Submitted by DeLaGrandTerre t3_ykjcio in history
I only heard about this for the first time today. I knew a little about the Jim Crow South, but not a lot. I had no idea there was such a "gotcha" attitude to people who were even noted as white on their birth certificates.
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The story really affected me on a personal level today. My great gram Lola left Louisiana in the 1930s as a woman of color and raised us in NY as "French". I was researching for a documentary series Ive been releasing on youtube called "Finding Lola" ( I won't link so this post isn't removed for spam)--where Im working through the history of white-passing in my family and the circumstances around that in both Louisiana and NY. To be honest, I started the project angry at my Gram Lola for lying to the whole family about our heritage, but now I feel....shocked. Sad for her and how much she tried to protect the whole family the best she could. The article notes that the "one drop rule" (1/32 African) was still in effect until 1983. Only THREE years before I was born. In NY, we were white. In Louisiana, we were Black---and in danger. This was not that long ago.
Juicepig21 t1_iuvzwii wrote
That's absolutely nuts. Thank you for sharing.