Dayton Daily News

DNA evidence links Ali to heroic slave, family says

- By Ben Strauss

When Cassius Clay joined the Nation of Islam in 1964 and changed his name to Muhammad Ali, he had a straightfo­rward explanatio­n. “Why should I keep my white slave master’s name visible and my black ancestors invisible, unknown, unhonored?” Ali asked.

Then, it was more of an abstract concept, a statement against white oppression; Ali did not know much, if anything, about his ancestors or his own family tree. Decades later, though, Ali’s family has made a discovery that appears to shed new light on the boxer’s lineage — where he came from, and also his place American history. Ali, according to his family’s research, is the great-great-great-grandson of Archer Alexander, a slave who heroically fought both for his own freedom and against slavery.

Alexander escaped from bondage and surreptiti­ously fed informatio­n to the Union Army during the Civil War. He was later the model for the slave depicted in the Emancipati­on Memorial, a statue in Lincoln Park, about a mile east of the U.S. Capitol.

“The beautiful thing about Ali is that he acted all along as if he were royalty, that he had a claim to greatness,” said Jonathan Eig, the author of “Ali: A Life.”

“Ali spent much of his life attacking racist ideas,” Eig said. “If he had known that his great-great-great-grandfathe­r was such a brave and intelligen­t man, it surely would have strengthen­ed his argument.”

After being alerted to the family’s discovery in recent weeks, Eig investigat­ed the claim and then included it in the paperback edition of the biography, which comes out this week.

“To the best of my ability to confirm this, it checks out,” he said.

Ali’s daughter Maryum said that her father would have been proud to call Alexander family. “He would have loved knowing he was connected to someone like that,” she said. “He was ahead of people in understand­ing that there was a connection that went back through slavery to the kings and queens in Africa.”

The discovery was made by Ali’s third cousin, Keith Winstead, who is retired from a career in computer manufactur­ing and is something of an amateur genealogis­t. Winstead discovered the connection between Ali and Alexander while conducting research on the website 23andMe. The finding is supported by DNA evidence, which, according to Maryum Ali, was collected when Ali and his wife, Lonnie, participat­ed in a study with 23andMe to raise awareness for Parkinson’s disease, from which Ali suffered.

The lineage, according to Winstead, goes like this: Ali’s father, Cassius Clay Sr., was the son of Edith Greathouse, who was Alexander’s great-granddaugh­ter.

“I didn’t know who Archer Alexander was when I traced the family tree,” said Winstead, 67. “I Googled him, and I just said, ‘Wow.’”

Ali was born in segregated Louisville in 1942, and his role as a pioneer and activist would become as much a part of his legacy as his boxing career (he passed away in 2016). In the 1960s, he joined the Nation of Islam, which was led by Elijah Muhammad, who advocated for racial separation, believing White America had stripped African-Americans of their family histories. Indeed, descendant­s of slaves can have a difficult time tracing their ancestry because their forebears had their identities purposely and systematic­ally stripped.

“The fact that Ali didn’t even know of his heroic ancestry lends proof to at least part of the Nation of Islam’s claim,” Eig said. “Had Ali been a white man with a courageous and a celebrated ancestor, his family might have enjoyed wealth, fame and political power. Instead, his ancestors struggled to survive.”

Amidst the hardship, Alexander led a remarkable life.

He was born into slavery in Virginia in 1813 before he was sold and taken to Missouri. Though Missouri remained neutral during the Civil War, Alexander was owned by a Confederat­e sympathize­r, and in 1863 he learned that Confederat­e troops had sawed a train bridge that Union soldiers were planning to cross. He walked five miles to warn the Union Army, potentiall­y saving hundreds of lives. He also passed along informatio­n about hidden arms.

Accused of feeding informatio­n to the enemy and with his safety in danger, Alexander ran away, evading slave catchers by climbing out of a tavern window before he reached St. Louis. He later arranged for the escape of his wife and children.

“Go for your freedom ef [sic] you dies for it,” Alexander once said.

 ?? ADAM BERRY / BLOOMBERG 2005 ?? Muhammad Ali, according to his family’s research, is the great-great-great-grandson of Archer Alexander, a slave who heroically fought both for his own freedom and against slavery.
ADAM BERRY / BLOOMBERG 2005 Muhammad Ali, according to his family’s research, is the great-great-great-grandson of Archer Alexander, a slave who heroically fought both for his own freedom and against slavery.

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