Ramapough Mountain People The Jackson Whites
A Pathfinder and Annotated Bibliography
In place 1995. Last updated January 2, 2001. Copyright © Randy D. Ralph.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction:
My parents moved the family way, way out in the country, after my baby
brother was born, to a little tract house in the middle of the Preakness
Valley in Passaic County, New Jersey. The valley was open and green and
filled with Dutch dairy farms and Italian truck gardens. It lay snuggled
between the Ramapo and Watchung ridges. Our family was one of the first
to move into the new neighborhood between Old Man van der Veen's dairy
cows and Mrs. Capodimaggi's vegetable garden. One day in mid-summer, not
long after we'd moved in, a new kid showed up at the baseball diamond the
us kids had carved out of one of the still-vacant lots. His name was
Willie G. Mann, Jr., or, just "Junior." He became one of my best friends
for reasons I didn't understand until many years later.
I was a fat kid. I was usually the last to be picked when the kids chose
up sides for baseball. I could hit OK, but I couldn't catch worth a damn
and I couldn't run fast either. More often than not, I'd wind up in the
middle of a fight over whose team I'd made lose the last time - until
Junior showed up.
The kids on the block thought Junior was "weird-looking" and said so. His
complexion was almost bronze. He had sparkling Blue Plate Special blue
eyes and jet black, curly hair. He looked for all the world like an
Indian to me. To the kids on the block it was clear he wasn't "one of
us." He was lanky and athletic, though. It almost seemed he could hit a
home run with one hand tied behind his back, catch a pop fly blind-folded
or round the bases in a blur and slide into home without a drop of sweat
on his brow. He was a natural, and that was all that mattered to them.
Junior's folks had moved into a little house up the block from mine.
Their old home in Mahwah was just a few miles away over the mountain in
Bergen County. We didn't know it when we first met Junior, but the Manns
belonged to a group that the farmers' kids called the "Jackson Whites."
There was bound to be a fight when one of Old Man van der Veen's boys
called Junior "Bockie," "Jack," or "Whitey." Junior won all these fights.
This meant that he soon became captain of one of the neighborhood baseball
teams. They called Junior's team, sort of half as grudging recognition
and half as insult, the Jackson Whites, but only behind his back.
Junior would pick me first for his team amid jeers of "Oh, no! Not Fatso,
again! Jeez!" I'd take my place at his side, ready to defend him against
the jeers of "Hey, Jack! Bockie! You nuts?" that followed. I couldn't
run very fast, but when I got someone down and sat on him, he stayed down.
It became a routine as comfortable as an old shoe. I didn't mind the
jeers anymore and the fights became less and less frequent. Together,
Junior and I could take on the world, and did. Apart, the farmers' kids
could get the better of us, and did. We won our fair share. That's all.
Before long, Junior and I became inseparable. We went everywhere
together. Junior had almost an innate knowledge of the hills and trails
around the valley. He knew the names of plants and what they were used
for. He'd tear up a stalk of touch-me-not, rub it on a mosquito bite and
the itch would go away. He knew how to sit patiently and wait for animals
to come close. We could watch them, motionless, as they went about their
business. We did all these things on long hikes into the hills in warm
weather. We wouldn't make it back home until way after dark sometimes.
At first, my mother didn't approve of any of this, but I guess when she
saw the good it was doing me, she gave up and Junior won a place in our
extended family.
Junior and I often wound up on top of Old Baldy, the biggest hill above
the valley. It had a beautiful glacier-scoured serpentine barren at the
top that the local people called a "bald." That's how it got its name.
You could see the whole skyline of New York City clearly from there on a
good day. Junior had never been there, even though it was less than
thirty miles away. He used to love to listen to my stories about trips
I'd taken into the city to see Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade or the
Rockettes on stage at Radio City Music Hall. He could scarcely believe
what he heard. You'd have thought I was describing Xanadu, or something.
Junior knew about the mountains. I knew about New York City. Our worlds
met on Old Baldy.
One day, after Junior and I had finished a lunch of crayfish poached
in a tin can, we discovered a small, rusted steel pole barge, nothing more
than an old cement trough, really. It was chained to an iron stake at the
edge of Franklin Pond at the foot of Old Baldy. It was made for kids. It
called out to us like God-damn Bali Hai. Junior picked the lock and in no
time we poled the thing silently out into the middle of the pond through
the sweet flag and water lilies at its edge leaving a fragrant wake behind
us. To this day the smell of sweet flag yanks me right back to Franklin
Pond.
We spent a long, lazy afternoon floating on the pond watching bullfrogs,
snapping turtles, sunfish, dragonflies, and whatever else happened by.
When the sun got low, we poled the barge back toward the shore where we'd
found it. Junior locked it back up. No harm done, we thought. But on
the way back up the hill a woman came screaming after us yelling "Stop,
Nigger! Stop!" with two men close behind her. I'd never heard the word
before. I knew instantly, from Junior's reaction, that I never wanted to
hear it again.
We ran, but the men caught up with us and tackled Junior. The woman
arrived shortly. She grabbed me and spun me around. "You should know
better than this, Mr. Ralph!" she screamed into my face. "I've called
your father and he's on his way here now. You're in big trouble, young
man," she informed me. I was terrified. How did she know my name? She
looked familiar but I had absolutely no idea who she was.
Meanwhile, the two men were wrestling with Junior and trying to subdue the
kid amid a fusillade of epithets I mostly couldn't hear and didn't
understand anyway. It was clear to me, though, that they hurt Junior as
much as or more than the pummeling. One of them finally got him up,
twisted an arm roughly behind his back and marched him down the hill
toward where the woman and I stood. Junior was in a lot more trouble than
I was, that was clear. But why? I didn't get it.
"Let's go boys." she said, to the men that had Junior. The woman led me
off by my ear reminding me now and again of the awful trouble I was in. I
went peaceably. The two men with Junior followed behind, struggling with
the kid all the way. If Junior was going to go, he wasn't going to go
without a fight. Every so often I'd hear a crack as one of them cuffed
him again. It seemed like it took forever but we soon arrived at the
woman's house behind a copse of trees close to the pond. The house was
huge - almost a mansion, I thought. Then I saw my mother standing with
arms on her hips on the large flagstone patio behind the house. She was
watching us come down the hill toward her. She didn't say a word to me or
to Junior.
My mother held up her hand as if to say "Stop." and motioned us two boys
into black wrought iron arm chairs arranged around a low table. "Sit."
she commanded. We did. Then she motioned to the woman and the two men to
follow her up a way toward the house. "Stay put!" she commanded Junior
and me. We did. My mother, the woman and the two men moved away and had
an animated conversation in whispered tones above which floated, from time
to time, words like "Nigger" and "Trash." I glanced over at Junior and
was dumbfounded to see him crying. I'd never seen him cry before, no
matter what. But he was sitting slumped over with tears running down his
cheeks. He looked up at me with those amazing blue eyes. They said,
simply, "See?" I saw. I saw instantly. I will never forget that moment.
I will never forget the absolute contempt and hatred it made me feel for
those people. They had hurt my friend. I learned disrespect that day.
We sat there just looking at each other dully until the adults had
finished their argument over us. The woman nodded and went inside after
motioning the two men away. They went around the side of the house and
disappeared from my life forever, but, unfortunately, not from Junior's.
My mother turned and began to walk toward us. The woman stopped when
she'd gotten to the screen door at the back of the house and turned, also.
"Just make sure that half-breed stays away from here, Amy!" she yelled
after my mother. She held up a hand without turning toward the woman to
indicate she'd heard. Her eyes were on Junior. She raised a single
finger to her mouth and made the "Shhhhh!" sign. "You shouldn't let your
boy associate with that kind of trash!" she screeched. My mother's hand
came down and she turned to face the woman who was halfway through the
door by now but still shaking a finger in our direction. "You just let me
worry about that, Miss Dijkstra" my mother said, raising a hand in a kind
of peace sign, and turned back toward us. Junior and I looked at each
other in shock. Miss Dijkstra?!?!!! Oh, my God! the school principal.
"Boys, come with me," my mother said and held out a hand to each of us.
We got up and walked toward her. She turned at the same time and put her
hands on our shoulders. All three of us rounded the house and moved
toward my father's Studebaker which was parked in the circular drive in
front of the house. She ushered us into the back seat together and
started the car. I could see the drapes in one of the stone-framed
windows move aside as the woman watched us leave. My mother pulled the
car slowly out of the driveway onto Valley Road and pointed it toward
home.
None of us said a word all the way back over Old Baldy to Junior's house.
When we got there my mother turned in her seat, reached back and opened
the rear door so Junior could get out. A shaft of light came from the
door of Junior's house where his own mother appeared in silhouette.
Junior looked at her for a moment and then back toward my mother. They
exchanged one of those "Oh boy!" looks. My mother tousled Junior's hair.
Then she pointed a finger at our noses in turn and said, "For Heaven's
sake, boys, stay away from Miss Dijkstra's house from now on, will you?
You promise?" We nodded vigorously. "Thanks, Mrs." Junior said and
stepped out of the car.
We watched until Junior went through the door where his mother stood, a
wooden spoon clutched in the hand resting on her hip, ready to go. The
tale of our adventure had obviously preceded him home. Junior was in for
it, that was for sure, and so was I. My father was not nearly as amused
as my mother by the day's events. He took great pains to demonstrate this
to me through the liberal application of a hair brush from Stanhome
Products to my rear end. It didn't last long and it didn't hurt too bad.
Besides, the bonus was that I had a great war story to tell to the other
kids on the block. Miss Dijkstra! for crying out loud!
After this watershed event Junior and I became the fastest of friends.
He'd spend a lot of time telling me about his family back in Mahwah while
we were fishing in Old Man van der Veen's pastures. There was a widening
in the brook there under the elms that Junior dubbed "Randy's Favorite
Pool" in my honor. This was our domain. Even Old Man van der Veen's kids
stayed away when we were there.
That's how I first came to know who the Jackson Whites were - from Willie G.
Mann, Jr., my first and best friend. Junior told me stories about these
shy, gentle, reclusive mountain people. They kept mostly to themselves.
A lot of the townspeople in the valleys below their homes called them
names because they were afraid of them or thought themselves better.
Among Junior's many cousins, some were albino. Some had extra fingers or
toes. Some had webbed fingers or toes. Some were a bit slow-witted.
Some knew Indian medicine. Some spoke proudly of their Tuscarora or
Hessian or Dutch blood. Some spoke "Jersey Dutch," an old dialect that
the newer valley people couldn't understand. Some people said they came
from runaway slaves or black whores. Some said they came from traitors
and turncoats. Some people called them "Jacks." Others called them
"Bockies." It really didn't matter. They were all wrong anyway.
Junior and his people took the name, "Jackson Whites," more often as the
phrase, "Jacks and Whites." It was just as sharp and cut just the same
either way. His parents had moved his family across the mountains and
away from their home because they hoped they wouldn't have to hear it ever
again. They were wrong.
Junior was drafted and went to Viet Nam in 1965. I remember thinking,
"For once he goes without a fight and it's got to be now?!?!" He thought
he was defending America. I didn't. I resisted the draft. I thought I
was defending America. He didn't. I marched on Washington. He marched
into a land mine. They sent him back home less than a year after he'd
left. On a glorious day in the fall I stood with his people and his
friends in the hills he loved and wept with them over his grave. I hoped
I would never have to do anything so hard again. I was wrong.
The Jackson Whites:
The Ramapough Mountain People, also known locally, and in the pejorative
as The Jackson Whites,
are an extended clan of closely interrelated families
living in the Ramapo Mountains and their more remote valleys principally
in Bergen County, New Jersey, but also in immediately adjacent Passaic
County, New Jersey, and Rockland County, New York. Their largely Dutch
surnames, de Groot, de Fries, van der Donck, and Mann, in all their
variant spellings, are among the oldest in the countryside and predate the
Revolutionary War. They live only thirty miles or so from downtown
Manhattan which lies just across the Hudson River (see map). They are shy, gentle, proud, and
reclusive people who, until relatively recently, seldom ventured far from
their mountain homes.
They are clearly racially mixed. There are elements from native Indian,
Negro, Dutch, and possibly German (Hessian) and Italian blood lines.
Their isolation has resulted in a high degree of intermarriage among the
families which has, on occasion, produced genetic anomalies such as
syndactyly (fusion of fingers or toes), polydactyly (extra fingers or
toes), pie baldness, albinism, sometimes distinguised by a grayish skin
color, and mental retardation.
The majority of the members of the extended clan, however, are robust,
intelligent people with striking good looks. In general, members of the
clan have light to dark bronze complexions, light eyes, and curly hair,
usually jet black or brunette but occasionally pure white. Their facial
features display a mixture of Indian and Negro characteristics that have
set them apart from their neighbors for centuries. More than any other
aspect, it is their looks that have isolated them, marked them, and
engendered the many lies, misconceptions, myths and legends that surround them in the local oral
history of the region.
The clan now prefers to be called the Ramapough (or Ramapo) Mountain
People or the Ramapough Mountain Indians. In the 1980s, as a result of an activist movement led by tribal
author and historian, Mozelle Van Dunk, they
petitioned the Bureau of Indian Affairs, with support from the Attorneys
General of New Jersey and New York States, for recognition and status as a
bona fide Indian tribe. To date, their efforts have been unsuccessful.
The Bureau classifies them as Black not Indian.
Map of the Ramapo Mountain region of New Jersey and New York
The Legend:
According to the first part of the legend, the first settlers in the
Ramapo Mountain region were Tuscarora Indians. They fled northward on the
Cumberland Trail to join their allies the Iroquois in upper New York after
a humiliating defeat at the hands of the British Army in a series of
skirmishes, part of the French and Indian Wars, in western North Carolina
from 1711 to 1714. They were either joined shortly after their arrival by
or came accompanied with runaway slaves, often referred to in those days
as "Jacks." The sons of Black freedmen from the plantations of the nearby
Hudson River Valley and Catskill Mountains also joined them and brought
their former masters' Dutch surnames with them to the Ramapos. They
intermarried with the Tuscaroras and possibly local Lenni Lenape Indians,
as well. It is at this time that their local neighbors may have begun to
refer to these people as the "Jacks and Whites."
According to the second part of the legend, during the War of
Independence, the British Army command at New York contracted with a
Colonial seacaptain and trader named Jackson to bring 3,500 prostitutes
recruited in the cities of England to New York to serve the garrison. On
the trans-Atlantic voyage one of the twenty ships in the convoy foundered
during a storm and most of the passengers were drowned. The clever and
industrious Jackson made for the West Indies and picked up an additional
400 black women to replace those lost at sea.
On his return to New York harbor the black prostitutes, known ironically
as "Jackson Whites" and as "Jackson Blacks," were segregated from the rest
and billeted for several years in a cow pasture in Greenwich Village
called Lispenard's Meadows. When the British were forced, abruptly, to
quit New York during the War of Independence, the women fled Manhattan in
fear of their lives and wandered northward into the Hudson Valley where
they heard, possibly from Hessian deserters, that the Ramapos were a haven
for Tory refugees, Dutch adventurers and villians of all kinds, including
the infamous Tory guerilla Cladius Smith, Cowboy of the Ramapos. and his
followers and admirers.
All these people, according to legend, wound up in the Ramapos and by 1800
were firmly ensconced as a clannish, isolated group bearing the collective
name "Jackson Whites," presumably as an ironic variant of "Jacks and
Whites." The were despised by their respectable lowland neighbors either
for having been Tory sympathizers, for their mixed blood, or for being
Black, or Indian, or outlaw, or all of that, and more. From roughly 1800
on, the Jackson Whites had little to do with the world outside their
Ramapo Mountains retreat and the few towns and villages they had managed
to build.
Journal Articles:
- "145 Minutes from Broadway," Country Life July/August, 1948.
- A description of the Ramapo Mountain region with a recounting of the
Jackson Whites legend.
- Beale, Calvin L. "American tri-racial isolates," Eugenics Quarterly
- 4(Dec 1957):187-196.
- The article discusses the origins of racially-mixed, isolated
mountain populations like the Jackson Whites of New Jersey and the
Melungeons of North Carolina and Tenessee.
- Chanler, David, "The Jackson Whites, an American episode," Crisis 46(May 1939):
- 138.
- The journal Crisis is devoted to discussion of black issues. Mr.
Chanler writes that the Jackson Whites were considered to be black. They
are an impoverished group under the control of the Ringwood Company of
Bergen County, NJ, which employs many of them and provides substandard
housing. There was a spate of newspaper articles about the Jackson Whites
in the mid-30s brought on by the activities of Rev. A. F. Chillson of the
Protestant Episcopal Church in Bergen County, who was interested in
helping the Jackson Whites. The Ringwood Company became embarrassed by
the attention and Rev. Chillson was soon moved to another church.
- Cohen, David S., "The origin of the 'Jackson Whites': History and legend
- among the Ramapo Mountain People," Journal of American Folklore
- 85(1972):260-266.
- Of the many articles written on the Jackson Whites legend this is
probably one of the best researched and most reasoned. The term Jackson
Whites is considered extremely offensive to the local people of the Ramapo
Mountain region of northern New Jersey and southern New York states. The
origins of the legend are explored and critically analyzed. The group is
identified as ethnically distinct from neighboring peoples. The core
family names of the group are de Fries, van Donck, de Groot and Mann,
probably brought to the region by escaped Negro slaves or freedmen from
Dutch plantations in the Hudson Valley region. These Dutch surnames can
be traced in local genealogical records back to the 1740s. The original
inhabitants of the Ramapo Region, considered to be on the frontier then,
were racially mixed sons and daughters of freed black servants and Dutch
farmers and plantation owners with these surnames. There is little
evidence that the current descendants have very much Indian blood although
there may be significant components from the Lenni Lenape and the
Tuscarora. The single largest racial component appears to be Negro. The
light coloration of many members of the clan arises from albinism and pie
baldness from isolation and constant intermarriage within the extended
clan.
- ________, "The Ramapo Mountain People: A Reassessment," New Jersey
- Folklore
2(1980):15-17
- A general article on isolated, racially-mixed groups, including the
Jackson Whites. It offers an analysis of the legends surrounding these
groups and compares them with their own oral histories and traditions.
- Collins, Daniel, "The racially-mixed People of the Ramapos: Undoing the
- Jackson White legends," American Anthropologist
- 74(Oct 1972):1276-1285.
- A review of the literature fails to validate the Jackson White legends
which traditionally have accounted for the presence of a racially mixed
collectivity in the Ramapo Mountain area. Extant oral traditions
supporting the least documented & most pejorative aspects of the legends
serve to maintain isolation & threaten the continuation of the Ramapo
Mountain community of racially mixed people. The name Jackson White
connotes a racial anomaly spawned by inbreeding & intermarriage, born into
ignorance & degeneracy, & condemned to poverty, feeble-mindedness &
suspicion. It is shown that an enumeration of the Jackson White pop is
impossible, if not irrelevant. Ways in which the Indian, white & Negro
elements of these mountain people are accounted for are discussed. The
Jackson Whites are a group of people held together by the isolation of the
mountains, kinship, the mixed racial stigma & a defamatory legend.
Changing the legends about the Jackson Whites to the history of the
racially mixed people of the Ramapos is a necessity.
- "Community of outcasts," Appleton's Journal of Literature, Science,
- and Art
7(Saturday, March 23, 1872):324-329.
- One of the earliest accounts of the Jackson Whites as a clan or
distinct group. The are described as poor, isolated and hermitic mountain
people of mixed Negro, Indian, Hessian and Dutch blood. There are
indications of albinism, mental retardation and other "degenerate" genetic
anomalies.
- Dunlap, A. R. and C. A. Weslager, "Trends in the naming of tri-racial mixed
- blood groups in the eastern United States," American Speech
- 22(Apr 1947):81-87.
- Not reviewed.
- Gilbert, William H., Jr., "Memorandum concerning the characteristics of the
- larger mixed-blood racial islands of the eastern United States,"
- Social Forces 24(May 1946):438-447.
- Greene, Florence E., "Tobacco road of the north," American Mercury
- 53(July 1941):15-22.
- Ms. Greene describes the Jackson Whites as a "dull-minded, moral-less
and lawless tribe of mountain folk who make the characters of Tobacco
Road seem cultured and effete by comparison." She describes their
homes as "squalid" and "jerry built" and notes that they can be seen
"growing obliquely out of the mountainside like unwholesome fungi." [She
neglects to mention that many of these homes were built by the Ringwood
Company as workers' quarters]. The reiterates the principal components of
the Jackson Whites legend as expostulated by John C. Storms,
self-proclaimed authority on the subject. The Jackson Whites, and, by
extension, others in the Ramapo Mountain region of New Jersey, were also
known as "bockies" either from the name given to the oak splint baskets
they wove. Many of the Jackson Whites were piebald or albino.
- Harris, Mark, "America's oldest interracial community," Negro Digest
- 6(July 1948):21-24.
- Not reviewed.
- Harte, Thomas J., "Trends in mate selection in a tri-racial isolate, " Social
- Forces
37(March 1959):215-221.
- Not reviewed.
- Honeyman, Abraham Van Doren, "Early trials of Negroes in Bergen County,"
- Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society 10(1925):357.
- Not reviewed.
- "Jackson Whites," Eugenical News 16(December 1931):218.
- A horrific description of the genetic abnormalities found among the
Jackson Whites complete with photographs meant principally as an object
lesson in what miscegenation can cause.
- "Jersey man and his wife doing noble work among Jackson Whites,"
- Prospector, Nov. 12, 1936, p. 2.
- The article focuses on the work of Rev. A. F. Chillson of the
Protestant Episcopal Church in Bergen County, NJ, and his wife and their
efforts to help the poor of the region, collectively known as the Jackson
Whites.
- Jessup, Elon, "Secrets of the Ramapos," Outing 81(Feb. 1923):217-221,
- 236-238.
- This is an article on hiking in the Ramapo Mountains of Northern New
Jersey. It focuses largely on the geology, botany and general sights to
be seen. There is no mention of the Jackson Whites. The article, despite
its promising title, is of interest principally as a romantic overview of
the physical nature of the region and its "secrets."
- Johnson, Guy B., "Personality in a White-Indian-Negro community," American
- Sociological Review
4(Aug 1939):516-523.
- Not reviewed.
- Johnston, James H., "Documentary evidence of the relations of Negroes and
- Indians," Journal of Negro History 14(Jan 1929):21-43.
- Not reviewed.
- Kaufman, Charles H., "An ethnomusicological survey among the people of the
- Ramapo Mountains," New York Folklore 23(1957):3-43, 109-131.
- His research indicates that the musical origins of the folk songs of
the Ramapo Mountain region are Dutch and Negro. There is little evidence
for significant contributions from Indian, West Indian or German sources.
This lends credence to the opinions expressed by others that the Jackson
Whites are a mixture of Dutch and Negro lines.
- Mayer, Allan J., "Is this tribe Indian?" Newsweek 95(Jan 7, 1980):32(1).
- The article focuses on the recent attempts by the people of the Ramapo
Mountain region to gain acceptance by the Bureau of Indian Affairs as the
Ramapough Mountain Indians. They consider themselves to be descendants of
the Tuscarora and Delaware tribes. The Jackson Whites legend is
reiterated. Considerable credence is given to the notion that the current
population is largely descended from free black pioneers and early Dutch
farmers in the region. A dialect known as "Jersey Dutch" still echoes in
their speech. This is offered as evidence of the connection with early
Dutch settlers.
- Merwin, Miles M., "The Jackson Whites," Rutgers Alumni Monthly 42(1963):8.
- Not reviewed.
- Price, Edward T., "A geographic analysis of White-Indian-Negro racial mixtures
- in the eastern United State," Annals of the Association of American
- Geographers
43(June 1953):138-155.
- Not reviewed.
- "Ramapo Memories," Magazine of History 4(September 1906):139-144.
- Not reviewed.
- Rankin, Edward S., "The Ramapo Tract," Proceedings of the New Jersey
- Historical Society
50(1932):375-394.
- Not reviewed.
- Sheppard, Caroll-Anne, "Where are the Pineys?" New Jersey Folklife
- 14(1989):21-29.
- Not reviewed.
- Skinner, Alanson, "A primitive new race in the very heart of civilization: the
- 'Jackson Whites'," American Examiner 1911. In the files of the Eugenics
- Records Office, Dwight Institute for Human Genetics, University of
- Minnesota.
- Not reviewed.
- Snedecor, Spencer T. and William K. Harryman, "Surgical problems in hereditary
- polydactylism and syndactylism," Journal of the New Jersey Medical
- Society
37(September 1940):443-449.
- The article focuses on the hereditary malformations found in some of
the members of the Jackson Whites clan, principally in the Van Donk
family. Polydactyly (additional fingers) and syndactyly (fusion of the
fingers) are common abnormalities. There is also a considerable amount of
albinism, pie baldness and some mental retardation among the youngest
members of the clan. The ancestry appears to be largely Indian and Negro.
- Speck, F. G., "Jackson Whites," Southern Workman 40(1911):104-107.
- The Jackson Whites clan seems to have been founded by core families of
native Algonquin Indians, probably Minisinks of the Delaware nation, with
some of the Tuscarora who lingered for a rest in the Ramapo Valley on
their retreat from North Carolina in 1714 to join their allies, the
Iroquios, in New York against the British. Runaway Negro slaves and
freedmen from the Dutch colonial plantations in the lowlands nearby added
their blood to the mix. Some of the current surnames, van Donk, de Fries,
Mann and de Groot come from these origins. The conclusion is that the
Jackson Whites are a mixture of three racial lines and that their
isolation led to the inbreeding which has resulted in some of the current
genetic problems of the group.
- Stuart, William, "Negro slavery in New Jersey and New York," Americana
- Illustrated
16(Oct. 1922):347-367.
- Not reviewed.
- Thompson, Edgar T., "The little races," American Anthropologist 74(Oct
- 1972):1295-1306.
- Not reviewed.
- Wallace, Anthony F. C., "The Tuscarora, sixth nation of the Iroquois
- Confederacy," Proceedings of the American Philosophical
- Society
93(May 1949):159-165.
- Not reviewed.
- Weller, George, "Jackson Whites," New Yorker 14(September 17,
- 1938):27-30, 34, 36.
- Mr. Weller's largely sympathetic article describes the clan as
consisting of "self-respecting mountaineers of ancient lineage. . ."
Maxwell Anderson in this play High Tor has his heroine refer to the clan
in her remarks to her suitor: "We can't live in your cabin, and have no
money, like the Jackson Whites over at Suffern." They were also referred
to as "the Jacks." Many of the members of the extended clan are albino.
It was not known at the time whether this condition was the result of
inbreeding or of lack of copper sulfate in the mountain diet. One of the
Whites, Nellie Mann, was the great-granddaughter of a Hessian deserter
from the British Army who traveled with the Barnum & Bailey Circus for
many years billed as a wild girl captured in the Australian bush. Nellie,
who was proud of her standing with the D.A.R. insisted on being announced
as "a beautiful American albino from our own Ramapo Mountains," which was
ruinous to her career as a sideshow curiosity. The article follows the
genealogy of the core families of the Whites. Mr. Weller notes that "it
is harder to find out something that happened in the Ramapo Mountains two
generations ago than what happened in the Fiji Islands at the same
period." Much of the history of the Jackson Whites is obscure because
they were largely ignored by polite and genteel society in the valleys
below their mountain homes. The article continues to recount, in
considerable detail, the legend of the origin of the Jackson Whites.
- "Who are the Jackson Whites?" Pathfinder (Sept. 5, 1931):20.
- Not reviewed.
Newspaper Articles:
- Berger, Meyer, "Hill folk at the City's portals - Only 'forty-five minutes from
- Broadway' dwell primitive people whose lives are still untouched by
- the turbulent stream of the metropolis," New York Times Magazine
- Mar. 24, 1935.
- A remarkably sympathetic article on the "hill folk" of the Ramapos, principally the Conklin family.
They are portrayed as rustic, not degenerate. Photographs show family and community activities.
The Jackson Whites legend is recounted with skepticism.
- De Yoe, Willard L., "Ramapo Valley history begins in this issue," Ramsey
- Journal
(July 4, 1957):1,5.
- The first in a series of largely anecdotal version of the history of the Ramapo Mountain region of
New Jersey and New York.
- ________, "Second chapter of Ramapo Valley History given," Ramsey Journal
- (July 11, 1957):7,9.
- ________, "Hopper House History is continued," Ramsey Journal
- (July 18, 1957):7, 10.
- ________, "History of Hopper House and Ramapo Valley continues," Ramsey
- Journal
(July 25, 1957):7.
- ________, "History of Hopper House and Valley Road during Revolutionary
- times is continued with story of Lafayette and French Army,"
- Ramsey Journal (Aug 1, 1957):7.
- ________, "Victorious end of Revolution recounted in part of history of
- Hopper House, Valley Road," Ramsey Journal
- (Aug 8, 1957):5.
- ________, "Hopper House and Valley Road history ends with anecdotes,
- legends, notes about period," Ramsey Journal
- (Aug 15, 1957):9, 12.
- "Deformity traced in Jersey group," Newark Evening News (Jun. 6, 1940)
- A biased presentation of some of the medical evidence of syndactyly
and polydactyly among the Jackson Whites gathered by public clinicians.
Seen largely as evidence of the evils of miscegenation and inbreeding.
Those bearing the anomalies are said to be degenerate.
- "Forest fire in the Ramapos," Star-Eagle Nov. 24, 1924.
- A report of forest fires in the Ramapo Mountains and on the damage to
homes and loss of life caused among the Jackson Whites. Efforts of local
citizens to assist the "feeble" of the clan are praised.
- Harrison, Charles, "Jackson Whites' Origin," Bergen Evening Record, 1960.
- A well-documented presentation of the evidence developed, largely by
David Cohen, on the origins of the Jackson Whites legend. The article is
largely skeptical of the traditional tales and critical of those who
recounted it in the past.
- Hernandez, Raymond, "The mountain people dig in over recognition as Indians.
- (People of the Ramapo Mountains want to be recognized by the federal
- government as Indians," The New York Times 144(Jan 1, 1995):29, col. 4.
- A detailed account of the recent efforts of the Ramapough Mountain People to gain recognition as
an Indian tribe from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The legend of the Jackson Whites is recounted
with derision.
- "Hill folk inherit lives of poverty," New York Times May 3, 1937.
- Not found. Incorrect citation?
- "Jackson Whites," New York Sun Feb. 28, 1909.
- Not reviewed.
- "Jackson Whites get Ringwood Co. help," World-Telegram Apr. 28, 1937.
- Not reviewd.
- "Jackson Whites, racial hybrids, putter along in the Ramapos,"
- Herald-Tribune Sep. 15, 1936.
- Not reviewed.
- "Jersey man and his wife doing noble work among Jackson Whites,"
- Newark Sunday Call Sep. 13, 1914.
- Describes the work of the Rev. A. F. Chillson and his wife among the
Ramapo Mountain People. The deplorable condition of the settlements in the
Bergen County area is described. The connection to the Ringwood Company
is noted.
- "Jersey to succor Jackson Whites: State appoints an investigator for
- study as prelude to bid for federal aid," New York Times
- Apr. 26, 1937, p. 21.
- The article focuses on the activities of Rev. A. F. Chillson and his wife in their attempts to raise
consciousness about he plight of the mountian people of the Ramapos. The state promised to
assign an investigator but nothing came of it. The Jackson Whites legend is recounted.
- "Jersey's Tobacco Road - 50 miles from the Broadway they've never seen,"
- New York World-Telegram Apr. 27, 1937.
- A radically racist portrayal of the Jackson Whites. They are seen as a degenerate result of racial
intermarriage. Genetic abnormalities are cited as indications of such evils.
- "Origin of the Jackson Whites traced by J. C. Storms," Paterson Call
- Feb. 11, 1936.
- Thoroughly retells the biased version of the Jackson Whites legends and myths some of which
James C. Storms, local newspaper editor, created himself.
- "State probes plight of New Jersey 'Jackson Whites'," Newark Sunday Call
- Apr. 25, 1937.
- In response to the activities of Rev. A. F. Chillson, the state appoints a commission to study the
condition of the Jackson Whites communities in Bergen County.
- Terhune, A. P., "When dogs go wild," New York Herald-Tribune Magazine
- Mar. 4, 1934.
- Even in the context of its time, an extremely nasty and radical portrayal of the Jackson Whites as the dregs of humanity, akin to dogs.
Books and Monographs:
- Berry, Brewton. Almost white. New York: Macmillan, 1963, 212 p.
- This is a shockingly racist little book. The author seems to have
written it in a sincere and somewhat sympathetic attempt to cast people he
calls mestizos in a better light, but it is written in language that
exudes a casual air of white superiority over and pity for lesser people
of mixed blood who are described in the preface as "pathetic folk of mixed
ancestry who never know quite where they belong." He notes that
"Miscegenation seems to be an inevitable consequence of the meeting of
races and nationalities." He goes on to say, "I hope that this book will
help to remove some of the prejudice and misunderstanding to which they
have been subjected." In the segments on the Jackson Whites he reiterates
the legend and quotes Florence Greene's article heavily, not entirely as
an example of racist claptrap.
- Beck, Henry Charlton. Fare to Midlands. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1939
- (reprinted as The Jersey Midlands. New Brunswick, NJ:
- Rutgers University Press, 1963).
- The book makes passing mention of the Jackson Whites clan.
- ________. Tales and towns of northern New Jersey. New Brunswick, NJ:
- Rutgers University Press, 1964, x & 349 p.
- There is only passing mention of the Jackson Whites as "bockies" -
mountain people who weave
baskets made of oak splints - in the chapter "The Scourge of the Ramapos," which deals with the
life and times of one Claudius Smith, a horse thief, murderer, sometimes political activist and highwayman who was hanged in his stocking feet on January 22, 1779. He was known as the "Scourge of the Ramapos"
and as "Cowboy Claudius."
- ________. The roads of home: Lanes and legends of New Jersey. New
- Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1956, xii & 291 p.
- The author devotes a complete chapter to the Jackson Whites. He retells the standard legend
skeptically and with sympathy. Most of the material presented is of more interesting aspects of the
oral history of the Ramapo Mountain clans.
- Clayton, William W. and William Nelson. History of Bergen and Passaic
- Counties, New Jersey
. Philadelphia: Everts & Peck, 1882.
- Not reviewed.
- Cohen, David Steven. The Ramapo Mountain people. New Brunswick, NJ:
- Rutgers University Press, 1974, xvi & 285 p. illus.
- A thorough and very scholarly account of the origins, history and
traditions of the Ramapo Mountain People, known as the Jackson Whites. He
presents evidence to support some portions of the legend and refute other
aspects of it. The connection with Captain Jackson and the Negro
prostitutes of the British Army in New York is particularly questionable.
The clans seem to be derived largely from native Indian stock mixed with
Negro freedmen. The genetic identity of the group, if there is any, is a
result of intermarriage and what the author calls "solidarity."
- ________. Folk legacies revisited. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University
- Press, 1995.
- The book makes reference to his previous works on the Jackson Whites and summarized his
findings.
- Cole, David, ed. History of Rockland County, New York. New York: J. B.
- Beers, 1884.
- Not reviewed.
- Cooley, Henry S. A study of slavery in New Jersey. Johns Hopkins
- University Studies in History and Political Science. Baltimore:
- Johns Hopkins University Press, 1896.
- Emerson, Josephine. "The Jackson Whites." In Hudson Highlands, Solvitur
- Ambulando, ed. New York: Appalachian Mountain Club, 1945.
- Not reviewed.
- Flick, Alexander C., ed. History of the State of New York. Vol. 1.
- New York: Columbia University Press, 1933 - 1937.
- Not reviewed.
- Franklin, John H. The free Negro in North Carolina, 1790 - 1860.
- Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1943.
- Not reviewed.
- Green, Frank B. The History of Rockland County. New York:
- A. S. Barnes, 1886.
- Not reviewed.
- Harvey, Cornelius B., ed. Genealogical History of Hudson and Bergen
- Counties, New Jersey
. New York: New Jersey Genealogical
- Publishing Co., 1900.
- Not reviewed.
- Hudson, Sue F. Background of Ho-Ho-Kus History. Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ:
- Woman's Club, 1953.
- Not reviewed.
- Johnson, Elias. Legends, Traditions and Laws of the Iroquois or Six
- Nations and History of the Tuscarora Indians
. Lockport, NY:
- Union Printing & Publishing Co., 1881.
- Not reviewed.
- Leiby, Adrian C. The Early Dutch and Swedish Settlers of New Jersey.
- New Jersey Historical Series. Princeton, NJ: D. Van Nostrand,
- 1964 (now distributed by the Rutgers University Press).
- Not reviewed.
- Livingston, Rosa. Turkey Feathers, Tales of Old Bergen County. Little
- Falls, NJ: Phillip-Campbell Press, 1963.
- Not reviewed.
- Lowell, Edward Jackson. The Hessians and the Other German Auxiliaries
- of Great Britain in the Revolutionary War. New York: Harper
- & Bros., 1884, viii & 328 p.
- Provides some credence to the notion that Hessian deserters may have settled in the Ramapo
Mountain region of New Jersey and New York.
- Miller, David. The Forsaken Jackson Whites. New York: New York
- Herald Tribune, 1961.
- Depicts the Jackson Whites as a down-trodden lot with little dignity and confidence, neglected by the state and local agencies. The legend is retold, but with some good documentation. Many of
the myths are debunked. Credence is given to the mixed blood ancestry with Indian, Negro and
Hessian or Dutch blood.
- New Jersey Library Association. New Jersey and the Negro: A
- bibliography, 1715 - 1966
. Trenton, NJ: New Jersey
- Library Association, 1967.
- Not reviewed.
- Penfold, Saxby V. Romantic Suffern: The History of Suffern, New
- York, from the Earliest Times to the Incorporation of the
- Village in 1896
. Tallman, NY: Rockland County Historical
- Committee, 1955.
- Not reviewed.
- Pierson, Edward F. The Ramapo Pass, Including the Village of
- Ramapo Works, Founded by the Pierson Brothers in 1795,
- Josiah Gilbert, Jeremiah Hulsey, and Isaac Pierson and Other
- Historical Particulars
. Ramapo, NY: Private printing,
- 1955 (written in 1915).
- Not reviewed.
- Ransom, James M. Vanishing Ironworks of the Ramapos: The Story
- of the Forges, Furnaces, and Mines of the New
- Jersey - New York Border Area
. New Brunswick,
- NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1966.
- Not reviewed.
- Reuter, E. B. The Mulatto in the United States, Including a Study
- of the Role of Mixed-Blood Races throughout the World
.
- New York: Negro University Press, 1969 (first published
- in 1918).
- Not reviewed.
- ________. Race Mixture; Studies in Intermarriage and Miscegenation.
- New York: Wittlesey House, McGraw-Hill, 1931.
- Not reviewed.
- Ringwood Golden Jubilee, 1918 - 1968. Ringwood, NJ: Ringwood
- Golden Jubilee, Inc., 1968.
- Not reviewed.
- Sawyer, Sr. Claire Marie. Some Aspects of the Fertility of a Tri-Racial
- Isolate
. Wahsington, DC: Catholic University of America, 1961.
- Not reviewed.
- Shapiro, H. L. "The Mixed-Blood Indian." In The Changing Indian,
- Oliver La Farge, ed. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma
- Press, 1942.
- Not reviewed.
- Skinner, Alanson B. The Indians of Greater New York. Cedar Rapids,
- IA: Torch Press, 1915.
- Not reviewed.
- ________ and Max Schrabisch. A Preliminary Report of the
- Archaeological Survey of the State of New Jersey.
- Bulletin 9
. Trenton, NJ: Geological Survey of
- New Jersey, 1913.
- Not reviewed.
- Smeltzer, Chester A. and John V. Dater. The Birth and Growth of Ramsey and
- Mahwah. Ramsey, NJ: Ramsey Journal, 1949.
- Not reviewed.
- Speck, Frank G. A Study of the Delaware Indian Big House Ceremony.
- Harrisburg, PA: Pennsylvania Historical Commission, 1931.
- Not reviewed.
- Stimpson, George W., "Who are the Jackson Whites?" In Things worth
- knowing
, New York: Burton, 1932, pp. 377-378.
- A simple recantation of the many legends surrounding the Jackson Whites and the origin of the
name.
- Storms, James B. H. A Jersey Dutch Vocabulary. Park Ridge, NJ:
- Pascack Historical Society, 1964.
- A "Jersey Dutch" vocabulary and dictionary by the brother of John C. Storms,
the N.J. newspaper editor who popularized and embellished the legends of
the Jackson Whites.
- Storms, John C., Origin of the Jackson Whites of the Ramapo Mountains,
- Park Ridge, NJ: Author, 1936.
- Probably the single most influential account of the Jackson Whites by
a local newspaper editor, constantly quoted and misquoted. The legend is
set forth in great detail but is not well documented. Much of the
information is anecdotal or relies on strictly oral traditions of members
of communities adjacent to the Ramapo Mountains. The entire account is
hopelessly biased, racist in tone and filled with inconsistencies.
- Terhune, Albert Payson. Treasure. New York: A.L. Burt, 1926.
- Terhune refers to the Jackson Whites in this book as "white trash,"
"degenerate mountaineers," and "blue-eyed niggers." The legend is
recounted in detail.
- Tompkins, Arthur S. ed. Historical Record of the Close of the Nineteenth
- Century of Rockland County
, New York. Nyack, NY: Van Deusen
- & Joyce, 1902.
- Not reviewed.
- Torrey, Raymond H., Frank Place and Robert L. Dickinson. New York Walk
- Book
. American Geographical Society Outing Series No. 2.
- New York: American Geographical Society, 1923.
- A book on hiking in New York wilderness areas. It mentions the Jackson Whites on page 90 in
its description of the Ramapo Mountains. "Legend has it that the unattached followers of the
British army [after the Revolutionary War] were relegated to the wilderness and with Indians and
Negroes brought up a race of half-breeds." - the Jackson Whites.
- van Loon, Lawrence G. Crumbs from an Old Dutch Closet: The Dutch
- Dialect of Old New York
. The Hague, Netherlands: M.
- Nijhoff, 1938.
- A pronunciaiton gazetteer and dictionary of the Dutch dialects of the
Hudson Valley area of NewYork and neighboring New Jersey.
- van Valen, J. M. History of Bergen County, New Jersey. New York:
- New Jersey Publishing & Engraving Co., 1900.
- Not reviewed.
- Weller, George. "The Jackson Whites." In A New Jersey Reader. New
- Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1961.
- Another abridged version of the standard legends with appropriate skeptical commentary.
- Westervelt, Frances A. History of Bergen County, New Jersey,
- 1630 - 1923
. 3 Vols. New York: Lewis Historical
- Publishing Co., 1923.
- Not reviewed.
- White, Newman L., ed. The Frank C. Brown Collection of North
- Carolina Folklore
. Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
- 1952 - 1961.
- Contains a recounting of the flight of the Tuscarora Indians from
North Carolina northward through the Appalachian Mountains with British
troops in pursuit.
Manuscripts, Term Papers, Theses and Dissertations:
- Austin, Roy S. People of the Ramapos. Term paper, William Paterson
- College of New Jersey, Paterson, NJ, 1959, 42 lvs.
- Not reviewed.
- Baird, Doris. The Jackson Whites and their Culture. Original essay in
- Suffern Library, Suffern, NY, no date.
- Not reviewed.
- Baker, Tunis. Jackson-Whites. Paterson, NJ: Term Paper, Paterson
- Normal College. no date given, copy on file at the Department
- of Institutions and Agencies, Trenton, NJ.
- Not reviewed.
- Brief School History of Rockland County, New York. A study prepared
- by the pupils, teachers, and friends of the Rockland
- County Public Schools, 1941. Mimeographed.
- Not reviewed.
- Cohen, David S. They walk these hills: A study of social solidarity
- among the racially-mixed people of the Ramapo Mountains
.
- Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA,
- 1971.
- A thorough and scholarly investigation of the origins of the Jackson
Whites and on the causes and consequences of their social isolation from
the mainstream.
- Coombs, Elizabeth Lockwood. Antecedents of the Ramapo People: The
- Jackson Whites
. [S.l.]: Author, 1968, 1 volume unpaginated.
- Not reviewed.
- Cornell, H.; Deluca, P.; and Ziegler, M. Sociological Study of the
- Jackson Whites
. Manuscript in Pascack (New Jersey) Historical
- Society, n.d.
- Not reviewed.
- Crawford, Constance. The Jackson Whites, Master's thesis, New York
- University, New York, 1940.
- Not reviewed.
- Hadlock, Nancy. The Jackson Whites of the Ramapo Mountains. Report in
- Ridgewood (New Jersey) Public Library, c. post-1940s.
- Not reviewed.
- Kaufman, Marie L. Public Health Nursing Among the Jackson Whites.
- Unpublished essay on file in the Suffern Public Library,
- Suffern, NY, 1951.
- Not reviewed.
- Lacatena, Angelo Victor. The people of the Ramapos: Yesterday,
- today, and tomorrow
. Master's thesis, William Paterson
- College of New Jersey, May 1969.
- Not reviewed.
- Machol, Jill. The Ramapo Mountain people - a problem of acceptance. Painesville,
- OH: Author, 1966, 25 lvs.
- Not reviewed.
- Merwin, Miles M. The Jackson Whites. Thesis, Rutgers University,
- New Brunswick, NJ, 1953.
- Not reviewed.
- Moskowitz, Miriam. The Educational Problem of the People of the
- Ramapos
. Master's thesis, Jersey City State College,
- 1968.
- Not reviewed.
- Newark Public Library. The Jackson Whites: References to books, documents
- and magazines, October 1941
. Newark, NJ: The Newark Public
- Library, 1941, 3 leaves unbound.
- Three leaves bound containing bibliographic entries on the Jackson Whites discovered in the
collections of:
- New York Pubic Library
- Russell Sage Foundation
- Library of Congress
- Paterson Public Library
- New Jersey Historical Society
- Newark Public Library
- Department of Institutions and Agencies, Trenton, NJ.
- Episcopal Church, Diocese of Newark, NJ.
- Otto, Edward Arthur. The Ramapos, paradise or paradox? [S.l.]:
- Author, 1965.
- Not reviewed.
- Nordstorm, Carl A. A Finding List of Bibliographical Materials
- Relating to Rockland County, New York
. Compiled for the
- Tappan Zee Historical Society, Orangeburg, NY, and the Office
- of the County Superintendent of Schools, New City, NY, 1959.
- Not reviewed.
- Pierson, Edward F. The Ramapo Pass: Including the village of Ramapo
- Works: Founded by the Pierson Brothers in 1795, Josiah
- Gilbert, Jeremy Halsey and Isaac Pierson and other
- historical particulars
. Ramapo, NJ: Author, 1915.
- Not reviewed.
- Price, Edward T. Mixed blood populations of the Eastern Unites
- States as to origins, localizations, and persistence
.
- Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley,
- CA, 1950.
- Not reviewed.
- Ramapo Presbyterian Church. Church History and Buyer's Guide Including
- Cook Book of Favorite Recipes
. Hillburn, NY: Ramapo
- Presbyterian Church, n.d. Pamphlet.
- Not reviewed.
- Smeltzer-Stevenot, Marjorie. Footprints in the Ramapos: Life in the mountains
- before the state parks
. Ashland, OH and Sloatsburg, NY: Author, 1993.
- Not reviewed.
- Stamato, Linda. The Jackson-Whites of the Ramapo Mountains. M.A.
- thesis, Seton Hall University, 1968.
- Not reviewed.
- Stead, Chuck. The Ramapo Mountain poet. Monroe, NY: Library
- Research Associates, 1979, 24 p.
- Not reviewed.
- Storms, James C. Origin of the Jackson-Whites of the Ramapo
- Mountains
, Park Ridge, NJ: Author, 1958.
- One of the first full recountings of the origins of the Jackson Whites.
The work retells, uncritically, many of the legends surrounding the group
and is a good source for local oral traditions.
- Woodsmen, mountaineers and bockies: The people of the Ramapos: April 14 -
- August 18, 1985
. New City, NY: Historical Society of
- Rockland County, 1985.
- Not reviewed.
Government Documents:
- New Jersey Conference of Social Work, Interracial Committee, Negro
- in New Jersey
, Newark, 21 Fulton St., 1932, 22 pp.
- Not reviewed.
- New Jersey Washington Bicentennial Committee, Forges and Manor of
- Ringwood
, Trenton, NJ: The Committee, 1932.
- There is one paragraph on pg. 12 on the Jackson Whites.
- Ramapough Mountain Indian Tribe of New York and New Jersey. Ramapough
- Mountain Indians Incorporated: Petition for federal acknowledgement,
- 1990
. Washington, DC: Bureau of Indian Affairs, March 31,
- 1990.
- The petition for status as an Indian nation was denied.
- United States, Work Projects Administration. Indian Site Survey of
- New Jersey, March 16, 1936 - June 30, 1938
. Trenton,
- NJ: New Jersey State Museum, 1938.
- Not reviewed.
Audiovisual Materials:
- Finkelstein Memorial Library. The Ramapo Mountain People. Yesteryears,
- Part 2. Spring Valley, NY: The Library, 1980, VHS
- videocassette, speaker Mozelle Van Dunk Stein.
Interviews:
- Blowers, F. E., Mrs. Public Health Nurse, Ramsey, NJ. Interview by
- Jill Machol, 29 December, 1965. Cited in The Ramapo
- Mountain people - a problem of acceptance
. Painesville,
- OH: Jill Machol, 1966.
- Not reviewed.
- Cooke, Fr. E. S., Catholic Priest to the Mountain People. Interview by
- Jill Machol, 28 December, 1965. Cited in The Ramapo
- Mountain people - a problem of acceptance
. Painesville,
- OH: Jill Machol, 1966.
- Not reviewed.
- Hein, Amy Isabel Plokhooy, author's mother. Interview by the author,
- 20 April, 1995.
- My mother describes her experiences with the Jackson Whites during the
time she was a sales representative for the Stanhome Products company in
the Bergen and Passaic County, NJ, region. She vividly recalls several
"Stanley Parties" she attended as the demonstrator of Stanhome household
products in the homes of some of the Jackson Whites in Bergen County in
the late 1950s. She describes them as being, in her view, amoral in the
sense that they had no sense of what constituted an incestuous
relationship. She also describes them, particularly the children, as
dirty. She reports feeling mildly apprehensive when in the company of
most of the men and many of the women of the clans. It is difficult to
gauge how much of this reaction was conditioned by expectations and how
much was a result of genuinely objective observation.
- Haff, Stephen, Editor of the Ramsey Journal and President of
- the Ramsey Community Service Association. Interview by
- Jill Machol, 30 December, 1965. Cited in The Ramapo
- Mountain people - a problem of acceptance
. Painesville,
- OH: Jill Machol, 1966.
- Not reviewed.
Speeches:
- Cooke, Fr. E. S. Modern Day Samaria: Stag Hill, History and Postulates.
- Fordham University, New York, May 10, 1964.
- Finn, Rev. John W. A Ramapo Treasure Hunt: A Survey of the Origins of
- the Jackson Whites of the Ramapos. Bergen County
- Historical Society, Hackensack, NJ, October 21, 1965.
- Overall, Carole C. Various Retreat Groups: And more specifically, the
- Jackson Whites of the Ramapo Mountains, May 8, 1959.
Unpublished Materials:
- Draft of a Proposed First Report of a Bergen County Volunteer
- Committee Concerned with the "Mountain People" of the
- Ramapo Hills, Bergen County, NJ, 1953.
- Not reviewed.
- Goddard, H. H., Jackson-Whites, Unpublished study,
- Vineland Training School, 1911.
- See below
- Jackson Whites, A study of Racial Degeneracy. Vineland
- Training School, Vineland, NJ, 1911.
- See also H. H. Goddard, above - probably the same manuscript.
- Kaufman, Marie L. Public Health Nursing among the Jackson Whites.
- Northern Bergen Nursing Service, 1951.
- Not reviewed.
- van Valen, J. M. History of Bergen County, New Jersey. New York:
- Author, 1900.
- This manuscript describes the Jackson Whites as being largely of Hackensack Indian blood. The
Hackensacks were a branch of the Lenni Lenape tribe. Mr. van Valen says they "bear little
resemblance to the Indians, yet as tradition gives it they are descendants of Hessians, Indians,
and Negroes, but they know nothing of their ancestry, so ignorant have they become."
- Vineland Training School. The Jackson Whites: A study of Social Degeneracy.
- Vineland, NJ: The School, unpublished, unpaginated manuscript, 1911.
- See also Goddard, H. H. Jackson Whites and Jackson Whites, A study of Racial Degeneracy.
Vineland Training School, above - probably the same.
- Volunteer Committee Concerned with the People of the Ramapos.
- Fact Sheet, 1953.
- Not reviewed.
APPENDIX A
Portraits of Members of the Van Dunk and De Freese Families
Yesterday
|
|
| Charlie De Freese |
Wesley Van Dunk |
|
|
FROM: Cohen, David Steven. The Ramapo Mountain people.
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1974.
|
Today
|
|
| Bob Van Dunk |
Mozelle Van Dunk Stein |
|
|
FROM: Mayer, Allan J., "Is this tribe Indian?"
Newsweek 95(Jan 7, 1980):32(1).
|
Tomorrow
|
|
| Myron Van Dunk |
Jack Van Dunk |
|
|
FROM: Cohen, David Steven. The Ramapo Mountain people.
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1974.
|
APPENDIX B
Primary Sources Examined by David S. Cohen
General Collections Consulted
- New York Pubic Library
- Russell Sage Foundation
- Library of Congress
- Paterson Public Library
- New Jersey Historical Society
- Newark Public Library
- Writings on American History, 1902-1936.
Manuscripts and Manuscript Collections
Bergen County Court House, Hackensack, NJ:
- Black Births in Bergen County, 1804-1844.
- Deeds.
- Manumission of Slaves, Liber A.
- Tax Assessment List, Township of Mahwah, 1972.
- Wills and Inventories.
Bergen County Historical Society, Johnson Free Library, Hackensack, NJ:
- New York and New Jersey Cemeteries. Compiled by Herbert S. Ackerman
- and Arthur J. Goff, 1947.
- Paramus Reformed Dutch Church Records, Marriages 1799-1900, Baptisms 1851-
- 1900. Compiled by Herbert S. Ackerman and Arthur J. Goff, 1944.
- Pascack Dutch Reformed Church Records and Cemetery. Compiled by Herbert S.
- Ackerman and Arthur J. Goff, 1946.
- Records of the Ramapo Reformed Dutch Church and of the Ramapo Lutheran
- Church. Compiled by Herbert S. Ackerman and Arthur J. Goff, 1944.
- Records of the Zion Lutheran Churches of Saddle River and Ramapo, NJ Compiled
- by Herbert S. Ackerman and Arthur J. Goff, 1943.
- Saddle River Dutch Reformed Church and Cemetery. Compiled by Herbert S.
- Ackerman and Arthur J. Goff, 1944.
- Tombstone Inscriptions, Bergen County. Compiled by Rev. Edward Kelder, 3 vols.
Community Action Council of Passaic County, Hewitt, NJ:
- Report of Findings of Progress Development Grant, 1967.
- Survey conducted from December 1966 to March 1967 of the Ringwood Mine Area.
Eugenics Records Office Files, Dwight Institute of Human Genetics, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn.:
- Osborn, Dorothy, Pedigree of Van Donk-De Grote Albino Family.
Hillburn Village Hall, Hillburn, NY:
New Jersey Historical Society, Newark, NJ:
- New Jersey Boundary Papers, 1769. 2 vols.
- New York and New Jersey Boundary ca. 1748-1753, 2 vols.
- Discovery, Grants, and Settlements of New Jersey ca. 1606-1700.
New Jersey State Archives, State Library, Trenton, NJ:
- State Census for New Jersey: 1855. Bergen and Passaic Counties.
- State Census for New Jersey: 1865. Bergen and Passaic Counties.
- State Census for New Jersey: 1915. Bergen and Passaic Counties.
- Wills and Inventories.
New-York Historical Society, Map Section, New York City:
- Road from 15 M. Stone, near Suffran's to Fort Lee, Hackensack, Haversvraw,
- etc., by Captain John W. Watkins, Erskine-DeWitt map no. 26.
- Roads from Ringwood to Pompton Plains and from Pompton Plans to Sufferns,
- by Robert Erskine, Erskine-DeWitt map no. 42.
New York Public Library, Manuscript Section, Budke Collection, New York City,
NY:
- Abstracts of Deeds recorded in Liber A in the Office of the Clerk of Rockland County, NY
(1798-1808), fol. BC-66.
- Assessment Rolls for the Town of Clarkstown, Rockland County, NY, for the Years 1841
and 1842, fol. BC-24.
- Assessment Rolls-Real and Personal Estates in the Town of Orange, County of
Rockland, NY, for the Years 1796, 1807, 1808, 1817, 1820, 1821, 1826, 1827, 1829,
1832, 1837, fol. BC-47.
- Calendar of Wills and Letters of Administration Pertaining to Estates in Rockland County,
NY, to the End of the Year 1850, fol. BC-68.
- Clarkstown, NY, Tax Assessment List, 1787, fol. BC-52.
- Genealogical Notebook, 3 vols., fol. BC-58m, 59, 60.
- Grand Jury List, Rockland County, NY, 1827, 1828, 1830, fol. BC-22.
- Historical Manuscripts, vol. A-E, Wills, Deeds, Mortgages, Church Records, Bills of Sale,
Estate Inventories, 1666-1898, fol. 72-74, 34-35.
- Marriage Records of the Reformed Dutch Churches of Tappan and Clarkstown, Rockland
County, NY, 1694-1831. Compiled by David Cole and Walter Kenneth Griffin, fol. BC-50.
- Original Assessment Rolls for the Town of Clarkstown, Rockland County, NY, for the
Years 1848, 1850, 1851, 1852, 1853, 1854, fol. BC-25.
- Original Assessment Rolls for the Town of Clarkstown, Rockland County, NY, for the
Years 1855, 1856, 1857, fol. BC-26.
- Original Assessment Rolls for the Town of Clarkstown, Rockland County, NY, for the
Years 1858, 1859, 1860, 1861, 1862, 1863, 1864, 1865. 8 vols., fol. BC-13-20.
- Papers Relating to the New York and New Jersey Boundary, 1686-1775; 1924, fol. BC-
29.
- Patents Granted for the Lands in the Present County of Rockland, NY, fol. BC-67.
- Records of the Clarkstown Reformed Church (Rockland County, NY), also the Baptismal
Records of the Ramapo Evangelical Lutheran Church. Translated from Dutch by George
H. Budke, fol. BC-49.
- Records of the Greenbush Presbyterian Church at Blauvelt, Rockland County, NY,
Marriages, Baptisms and Membership from the ()rigination of the Church in 1812 to the
Close of 1850, fol. BC-61.
- Records of the New Hempstead Presbyterian Church, Known Locally as the English
Church; 1919, fol. BC-65.
- Records of the Reformed Dutch Church of West New Hempstead, commonly called the
Brick Church, also the Kakiat Reformed Dutch Church, fol. BC-64.
- Records of the Tappan Reformed Church. Baptisms. 1816-1870; Marriages, 1831-1870,
fol. 48.
- Suffern, Andrew. Account Book, 1795-1804, fol. BC-4.
- Suffern, Andrew. Account Book, 1795-1804, Ledger B, fol. BC-6.
- Suffern, John. Account Book, 1795-1804, Haverstraw General Store, fol. BC-8.
- Supervisors of the Poor, Account Book, 1793-1819, also 1847-1867. Clarkstown, NY, fol.
BC-7.
- Tombstone Inscriptions, fol. 37 45.
Rockland County Court House. New City, NY:
- Deeds.
- Party Enrollment Lists.
- New York State Census for Rockland County: 1855.
- New York State Census for Rockland County: 1865.
- New York State Census for Rockland County: 1875.
- New York State Census for Rockland County: 1892.
- New York State Census for Rockland County: 1905.
- New York State Census for Rockland County: 1915.
- Wills and Inventories.
Rutgers University Library, Special Collections, New Brunswick, NJ:
- Kite, Elizabeth. Manuscript Research Notes on the Jackson Whites, box 5.
- Kite, Elizabeth. Compilation of the Jackson White Rose family, box 5.
- Kite, Elizabeth. Correspondence Relating to Research on the Jackson Whites, box 5.
- Vineland Training School, The Jackson Whites: A Study of Racial Degeneracy. Vineland,
NJ, c. 1911. Microfilm.
- Town of Ramapo, NY Tax List. 1972. Hillburn.
United States, Bureau of the Census:
- Second Census of the United States: 1800. New York: Rockland County. Orange County.
- Third Census of the United States: 1810. New York: Rockland County. Orange County.
- Fourth Census of the United States: 1820. New York: Rockland County. Orange County.
- Fifth Census of the United States: 1830. New York: Rockland County. Orange County.
New Jersey: Bergen County. Passaic County.
- Sixth Census of the United States: 1840. New York: Rockland County. New Jersey:
Passaic County. Bergen County.
- Seventh Census of the United States: 1850. New York: Rockland County. New Jersey:
Bergen County. Passaic County.
- Eighth Census of the United States: 1860. New York: Rockland County. New Jersey:
Bergen County. Passaic County.
- Ninth Census of the United States: 1870. New York: Rockland County. Tenth Census of
the United States: 1880. New York: Rockland County. New Jersey: Bergen County.
Passaic County.
West, Lewis, private collection, Midvale, NJ:
- Account of the General Store at the Long Pond Furnace. 1866.
- Long Pond Ironworks, Account Books, 1866-69.
- Monthly Paylists of the Ringwood Ironworks.
- Payroll for the Greenwood Lake Ice House, August 9, 1879.
- Payrolls for the Ringwood Furnace, 1869.
- Store Sales for the Copper and Hewitt Company Store, August 1879.
Books:
- Banta, Theodore. A Frisian Family: The Banta Genealogy. New
- York: n.p., 1893.
- Baptisms at Clarkstown from August 13, 1749, to December 28, 1794,
- History of Rockland County, New York
. Edited by David
- Cole. New York: J. B. Beers & Co., 1884.
- Baptisms at Tappan from October 25, 1694 to January 10, 1816, History
- of Rockland County, New York
. Edited by David Cole.
- New York: J. B. Beers & Co., 1884.
- Bergen County, NJ, Board of Justices and Chosen Freeholders. Minutes of the
- Justices and Freeholders of Bergen County, New Jersey,
- 1715-1795. North Hackensack, NJ: Bergen County Historical
- Society, 1924.
- Coster, G. C. Hessian Soldiers in the American Revolution: Records of
- their Marriages and Baptisms of their Children in America, performed
- by Rev. G. C. Coster, 1776-1783, Chaplain of 2 Hessian Regiments
.
- Translated by Marie Dickore. Cincinnati, OH: C. J. Krehbiel Co., 1959.
- Danckaerts, Jasper. Journal of Jasper Danckaerts. Edited by James
- B. Bartlett and J. Franklin Jameson
. New York: 1913, reprinted in The
- History of the United States. vol. 1. 1600-1876
. Source Readings,
- eds. Neil Harris, David J. Rothman, and Stephan Thernstrom. New York:
- Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1969.
- de Vries, David Peterson. Voyages from Holland to America, A.D. 1632
- to 1644
. Translated by Henry C. Murphy. New York:
- Billin & Bros., 1853.
- Eelking, Max von. The German Allied Troops in the North American War of
- Independence, 1776-1783
. Translated and abridged from the
- German by J. C. Rosengarten. Albany, NY: Joel Munsell's Sons, 1893.
- Longworth, David. Longworth's American Almanac, New York Register
- and City Directory. New York: David Longworth, 1805-26.
- Meyers, Carol M. Early New York State Census Records, 1663-1772.
- 2d ed. Gardena, CA: RAM Publishers, 1965.
- Muster Rolls of New York Provincial Troops, 1755-1764. New York:
- NewYork Historical Society, 1892.
- New Jersey and the Negro: A Bibliography, 1715-1966. Trenton,
- NJ: New Jersey Library Association, 1967.
- New Jersey Archives. 1st ser. vols. 11, 12, 19, 20, 24-29
- Newspaper Extracts, ed. William Nelson, Paterson,
- NJ: Press Printing & Publishing Co., 1894, 1895, 1897,
- 1898, 1902-17; vol. 22 Marriage Records. ed. William
- Nelson, Paterson, NJ: The Press Printing &
- Publishing Co., 1900; vols. 23, 30-39 Abstracts of
- Wills, eds. William Nelson, Elmer T. Hutchinson, and
- A. Van Doren Honeyman, Newark & Sommerville, NJ: New
- Jersey Law Journal & Unionist-Gazette Association,
- 1918-44; 2d sers. vols. 1-5 Newspaper Extracts, eds.
- William Stryker, Francis Lee, Austin Scott, & William
- Nelson, Trenton, NJ: John L. Murphy Publishing Co.,
- 1901-17.
- New York, Secretary of State. Calendar of NY Colonial Manuscripts
- Indorsed Land Papers in the Office of the Secretary of
- State of New York, 1643-1803
. Albany, NY: Weed, Parsons &
- Co., 1864.
- New York State Historian. Third Annual Report of the State Historian
- of the State of New York, 1897
. Albany & New York:
- Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co., 1898.
- Newark Directory: 1910. Newark: Price & Lee Co., 1910.
- Niebyl, Elizabeth Hale. A Program for Housing in the Township of Mahwah,
- New Jersey: A Survey of Selected Areas and Recommendations
- for the Removal of Substandard Conditions
. Mahwah, NJ:
- Volunteer Committee Concerned with the People of the Ramapos,
- Inc., 1955.
- O'Callaghan, E. B., ed. Calendar of Historical Manuscripts in the Office
- of the Secretary of State, Albany, New York. Pt. 1, Dutch
- Manuscripts, 1630-1664
. Albany, NY: Weed, Parsons & Co., 1865.
- ________. The Documentary History of the State of New York. Albany,
- NY: Weed, Parsons & Co., 1849. vols. 1-4.
- ________. Documents Relative to the Colonial History of the State
- of New York. Albany
, NY: Weed, Parsons & Co., 1861.
- ________. The Register of New Netherlands, 1626 to 1674. Albany,
- NY: J. Munsell, 1865.
- State of New Jersey. Acts of the General Assembly of the Province of
- New Jersey
. Edited by Samuel Allinson. Burlington, NJ:
- Isaac Collins, 1776.
- ________. Laws of the State of New Jersey. Compiled by William Paterson.
- New Brunswick, NJ: Abraham Blauvelt, 1800.
- ________. Adjutant General's Office. Official Register of the Officers
- and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War
. Trenton, NJ:
- William T. Nicholson & Co., 1872. 2 vols.
- ________. Record of Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Civil War,
- 1861-1865
. Trenton, NJ: John L. Murphy, 1876.
- Stokes, Isaac Newton Phelps. The Iconography of Manhattan Island, 1495-1909.
- New York: Robert H. Dodd, 1922. 6 vols.
- United States, Bureau of the Census. Heads of Families at the First Census of
- the United States Taken in the Year 1790
. New York.
- Washington, D.C.: Govermnent Printing Office, 1908.
- ________. Tenth Census of the United States: 1880. New York. New
- Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1883.
- ________. Eleventh Census of the United States: 1890. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office,
- 1894, 1895, 1897.
- ________. Twelfth Census of the United States: 1900. New York. New
- Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Governmcnt Printing
- Office, 1901-2.
- ________. Thirteenth Census of the United States: 1910. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1913.
- ________. Fourteenth Census of the United States: 1920. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1923.
- ________. Fifteenth Census of the United States: 1930. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1932.
- ________. Sixteenth Census of the United States: 1940. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1943.
- ________. Seventeenth Census of the United States: 1950. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1952.
- ________. Eighteenth Census of the United States: 1960. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Housing. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1963.
- ________. Nineteenth Census of the United States: 1970. New York.
- New Jersey. Population. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
- Office, 1973.
- van der Donck, Adriaen. A Description of the New Netherlands. Edited
- by Thomas F. O'Donnell. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University
- Press, 1968. First published in 1656.
- van Laer, Arnold John Ferdinand, ed. Documents Relating to New Netherlands,
- 1624-1626, in the Huntington Library
. San Marino, CA:
- Huntington Library, 1924.
- Westervelt, Frances A., comp. Bergen County, New Jersey, Marriage
- Records Copied from the Entries as Originally Made at the Court
- House by the Ministers and Justices of the Peace of the County
.
- New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Co., 1929.
- Woodson, Carter Godwin. Free Negro Heads of Families in the United States
- in 1830
. Washington, D.C.: Association for the Study of Negro
- Life and History, 1925.
Periodicals:
- Baptisms in the Lutheran Church, New York City, From 1725, New York Genealogical
and Biographical Record 97 (1966): 92-105, 163-70, 223-30.
- Census of Orange County, New York, Based on the True Account of the Inhabitants Returned by
Dirck Storm, Clerk of the County, June 16, 1702, The Rockland Record, Being the
Proceedings and Historical Collections of the Rockland County Society of the State of
New York, Inc., for the Years 1931 and 1932. Vol . 2 (1931): 65-79.
- Census of Orange County, 1712; ibid., Vol. 2 (1931): 22-23.
- Federal Census of 1800 for Orange County, New York, New York Genealogical and Biographical
Record, 64 (January 1933): 62.
- Flatbush Dutch Church Records, Yearbook of the Holland Society of New York. New York:
Holland Society of New York, 1898.
- Hoffman, William J.: An Armory of American Families of Dutch Descent, New York Genealogical
and Biographical Record 19 (July 1938): 224 26.
- Marriages in the Reformed Dutch Church, New York City, New York Genealogical and
Biographical Record, 70 (January 1939): 39.
- Marriages in the Village of Bergen in New Jersey beginning 1665, Yearbook of the Holland
Society of New York. New York: Holland Society of New York, 1914. Vol. 2, Bergen Book,
pp. 57-85.
- Records of the Reformed Dutch Church in New Amsterdam and New York. Collections of the
New York Genealogical and Biographical Society. Vol. 1 (1890) Marriages, 1639-1801;
Vol. 2 (1901) Baptisms, 1639-1739; Vol. 3 (1902) Baptisms, 1731-1800.
- Records of the Reformed Dutch Churches of Hackensack and Schraalenburgh, New Jersey,
Collections of the Holland Society, vol. 1 (1891), pt. 1, Hackensack; pt. 2,
Schraalenburgh.
- Some Early Records of the Lutheran Church, New York, Yearbook of the Holland Society of New
York. New York: Holland Society of New York, 1903.
Newspapers:
- Argus (West Milford, NJ)
- Bergen Evening Record (Hackensack, NJ)
- Bulletin (Ringwood, NJ)
- Daily (New York City, NY)
- Herald News (Ridgewood, NJ)
- New York Times (New York City, NY)
- Nyack Journal News (Nyack, NY)
- Ramsey Journal (Ramsey, NJ)
- Rockland County Journal (Nyack, NY)
|