The Mulatto Advantage: The Biological Consequences of Complexion in Rural Antebellum VirginiaPosted in Articles, Economics, History, Social Science, United States, Virginia on 2009-10-26 00:57Z by Steven |
The Mulatto Advantage: The Biological Consequences of Complexion in Rural Antebellum Virginia
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
Volume 33, Number 1 (Summer 2002)
pp. 21-46
E-ISSN: 1530-9169; Print ISSN: 0022-1953
DOI: 10.1162/00221950260029002
Howard Bodenhorn, Professor of Economics
Clemson University
Although historians have long noted that African-Americans of mixed-race in the antebellum Lower South were given economic and social preference over those with darker skin, they have denied that people of mixed race received special treatment in the antebellum Upper South as well. Examination of data on the registrations of free African-Americans in antebellum Virginia, however, reveals that adolescents and adults with lighter complexions tended to have a height advantage, which suggests that they enjoyed better nutrition.