NOTE: THIS WEBSITE IS A WORK IN PROGRESS. RESOURCES AND DATA ARE ADDED DAILY.
IMPORTANT: We are in urgent need of funding to keep this project alive and ensure its future. If you’re enjoying the site and see our vision for the project, please consider contributing to the Melungeon Roots crowdfunding campaign today. It is only with your help that we can continue this work. MORE INFO / DONATE
Thanks so much for your support! – Jes
The Invisible Line: Three American Families and the Secret Journey from Black to White
share:
Some buttons on this page link to external websites. If you visit one of our affiliate sites and make a purchase, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. More info
- UPDATED: 6.29.2025
- status: to be worked, high-priority
- mixed ancestry peoples
- history, race, racism, civil rights
author:
Daniel J. Sharfstein
editor:
n/a
publisher:
date:
2011
ISBN:
9781594202827
pages:
396
notes:
contents:
description:
In this sweeping history, Daniel J. Sharfstein unravels the stories of three families who represent the complexity of race in America and force us to rethink our basic assumptions about who we are. The Gibsons were wealthy landowners in the South Carolina backcountry who became white in the 1760s, ascending to the heights of the Southern elite and ultimately to the U.S. Senate. The Spencers were hardscrabble farmers in the hills of Eastern Kentucky, joining an isolated Appalachian community in the 1840s and for the better part of a century hovering on the line between white and black. The Walls were fixtures of the rising black middle class in post-Civil War Washington, D.C., only to give up everything they had fought for to become white at the dawn of the twentieth century. Together, their interwoven and intersecting stories uncover a forgotten America in which the rules of race were something to be believed but not necessarily obeyed.
Defining their identities first as people of color and later as whites, these families provide a lens for understanding how people thought about and experienced race and how these ideas and experiences evolved-how the very meaning of black and white changed-over time. Cutting through centuries of myth, amnesia, and poisonous racial politics, The Invisible Line will change the way we talk about race, racism, and civil rights.
CMOS:
Daniel J. Sharfstein. The Invisible Line: Three American Families and the Secret Journey from Black to White. New York, NY: Penguin Press, 2011.
author-date:
Sharfstein 2011
Other Resources
- Joara: Tale of the New World, 1566 – 1568
- First Peoples: A Documentary Survey of American Indian History
- Race, Removal, and the Right to Remain: Migration and the Making of the United States
- Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and Their Journey
- Free African Americans of North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina, From the Colonial Period to About 1820, Vol. III
- Greenbrier County, West Virginia: Reprinted from Early Historical Writings