Miami Herald

DNA gives new insights into Michelle Obama’s roots

- BY RACHEL L. SWARNS

REX, Ga. — Joan Tribble held tightly to her cane as she ventured into the overgrown cemetery where her people were buried. There lay the pioneers who once populated north Georgia’s rugged frontier, where striving white men planted corn and cotton, fought for the Confederac­y and owned slaves.

The settlers interred here were mostly forgotten over the decades as their progeny scattered across the South, embracing unassuming lives.

But one line of her family took another path, heading north on a tumultuous, winding journey that ultimately led to the White House.

The white men and women buried here are the forebears of Tribble, a retired bookkeeper who delights in her two grandchild­ren and her Sunday church mornings. They are also ancestors of Michelle Obama, the first lady.

The discovery of this unexpected family tie between the United States’ most prominent black woman and a white, silver-haired grandmothe­r from the Atlanta suburbs underscore­s the entangled histories and racial intermingl­ing that continue to bind countless U.S. families more than 140 years after the Civil War.

The link was establishe­d through more than two years of research into Obama’s roots, which included DNA tests of white and black relatives. Like many AfricanAme­ricans, Obama was aware that she had white ancestry, but knew little more.

Now, for the first time, the white forebears who have remained hidden in the first lady’s family tree can be identified. And her blood ties are not only to the dead. She has an entire constellat­ion of white distant cousins who live in Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama, Texas and beyond, who in turn are only now learning of their kinship to her.

Those relatives include profession­als and blue-collar workers, a retired constructi­on worker, an accountant, a dietitian and an insurance claims adjuster, among others, who never imagined they had black relatives. Most had no idea that their ancestors owned slaves.

Many of them, like Tribble, 69, are still grappling with their wrenching connection to the White House. “You really don’t like to face this kind of thing,” said Tribble, whose ancestors owned the first lady’s great-great-greatgrand­mother.

Some of Tribble’s relatives have declined to discuss the matter beyond the closed doors of their homes, fearful that they might be vilified as racists or forced to publicly atone for their forebears.

Tribble has decided to openly accept her history and her new extended family.

“I can’t really change anything,” said Tribble, who would like to meet Obama one day. “But I can be open-minded to people and accept them and hope they’ll accept me.”

The bloodlines of Obama and Tribble extend back to a 200-acre farm that was not far from here. One of their common ancestors was Henry Wells Shields, Tribble’s greatgreat-grandfathe­r. He was a farmer and a family man who grew cotton, Indian corn and sweet potatoes. He owned Obama’s maternal great-greatgreat-grandmothe­r, Melvinia Shields, who was about 8 years old when she arrived on his farm sometime around 1852.

The DNA tests and research indicate that one of his sons, Charles Marion Shields, is the likely father of Melvinia’s son Dolphus, who was born around 1860. Dolphus T. Shields was the first lady’s maternal great-great-grandfathe­r. His identity and that of his mother, Melvinia, were first reported in an article in The New York Times in 2009, which also indicated that he must have had a white father.

Melvinia was a teenager, perhaps around 15, when she gave birth to her biracial son. Charles was about 20.

Such forbidden liaisons across the racial divide inevitably bring to mind the story of Thomas Jefferson and his slave, Sally Hemings. Obama’s ancestors, however, lived in a world far removed from the elegance of Jefferson’s Monticello, his 5,000-acre mountain estate with 200 slaves. They were much more typical of the ordinary people who became entangled in the United States’ entrenched system of servitude.

In Clayton County, Ga., where the Shields family lived, only about a third of the heads of household owned human property, and masters typically labored alongside their slaves. Charles was a man of modest means — he would ultimately become a teacher — whose parents were only a generation or so removed from illiteracy.

Melvinia was not a privileged house slave like Sally. She was illiterate and no stranger to laboring in the fields. She had more biracial children after the Civil War, giving some of the white Shieldses hope that her relationsh­ip with Charles was consensual. “To me, it’s an obvious love story that was hard for the South to accept back then,” said Aliene Shields, a descendant who lives in South Carolina.

People who knew Melvinia said she never discussed what happened between them, whether she was raped or treated with affection, whether she was loved and loved in return. Somewhere along the way, she decided to keep the truth about her son’s heritage to herself.

Ruth Wheeler Applin, who knew Melvinia and Dolphus, suspected that Melvinia had been raped by her master. But Applin, who married Melvinia’s grandson and lived with her for several years in the 1930s, never asked that sensitive question. Melvinia died in 1938. “You know,” Applin said in an interview in 2010, “she might not have wanted nobody to know.” Applin died this year at 92.

For many members of that first generation to emerge from bondage, the experience of slavery was so shameful and painful that they rarely spoke of it. This willful forgetting pervaded several branches of the first lady’s family tree, passed along like an inheritanc­e from one generation to the next.

Obama declined to comment on the findings about her roots, as did her mother and brother. But over and over, the black members of her extended family said their parents, grandparen­ts and other relatives did not discuss slavery or the origins of the family’s white ancestry.

Nor was the topic much discussed within Obama’s immediate family. She and her brother, Craig Robinson, watched the mini-series Roots, about Alex Haley’s family’s experience in slavery. During summers, the family would visit relatives who lived in a South Carolina town dotted with old rice plantation­s. But they never discussed how those plantation­s might be connected to their personal history.

Nomenee Robinson, Obama’s paternal uncle, said he found himself stymied whenever he tried to delve into the past. His line of the family also has white ancestry, relatives say.

“All of these elderly people in my family, they would say, ‘Boy, I don’t know anything about slavery time,’ ” he said. “And I kept thinking, ‘ You mean your mother or grandmothe­r didn’t tell you anything about it?’ What I think is that they blocked it out.”

Contempora­ry United States emerged from that multiracia­l stew, a nation peopled by the heirs of that agonizing time who struggled and strived with precious little knowledge of their own origins. By 1890, census takers counted 1.1 million U.S. citizens of mixed ancestry.

All four of Obama’s grandparen­ts had multiracia­l forebears. There were Irish immigrants who nurtured their dreams in a new land and free African-Americans who savored liberty long before the Civil War. Some were classified as mulatto by the census, while others claimed Cherokee ancestry.

There were even tantalizin­g hints of a link to a Jewish family with ties to the Charleston, S.C., synagogue that became the birthplace of the U.S. Jewish Reform Movement in the 19th century.

Obama’s ancestors ultimately moved north, with some arriving in Illinois as early as the 1860s. Others settled in Maryland, Michigan and Ohio.

 ?? RICHARD PERRY/NEW YORK TIMES SERVICE ?? Joan Tribble at the grave of her great-great-grandfathe­r, Henry W. Shields, a Georgia slave owner who is also an ancestor of Michelle Obama.
RICHARD PERRY/NEW YORK TIMES SERVICE Joan Tribble at the grave of her great-great-grandfathe­r, Henry W. Shields, a Georgia slave owner who is also an ancestor of Michelle Obama.

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