Meghan, Duchess of Sussex

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex in 2014, photo by kathclick /Bigstock.com

Birth Name: Rachel Meghan Markle

Place of Birth: Los Angeles, California, United States

Date of Birth: August 4, 1981

Ethnicity:
*father – German, English, Irish, Scottish, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish, and remote French
*mother – African-American

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, previously known as Meghan Markle, is an American actress, model, author, and humanitarian. She has starred on the show Suits, appeared in the films Remember Me, Horrible Bosses, Dysfunctional Friends, Random Encounters, and Anti-Social, narrated the documentary Elephant (2020), and ran the lifestyle blog The Tig. She has participated in charity work related to women’s issues and social justice, and launched the podcast Archetypes.

Duchess Meghan is the daughter of Doria Loyce (Ragland) and Thomas Wayne Markle, a lighting director who worked on Married… with Children. She was raised in View Park–Windsor Hills, Los Angeles. She is married to Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, with whom she has two children, including Prince Archie of Sussex. The couple has stepped down as working royals. They have launched public organization Archewell, Inc., focusing on non-profit activities and creative media ventures.

Her father is white and her mother is black. A picture of Duchess Meghan with her father can be seen here. Pictures of Duchess Meghan with her mother can be seen here and here. More pictures of her family, specifically her mother’s side, can be seen here.

An essay Duchess Meghan composed about her biracial identity can be read here. She writes, among other things:

‘What are you?’ A question I get asked every week of my life, often every day… ‘Where are your parents from?’… While I could say Pennsylvania and Ohio… I instead give them what they’re after: ‘My dad is Caucasian and my mom is African American. I’m half black and half white.’…

While my mixed heritage may have created a grey area surrounding my self-identification, keeping me with a foot on both sides of the fence, I have come to embrace that. To say who I am, to share where I’m from, to voice my pride in being a strong, confident mixed-race woman. That when asked to choose my ethnicity in a questionnaire as in my seventh grade class, or these days to check ‘Other’, I simply say: ‘Sorry, world, this is not Lost and I am not one of The Others. I am enough exactly as I am.’

She has also specified:

My mom is black and my dad is Dutch and Irish, so the texture of my hair is densely curly. I’ve been getting Brazilian blowouts for a couple of years.

Duchess Meghan’s Dutch ancestry is really Pennsylvania Dutch, the name for ethnic Germans who lived in Pennsylvania; her German ancestry includes Alsatian Germans. Her father also has a preponderance of English ancestry, with Colonial American roots going back to the 1600s, as well as some Irish, Scottish, and Scots-Irish/Northern Irish, and remote French, ancestry. Duchess Meghan and her husband Harry share a common ancestor in the 1500s; the details of this remote genealogical relation can be seen here.

Duchess Meghan’s maternal grandparents were/are both black, from African-American families.

Duchess Meghan has also said:

I took an African-American studies class at Northwestern (university) where we explored colourism; it was the first time I could put a name to feeling too light in the black community, too mixed in the white community… For castings, I was labelled ‘ethnically ambiguous’. Was I Latina? Sephardic (Jewish)? Exotic Caucasian?

Duchess Meghan in 2011, photo by DFree/Bigstock.com

Several web sites have stated that Duchess Meghan’s father is Jewish. This is not accurate. While her wedding to her first husband, producer Trevor Engelson, was Jewish or had Jewish elements, that is because Trevor is Jewish. It is possible that Duchess Meghan converted to Trevor’s faith, but there is no particular indication of this being the case. She joined the Church of England upon marrying Prince Harry.

Duchess Meghan is said to be a distant relative of professional baseball player Mookie Betts, through her Betts line.

Duchess Meghan’s paternal grandfather was Gordon Arnold Markle/Markel (the son of Isaac Thomas Markle/Markel and Ruth Ann Arnold). Gordon was born in Juniata County, Pennsylvania. Isaac was the son of George Benjamin Markle/Markel and Mary Jane Mangle/Mengle. Ruth was the daughter of Adam A. Arnold and Martha J. “Mattie” Sykes, who was born in England; her father was from Kimberworth, South Yorkshire and her mother from Gainsborough, Lincolnshire.

Duchess Meghan has said:

I rarely saw my Grandma Markle, as she hailed from New Hampshire and spent much of her life in Pennsylvania and Florida…

Duchess Meghan’s paternal grandmother was Doris Mary Rita Sanders (the daughter of Fred George Sanders and Gertrude May Merrill). Doris was born in New Hampshire. Fred was born in Lake Village, now Lakeport, Belknap, New Hampshire, the son of George Sanders, who was born in England, and of Maria Belle Ellsworth. Gertrude was born in Meredith, Belknap, New Hampshire, the daughter of George David Merrill and Mary Bird, who was born on Malta, to an English father and an Irish mother, from Ballinasloe, County Galway. Her family moved to Canada.

Duchess Meghan’s maternal grandfather was Alvin Azell Ragland (the son of Steve R. Ragland and Lois Russell). Alvin was born in Tennessee, and was African-American. Steve was born in Georgia, the son of Jeremiah/Jerry M. Ragland and Claudie/Claudia Ritchie/Richie. Lois was born in Tennessee, the daughter of James Russell and Virginia Bettes/Betts.

Duchess Meghan’s maternal grandmother was Jeanette Arnold (the daughter of James Arnold and Nettie M. Allen). Jeanette was born in Sandusky, Erie, Ohio, and was African-American. Nettie was the daughter of Luther Hunter Allen and Gertrude Parks/Gertrude Elizabeth Sadler.

Meghan Markle

Duchess Meghan in 2011, Photo by kathclick/Bigstock.com

Duchess Meghan’s father’s ancestry first publicly documented on the internet on her ethnicelebs page, by Follers (May 21, 2017)

Sources: Family histories of Meghan, Duchess of Sussex – http://www.dailymail.co.uk
http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Genealogies of Meghan, Duchess of Sussex – http://gw.geneanet.org
https://www.geni.com
http://i.dailymail.co.uk
http://www.famechain.com
https://famouskin.com
https://www.wikitree.com
https://1.bp.blogspot.com

Genealogy of Meghan, Duchess of Sussex (focusing on her father’s side) – http://www.dailyitem.com

Marriage announcement of Duchess Meghan’s paternal grandparents, Gordon Arnold Markle/Markel and Doris Mary Rita Sanders – https://www.newspapers.com

Marriage record of Duchess Meghan’s paternal grandparents, Gordon Arnold Markle/Markel and Doris Mary Rita Sanders – https://familysearch.org

Duchess Meghan’s paternal grandfather, Gordon Arnold Markle/Markel, on the 1930 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Genealogy of Duchess Meghan’s father (focusing on his mother’s side) – http://www.gamblinfamily.org

Duchess Meghan’s paternal grandmother, Doris Mary Rita Sanders, on the 1930 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org
Doris Mary Rita Sanders on the 1940 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Marriage record of Duchess Meghan’s paternal great-grandparents, Fred George Sanders and Gertrude May Merrill – https://familysearch.org

Duchess Meghan’s paternal great-grandparents, Fred George Sanders and Gertrude May Merrill, on the 1910 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Genealogy of Duchess Meghan’s paternal great-grandmother, Gertrude May Merrill (focusing on her own father’s side) – https://www.findagrave.com

Duchess Meghan’s paternal great-grandmother, Gertrude May Merrill, on the 1900 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Duchess Meghan’s paternal great-great-grandparents, George David Merrill and Mary Bird, on the 1920 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Information about Duchess Meghan’s paternal great-great-grandmother, Mary Bird’s, family – http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Duchess Meghan’s maternal great-grandfather, Steve R. Ragland, on the 1920 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Duchess Meghan’s maternal great-great-grandfather, Jeremiah/Jerry M. Ragland, on the 1940 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Death record of Duchess Meghan’s maternal great-great-grandfather, Jeremiah/Jerry M. Ragland – https://familysearch.org

Genealogy of Meghan’s maternal grandmother, Jeanette (Arnold) Johnson – https://www.familysearch.org

154 Responses

  1. andrew says:

    family history of Megan Markle:
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3906236/Meet-family-Harry-new-girl-s-ancestors-working-hard-racially-fractured-Jim-Crow-South-ruling-British-Empire.html

    Genealogy of Megan Markle (focusing on her mother’s side):
    http://www.famechain.com/family-tree/55174/meghan-markle

    Megan’s maternal great-grandfather, Steve R. Ragland, on the 1920 U.S. Census: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNP8-7CW

    Megan’s maternal great-great-grandfather, Jeremiah/Jerimiah Ragland, on the 1940 U.S. Census: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4HP-CZT

  2. alexgxo says:

    Her moms probably and looks 75% or greater West African so I’d say to most Americans she’s black maybe some European ancestry here and there which maybe why she came out looking like a quadroon imo. I don’t looks wise she passes as “white”.

  3. midori29 says:

    Irish dna mixed with black African creates very light kids. Maybe because Irish people are so pale. Mariah Carey is half black and Half Irish too.

    • alexgxo says:

      Ryan Reynolds? I know he’s not Irish Irish but he has Irish ancestry and he’s not ghost white either..

      I’m sorry but you mention black people come in all shades then mention Irish people are so pale? Black Irish stereotypes anyone? Also Mariah’s most likely 1/4 black. Her “black” parent was already mixed with something else (I think he was part mulatto Latino or something).

      Anyways, genetically her “black” mother may have Some distant European blood which may explain why Meghan came out looking like a quadroon. I saw the pics of her real mom and it is always a possibity but for all purposes her mothers black and Meghan’s “biracial”.

      • gel says:

        Ah, yes, you and your “Black Irish”! One of these is From Kerry in Ireland and one from Sweden:

        http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2016/12/02/15/3AF6D9C600000578-3994274-Shannon_left_and_Sarah_hit_headlines_last_year_after_finding_eac-m-58_1480691711684.jpg

        So which one is “Black Irish” then?

      • midori29 says:

        @Alexgro funny I actually agree with what you said and youre wasting your time challenging me. I am not going against anything you have said. And I DO know about black Irish. Mariahs dad is barely mixed with anything else, he is a black man like any African American is. People just think so because he has Venezuelan relatives but there are tons of black Venezuelans. Whenever someone says South American people think non black and always mixed and its not accurate. There are BLACK people living all over the word and there are BLACK Hispanics who are not mixed. There are black Cubans, Brazilians, Puerto Ricans, etc. Also you are playing naĂŻve YES the Irish have some of the whitest and ghostly skin in Europe and I have had Irish friends tell me the black Irish are mixed and anyone without that pale skin in Ireland is mixed. So the mixtures with the Irish come out looking dark white. ALOT.

      • midori29 says:

        @Alexgo Yes again I have heard about black Irish most people on earth must live in a box if they have not heard about “The black Irish”. My Irish friend said they are mixed Irish with swarthy darker foriegners/sailors, etc. Actors Tom Cruise and Bridgette Moynihan are supposed to be “Black Irish”. My friends dad was a racist Irishman who believed in her only marrying another unmixed pale Irishman. She told me the real deal and she was pure Irish.
        Actor Tom Cruise Black Irish-according to my Irish friend
        http://www.celebrity-gossip.net/tom-cruise/tom-cruise-irish-fun-dublin-833319
        Bridgette Moynihan-Black Irish
        //www.imdb.com/name/nm0005256/
        Pure Irish types
        http://www.irishtimes.com/blogs/generationemigration/2013/02/25/young-ireland-sydney-the-oldest-and-most-successful-gaa-club-in-nsw/

          • gel says:

            brown eyes doesn’t equal being black, or most of Europe would be black – and Tom Cruise has blue eyes!

          • midori29 says:

            @Gel I am simply repeating what an actual Irish white woman told me she told me that black Irish people were mixed and that not all whites in Ireland are 100 percent. And the 100 percent ones are usually super pale.

          • Alice says:

            @midori29 – She obviously doesn’t know what she is talking about. Also it is not an Irish origin subject and there is actually no group of people called “The Black Irish” except that it has a US origin. There is no known “mixed group” of Irish who have had long term ancestry in Ireland. The only Irish that are “outliers” are the Traveller population due to inbreeding but they still fully originate from an Irish population but form their own cluster. The Irish DNA Atlas has released some preliminary results but most of the information hasn’t been released yet. It will be released some time next year.

            https://www.familyhistory.ie/docs/DNA/DNA_01.pdf
            http://cruwys.blogspot.com.au/2016/10/genetic-genealogy-ireland-2016.html?showComment=1477742598820

        • Peanut says:

          “Black irish” describes irish people of the mediterranean phenotype, and since ALL europeans have high amounts of mediterranean dna from the early european farmers, all europeans could turn out mediterranean looking, you dont need to be mixed for that.

          • Alice says:

            “Black Irish” is an American invention. It is not used in Ireland and if people want to research the topic they will realise it is just one of those stupid phrases that should not be used. “Black Dutch” is another American invention. People with dark hair are in every population in Europe. Do we have a special category for the Black Danish or the Black English? The Irish whether they be brunets, blonds or redheads all cluster together genetically. There is no group of Irish that cluster separately and all are right next to British populations like the Scots. So whether an Irish person is dark haired or blond they will cluster with their fellow countrymen showing that they don’t have any different admixture in their genes. Here is an example of a genetic plot if people aren’t familiar with genetics.

            This is the Novembre map if people want to research further.

            http://greek-dna-sub-saharan-myth.org/images/genetics/novembre-fig1a.png

            Tom Cruise has as much German ancestry as he has Irish.

            Logically how does someone explain a blond Irishman or a redheaded Irishman. Do you really think that someone having a different colour hair means they are different than someone who has the exact same ancestry as them. Haven’t you seen a brother who is blond and a brother who is brunet in the same family? I find the term “Black Irish” incredibly annoying and stupid and I think most Irish people do.

          • midori29 says:

            @Peanut there are many studies and I dont know either way that say the “medittaranean racial subcategory” was an early mixing of North Africans and Southern Europeans with some East and West Africans too.

      • marjanel says:

        Latino is not a race, you can’t be part latino

    • Samiiraa says:

      No, they look light because their black parent has European ancestry which makes them more white than black.

    • Multiethnicchick says:

      No Mariah Carey’s father is mixed. She’s a quarter black.

  4. Princess says:

    She doesn’t look Black at all. She looks like a pretty Latina.

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