Mixed Clues From the Graveby
Cyndie Goins Hoelescher
Mixed Heritage Clues from Grave Markers Tracking down
African-American, Native American or racially mixed ancestors can be
difficult, especially when these family members often were oppressed and
segregated in society. The segregation did not end with churches,
schools and neighborhoods. Even the final resting places of these
ancestors were separate and sometimes obscure. A few years ago, my
father and I decided to go on a field trip to visit the places where my
ancestors lived. We had accumulated information from census records and
vital statistics and thought I understood quite a bit about our family
and how they lived. When we actually visited the township they lived in,
I was in for a surprise. I knew my great-great grandfather was buried in
Grant Township, also called Grantville, in Randolph County, North
Carolina. When my father and I finally located the grave of my ancestor,
it raised hundreds of more questions. He was buried in a small, grassy
area near the side of the road. Up on the hill, directly above his final
resting place, was a beautiful church dating back to the early 1800’s
with a magnificent cemetery. The cemetery contained thousands of graves,
but why wasn’t my ancestor buried among them? Then a local woman told
us, “He was too dark to be buried up there.” Since our ancestor, Abraham
Wellington “Bud” Goins, died in 1894, there were no vital records that
indicated that he was a person of color. The race category on the census
records was recorded upon the discretion of the enumerator who would
look at the person and check the category he thought the individual
should be labeled as. One enumerator may believe he is taking
information from a mulatto. Another enumerator may label him as an
Anglo-white. The information varied, but when it came down to the final
resting place, the people in the community knew that Abraham Wellington
Goins was not white. Family members tended to the grave and Goins’
daughter, Norvie Jane, placed a traditional headstone on the grave to
mark it. The prominence of the marker bespoke of the homage reserved for
a beloved patriarch of the family. Surrounding the marker, there were at
least four other small, diamond shaped markers. Judging from the small
size, they may indicate the final resting place of children or perhaps
female members of the family. No one will know for sure. Another clue in
finding mixed ethnic relations may be in the footstones. Again, when
looking for my family members, I could not locate them in neat
churchyards. The field trip involved excursions deep into woods. On one
occasion, I photographed a footstone of a family member who had a
traditional marker with her name and dates, but the footstone possessed
an interesting etching of a human body being supported by vertical
lines. Not understanding this, we showed the photograph to a gravedigger
in the area who proved to be most helpful. “That picture indicates that
she was buried upright,” he said. It was a common practice of the Native
American peoples in the area to bury their deceased standing up.
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The foot stone of the etched person belongs to Eliza Goins.
She is buried in a family (Old Indian Graveyard) in West End, Moore
County, North Carolina.

Abraham Wellington Bud Goins
b. Jan 4, 1867
d. Jan 4, 1894
Grave located in small family
burial site on side of the road in Grantville, Randolph
County, NC
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