United States followed Western traders to the Hawaiian Islands, leading to a wave of Western migration to the [[Kingdom of Hawaii]]. Westerners in the Hawaiian Islands often intermarried with Native Hawaiian women, including Hawaiian royalty. These developments eventually led to a gradual change in the beauty standards of Native Hawaiian women to a more [[Westernization|westernized]] standard, which was reinforced by the refusal of Westerners to marry dark-skinned Hawaiians.<ref name="Colonialism's Daughters">{{cite book |title= Pacific Diaspora: Island Peoples in the United States and Across the Pacific |chapter= Colonialism's Daughters |author= Karina Kahananui Green |editor= Paul R. Spickard |editor2=Joanne L. Rondilla |editor3=Debbie Hippolite Wright |pages= 242–248 |publisher= University of Hawaii Press |year=2002 |isbn= 978-0-8248-2619-2 |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=lnIYIXyIP8QC}}</ref>
Laws dating from 17th-century colonial America defined children of African slave mothers as taking the status of their mothers, and born into slavery regardless of the race or status of the father, under ''[[partus sequitur ventrem]]''. The association of slavery with a "race" led to slavery as a racial caste. But, most families of [[free people of color]] formed in Virginia before the [[American Revolution]] were the descendants of unions between white women and African men, who frequently worked and lived together in the looser conditions of the early colonial period.<ref>[http://www.freeafricanamericans.com Paul Heinegg, ''Free African Americans in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware''], 1995-2005</ref> While interracial marriage was later prohibited, white men frequently took sexual advantage of slave women, and numerous generations of multiracial children were born. Some 19th-century categorization schemes defined people by proportion of African ancestry: a person whose parents were black and white was classified as [[mulatto]], with one black grandparent and three white as [[quadroon]], and with one black great-grandparent and the remainder white as [[octoroon]]. The latter categories remained within an overall black or colored category, but before the Civil War, in Virginia and some other states, a person of one-eighth or less black ancestry was legally white.<ref name="Jordan">Winthrop Jordan, ''Black Over White'', ch. IV, "The Fruits of Passion."</ref> Some members of these categories passed temporarily or permanently as white.


While some American Pacific Islanders continue traditional cultural [[endogamy]], many within this population now have mixed racial ancestry, sometimes combining European, Native American, as well as [[East Asian people|East Asian]] ancestry. The [[Hawaiian language|Hawaiians]] originally described the mixed race descendants as ''[[hapa]]''. The term has evolved to encompass all people of mixed Asian and/or [[Pacific Islander]] ancestry. Subsequently, many [[Han Chinese|ethnic Chinese]] also settled on the islands and married into the Pacific Islander populations.
Until the [[American Civil War|Civil War]], racial identity depended on the combination of appearance, African blood fraction, and social circle.<ref>See "Chapter 9. How the Law Decided if You Were Black or White: The Early 1800s" in ''Legal History of the Color Line: The Rise and Triumph of the One-Drop Rule'' by Frank W. Sweet, ISBN 0-939479-23-0. A summary of this chapter, with endnotes, is available online at [http://backintyme.com/Essay040811.htm How the Law Decided if You Were Black or White: The Early 1800s].</ref>After whites regained power in the South following [[Reconstruction]], they established [[racial segregation]] to reassert [[white supremacy]], followed by laws defining people with any apparent or known African ancestry as black, under the principle of [[hypodescent]]. <ref name="Jordan"/>


There are many other Pacific Islanders outside of Hawaii that do not share this common history with Hawaii and Asian populations are not the only race that Pacific Islanders mix with.
However, since several thousand blacks have been crossing the color line each year, millions of white Americans have relatively recent African ancestors (of the last 250 years). A statistical analysis done in 1958 estimated that 21 percent of the white population had some African ancestors. The study concluded that the majority of Americans of African descent were today classified as white and not black.<ref>[https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/bitstream/1811/4532/1/V58N03_155.pdf AFRICAN ANCESTRY OF THE WHITE AMERICAN POPULATION], Ohio State University</ref>


<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
<center><gallery>
File:Kaiulani in San Francisco, 1897, photograph by I. W. Taber, retouched photo by J. J. Williams, Library of Congress (restored).jpg|[[Kaʻiulani|Princess Kaʻiulani]] was of Indigenous Hawaiian and Scots-American descent.<ref name="Hawaiian Kingdom 1874-1893">{{cite book|title=Hawaiian Kingdom 1874–1893, the Kalakaua Dynastism|author=Ralph S. Kuykendall|year=1967|isbn=978-0-87022-433-1|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|page=477}}</ref>
File:Henriettedelille.gif|[[Henriette DeLille]], born to a Spanish father and [[Creoles of color|Creole]] mother, was raised to take her place in the [[plaçage]]. She, instead, spoke against the system. <ref>M. Boniface Adams, "The Gift of Religious Leadership: Henriette Delille and the Foundation of the Holy Family Sisters," Glenn R. Conrad, ed., ''Cross, Crozier, and Crucible: A Volume Celebrating the Bicentennial of a Catholic Diocese in Louisiana'' (New Orleans: The Archdiocese in cooperation with the Center for Louisiana Studies, 1993), 360-74.</ref>
File:Queen Emma of Hawaii, retouched photo by J. J. Williams.jpg|[[Queen Emma of Hawaii]] was of [[House of Kamehameha|Hawaiian Nobility]] and [[John Young (Hawaii)|Scottish]] ancestry.<ref>[[Kamehameha III#Family Tree]]</ref>
File:Daniel Hale Williams.jpg|[[Daniel Hale Williams]] was of Scots-Irish and African-American ancestry. Although members of his family passed as white, he exclusively served, and identified with, African Americans.<ref name=bigelow>{{cite book|last=Bigelow|first=Barbara Carlisle|title=Contemporary Black biography. profiles from the international Black community|year=1992|publisher=Gale Research Inc.|location=Detroit|isbn=0-8103-8554-6|pages=254}}</ref>
File:Dwayne Johnson 2, 2013.jpg|Actor [[Dwayne Johnson]]'s mother is [[Samoans|Samoan]] and his [[Rocky Johnson|father]] is [[Black Nova Scotians|Black Nova Scotian]].<ref name=mh>{{cite news|title=Grandmother of 'The Rock,' promoter|first=Elinor J.|last=Brecher|newspaper=[[The Miami Herald]]|date=October 25, 2008}}</ref><ref name="yahoo">{{cite web|url=https://movies.yahoo.com/feature/through-the-years-the-rock.html|title=Through The Years – Dwayne 'Not Just The Rock' Johnson|date=March 12, 2008|last=Crow|first=Jonathan|access-date=March 13, 2009|publisher=Yahoo Movies|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090316064529/http://movies.yahoo.com/feature/through-the-years-the-rock.html|archive-date=March 16, 2009}}</ref><ref name=tsom>{{cite news|last=Young|first=Graham|title=The Rock's on a roll in Hollywood|newspaper=The Birmingham Post|date=April 10, 2010|url=http://www.birminghampost.net/life-leisure-birmingham-guide/postfeatures/2009/04/10/the-rock-s-on-a-roll-in-hollywood-65233-23360885/|access-date=November 10, 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101223202537/http://www.birminghampost.net/life-leisure-birmingham-guide/postfeatures/2009/04/10/the-rock-s-on-a-roll-in-hollywood-65233-23360885/|archive-date=December 23, 2010}}</ref><ref name="islandconnections">{{cite web|url=http://www.islandconnections.com/edit/dwayne_johnson.htm|title=Dwayne Johnson – How The Rock Transformed from Pro Wrestler to Bankable Movie Star|access-date=December 29, 2006|publisher=Island Connections|author=Morgan, Kaya|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120119050623/http://www.islandconnections.com/edit/dwayne_johnson.htm|archive-date=January 19, 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:Imitation of Life (1934) trailer 8.jpg|''[[Imitation of Life (1934 film)|Imitation of Life]]'' star [[Fredi Washington]] portrayed a woman who [[passing (racial identity)|passed]] in the famous film, but was against passing in her own life.<ref>[Fay M. Jackson, "I don't want to pass because I can't stand insincerities and shams. I am just as much Negro as any of the others identified with the race.'', (1911-1950), Pittsburgh, Pa.: Apr 14, 1934</ref>
File:Jason Momoa 2011.jpg|[[Jason Momoa]] was born to a mother of Native American, Irish and German ancestry and a father of [[Native Hawaiians|Indigenous Hawaiian]] ancestry.<ref>Staff (July 19, 2004). [http://telepixtvcgi.warnerbros.com/dailynews/extra/0704/07_19c.html "Momoa Makes Hawaii Hot"], ''[[Extra (U.S. TV program)|Extra]]'', Retrieved August 18, 2011.</ref>
File:Henry Plummer Cheatham.jpg| Born into slavery, the African-American congressman, [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] [[Henry P. Cheatham]], was of majority white ancestry.<ref>[http://www.campbell.edu/faculty/Faulkner/NCHist33213-14.pdf Campbell University]</ref>
File:LouDiamondPhillipsByPhilKonstantinPublicDomain.jpg|[[Lou Diamond Phillips]] is of [[Cherokee]], [[Native Hawaiians|Hawaiian]], Spanish, Chinese, [[Japanese in the Philippines|Japanese]], [[Filipinos|Filipino]] and [[Scotch-Irish Americans|Scotch-Irish American]] ancestry.<ref name="newsref2">{{cite news|title=The Return of the Native|publisher=Starweek Magazine|year=1999}}</ref><ref name="newsref3">{{cite web|url=http://www.2g.org/home/news/meettheartist/currentnews-loudiamondphilips.shtml|title=Second Generation|access-date=March 17, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Honeycutt|first=Kirk|title=Lou Diamond Phillips: From Young Gun to Young Writer|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=August 19, 1990|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-08-19-ca-3055-story.html|access-date=November 28, 2009}}</ref>
File:Walter Francis White.jpg|Often mistaken for white, civil rights activist [[Walter Francis White]] was of African-American and majority European descent. He had fair skin, blonde hair and blue eyes.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0820316989&id=bbMKSGD_TpUC&pg=PA3&lpg=PA3&dq=Walter+White+NAACP&sig=LIfEA99_uvt-pOy5yXKb1Q2Ey-s Walter White, ''A Man Called White'']</ref>
</gallery>
File:Thomas Ezekiel Miller.jpg|Politician [[Thomas E. Miller]] is one of a few African Americans to have served in the [[United States House of Representatives|U.S. House of Representatives]] from South Carolina.<ref>{{Cite book
| last = Edgar
| first = Walter
| title = South Carolina Encyclopedia
| publisher = University of South Carolina Press
| year = 2006
| location = Columbia, SC
| pages = 999–1000
| isbn = 1-57003-598-9
}}</ref>
File:Mary Ellen Pleasant.gif|[[Mary Ellen Pleasant]], born to a slave and the youngest son of [[James Pleasants]], passed to further the [[abolitionist]] movement.<ref name=findagrave>{{Find a Grave|8235492|work=Claim to Fame: Known as the Mother of Civil Rights in California |accessdate=August 15, 2010}}</ref>
File:Charles W Chesnutt 40.jpg|[[Charles W. Chesnutt|Charles W. Chesnutt's]] parents were [[free persons of color]], of majority white ancestry. He could have easily passed for white but identified with people of color and wrote about their issues.<ref name=browner>{{cite web|last=Browner|first=Stephanie P|title=Charles W. Chesnutt, "Race Prejudice; Its Causes and Its Cure"|url=http://faculty.berea.edu/browners/chesnutt/Works/Essays/race.html|work=The Charles Chesnutt Digital Archive|publisher=Berea College|accessdate=5 May 2012}}
</ref>
</gallery></center>


==Eurasian-American identity==
==Multiracial families==
In its original meaning, an '''Amerasian''' is a person born in Asia to an [[Asian people|Asian]] mother and a [[United States Armed Forces|U.S. military]] father. Colloquially, the term has sometimes been considered [[synonym]]ous with [[Asian Americans|Asian-American]], to describe any person of mixed American and Asian parentage, regardless of the circumstances. The term "wasian" is also common slang to describe the individuals. "Wasian" has gained popularity on online platforms like TikTok among younger audiences, where trends in the 2020s have increased the proliferation of the term.<ref>{{cite journal | doi=10.3390/genealogy6020055 | doi-access=free | title=#Wasian Check: Remixing 'Asian + White' Multiraciality on TikTok | date=2022 | last1=King-o'Riain | first1=Rebecca Chiyoko | journal=Genealogy | volume=6 | issue=2 | page=55 }}</ref>
{{Over-quotation|section|date=November 2009}}
{{See|Interracial marriage in the United States}}
[[File:Mixed-couple.jpg|thumb|A 2004 California wedding between a Filipina bride and a Nigerian groom.]]
In an article about mixed-race children having identity problems, Charlotte Nitary states:
{{quote|Wardle (1989) says that today, parents assume one of three positions as to the identity of their interracial children. Some insist that their child is 'human above all else' and that race or ethnicity is irrelevant, while others choose to raise their children with the identity of the parent of color. Another growing group of parents is insisting that the child have the ethnic, racial, cultural and genetic heritage of both parents.<ref name="Nitardy"/>}}


According to the [[United States Census Bureau]], concerning multiracial families in 1990, the number of children in interracial families grew from less than one-half million in 1970 to about two million in 1990.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www2.census.gov/census_2000/datasets/CQS/B.3.pdf|title=Census Quality Survey to Evaluate Responses to the Census 2000 Question on Race: An Introduction to the Data|date=October 20, 2003|access-date=October 22, 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20031020153728/http://www2.census.gov/census_2000/datasets/CQS/B.3.pdf|archive-date=October 20, 2003}}</ref>
In her book ''Love's Revolution: Interracial Marriage'', Maria P. P. Root writes:
{{quote|Women with children, especially biracial children, have fewer chances for remarriage than childless women. And because the children of divorce tend to remain with mothers, becoming incorporated into new families when their mothers remarry, interracial children are more threatening markers of race and racial authenticity for families in which race matters.<ref name="Root">{{cite book|last=Root|first=Maria P. P.|title=Love's Revolution: Interracial Marriage|publisher=Temple University Press|pages=202|isbn=1-56639-826-6|url=http://books.google.com/?id=-im2X0hbpv8C&pg=PA111&lpg=PA111&dq=why+interracial+marriage|accessdate=2008-07-14|year=2001}} at p. 138.</ref>}}


According to James P. Allen and Eugene Turner from [[California State University, Northridge]], by some calculations the largest part white biracial population is white/[[Native Americans in the United States|American Indian]] and [[Alaska Natives|Alaskan Native]], at 7,015,017; followed by white/black at 737,492; then white/Asian at 727,197; and finally white/[[Native Hawaiians|Native Hawaiian]] and other [[Pacific Islander]] at 125,628.<ref name="csupomona.edu"/>
In 2009, Keith Bardwell, a [[justice of the peace]] in [[Robert, Louisiana]], refused to officiate a wedding for an interracial couple and was summarily sued in federal court. See [[refusal of interracial marriage in Louisiana]].

The U.S. Census categorizes [[Eurasia]]n responses in the "some other race" section as part of the Asian race.<ref name="Umich"/> The Eurasian responses which the U.S. Census officially recognizes are [[Indo-European languages|Indo-European]], [[Amerasian]], and Eurasian.<ref name="Umich"/>

<gallery mode="packed" heights="160">
File:Chloe Bennet by Gage Skidmore 2.jpg|[[Chloe Bennet]]; mother is [[Caucasian race|Caucasian]] and her father is Chinese.<ref name=wong2014>{{cite web|last=Wong|first=Tony|title=Actress Chloe Bennet says changing her name changed her luck|url=https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/television/2014/05/11/actress_chloe_bennet_says_changing_her_name_changed_her_luck.html#|access-date=May 12, 2014|newspaper=[[Toronto Star]]|date=May 11, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141022031153/http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/television/2014/05/11/actress_chloe_bennet_says_changing_her_name_changed_her_luck.html%23|archive-date=October 22, 2014|url-status=live}}</ref>
File:Moon Bloodgood 2012 Dark Horse Comics booth (cropped).jpg|[[Moon Bloodgood]] is part Irish, [[Dutch people|Dutch]], and Korean.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.complex.com/index.php?task=Articles&id=392&section=2&issue=1&PHPSESSID=fd94e00c8e01|title=Complex - Making Culture Pop|website=[[Complex Networks]]|access-date=March 17, 2015|archive-date=February 6, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120206135358/http://www.complex.com/index.php?task=Articles&id=392&section=2&issue=1&PHPSESSID=fd94e00c8e01|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://iamkoream.com/rising-moon/|title=Rising Moon|access-date=March 17, 2015}}</ref>
File:Tia Carrere 2009.jpg|[[Tia Carrere]] is part Spanish, Chinese, and [[Filipinos|Filipino]].<ref>{{cite web|title=BrainyQuote|url=http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/t/tia_carrere.html}}</ref>
File:Norah Jones at Bright Eyes 1 (cropped).jpg|[[Norah Jones]] was born in [[Brooklyn]], New York to an [[English Americans|English-American]] mother and Indian [[sitar]] player [[Ravi Shankar]] of [[Bengalis|Bengali]] descent.
File:Sean Lennon Saint Asbury Park NJ 09272013 LHCollins 400.jpg|[[Sean Lennon]] is the son of Japanese [[multimedia]] artist [[Yoko Ono]], and English and Irish descended [[John Lennon]].<ref>{{cite web|author=Dekel, Jonathan|url=http://www.spinner.com/2010/10/08/sean-lennon-interview-john-yoko-plastic-ono-band/|publisher=[[Spinner (website)|Spinner]]|title=Sean Lennon on Singing John's Songs, Making Music and Yoko Ono's Legacy|date=October 8, 2010|access-date=March 31, 2012|archive-date=August 4, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200804070646/http://www.spinner.com/2010/10/08/sean-lennon-interview-john-yoko-plastic-ono-band/|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:Olivia Munn 2013.jpg|[[Olivia Munn]]; father is of English, Irish, and German ancestry,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://eng.alostouramagazine.com/2015/05/02/style-battle-olivia-wilde-vs-olivia-munn/|title=Style Battle – Olivia Wilde Vs Olivia Munn|date=May 2, 2015|access-date=March 19, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170319200425/https://eng.alostouramagazine.com/2015/05/02/style-battle-olivia-wilde-vs-olivia-munn/|archive-date=March 19, 2017|url-status=live}}</ref> while her mother is from [[Vietnam]].<ref name="Moviefone">{{cite web|title= Olivia Munn Facts: 29 Things You (Probably) Don't Know About the Actress|publisher= [[Moviefone]]|url=http://www.moviefone.com/2014/07/04/olivia-munn-facts/|date= July 4, 2014|access-date= September 19, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160920150251/http://www.moviefone.com/2014/07/04/olivia-munn-facts/|archive-date= September 20, 2016|url-status=dead|df= mdy-all}}</ref>
File:Jennifer Tilly, 2006 (cropped).jpg|[[Jennifer Tilly]] is part Native American, Irish, [[Finns|Finnish]], and Chinese.<ref>[http://www.asiancemagazine.com/2011/03/17/meg-tilly-is-asian-irish "Meg Tilly is Asian Irish"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111229232603/http://www.asiancemagazine.com/2011/03/17/meg-tilly-is-asian-irish|date=December 29, 2011}}, ''Asiance Magazine'' March 2011,</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=BankrollBoost.com|url=http://www.bankrollboost.com/jennifer-tilly.php|title=Jennifer Tilly – Poker Pro Bio, Pictures and Poker Videos|publisher=Bankrollboost.com|access-date=February 15, 2011|archive-date=December 28, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101228042449/http://www.bankrollboost.com/jennifer-tilly.php|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/jennifer-tilly-little-voice-big-talent-533709.html|location=London|work=[[The Independent]]|title=Jennifer Tilly: Little voice, big talent|date=November 19, 2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.officialmegtilly.com/blog/P15|title=Official Meg Tilly Website|publisher=Officialmegtilly.com|access-date=February 15, 2011|archive-date=February 23, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110223104149/http://www.officialmegtilly.com/blog/P15/|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:Danny Pudi by Gage Skidmore 2.jpg|[[Danny Pudi]] was born to a [[Polish Americans|Polish American]] mother and a [[Telugu people|Telugu]] [[Indian people|Indian]] father.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2011-06-04 |title=Desis On Cable: Reshma Shetty and Danny Pudi - India Currents |url=http://www.indiacurrents.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=23821dac0d05b3f450fba42258a3e12c |access-date=2024-02-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604121129/http://www.indiacurrents.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=23821dac0d05b3f450fba42258a3e12c |archive-date=June 4, 2011 }}</ref>
File:Mitksi (46927277872) (cropped).jpg|[[Mitski]] was born in [[Mie Prefecture]], Japan to a [[Japanese people|Japanese]] mother and an American father.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Tolentino |first=Jia |date=2018-12-12 |title=The Misreading of Mitski |url=https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-misreading-of-mitski |access-date=2024-02-14 |magazine=The New Yorker |language=en-US |issn=0028-792X}}</ref>
</gallery>

==Afro-Asian-American identity==
{{Main|Afro-Asians}}
Chinese men entered the United States as laborers, primarily on the West Coast and in western territories. Following the [[Reconstruction era]], as blacks set up independent farms, white planters imported Chinese laborers to satisfy their need for labor. In 1882, the [[Chinese Exclusion Act]] was passed and Chinese workers who chose to stay in the U.S. were unable to have their wives join them. In the South, some Chinese married into the black and mulatto communities, as generally, discrimination meant they did not take white spouses. They rapidly left working as laborers and set up groceries in small towns throughout the South. They worked to get their children educated and socially mobile.<ref name=ChineseBlacks>{{cite web|url = http://www.colorq.org/MeltingPot/article.aspx?d=America&x=ChineseBlacks|work= Chinese Blacks in the Americas|title = The United States|access-date = July 21, 2008|publisher = Color Q World}}</ref>

The Afro-Asian population drastically increased by the 1950s, with a number of Afro-Asians born to African American fathers and Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, or Filipino mothers due to the large number of African Americans who enrolled in the military and developed relationships with Asian women abroad. Other groups of Afro-Asians are those who are of Caribbean American descent and are considered [[Dougla]], or of Indian or Indo-Caribbean and African or Afro-Caribbean descent.

As of the census of 2000, there were 106,782 Afro-Asian individuals in the United States.<ref name=nation>{{cite web|url=http://www.asian-nation.org/multiracial.shtml|title= Multiracial/Hapa Asian Americans|access-date= July 21, 2008|last= Le|first= C. N.|publisher= Asian-Nation: The Landscape of Asian America|quote= According to the [[2000 United States Census|2000 census]], out of the 281,421,906 people living in the U.S., 10,242,998 of them identified themselves as entirely of Asian race (3.6%). Additionally, there were 1,655,830 people who identified themselves as being part Asian and part one or more other races. Asian and Black/African American ... 106,782 ... 0.64% (percentage of total multiracial Asians)}}</ref>


<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
About 15% of all new marriages in the United States in 2010 were between spouses of a different race or ethnicity from one another, more than double the share in 1980 (6.7%).<ref>[http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2012/02/16/the-rise-of-intermarriage/ The Rise of Intermarriage]</ref>
File:Nicki Minaj 3, 2012.jpg|[[Nicki Minaj]] is part [[Afro-Trinidadians and Tobagonians|Afro-Trinidadian]] and [[Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonian|Indo-Trinidadian]].<ref name="McGarry">McGarry, Kevin (2009) "[http://themoment.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/04/the-new-queen-bee-meet-nicki-minaj/?scp=1&sq=nicki%20minaj&st=cse The New Queen Bee|Meet Nicki Minaj]", ''New York Times'', June 4, 2009</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Girls|access-date=July 24, 2012|publisher=[[Complex Magazine]]|year=2009|url=http://www.complex.com/girls/2009/08/worlwide-wednesday-the-10-hottest-multiracial-women/page/3|archive-date=May 6, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140506055119/http://www.complex.com/girls/2009/08/worlwide-wednesday-the-10-hottest-multiracial-women/page/3|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:Ne-Yo 2013.jpg|[[Ne-Yo]] is part African-American and Chinese.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.stcloudstate.edu/news/pressreleases/default.asp?storyID=26749|title=Ne-Yo: Grammy-winning singer to perform at Halenbeck Hall|date=September 25, 2008|publisher=St. Cloud State University|access-date=October 14, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216123639/http://www.stcloudstate.edu/news/pressreleases/default.asp?storyID=26749|archive-date=December 16, 2008|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:BobbyScott.jpg|[[Bobby Scott (politician)|Bobby Scott]] is of [[African Americans|African-American]] and [[Filipino Americans|Filipino]] (maternal grandfather) descent.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.philstar.com/index.php?Headlines&p=49&type=2&sec=24&aid=20081107124|title=Fil-Am elected to US Congress|first=Edmund|last=Silvestre|date=November 8, 2008|newspaper=The Philippine Star|access-date=November 8, 2008|quote=Another US congressman who has Filipino roots is Rep. Robert Scott, an African-American representing Virginia's third District. The Harvard-educated Democrat's maternal grandfather, Valentin Cortez Hamlin, is from the Philippine." (sic., final word should read "Philippines")|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081110035515/http://www.philstar.com/index.php?Headlines&p=49&type=2&sec=24&aid=20081107124|archive-date=November 10, 2008 }}</ref>
File:Sonja Sohn at Harvard Law School.jpg|[[Sonja Sohn]] is part African-American and Korean.<ref name="sonjasohn01">{{cite web|url=http://www.racialicious.com/2006/12/05/interview-with-the-wires-sonja-sohn-not-%E2%80%98your-typical-black-girl%E2%80%99/|title=Interview with 'The Wire's' Sonja Sohn: Not 'Your Typical Black Girl'|access-date=March 31, 2012|last=Chang|first=Wah-Ming Chang|publisher=Racialicious|quote=A husky-voiced woman of African American and Korean parentage, Sohn (who's straight, in case you're wondering) got her start in the New York slam-poetry circuit (including the Def Poetry Jam) before moving on to the TV and movie game (check her out in Shaft).|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071013184415/http://www.racialicious.com/2006/12/05/interview-with-the-wires-sonja-sohn-not-%E2%80%98your-typical-black-girl%E2%80%99/|archive-date=October 13, 2007|url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:JERO @ Japan Society - 6-8-2012 - 18.jpg|[[Jero]] is part African-American and Japanese.<ref name="jero-ap">{{cite web|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1A1-D9778SJG0.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202054347/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1A1-D9778SJG0.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=February 2, 2017|title=Japanese enka star to perform at DC festival|publisher=[[Associated Press]]|date=March 28, 2009}}</ref>
File:TommyPham752017.jpg|[[Tommy Pham]] is an American baseball player whose mother is black and whose father is of Vietnamese and African-American descent.
File:Bruce Harrell (52457507483) (2).jpg|[[Seattle]] mayor [[Bruce Harrell]] was born to an African-American father and a [[Japanese Americans|Japanese]] mother.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2007-03-24 |title=Northwest Asian Weekly: Harrell makes run for City Council |url=http://www.nwasianweekly.com/20072606/harrell20072606.htm |access-date=2024-02-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070324051306/http://www.nwasianweekly.com/20072606/harrell20072606.htm |archive-date=March 24, 2007 }}</ref>
File:Steve Lacy at Icebox in 2019.jpg|[[Steve Lacy]] was born to an African-American mother and a Filipino father.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-08-27 |title=Men: Steve Lacy — FANTASTIC MAN |url=http://www.fantasticman.com/men/steve-lacy |access-date=2024-02-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180827075435/http://www.fantasticman.com/men/steve-lacy |archive-date=August 27, 2018 }}</ref>
File:Tatyana Ali in Zuhair Murad and Swarovski Inauguration Night 2.JPG|[[Tatyana Ali]] was born in [[New York (state)|New York]] to a [[Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonian|Indo-Trinidadian]] father and an [[Afro-Panamanians|Afro-Panamanian]] mother.
File:Marilyn Strickland 117th U.S Congress (cropped).jpg|[[Marilyn Strickland]] was born in [[Seoul]] to a Korean mother and an African-American father.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-11-06 |title=Marilyn Strickland's Black, Korean American roots are 1st for Congress |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/marilyn-strickland-s-black-korean-american-roots-are-historic-1st-n1246705 |access-date=2024-02-14 |website=NBC News |language=en}}</ref>
</gallery>


==In fiction==
==In fiction==
The figure of the "[[tragic octoroon]]" was a [[stock character]] of [[abolitionist]] literature: a mixed-race woman raised as if a white woman in her white father's household, until his bankruptcy or death has her reduced to a menial position<ref>Ariela J. Gross, ''What Blood Won't Tell: A History of Race on Trial in America'', p 61 ISBN 978-0-674-03130-2</ref> She may even be unaware of her status before being reduced to victimization.<ref name="davis">Kathy Davis. "[http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cusww/lb/HNQSPH.html Headnote to Lydia Maria Child's 'The Quadroons' and 'Slavery's Pleasant Homes']," Bucknell University, Summer 1997, accessed 4 June 2012</ref> The first character of this type was the heroine of [[Lydia Maria Child]]'s "The Quadroons" (1842), a short story.<ref name="davis"/> This character allowed abolitionists to draw attention to the sexual exploitation in slavery and, unlike portrayals of the suffering of the field hands, did not allow slaveholders to retort that the sufferings of Northern mill hands were no easier. The Northern mill owner would not sell his own children into slavery.<ref>Werner Sollors, ''Interracialism,'' p. 285 ISBN 0-19-512856-7</ref>
The figure of the "[[tragic octoroon]]" was a [[stock character]] of [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionist]] literature: a mixed-race woman raised as if a white woman in her white father's household, until his bankruptcy or death has her reduced to a menial position<ref>Ariela J. Gross, ''What Blood Won't Tell: A History of Race on Trial in America'', p 61 {{ISBN|978-0-674-03130-2}}</ref> She may even be unaware of her status before being reduced to victimization.<ref name="davis">Kathy Davis. "[http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cusww/lb/HNQSPH.html Headnote to Lydia Maria Child's 'The Quadroons' and 'Slavery's Pleasant Homes'] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629201837/http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cUSWW/LB/HNQSPH.html |date=June 29, 2011 }}," Bucknell University, Summer 1997, accessed June 4, 2012</ref> The first character of this type was the heroine of [[Lydia Maria Child]]'s "The Quadroons" (1842), a short story.<ref name="davis"/> This character allowed abolitionists to draw attention to the sexual exploitation in slavery and, unlike portrayals of the suffering of the field hands, did not allow slaveholders to retort that the sufferings of Northern mill hands were no easier. The Northern mill owner would not sell his own children into slavery.<ref>Werner Sollors, ''Interracialism,'' p. 285 {{ISBN|0-19-512856-7}}</ref>


Abolitionists sometimes featured attractive, escaped [[mulatto]] slaves in their public lectures to arouse sentiments against slavery. They showed Northerners those slaves who looked like them rather than an "Other"; this technique collapsed the separation between peoples and made it impossible for the public to ignore the brutality of slavery.<ref>Lawrence R. Tenzer,[http://multiracial.com/site/content/view/460/27/ "White Slaves"], Multiracial.com</ref>
Abolitionists sometimes featured attractive, escaped [[mulatto]] slaves in their public lectures to arouse sentiments against slavery. They showed Northerners those slaves who looked like them rather than an "Other"; this technique, which is labeled ''[[White slave propaganda]]'', collapsed the separation between peoples and made it impossible for the public to ignore the brutality of slavery.<ref>Lawrence R. Tenzer,[http://multiracial.com/index.php/2001/10/01/white-slaves/ "White Slaves"], Multiracial.com</ref>


[[Charles W. Chesnutt]], an author of the post-Civil War era, explored stereotypes in his portrayal of multiracial characters in southern society in the postwar years. Even characters who had been free and possibly educated before the war had trouble making a place for themselves in the postwar years. His stories feature mixed-race characters with complex lives. [[William Faulkner]] also portrayed the lives of mixed-race people and complex interracial families in the postwar South.
[[Charles W. Chesnutt]], an author of the post-Civil War era, explored stereotypes in his portrayal of multiracial characters in southern society in the postwar years. Even characters who had been free and possibly educated before the war had trouble making a place for themselves in the postwar years. His stories feature mixed-race characters with complex lives. [[William Faulkner]] also portrayed the lives of mixed-race people and complex interracial families in the postwar South.


Comic book writer and filmmaker [[Greg Pak]] wrote that while white filmmakers have used multiracial characters explore themes about race and racism, many of these characters created stereotypes that Pak described were: "Wild Half-Castes", "sexually destructive antagonists explicitly or implicitly perceived as unable to control the instinctive
The 21st-century filmmaker Greg Pak suggests that multiracial characters in film have often been portrayed as more driven by instinct that whites. He writes,
{{quote|Multiracial characters have often been depicted as 'Wild Half-Castes', sexually destructive antagonists explicitly or implicitly perceived as unable to control the instinctive urges of their non-white heritage. Media which portrays multiracials as the 'half-breed' predator... [and] 'halfbreed' temptress perpetuates the association of multiraciality with sexual aberration and violence. Another recurring stereotype is the '[[Tragic mulatto|Tragic Mulatto]]', a typically female character who tries to [[pass for white]] but finds disaster when her non-white heritage is revealed... [T]he 'Half Breed Hero' provides a more 'empowering' stereotype... the 'Half Breed Hero' seemingly inspires identification as he actively resists white racism.<ref name="Pak">{{cite news|url=http://www.pbs.org/mattersofrace/pdf/4Mulattoes.pdf|title=Mulattoes, Half-Breeds, and Hapas: Multiracial Representation in the Movies|last=Pak|first=Greg|work=Matters of Race|publisher=PBS|date=23-24 September 2003 |accessdate=2008-07-21}}</ref>}}
urges of their non-white heritage" who exhibited the same racial stereotypes of their "full blood" counterparts, symbolically used by filmmakers to "[perpetuate] the association of multiraciality with sexual aberration and violence"; the "[[Tragic mulatto]]", "a typically female character who tries to [[Passing (racial identity)|pass for white]] but finds disaster when her non-white heritage is revealed" whose plight used by filmmakers to "to critique racism by inspiring pity"; and the "[[Half-breed|Half Breed Hero]]", an "empowering" stereotype whose objective of "[inspiring] identification as he actively resists white racism" is contradicted by the character being [[Whitewashing in film|played by a white actor]], reinforcing a "white liberal's dream of inclusion and authenticity than an honest depiction of a multiracial character's experiences." Pak noted that "Wild Half Caste" and "Tragic Mulatto" characters possess little to no character development and that while many multiracial characters have appeared more frequently in films without reinforcing stereotypes, white filmmakers have mostly avoided addressing their ethnicities.<ref name="Pak">{{cite news|url=https://www.pbs.org/mattersofrace/pdf/4Mulattoes.pdf|title=Mulattoes, Half-Breeds, and Hapas: Multiracial Representation in the Movies|last=Pak|first=Greg|work=Matters of Race|publisher=PBS|date=September 23, 2003 |access-date=June 20, 2018}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
{{Div col|colwidth=20em}}
* [[Race in the United States]]
* [[Race and ethnicity in the United States]]
* [[Racial and ethnic demographics of the United States]]
* [[Racial and ethnic demographics of the United States]]
* [[Colored]]
* [[Colored]]
* [[Mixed (United Kingdom ethnicity category)]]
* [[Mulatto]]
* [[Race of the Future]]
* [[Race of the Future]]
* ''[[Loving v. Virginia]]''
* ''[[Loving v. Virginia]]''
* ''[[Dreams from My Father]]''
* ''[[Dreams from My Father]]''
* [[British Mixed-Race]]
* [[One-drop rule]]
{{Div col end}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
{{reflist}}
* {{cite book
| last = Nickson
| first = Chris
| title = Mariah Carey: her story
| year = 1995
| publisher = St. Martin's Griffin
| location = New York
| isbn = 978-0-312-13121-0
| ref = harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Perry |first=Bruce |title=Malcolm: The Life of a Man Who Changed Black America |year=1991 |publisher=Station Hill |location=Barrytown, N.Y. |isbn=978-0-88268-103-0 }}


==Literature==
==Further reading==
* Susan Graham, "Born Biracial: How One Mother Took on Race in America" (2020) Memories Press.
* G. Reginald Daniel, ''More Than Black?: Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order'', Temple University Press (2002) ISBN 978-1-56639-909-8.
* G. Reginald Daniel, ''More Than Black?: Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order'', Temple University Press (2002) {{ISBN|978-1-56639-909-8}}.
* Teja Arboleda, ''In the Shadow of Race: Growing Up As a Multiethnic, Multicultural, and Multiracial American'' (1998) ISBN 978-0-585-11477-4.
* Yo Jackson, Yolanda Kaye Jackson, ''Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology'' (2006), ISBN 978-1-4129-0948-8.
* Teja Arboleda, ''In the Shadow of Race: Growing Up As a Multiethnic, Multicultural, and Multiracial American'' (1998) {{ISBN|978-0-585-11477-4}}.
* Yo Jackson, Yolanda Kaye Jackson, ''Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology'' (2006), {{ISBN|978-1-4129-0948-8}}.
* Joel Perlmann, Mary C. Waters, ''The New Race Question: How the Census Counts Multiracial Individuals'' (2005), ISBN 978-0-87154-658-6.
* Joel Perlmann, Mary C. Waters, ''The New Race Question: How the Census Counts Multiracial Individuals'' (2005), {{ISBN|978-0-87154-658-6}}.


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.multiracial.com The Multiracial Activist], an online activist publication
* [http://www.multiracial.com/ The Multiracial Activist], an online activist publication
* [http://www.ameasite.org The Association of MultiEthnic Americans, Inc.], founded 1988
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060813110446/http://www.ameasite.org/ The Association of MultiEthnic Americans, Inc.], founded 1988
* [http://www.multiethniceducation.org Multiethnic Education Program], offering resources and strategies (including videos, publications & trainings) to support mixed-race children in educational settings.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060820164737/http://www.multiethniceducation.org/ Multiethnic Education Program], offering resources and strategies (including videos, publications & trainings) to support mixed-race children in educational settings.
* [http://www.mavinfoundation.org MAVIN Foundation], an organization advocating for mixed heritage people and families
* [http://www.mavinfoundation.org MAVIN Foundation] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120309155746/http://www.mavinfoundation.org/ |date=March 9, 2012 }}, an organization advocating for mixed heritage people and families
* [http://www.neamf.org "NEAMF: The New England Alliance of Multiracial Families"], an organization uniting interracial families in the Boston area, founded 1992
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20171018061510/http://www.neamf.org/ "NEAMF: The New England Alliance of Multiracial Families"], an organization uniting interracial families in the Boston area, founded 1992
* [http://www.swirlinc.org "Swirl"], US-based mixed community, founded in 2000
* [http://www.swirlinc.org "Swirl"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150811054229/http://www.swirlinc.org/ |date=August 11, 2015 }}, US-based mixed community, founded in 2000
* [http://www.projectrace.com ProjectRACE], an organization supporting multiracial classification
* [http://www.projectrace.com ProjectRACE], an organization supporting multiracial classification
* [http://kitoba.com/pedia/Notable+Multiracial+People.html Notable Multiracial People], Kitoba
* [http://kitoba.com/pedia/Notable+Multiracial+People.html Notable Multiracial People], Kitoba
* [http://www.asian-nation.org/multiracial.shtml "Hapa/Multiracial Asian Americans"], Asian-Nation
* [http://www.asian-nation.org/multiracial.shtml "Hapa/Multiracial Asian Americans"], Asian-Nation
* [http://www2.jsonline.com/news/editorials/mar01/rodriguez25032401.asp?format=print Gregory Rodriguez (2001), "Multiracial identity, a shared destiny"]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090123092604/http://www2.jsonline.com/news/editorials/mar01/rodriguez25032401.asp?format=print Gregory Rodriguez (2001), "Multiracial identity, a shared destiny"]
* {{Cite news|url=http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |title=Williams/Zogby Poll: Americans' Attitudes Changing Towards Multiracial Candidates |date=2006-12-22|publisher-BBS News |accessdate=2007-09-23 |publisher=BBSNews.com |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070403062350/http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |archivedate = 2007-04-03}}
* {{Cite news|url=http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |title=Williams/Zogby Poll: Americans' Attitudes Changing Towards Multiracial Candidates |date=December 22, 2006|publisher=BBS News |access-date=September 23, 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070403062350/http://bbsnews.net/article.php/20061222014017231 |archive-date = April 3, 2007}}
* [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1084007/Most-shelter-dogs-mutts-like-Obama-defies-political-correctness-press-conference.html David Gardner, "'Most shelter dogs are mutts like me': Obama defies political correctness at first press conference"], ''[[Daily Mail]]'', 8 November 2008.
* [http://www.infography.com/content/451691075438.html "Interracial Marriage in the United States"], Infography
* [http://www.infography.com/content/451691075438.html "Interracial Marriage in the United States"], Infography


{{Demographics of the United States}}
{{Demographics of the United States}}
{{Hispanics/Latinos}}
{{Hispanics/Latinos}}

[[Category:Ethnic groups in the United States]]
[[Category:Ethnic groups in the United States]]
[[Category:Multiracial affairs|American]]
[[Category:Multiracial affairs in the United States| ]]

Latest revision as of 14:56, 6 January 2025

Multiracial Americans
Total population
Mixed-race (any race)
Increase 33,848,943 (2020 Census)[1]
Increase 10.21% of the total U.S. population
Regions with significant populations
Predominantly in the Southwestern United States and Florida
California California5,760,235[1]
Texas Texas5,133,738[1]
Florida Florida3,552,072[1]
New York (state) New York1,767,463[1]
Illinois Illinois1,144,984[1]
Related ethnic groups
African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Métis Americans, Louisiana Creoles, Hapas, Melungeons

Multiracial Americans, also known as Mixed Americans, are Americans who have mixed ancestry of two or more races. The term may also include Americans of mixed-race ancestry who self-identify with just one group culturally and socially (cf. the one-drop rule). In the 2020 United States census, 33.8 million individuals or 10.2% of the population, self-identified as multiracial.[2] There is evidence that an accounting by genetic ancestry would produce a higher number.

The multiracial population is the fastest growing demographic group in the United States, increasing by 276% between 2010 and 2020.[3] This growth was driven largely by Hispanic or Latino Americans identifying as multiracial, with this group increasing from 3 million in 2010 to over 20 million in 2020, making up almost two thirds of the multiracial population.[4] Most multiracial Hispanics identified as white and "some other race" in combination, with this group increasing from 1.6 million to 24 million between 2010 and 2021, a trend has been attributed to changes in the Census Bureau's methodology on counting write-in ancestry responses, as well as growing racial diversity among the Hispanic population.[5]

The impact of historical racial systems, such as that created by admixture between white European colonists and Native Americans, has often led people to identify or be classified by only one ethnicity, generally that of the culture in which they were raised.[6] Prior to the mid-20th century, many people hid their multiracial heritage because of racial discrimination against minorities.[6] While many Americans may be considered multiracial, they often do not know it or do not identify so culturally, any more than they maintain all the differing traditions of a variety of national ancestries.[6]

Barack Obama was the first Mixed American to be president of the United States (son of a black father and a white mother).

After a lengthy period of formal racial segregation in the former Confederacy following the Reconstruction Era and bans on interracial marriage in various parts of the country, more people are openly forming interracial unions. In addition, social conditions have changed and many multiracial people do not believe it is socially advantageous to try to "pass" as white. Diverse immigration has brought more mixed race people into the United States, such as a significant population of Hispanics. Since the 1980s, the United States has had a growing multiracial identity movement (cf. Loving Day).[7] Because more Americans have insisted on being allowed to acknowledge their mixed racial origins, the 2000 census for the first time allowed residents to check more than one ethno-racial identity and thereby identify as multiracial. In 2008, Barack Obama, who is of Luo (Kenyan) and Scottish lineage, was elected as the first biracial President of the United States; he acknowledges both sides of his family and identifies as African-American.[8]

Today, multiracial individuals are found in every corner of the country. Multiracial groups in the United States include many African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Métis Americans, Louisiana Creoles, Hapas, Melungeons and several other communities found primarily in the Eastern US. Many Native Americans are multiracial in ancestry while identifying fully as members of federally recognized tribes.

History

[edit]

The American people are mostly multi-ethnic descendants of various culturally distinct immigrant groups, many of which have now developed nations. Some consider themselves multiracial, while acknowledging race as a social construct. Creolization, assimilation and integration have been continuing processes. The Civil Rights Movement and other social movements since the mid-twentieth century worked to achieve social justice and equal enforcement of civil rights under the constitution for all ethnicities. In the 2000s, less than 5% of the population identified as multiracial. In many instances, mixed racial ancestry is so far back in an individual's family history (for instance, before the Civil War or earlier), that it does not affect more recent ethnic and cultural identification.

Interracial relationships, common-law marriages and marriages occurred since the earliest colonial years, especially before slavery hardened as a racial caste associated with people of African descent in Colonial America. Several of the Thirteen Colonies passed laws in the 17th century that gave children the social status of their mother, according to the principle of partus sequitur ventrem, regardless of the father's race or citizenship. This overturned the precedent in common law by which a man gave his status to his children – this had enabled communities to demand that fathers support their children, whether legitimate or not. The change increased white men's ability to use slave women sexually, as they had no responsibility for the children. As master as well as father of mixed-race children born into slavery, the men could use these people as servants or laborers or sell them as slaves. In some cases, white fathers provided for their multiracial children, paying or arranging for education or apprenticeships and freeing them, particularly during the two decades following the Revolutionary War. (The practice of providing for the children was more common in French and Spanish colonies, where a class of free people of color developed who became educated and property owners.) Many other white fathers abandoned the mixed race children and their mothers to slavery.

The researcher Paul Heinegg found that most families of free people of color in colonial times were founded from the unions of white women, whether free or indentured servants and African men, slave, indentured or free.[9] In the early years, the working-class peoples lived and worked together. Their children were free because of the status of the white women. This was in contrast to the pattern in the post-Revolutionary era, in which most mixed-race children had white fathers and Black mothers.[9]

Anti-miscegenation laws were passed in most states during the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, but this did not prevent white slaveholders, their sons, or other powerful white men from taking slave women as concubines and having multiracial children with them. In California and the rest of the American West, there were greater numbers of Latin American and Asian residents. These were prohibited from official relationships with whites. White legislators passed laws prohibiting marriage between European and Asian Americans until the 1950s.

Early United States history

[edit]
Olaudah Equiano

Interracial relationships have had a long history in North America and the United States, beginning with the intermixing of European explorers and soldiers, who took native women as companions. After European settlement increased, traders and fur trappers often married or had unions with women of native tribes. In the 17th century, faced with a continuing, critical labor shortage, colonists primarily in the Chesapeake Bay Colony, imported Africans as laborers, sometimes as indentured servants and, increasingly, as slaves. African slaves were also imported into New York and other northern ports by European colonists. Some African slaves were freed by their masters during these early years.

In the colonial years, while conditions were more fluid, white women, indentured servant or free, and African men, servant, slave or free, made unions. Because the women were free, their mixed-race children were born free; they and their descendants formed most of the families of free people of color during the colonial period in Virginia. The scholar Paul Heinegg found that eighty percent of the free people of color in North Carolina in censuses from 1790 to 1810 could be traced to families free in Virginia in colonial years.[10]

In 1789, Olaudah Equiano, a former slave from modern-day Nigeria who was enslaved in North America, published his autobiography. He advocated interracial marriage between whites and blacks.[11] By the late eighteenth century, visitors to the Upper South noted the high proportion of mixed-race slaves, evidence of miscegenation by white men.

In 1790, the first federal population census was taken in the United States. Enumerators were instructed to classify free residents as white or "other." Only the heads of households were identified by name in the federal census until 1850. Native Americans were included among "Other;" in later censuses, they were included as "Free people of color" if they were not living on Indian reservations. Slaves were counted separately from free persons in all the censuses until the Civil War and end of slavery. In later censuses, people of African descent were classified by appearance as mulatto (which recognized visible European ancestry in addition to African) or black.

After the American Revolutionary War, the number and proportion of free people of color increased markedly in the North and the South as slaves were freed. Most northern states abolished slavery, sometimes, like New York, in programs of gradual emancipation that took more than two decades to be completed. The last slaves in New York were not freed until 1827. In connection with the Second Great Awakening, Quaker and Methodist preachers in the South urged slaveholders to free their slaves. Revolutionary ideals led many men to free their slaves, some by deed and others by will, so that from 1782 to 1810, the percentage of free people of color rose from less than one percent to nearly 10 percent of blacks in the South.[12]

19th century: American Civil War, emancipation, Reconstruction and Jim Crow

[edit]
Charley Taylor holding an American flag. Charley was the son of Alexander Withers and one of Withers's slaves. Withers sold Charley to a slave dealer and he was sold again in New Orleans.

Of numerous relationships between male slaveholders, overseers, or master's sons and women slaves, the most notable is likely that of President Thomas Jefferson with his slave Sally Hemings. As noted in the 2012 collaborative Smithsonian-Monticello exhibit, Slavery at Monticello: The Paradox of Liberty, Jefferson, then a widower, took Hemings as his concubine for nearly 40 years. They had six children of record; four Hemings children survived into adulthood, and he freed them all, among the very few slaves he freed. Two were allowed to "escape" to the North in 1822, and two were granted freedom by his will upon his death in 1826. Seven-eighths white by ancestry, all four of his Hemings children moved to northern states as adults; three of the four entered the white community, and all their descendants identified as white. Of the descendants of Madison Hemings who continued to identify as black, some in future generations eventually identified as white and "married out," while others continued to identify as African American. It was socially advantageous for the Hemings children to identify as white, in keeping with their appearance and the majority proportion of their ancestry. Although born into slavery, the Hemings children were legally white under Virginia law of the time.

20th century

[edit]

Racial discrimination continued to be enacted in new laws in the 20th century, for instance the one-drop rule was enacted in Virginia's 1924 Racial Integrity Law and in other southern states, in part influenced by the popularity of eugenics and ideas of racial purity. People buried fading memories that many whites had multiracial ancestry. Many families were multiracial. Similar laws had been proposed but not passed in the late nineteenth century in South Carolina and Virginia, for instance. After regaining political power in Southern states by disenfranchising blacks, white Democrats passed laws to impose Jim Crow and racial segregation to restore white supremacy. They maintained these until forced to change in the 1960s and after by enforcement of federal legislation authorizing oversight of practices to protect the constitutional rights of African Americans and other minority citizens.

In 1967 the United States Supreme Court case Loving v. Virginia ruled that anti-miscegenation laws were unconstitutional.[13]

In the twentieth century up until 1989, social service organizations typically assigned multiracial children to the racial identity of the minority parent, which reflected social practices of hypodescent.[14] Black social workers had influenced court decisions on regulations related to identity; they argued that, as the biracial child was socially considered black, it should be classified that way to identify with the group and learn to deal with discrimination.[15]

By 1990, the Census Bureau included more than a dozen ethnic/racial categories on the census, reflecting not only changing social ideas about ethnicity, but the wide variety of immigrants who had come to reside in the United States due to changing historical forces and new immigration laws in the 1960s. With a changing society, more citizens have begun to press for acknowledging multiracial ancestry. The Census Bureau changed its data collection by allowing people to self-identify as more than one ethnicity. Some ethnic groups are concerned about the potential political and economic effects, as federal assistance to historically underserved groups has depended on Census data. According to the Census Bureau, as of 2002, 75% of all African Americans had multiracial ancestries.[16]

The proportion of acknowledged multiracial children in the United States is growing. Interracial partnerships are on the rise, as are transracial adoptions. In 1990, around 14% of 18- to 19-year-olds, 12% of 20- to 21-year-olds, and 7% of 34- to 35-year-olds were involved in interracial relationships (Joyner and Kao, 2005).[17] The number of interracial marriages as a proportion of new marriages has increased from 11% in 2010 to 19% in 2019.[18]

Demographics

[edit]

According to estimates from the 2022 American Community Survey, there are 41,782,288 people identifying as with multiple races in the US, making up 12.5% of the population. Excluding responses of "some other race" in combination with a single recognized category, this number is reduced to 13,658,099, or 4.1% of the population.[19] Almost 90% of Americans identifying as "some other race" in combination were Hispanic/Latino in 2022, making up over 90% of the multiracial Hispanic population and over half of the total multiracial population in the US.[20] The largest multiracial groups in the US in 2022 are:[21]

Combination Number as of 2022 % Total
White and "Some Other Race" 26,317,236 7.9%
White and Black 3,831,683 1.1%
White and Native American 3,012,849 0.9%
White and Asian 2,865,504 0.9%
Black and "Some Other Race" 1,194,056 0.4%
Black and Native American 464,679 0.1%
Native American and "Some Other Race" 338,757 0.1%
Black and Asian 300,787 0.1%
White and Pacific Islander 247,141 0.1%
Three races 2,298,469 0.7%
Four races 256,913 0.1%
Two or more races population pyramid in 2020

Multiracial people who wanted to acknowledge their full heritage won a victory of sorts in 1997, when the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) changed the federal regulation of racial categories to permit multiple responses. This resulted in a change to the 2000 United States Census, which allowed participants to select more than one of the six available categories, which were, in brief: "White," "Black or African-American," "Asian," "American Indian or Alaskan Native," "Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander" and "Other." Further details are given in the article: Race and ethnicity in the United States Census. The OMB made its directive mandatory for all government forms by 2003.

In 2000, Cindy Rodriguez reported on reactions to the new census:[22]

To many mainline civil rights groups, the new census is part of a multiracial nightmare. After decades of framing racial issues in stark black and white terms, they fear that the multiracial movement will break down longstanding alliances, weakening people of color by splintering them into new subgroups.

Some multiracial individuals feel marginalized by U.S. society. For example, when applying to schools or for a job or when taking standardized tests, Americans are sometimes asked to check boxes corresponding to race or ethnicity. Typically, about five race choices are given, with the instruction to "check only one." While some surveys offer an "other" box, this choice groups together individuals of many different multiracial types (ex: European Americans/African-Americans are grouped with Asian/Native American Indians).[citation needed]

The 2000 U.S. Census in the write-in response category had a code listing which standardizes the placement of various write-in responses for automatic placement within the framework of the U.S. Census's enumerated races. Whereas most responses can be distinguished as falling into one of the five enumerated races, there remains some write-in responses which fall into the "Mixture" heading which cannot be racially categorized. These include "Bi Racial, Combination, Everything, Many, Mixed, Multi National, Multiple, Several and Various".[23]

In 1997, Greg Mayeda, a member of the board of directors person for the Hapa Issues Forum, attended a meeting regarding the new racial classifications for the 2000 U.S. Census. He was arguing against a multiracial category and for multiracial people being counted as all of their races. He argued that a

separate Multiracial Box does not allow a person who identifies as mixed race the opportunity to be counted accurately. After all, we are not just mixed race. We are representatives of all racial groups and should be counted as such. A stand alone Multiracial Box reveals very little about the person's background checking it.[24]

US Census reporting of Two or Mixed Races 2010 – 2017

According to James P. Allen and Eugene Turner from California State University, Northridge, who analyzed the 2000 Census, most multiracial people identified as part white. In addition, the breakdown is as follows:

  • white/Native American and Alaskan Native, at 7,015,017,
  • white/black at 737,492,
  • white/Asian at 727,197, and
  • white/Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander at 125,628.[25]

In 2010, 1.6 million Americans checked both "black" and "white" on their census forms, a figure 134% higher than the number a decade earlier.[26] The number of interracial marriages and relationships, and transracial and international adoptions has increased the proportion of multiracial families.[27] In addition, more individuals may be identifying multiple ancestries, as the concept is more widely accepted.

Multiracial American identity

[edit]

Political history

[edit]

Despite a long history of miscegenation within the U.S. political territory and American continental landscape, advocacy for a unique social race classification to recognize direct, or recent, multiracial parentage did not begin until the 1970s. After the Civil Rights Era and rapid integration of African-Americans into predominately European-American institutions and residential communities, it became more socially acceptable for White-identified women to date, marry and procreate children fathered by non-White men. This trend evolved a political push that offspring of interracial unions fully inherit the social race classifications of both parents, regardless of the racial classification of the maternal parent. This advocacy countered what had been practiced in the United States since the early 1800s where a newborn's racial classification defaulted to that of their mother, which was by a variety of classifications differing from state to state over the past two centuries. In some states 3/4ths African ancestry determined African identity, in some it was more qualified, or less. The hypodescent or one-drop rule, meaning one African ancestor identified as black was adopted by Virginia in 1924. This one-drop rule was not adopted as law by South Carolina, Louisiana and other states where Creole were or had been slaveowners. White supremacist in effect practicing the one-drop rule during chattel slavery, the rule delegated the racial classification of offspring produced by White male slave masters and female slaves to be slaves, failing to acknowledge the male parentage. Similarly laws were passed punishing free people of mixed heritage, the same as free black men and women, denying their basic rights. Voting, for example, which free blacks could and did do under French rule, were denied after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 within a few years time. About ten percent of the slave population, according to observers, looked to be white, but had known African ancestors. After the end of slavery most of these people disappeared into the white population simply by moving. Walter White, President of the NAACP in 1920 reported that passing for white from 1880 to 1920 involved about 400,000 descendents of slaves. See Helen Catterall, editor, Judicial Cases Concerning American Slavery and the Negro, 5 Volumes, 1935 and A Man Called White, autobiography by Walter White, first President of NAACP.

Contemporary interracial marriage

[edit]

In 2009, Keith Bardwell, a justice of the peace in Robert, Louisiana, refused to officiate a wedding for an interracial couple and was summarily sued in federal court. See refusal of interracial marriage in Louisiana.

About 15% of all new marriages in the United States in 2010 were between spouses of a different race or ethnicity from one another, more than double the share in 1980 (6.7%).[28]

Multiracial families and identity issues

[edit]

Given the variety of the familial and general social environments in which multiracial children are raised, along with the diversity of their appearance and heritage, generalizations about multiracial children's challenges or opportunities are not very useful. A 1989 article written by Charlotte Nitary revealed that parents of mixed raced children often struggled between teaching their children to identify as only the race of their non-white parent, not identifying with social race at all, or identifying with the racial identities of both parents.[29]

The social identity of children and of their parents in the same multiracial family may vary or be the same.[30] Some multiracial children feel pressure from various sources to "choose" or to identify as a single racial identity. Others may feel pressure not to abandon one or more of their ethnicities, particularly if identified with culturally.

Some children grow up without race being a significant issue in their lives because they identify against the one-drop-rule construct. [31] This approach to addressing plural racial heritage is something U.S. society has slowly become socialized into as the general consensus among monoracially identified individuals is plural racial identity is a choice and presents disingenuous motives against the more oppressed inherited racial identity.[32] By the 1990s, as more multiracial identified students attended colleges and university, many were met with alienation from culturally and racially homogenous groups on campus. This common national trend saw the launch of many multi-racial campus organizations across the country. By the 2000s, these efforts for self-identification soon reached beyond educational institutions and into mainstream society.[33]

In her book Love's Revolution: Interracial Marriage, Maria P. P. Root suggests that when interracial parents divorce, their mixed-race children become threatening in circumstances where the custodial parent has remarried into a union where an emphasis is placed on racial identity.[34]

Some multiracial individuals attempt to claim a new category. For instance, the athlete Tiger Woods has said that he is not only African-American but "Cablinasian," as he is of Caucasian, African-American, Native American and Asian descent.[35]

Native American identity

[edit]

In the 2010 Census, nearly 3 million people indicated that their race was Native American (including Alaska Native).[49] Of these, more than 27% specifically indicated "Cherokee" as their ethnic origin.[50][51] Many of the First Families of Virginia claim descent from Pocahontas or some other "Indian princess". This phenomenon has been dubbed the "Cherokee Syndrome".[52] Across the US, numerous individuals cultivate an opportunistic ethnic identity as Native American, sometimes through Cherokee heritage groups or Indian Wedding Blessings.[53]

Levels of Native American ancestry (distinct from Native American identity) differ. The genomes of self-reported African Americans averaged to 0.8% Native American ancestry, those of European Americans averaged to 0.18%, and those of Latinos averaged to 18.0%.[54][55]

Many tribes, especially those in the Eastern United States, are primarily made up of individuals with an unambiguous Native American identity, despite being predominantly of European ancestry.[53] Point in case, more than 75% of those enrolled in the Cherokee Nation have less than one-quarter Cherokee blood.[56] Former Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, Bill John Baker, is 1/32 Cherokee, amounting to about 3%.

Historically, non-Native governments have forced numerous Native Americans to assimilate into colonial and later American society, e.g. through language shifts and conversions to Christianity. In many cases, this process occurred through forced assimilation of children sent off to special boarding schools far from their families. Those who could pass for white had the advantage of white privilege.[53] Today, after generations of racial whitening through hypergamy, a number of Native Americans may have fair skin like White Americans. Native Americans are more likely than any other racial group to practice racial exogamy, resulting in an ever-declining proportion of indigenous blood among those who claim a Native American identity.[57] Some tribes disenroll tribal members unable to provide proof of Native ancestry, usually through a Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood. Disenrollment has become a contentious issue in Native American reservation politics.[58][59]

Native American lineage and admixture in Black and African-Americans

[edit]

Interracial relations between Native Americans and African-Americans is a part of American history that has been neglected.[79] The earliest record of African and Native American relations in the Americas occurred in April 1502, when the first Africans kidnapped were brought to Hispaniola to serve as slaves. Some escaped and somewhere inland on Santo Domingo, the first Black Indians were born.[80] In addition, an example of African slaves' escaping from European colonists and being absorbed by Native Americans occurred as far back as 1526. In June of that year, Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón established a Spanish colony near the mouth of the Pee Dee River in what is now eastern South Carolina. The Spanish settlement was named San Miguel de Gualdape. Among the settlement were 100 enslaved Africans. In 1526, the first African slaves fled the colony and took refuge with local Native Americans.[81]

European colonists created treaties with Native American tribes requesting the return of any runaway slaves. For example, in 1726, the governor of New York exacted a promise from the Iroquois to return all runaway slaves who had joined them. This same promise was extracted from the Huron people in 1764, and from the Delaware people in 1765, though there is no record of slaves ever being returned.[82] Numerous advertisements requested the return of African-Americans who had married Native Americans or who spoke a Native American language. The primary exposure that Native Americans and Africans had to each other came through the institution of slavery.[83] Native Americans learned that Africans had what Native Americans considered 'Great Medicine' in their bodies because Africans were virtually immune to the Old-World diseases that were decimating most native populations.[84] Because of this, many tribes encouraged marriage between the two groups, to create stronger, healthier children from the unions.[84]

For African-Americans, the one-drop rule was a significant factor in ethnic solidarity. African-Americans generally shared a common cause in society regardless of their multiracial admixture or social/economic stratification. Additionally, African-Americans found it, near, impossible to learn about their Native American heritage as many family elders withheld pertinent genealogical information.[79] Tracing the genealogy of African-Americans can be a very difficult process, especially for descendants of Native Americans, because African-Americans who were slaves were forbidden to learn to read and write and a majority of Native Americans neither spoke English, nor read or wrote it.[79]

Native American lineage and admixture in White and European-Americans

[edit]

Interracial relations among Native Americans and Europeans occurred from the earliest years of colonization. European impact was immediate, widespread and profound—more than any other race that had contact with Native Americans during the early years of colonization and nationhood.[90]

Some early male settlers married Native American women or had informal unions with them. Early contact between Native Americans and Europeans was often charged with tension, but also had moments of friendship, cooperation and intimacy.[91] Several marriages took place in European colonies between European men and Native women. For instance, on April 5, 1614, Pocahontas, a Powhatan woman in present-day Virginia, married the Virginian colonist John Rolfe of Jamestown. Their son Thomas Rolfe was an ancestor to many descendants in First Families of Virginia. As a result, discriminatory laws (such as those against African Americans) often excluded Native Americans during this period. In the early 19th century, the Native American woman Sacagawea, who would help translate for and guide the Lewis and Clark Expedition in the West, married the French-Canadian trapper Toussaint Charbonneau.

Some Europeans living among Native Americans were called "White Indians". They "lived in native communities for years, learned native languages fluently, attended native councils, and often fought alongside their native companions."[92] European traders and trappers often married Native American women from tribes on the frontier and had families with them. Sometimes these marriages were done for political reasons between a Native American tribe and the European traders. Some traders, who kept bases in the cities, had what were called "country wives" among Native Americans, with legal European-American wives and children at home in the city. Not all abandoned their "natural" mixed-race children. Some arranged for sons to be sent to European-American schools for their education. Early European colonists were predominately men and Native American women were at risk for rape or sexual harassment especially if they were enslaved.[93]

Most marriages between Europeans and Native Americans were between European men and Native American women. The social identity of the children was strongly determined by the tribe's kinship system. This determined how easy it would be for the child assimilated into the tribe. Among the matrilineal tribes of the Southeast, such as the Creek and Cherokee, the mixed race children generally were accepted as and identified as Indian, as they gained their social status from their mother's clans and tribes and often grew up with their mothers and their male relatives. By contrast, among the patrilineal Omaha, for example, the child of a white man and Omaha woman was considered "white"; such mixed-race children and their mothers would be protected, but the children could formally belong to the tribe as members only if adopted by a man.

In those years, a Native American man had to get consent of the European parents to marry a white woman. When such marriages were approved, it was with the stipulation that "he can prove to support her as a white woman in a good home".[94]

In the early twentieth century in the West, "intermarried whites" were listed in a separate category on the Dawes Rolls, when members of tribes were listed and identified for allocation of lands to individual heads of households in the break-up of tribal communal lands in Indian Territory. This increased intermarriage as some white men married Native Americans to gain control of land. In the late 19th century, three European-American middle-class female teachers married Native American men they had met at Hampton Institute during the years when it ran its Indian program.[95] In the late nineteenth century, Charles Eastman, a physician of Sioux and European ancestry who trained at Boston University, married Elaine Goodale, a European-American woman from New England. They met and worked together in Dakota Territory when she was Superintendent of Indian Education and he was a doctor for the reservations. His maternal grandfather was Seth Eastman, an artist and Army officer from New England, who had married a Sioux woman and had a daughter with her while stationed at Fort Snelling in Minnesota.

Black and African-American identity

[edit]

Americans with sub-Saharan African ancestry for historical reasons: slavery, partus sequitur ventrem, one-eighth law, the one-drop rule of 20th-century legislation, have frequently been classified as black (historically) or African-American, even if they have significant European-American or Native American ancestry. As slavery became a racial caste, those who were enslaved and others of any African ancestry were classified by what is termed "hypodescent" according to the lower status ethnic group. Many of majority European ancestry and appearance "married white" and assimilated into white society for its social and economic advantages, such as generations of families identified as Melungeons, now generally classified as white but demonstrated genetically to be of European and sub-Saharan African ancestry.

Sometimes people of mixed Native American and African-American descent report having had elder family members withholding pertinent genealogical information.[79] Tracing the genealogy of African-Americans can be a very difficult process, as censuses did not identify slaves by name before the American Civil War, meaning that most African Americans did not appear by name in those records. In addition, many white fathers who used slave women sexually, even those in long-term relationships like Thomas Jefferson's with Sally Hemings, did not acknowledge their mixed race slave children in records, so paternity was lost.

Colonial records of French and Spanish slave ships and sales and plantation records in all the former colonies, often have much more information about slaves, from which researchers are reconstructing slave family histories. Genealogists have begun to find plantation records, court records, land deeds and other sources to trace African-American families and individuals before 1870. As slaves were generally forbidden to learn to read and write, black families passed along oral histories, which have had great persistence. Similarly, Native Americans did not generally learn to read and write English, although some did in the nineteenth century.[79] Until 1930, census enumerators used the terms free people of color and mulatto to classify people of apparent mixed race. When those terms were dropped, as a result of the lobbying by the Southern Congressional bloc, the Census Bureau used only the binary classifications of black or white, as was typical in segregated southern states.

In the 1980s, parents of mixed race children began to organize and lobby for the addition of a more inclusive term of racial designation that would reflect the heritage of their children. When the U.S. government proposed the addition of the category of "biracial" or "multiracial" in 1988, the response from the public was mostly negative. Some African-American organizations and African-American political leaders, such as Congresswoman Diane Watson and Congressman Augustus Hawkins, were particularly vocal in their rejection of the category, as they feared the loss of political and economic power if African-Americans reduced their numbers by self-identification.[96]

Since the 1990s and 2000s, the terms mixed race, multiracial and biracial have been used more frequently in society. It is still most common in the United States (unlike some other countries with a history of slavery) for people seen as "African" in appearance to identify as or be classified solely as "Black" or "African-Americans", for cultural, social and familial reasons.

President Barack Obama is of European-American and East African ancestry; he identifies as African-American.[97] A 2007 poll, when Obama was a presidential candidate, found that Americans differed in their responses as to how they classified him: a majority of White and Hispanics classified him as biracial, but a majority of African-Americans classified him as black.[98]

A 2003 study found an average of 18.6% (±1.5%) European admixture in a population sample of 416 African-Americans from Washington, D.C.[99] Studies of other populations in other areas have found differing percentages of ethnicity.

Twenty percent of African-Americans have more than 25% European ancestry, reflecting the long history of unions between the groups. The "mostly African" group is substantially African, as 70% of African-Americans in this group have less than 15% European ancestry. The 20% of African Americans in the "mostly mixed" group (2.7% of US population) have between 25% and 50% European ancestry.[100]

The writer Sherrel W. Stewart's assertion that "most" African-Americans have significant Native American heritage,[101] is not supported by genetic researchers who have done extensive population mapping studies. The TV series on African-American ancestry, hosted by the scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., had genetics scholars who discussed in detail the variety of ancestries among African-Americans. They noted there is popular belief in a high rate of Native American admixture that is not supported by the data that has been collected.[citation needed]

Genetic testing of direct male and female lines evaluates only direct male and female descent without accounting for many ancestors.[102] For this reason, individuals on the Gates show had fuller DNA testing.

The critic Troy Duster, writing in The Chronicle of Higher Education, thought Gates' series African American Lives should have told people more about the limitations of genetic SNP testing. He says that not all ancestry may show up in the tests, especially for those who claim part-Native American descent.[102][103] Other experts also agree.[104]

Population testing is still being done. Some Native American groups that have been sampled may not have shared the pattern of markers being searched for. Geneticists acknowledge that DNA testing cannot yet distinguish among members of differing cultural Native American nations. There is genetic evidence for three major migrations into North America, but not for more recent historic differentiation.[103] In addition, not all Native Americans have been tested, so scientists do not know for sure that Native Americans have only the genetic markers they have identified.[102][103]

Admixture

[edit]

On census forms, the government depends on individuals' self-identification. Contemporary African-Americans possess varying degrees of admixture with European (and other) ancestry. They also have various degrees of Native American ancestry.[105][106] In addition to being found to have 8% Asian and 19.6% European ancestry, African-Americans, who were sampled in 2010, were found to be 72.5% African; the Asian ancestry serving as a proxy for Native-American.[107]

Many free African-American families descended from unions between white women and African men in colonial Virginia. Their free descendants migrated to the frontier of Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina in the 18th and 19th centuries. There were also similar free families in Delaware and Maryland, as documented by Paul Heinegg.[108]

In addition, many Native American women turned to African-American men due to the decline in the number of Native American men due to disease and warfare.[90] Some Native American women bought African slaves but, unknown to European sellers, the women freed the African men and married them into their respective tribes.[90] If an African-American man had children by a Native American woman, their children were free because of the status of the mother.[90]

In their attempt to ensure white supremacy decades after emancipation, in the early 20th century, most southern states created laws based on the one-drop rule, defining as black persons with any known African ancestry. This was a stricter interpretation than what had prevailed in the 19th century; it ignored the many mixed families in the state and went against commonly accepted social rules of judging a person by appearance and association. Some courts called it "the traceable amount rule." Anthropologists called it an example of a hypodescent rule, meaning that racially mixed persons were assigned the status of the socially subordinate group.

Prior to the one-drop rule, different states had different laws regarding color. More importantly, social acceptance often played a bigger role in how a person was perceived and how identity was construed than any law. In frontier areas, there were fewer questions about origins. The community looked at how people performed, whether they served in the militia and voted, which were the responsibilities and signs of free citizens. When questions about racial identity arose because of inheritance issues, for instance, litigation outcomes often were based on how people were accepted by neighbors.[109]

The first year in which the U.S. Census dropped the mulatto category was 1920; that year enumerators were instructed to classify people in a binary way as white or black. This was a result of the Southern-dominated Congress convincing the Census Bureau to change its rules.[110][111]

After the Civil War, racial segregation forced African Americans to share more of a common lot in society than they might have given widely varying ancestry, educational and economic levels. The binary division altered the separate status of the traditionally free people of color in Louisiana, for instance, although they maintained a strong Louisiana Créole culture related to French culture and language, and practice of Catholicism. African Americans began to create common cause—regardless of their multiracial admixture or social and economic stratification. In 20th-century changes, during the rise of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements, the African-American community increased its own pressure for people of any portion of African descent to be claimed by the black community to add to its power.

By the 1980s, parents of mixed race children (and adults of mixed race ancestry) began to organize and lobby for the ability to show more than one ethnic category on Census and other legal forms. They refused to be put into just one category. When the U.S. government proposed the addition of the category of "biracial" or "multiracial" in 1988, the response from the general public was mostly negative. Some African-American organizations and political leaders, such as Senator Diane Watson and Representative Augustus Hawkins, were particularly vocal in their rejection of the category. They feared a loss in political and economic power if African-Americans abandoned their one category.

This reaction is characterized as "historical irony" by Reginald Daniel (2002). The African-American self-designation had been a response to the one-drop rule, but then people resisted the chance to claim their multiple heritages. At the bottom was a desire not to lose political power of the larger group. Whereas before people resisted being characterized as one group regardless of ranges of ancestry, now some of their own were trying to keep them in the same group.[96]

Definition of African-American

[edit]

Since the late twentieth century, the number of African and Caribbean ethnic African immigrants have increased in the United States. Together with publicity about the ancestry of President Barack Obama, whose father was from Kenya, some black writers have argued that new terms are needed for recent immigrants. There is a consensus that suggests that the term African-American should refer strictly to the descendants of American Colonial Era chattel slave descendants which includes various, subsequent, Free People of Color ethnic groups who survived the Chattel Slavery Era in the United States.[120] It's been recognized that grouping together all Afrodescent ethnicities, regardless of their unique ancestral circumstances, would deny the lingering effects of slavery within the American Colonial Era chattel slave descended community.[120] A growing sentiment within the Descendants of American Colonial Era Chattel Slaves (DOS) population insists that ethnic African immigrants as well as all other Afro-descent and Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade descendants and those relegated, or self-designated, to the Black race social identity or classification recognize their own unique familial, genealogical, ancestral, social, political and cultural backgrounds.[120]

Stanley Crouch wrote in a New York Daily News piece "Obama's mother is of white U.S. stock. His father is a black Kenyan," in a column entitled "What Obama Isn't: Black Like Me." During the 2008 campaign, the mixed-race columnist David Ehrenstein of the LA Times accused white liberals of flocking to Obama because he was a "Magic Negro", a term that refers to a black person with no past who simply appears to assist the mainstream white (as cultural protagonists/drivers) agenda.[121] Ehrenstein went on to say "He's there to assuage white 'guilt' they feel over the role of slavery and racial segregation in American history."[121]

Reacting to media criticism of Michelle Obama during the 2008 presidential election, Charles Steele Jr., CEO of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said, "Why are they attacking Michelle Obama and not really attacking, to that degree, her husband? Because he has no slave blood in him."[122] He later claimed his comment was intended to be "provocative" but declined to expand on the subject.[122] Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (who was famously mistaken for a "recent American immigrant" by French President Nicolas Sarkozy[123]), said "descendants of slaves did not get much of a head start, and I think you continue to see some of the effects of that." She has also rejected an immigrant designation for African-Americans and instead prefers the terms black or white.[124]

White and European-American identity

[edit]

Some of the most notable[vague] families include the Van Salees,[86] Vanderbilts, Whitneys, Blacks,[125] Cheswells,[126] Newells,[127] Battises,[128] Bostons,[129] Eldings[130] of the North; the Staffords,[131] Gibsons,[132] Locklears, Pendarvises,[87] Driggers,[133][134] Galphins,[135] Fairfaxes,[136] Grinsteads (Greenstead, Grinsted and Grimsted),[137] Johnsons, Timrods, Darnalls of the South and the Picos,[138] Yturrias[139] and Bushes of the West.[140]

DNA analysis shows varied results regarding non-European ancestry in self-identified White Americans. A 2003 DNA analysis found that about 30% of self-identified White Americans have less than 90% European ancestry.[141] A 2014 study performed on data obtained from 23andme customers found that the percentage of African or American Indian ancestry among White Americans varies significantly by region, with about 5% of White Americans living in Louisiana and South Carolina having 2% or more African ancestry.[54]

Some biographical accounts include the autobiography Life on the Color Line: The True Story of a White Boy Who Discovered He Was Black by Gregory Howard Williams; One Drop: My Father's Hidden Life—A Story of Race and Family Secrets written by Bliss Broyard about her father Anatole Broyard; the documentary Colored White Boy[142] about a white man in North Carolina who discovers that he is the descendant of a white plantation owner and a raped African slave and the documentary on The Sanders Women[143] of Shreveport, Louisiana.

Racial passing and ambiguity

[edit]

Passing is a phenomenon most widely noted in the United States, which occurs when a person who may be literally classified as a member of one racial group (by law or frequent social convention applied to others with similar ancestry) is accepted or perceived ("passes") as a member of another.

The phenomenon known as "passing as white" is difficult to explain in other countries or to foreign students. Typical questions are: "Shouldn't Americans say that a person who is passing as white is white or nearly all white and has previously been passing as black?" or "To be consistent, shouldn't you say that someone who is one-eighth white is passing as black?" ... A person who is one-fourth or less American Indian or Korean or Filipino is not regarded as passing if he or she intermarries with and joins fully the life of the dominant community, so the minority ancestry need not be hidden... It is often suggested that the key reason for this is that the physical differences between these other groups and whites are less pronounced than the physical differences between African blacks and whites and therefore are less threatening to whites... [W]hen ancestry in one of these racial minority groups does not exceed one-fourth, a person is not defined solely as a member of that group.[148]

Laws dating from 17th-century colonial America defined children of African slave mothers as taking the status of their mothers and born into slavery regardless of the race or status of the father, under partus sequitur ventrem. The association of slavery with a "race" led to slavery as a racial caste. But, most families of free people of color formed in Virginia before the American Revolution were the descendants of unions between white women and African men, who frequently worked and lived together in the looser conditions of the early colonial period.[154] While interracial marriage was later prohibited, white men frequently took sexual advantage of slave women, and numerous generations of multiracial children were born. By the late 1800s it had become common among African Americans to use passing to gain educational opportunities as did the first African-American graduate of Vassar College, Anita Florence Hemmings.[155] Some 19th-century categorization schemes defined people by proportion of African ancestry: a person whose parents were black and white was classified as mulatto, with one black grandparent and three white as quadroon, and with one black great-grandparent and the remainder white as octoroon. The latter categories remained within an overall black or colored category, but before the Civil War, in Virginia and some other states, a person of one-eighth or less black ancestry was legally white.[156] Some members of these categories passed temporarily or permanently as white.

After whites regained power in the South following Reconstruction, they established racial segregation to reassert white supremacy, followed by laws defining people with any apparent or known African ancestry as black, under the principle of hypodescent.[156]

However, since several thousand blacks have been crossing the color line each year, millions of white Americans have relatively recent African ancestors (of the last 250 years). A statistical analysis done in 1958 estimated that 21 percent of the white population had some African ancestors. The study concluded that the majority of Americans of African descent were today classified as white and not black.[157]

Hispanic and Latino American identity

[edit]

A typical Latino American family may have members with a wide range of racial phenotypes, meaning a Latino couple may have children who look white and black and/or Native American and/or Asian.[158] Latino Americans have several self-identifications; most Latinos identify as "Some other race", while others identify as white and/or black and/or Native American and/or Asian.[1][2]

Latinos of darker skin tones are noted as having limited media appearance; critics and Latinos of color have accused Latin American media of overlooking dark-skinned individuals in favor of those that are of lighter complexion, blonde-haired and blue/green-eyed – especially in regards to actors and actresses on telenovelas – rather than the typical nonwhite Latin Americans.[159][160][161][162][163][164][165][166][167]

Pacific Islander American identity

[edit]

During the 19th century, Christian missionaries from Europe and the United States followed Western traders to the Hawaiian Islands, leading to a wave of Western migration to the Kingdom of Hawaii. Westerners in the Hawaiian Islands often intermarried with Native Hawaiian women, including Hawaiian royalty. These developments eventually led to a gradual change in the beauty standards of Native Hawaiian women to a more westernized standard, which was reinforced by the refusal of Westerners to marry dark-skinned Hawaiians.[180]

While some American Pacific Islanders continue traditional cultural endogamy, many within this population now have mixed racial ancestry, sometimes combining European, Native American, as well as East Asian ancestry. The Hawaiians originally described the mixed race descendants as hapa. The term has evolved to encompass all people of mixed Asian and/or Pacific Islander ancestry. Subsequently, many ethnic Chinese also settled on the islands and married into the Pacific Islander populations.

There are many other Pacific Islanders outside of Hawaii that do not share this common history with Hawaii and Asian populations are not the only race that Pacific Islanders mix with.

Eurasian-American identity

[edit]

In its original meaning, an Amerasian is a person born in Asia to an Asian mother and a U.S. military father. Colloquially, the term has sometimes been considered synonymous with Asian-American, to describe any person of mixed American and Asian parentage, regardless of the circumstances. The term "wasian" is also common slang to describe the individuals. "Wasian" has gained popularity on online platforms like TikTok among younger audiences, where trends in the 2020s have increased the proliferation of the term.[191]

According to the United States Census Bureau, concerning multiracial families in 1990, the number of children in interracial families grew from less than one-half million in 1970 to about two million in 1990.[192]

According to James P. Allen and Eugene Turner from California State University, Northridge, by some calculations the largest part white biracial population is white/American Indian and Alaskan Native, at 7,015,017; followed by white/black at 737,492; then white/Asian at 727,197; and finally white/Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander at 125,628.[25]

The U.S. Census categorizes Eurasian responses in the "some other race" section as part of the Asian race.[23] The Eurasian responses which the U.S. Census officially recognizes are Indo-European, Amerasian, and Eurasian.[23]

Afro-Asian-American identity

[edit]

Chinese men entered the United States as laborers, primarily on the West Coast and in western territories. Following the Reconstruction era, as blacks set up independent farms, white planters imported Chinese laborers to satisfy their need for labor. In 1882, the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed and Chinese workers who chose to stay in the U.S. were unable to have their wives join them. In the South, some Chinese married into the black and mulatto communities, as generally, discrimination meant they did not take white spouses. They rapidly left working as laborers and set up groceries in small towns throughout the South. They worked to get their children educated and socially mobile.[206]

The Afro-Asian population drastically increased by the 1950s, with a number of Afro-Asians born to African American fathers and Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, or Filipino mothers due to the large number of African Americans who enrolled in the military and developed relationships with Asian women abroad. Other groups of Afro-Asians are those who are of Caribbean American descent and are considered Dougla, or of Indian or Indo-Caribbean and African or Afro-Caribbean descent.

As of the census of 2000, there were 106,782 Afro-Asian individuals in the United States.[207]

In fiction

[edit]

The figure of the "tragic octoroon" was a stock character of abolitionist literature: a mixed-race woman raised as if a white woman in her white father's household, until his bankruptcy or death has her reduced to a menial position[217] She may even be unaware of her status before being reduced to victimization.[218] The first character of this type was the heroine of Lydia Maria Child's "The Quadroons" (1842), a short story.[218] This character allowed abolitionists to draw attention to the sexual exploitation in slavery and, unlike portrayals of the suffering of the field hands, did not allow slaveholders to retort that the sufferings of Northern mill hands were no easier. The Northern mill owner would not sell his own children into slavery.[219]

Abolitionists sometimes featured attractive, escaped mulatto slaves in their public lectures to arouse sentiments against slavery. They showed Northerners those slaves who looked like them rather than an "Other"; this technique, which is labeled White slave propaganda, collapsed the separation between peoples and made it impossible for the public to ignore the brutality of slavery.[220]

Charles W. Chesnutt, an author of the post-Civil War era, explored stereotypes in his portrayal of multiracial characters in southern society in the postwar years. Even characters who had been free and possibly educated before the war had trouble making a place for themselves in the postwar years. His stories feature mixed-race characters with complex lives. William Faulkner also portrayed the lives of mixed-race people and complex interracial families in the postwar South.

Comic book writer and filmmaker Greg Pak wrote that while white filmmakers have used multiracial characters explore themes about race and racism, many of these characters created stereotypes that Pak described were: "Wild Half-Castes", "sexually destructive antagonists explicitly or implicitly perceived as unable to control the instinctive urges of their non-white heritage" who exhibited the same racial stereotypes of their "full blood" counterparts, symbolically used by filmmakers to "[perpetuate] the association of multiraciality with sexual aberration and violence"; the "Tragic mulatto", "a typically female character who tries to pass for white but finds disaster when her non-white heritage is revealed" whose plight used by filmmakers to "to critique racism by inspiring pity"; and the "Half Breed Hero", an "empowering" stereotype whose objective of "[inspiring] identification as he actively resists white racism" is contradicted by the character being played by a white actor, reinforcing a "white liberal's dream of inclusion and authenticity than an honest depiction of a multiracial character's experiences." Pak noted that "Wild Half Caste" and "Tragic Mulatto" characters possess little to no character development and that while many multiracial characters have appeared more frequently in films without reinforcing stereotypes, white filmmakers have mostly avoided addressing their ethnicities.[221]

See also

[edit]

References

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    "Many monoracials do view a multiracial identity as a choice that denies loyalty to the oppressed racial group. We can see this issue enacted currently over the debate of the U.S. census to include a multiracial category— some oppressed monoracial groups believe this category would decrease their numbers and 'benefits."

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Further reading

[edit]
  • Susan Graham, "Born Biracial: How One Mother Took on Race in America" (2020) Memories Press.
  • G. Reginald Daniel, More Than Black?: Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order, Temple University Press (2002) ISBN 978-1-56639-909-8.
  • Teja Arboleda, In the Shadow of Race: Growing Up As a Multiethnic, Multicultural, and Multiracial American (1998) ISBN 978-0-585-11477-4.
  • Yo Jackson, Yolanda Kaye Jackson, Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology (2006), ISBN 978-1-4129-0948-8.
  • Joel Perlmann, Mary C. Waters, The New Race Question: How the Census Counts Multiracial Individuals (2005), ISBN 978-0-87154-658-6.
[edit]