Not sure what happened with my last post -
Yeah, I kind of thought maybe the South would be more the black/white distinction. And, the ethnic background was more homogenized.
Prior to the textile mills opening in northern New England, as far as Europeans go, it was basically English, Scots, Irish and French Canadian. Once the mills opened, the city where I live had at least 20 different ethnic groups who all lived in more or less separate very ethnic neighborhoods. Some of those neighborhoods still exist, particularly the French Canadian.
Marriages between different ethnic groups was pretty rare up until probably the 1930's-1940's.
The big issue for the older folks would be intermarriage with blacks. There were two groups, black and white. Whites were English or Scotch-Irish.
Parts of the Northeast got imigrants from a wider variety of ethnic groups. I think whites in parts of the south had more homogeneous ethnic background.
Parts of the Northeast got imigrants from a wider variety of ethnic groups. I think whites in parts of the south had more homogeneous ethnic background.
Prior to the textile mills opening in northern New England, as far as Europeans go, it was basically English, Scots, Irish and French Canadian. Once the mills opened, the city where I live had at least 20 different ethnic groups who all lived in more or less separate very ethnic neighborhoods. Some of those neighborhoods still exist, particularly the French Canadian.
Marriages between different ethnic groups was pretty rare up until probably the 1930's-1940's.