ADVERTISEMENT

Halle Berry’s Ancestry

By Rhonda R. McClure Premium

Sign up for the Family Tree Newsletter Plus, you’ll receive our 10 Essential Genealogy Research Forms PDF as a special thank you!

Get Your Free Genealogy Forms

"*" indicates required fields

Hidden
Hidden
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Movie star Halle Berry—recently visible on big screens and small as Catwoman, a Bond girl and a makeup model—delivered that tearful “this moment is so much bigger than me” speech in 2002, after winning the first Oscar awarded to an African-American actress. Berry’s mixed heritage is well-known: She’s said, “I don’t see a white woman. I see a black woman, even though my mother is white.”

Although Berry sees herself as African-American, knowing her mother’s European heritage was a genealogical advantage for me. I reached back 12 generations and found lots of links to a variety of famous folk. Through John Perkins, an early-1600s settler of Ipswich, Mass., Berry can count actors Richard Gere and Montgomery Clift among her 10th cousins once removed (for the juicy details on Gere’s ancestry, see the December 2004 Family Tree Magazine.) The same colonial ancestor makes her a ninth cousin twice removed to playwright Thomas Lanier “Tennessee” Williams and a sixth cousin four times removed to 13th US President Millard Fillmore.

Unlike in modern times, though, people tended to hide mixed heritage during our ancestors’ era—which could make your research more difficult. If everything else about a suspected ancestor looks right, but the ethnicity is “wrong,” dig deeper. You might make a brick-wall breakthrough—and feel as though you’ve won a genealogical Oscar. Better start writing that acceptance speech.
 
For more tips and tools for researching your African-American heritage, see Family Tree Magazine‘s African-American Genealogy Guide Digital Download, available from Family Tree Shop

ADVERTISEMENT