Azie Dungey Profile picture
Feb 19 23 tweets 9 min read
It’s #BlackHistoryMonth and I’ve been slacking on content. But today I want to share something special!
My family recently made a discovery: my mom’s mother, Mabel Ruth Collick, descends from one of the “20-odd Negroes” brought to Jamestown in #1619 the first Africans in America. Image
I’ve tweeted a lot about the Dungee/Dungeys, my mom’s paternal side which is the Pamunkey/Mattaponi line that I’ve grown up knowing. But unfortunately, African American family history is notorious difficult to research. I’ve been working on mine for many years.
Most of my Black lineage was FPOC which helps cause there are records. Abt a year ago, I was contacted thru #ancestry by a DNA cousin. She enlisted the help of a certified genealogist. Here’s what we found.

My 9th great grandmother’s name was Margaret Cornish.
She was born in Angola abt 1607 and arrived in Jamestown on the White Lion in 1619. They were captured earlier that year when an army of Portuguese and African allies seeking control of the silver mines, invaded the kingdom of Ndongo on the Kwanza River, now Angola. ImageImage
Ndongo was a cosmopolitan Kingdom of the sophisticated Iron Age — made up of farmers, artisans, miners, silver and goldsmiths, blacksmiths, and cattle-herders. ImageImageImage
You may wonder about the name Margaret Cornish, cause I def did. For one, neither her owner, nor her male partners had the name Cornish. So that remains a mystery for now. As for Margaret, I believe it was her birth name (or one of them), but the Portuguese version - Margarida.
Many don’t realize that by and large, the Angolans had embraced Catholicism generations before the transatlantic slave trade began in earnest. Several of their Kingdoms had a thriving trade relationship with Portugal since the late 1400s (silver, gold, iron, cloth, etc). ImageImageImage
So my Margaret was probably Catholic, she most likely spoke Portuguese, Kimbundu, and any/all of 5 other Bantu languages in her region as well as some Dutch and eventually English. I bet she was in Jamestown like “these people are ignorant af”.
The first Africans in Jamestown were not held in life-long enslavement, but were apparently under a similar situation to the white indentured servants. Except for the *very important* fact that they were stolen and forced to be there.
Margaret’s enslavement (indenture?) was to Lt. Robert Sheppard who owned the Chippoke Plantation. Margaret married one of the other 20-and odd from her ship, John Graweere (Gowen), and they had a son named Michael.

Then there was a huge scandal…
*cue the dramatic music*
In 1638, an English indentured servant named Robert Sweet came to work for Lt. Shepherd. He and Margaret had an affair resulting in a baby named Jane. This baby came out…very white, which was very suspicious.
Margaret was convicted of adultery. She was publicly whipped.
Robert was also convicted of fornication. His punishment? He had to wear a white tunic to church and be shamed in front of the whole congregation. Must be nice. 🙄 Image
Now I should mention that her husband John was owned by someone else and lived elsewhere.

All the while this was happening, John had attained his freedom and was trying to make enough money to purchase Margaret and his son. But after all that drama, he was like “Nah, man.”
John had the money to purchase his son, but it was unclear who owned him. He filed a lawsuit and took his case to court March 31, 1641. At court, he said wanted to raise his child to be a good Christian and he wanted him to be educated. (And get him out that v unChristian drama)
And then, get this, Lt Sheppard - Margaret’s owner - stood with her ex John Gowen in court and said that he, as the child’s godfather (which he apparently was???) would be guardian along with John.

John won his case and their boy Michael was never a servant or a slave.
Sweet Baby Jane (no pun intended), being born in sin and whatnot, was not so lucky. Records show that she was adopted by Manuel Driggers (Emmanual Rodriguez, another of the 20-and odd) who was free by this time. He paid for her indenture to be handed over to another household.
For a long time I thought Manuel Driggers was my ancestor bc her name in records was Jane Driggers. Until we found the note abt the adoption. I’ve thought a lot abt this and I believe he was saving the child from being taken by the church (as they did to bastards) and sold away.
Margaret and Robert Sweet went on to be married and have more children. She was freed and had her own farm in Hog Island, Surry County, Virginia. She died at around 70 years old. ImageImage
Her daughter Jane, after her own scandals (contraception was not a thing back then guys), went on to marry William Harmon, an African who had been trafficked to Virginia sometime before 1648. William and Jane are my 8x great grandparents. ImageImage
They moved to Maryland where Harmons married Collicks many times over. The Collicks were FPOC in MD, descended from Sam Collick, a Native man allotted land in Askibinakansen Indian Town when the reservation was disbanded. The area became a FPOC settlement.
hdl.handle.net/11603/11895 Image
Most of the Harmons left MD with the Nanticoke Tribe and migrated to Delaware in mid-1800s. My Collicks/Harmons stayed in MD and fought for the Union in the Civil War.

(You’ll notice under “complexion” it says Griffe which meant Black/Native, as in griffin half eagle/lion 🙄) ImageImage
It is incredible to me that my grandparents found each other. Him from the Indigenous people of Virginia, the Powhatan Confederacy, and her a descendent of the first Black and white people to be there. 400 years ago, they were all sorting through the mess that would be America.
Damn. I really am America.

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More from @AzieDee

Dec 20, 2021
After going thru 2 years of this pandemic, I’m starting to wonder in the Black Plague can explain how particularly and outrageously violent Euro colonizers/slave traders were in the New World. Watching people fall dead around you every minute maybe made life feel less valuable.
It never ended in England. It came back every 10 yrs for 300 yrs. Each new iteration took 20% of the London population. They started killing dogs and cats en masse. In 1665, 100,000 Londoners died in 6 months. All entertainment was shut down and people were locked in their homes
They may have literally been crazy. Like psychologically damaged with a very skewed perspective. Live recklessly and get what you can - get rich and enjoy life - before blood and pus seep out of your lymph nodes, you cough once then drop dead suddenly and without reason.
Read 11 tweets
Dec 17, 2021
@united my sister is at the airport and she got to the counter and they said her ticket is bought and paid for, she has an eticket confirmation and confirmation number but there is “no booking” so she can’t get on her international flight. It leaves in an hour now.
I have been on hold trying to rectify this. She is just standing there and they said they can’t help her.
I purchased the flight on Nov 21st over the phone. There is no indication of any problem. I have all receipts and emails with confirmations. Please advise because I can not get through on your phone line and she is going to miss her @lufthansa flight to Germany and connection.
Read 29 tweets
Sep 23, 2021
Lemme tell y’all a few things about Haiti - and why we owe them. A thread.
1. The American Revolution was funded by Haitian money. France gave the American colonies $9Billion to aide the Revolution. France had that money because Haiti was the richest colony in the entire world — richer than the Spanish empire.
France also used Haiti as a transient point to send troops and other aide to the American colonies to fight the American Revolution. Enslaved Haitians also made the gunpowder that was used in many of the battles.
Read 21 tweets
Sep 20, 2021
Looking at Gabby Petito’s IG, it struck me that she has no photos with anyone but him. There was one from a few years ago with her brother, but that is all. No friends, no family members. That indicates a lot to me.
Not to jump to conclusions but isolation is such a common tactic for mental/emotional/physical abusers. It happened to me at that age, and I’m very aware that her fate was nearly my own. It certainly is for many young women like her whose stories don’t get this attention.
Also, eff the articles coming out abt how travel puts an “extra strain” on relationships. Millions of couples take road trips together and don’t end up missing or murdered.

Lemme find out y’all wanna excuse homicidal white boys so bad you will blame vans and National Parks. 😒
Read 13 tweets
Jun 16, 2021
Have y’all been to the Heights?!? I lived there and looked like everyone else. People kept coming up to me to hug me and say they knew my mother. The neighborhood is Dominican (as in the same island as Haiti 🙄).

The irony of her last name in this instance is not lost on me.
But of course, I didn’t get why we needed Black and Brown people playing the a bunch of colonizers, so maybe I’m just weird.
I was especially pissed at the show’s focus on John Laurens as a martyr with an unrealized dream of recruiting Black Revolutionary soldiers when THERE WERE BLACK REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS (9,000 on American side - 4% of our troops) and they were completely ERASED from the narrative!
Read 8 tweets
Jun 16, 2021
If you are a woman, and you have a crush on roughly 98 men and 2 women, does that make you 2% gay? Is this science?
To be clear, I think women are way too juicy and mushy to actually have sex with. Like, no thanks. But remember Sue from Great British Bake-off? She’s my wife.
As is Kate from Line of Duty.

But she’s basically Sue without glasses, so. 🤷🏾‍♀️
Read 4 tweets

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