Vanessa L. Williams

Williams in 2011, kathclick/bigstock.com

Birth Name: Vanessa Lynn Williams

Place of Birth: Tarrytown, New York, U.S.

Date of Birth: March 18, 1963

Ethnicity: African-American, along with some English and Welsh

Vanessa L. Williams is an American actress, singer, songwriter, producer, model, and television personality. She was the first African-American to win the Miss America Pageant, in 1983. Her roles include the films Eraser, Soul Food, Hoodlum, Dance with Me, Light It Up, Shaft (2000), Batman: Hush, and Bad Hair, and the series Ugly Betty.

Vanessa is the daughter of Helen L. (Tinch) and Milton Augustine Williams, Jr. Her parents were both black. Her brother is actor and comedian Chris Williams. Vanessa grew up in the mainly white middle-class suburb of Millwood, New York. Vanessa is married to businessperson Jim Skrip. She has three children, including dancer and singer Jillian Hervey, with her former husband, public relations specialist Ramon Hervey II; and a daughter with her former husband, Canadian basketball player and actor Rick Fox.

An AncestryDNA test taken by Vanessa stated that her genetic ancestry is:

*56% African
——–*23% Ghana
——–*15% Cameroon/Congo
——–*7% Togo
——–*6% Benin
——–*5% Senegal
*44% European
——–*17% British Isles
——–*12% Finnish/Ural/Volga
——–*11% Southern European
——–*4% Spain/Portugal

In an interview, a journalist stated that Vanessa’s mixed heritage includes African-American, Welsh, and Native American. No Native American markers appear on her DNA test. Vanessa appeared on the program Who Do You Think You Are? (2011), where she discovered that her great-great-grandfather, David Carll, was a “mulatto” (mixed race) man who avoided slavery and married a white woman (her great-great-grandmother).

Vanessa’s ancestry is at least 1/32nd English. One of her maternal great-great-great-grandfathers, George Appleford, was born in Surrey, England, in 1802.

Vanessa’s paternal grandfather was Milton Augustine/Abner Williams (the son of John Hill Williams and Mary L. Fields). Milton was born in Tennessee. John was the son of George Williams and Mollie/Molly Turner. Mary L. was the daughter of William A. Fields and Elizabeth “Lizzie” Fields.

Vanessa’s paternal grandmother was Iris Agnes Carl/Carll (the daughter of Frank S. Carl/Carll and Imogene Jackson). Iris was born in New York. Frank was the son of David Carll and Mary Louisa Appleford, who was white, and whose own father was English. Imogene was the daughter of Henry Titus Jackson and Emiline/Emmaline G. Russell.

Vanessa’s maternal grandfather was Edward James Tinch (the son of John Wilbur Tinch and Helen Elizabeth Fitzgerald). Edward was born in New Jersey. John was the son of John Tinch. Helen was the daughter of William Fitzgerald and Margaret.

Vanessa’s maternal grandmother was Doris Catherine Griffen/Griffin (the daughter of Moses George Wilson and Elvira Viola Johnson). Doris was born in New York. Moses George was the son of George Wilson and Frances Duson. Elvira was the daughter of Waldo/Walter Johnson and Fannie/Fanny Cavel/Calvin.

Regarding her DNA test, Vanessa has said:

Now, I can’t wait to go to Ghana and Cameroon and Togo and Senegal — it’s a great opportunity to see why the customs resonate with you. I love to travel and I love to explore, and I have to admit that I was always jealous of people who knew their cultural background. Both my family and myself came out with light eyes, so obviously there is a recessive gene here. Not knowing what that was just made me very curious.

Sources: Genealogy of Vanessa L. Williams – http://www.geni.com

Genealogy of Vanessa’s father (focusing on his mother’s side) – https://www.findagrave.com

Vanessa’s paternal grandmother, Iris Agnes Carl/Carll, on the 1930 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

ethnic

Curious about ethnicity

343 Responses

  1. John Leyton says:

    she’s hot! :O)

    seriously… um… color, race, height, weight… some humans will always have something they really don’t like, for whatever reason. I just wish a person’s preference or choice wouldn’t lead to derogatory actions against something that is a a physical characterstic.

    If someone slaps you across the face… then HATE on that.

  2. Kee-Kee says:

    For all of you that’s going on with these various and might I say frivolous conversation’s about Vanessa Williams and her ethnicity. I am very sure no 100 % accurate that Vanessa is of African American, welsh, and native american.

  3. moi says:

    she looks creole tbh

    both her parent have mixed heritage

    imho i think the word black and especially african american are too vague as people use it to describe people who came from africa,ppl born in america, ppl of african descent

    so in a way she is culturally and socially african american and biologically mixed race

    • boss says:

      you she not mixed

      she is just african american

      cuz when you see her parents both of them

      just look black -you dont even know if they are mixed

      if they diddnt tell you

      thats like saying

      ok

      megan fox is native american

      and
      not white

      that sounds stupid

  4. Boricua7193 says:

    Wow! yall are reading too much into this….! First of all Fully Black people can have Green/blue/Grey eyes and not be mixed…(whoever opposes to that need to get it together, seriously!) I’m mixed with Puerto Rican Dominican White Black& Native American.. But I am primarily black… with light green eyes(NEITHER PARENTS OR GRANDPARENTS HAVE IT.. BT 1ST COUSINS HAVE IT), fine curly hair &brown skin cause when it comes down to me… my parents are half black &both my grandfathers are multi-racial! I shouldn’t get the chance to say I’m all that stuff because my parents aren’t one or the other.. they’re more than one.. I’m just a product.. Maybe Vanessa feels the same.. if she says she’s black then she is black.. if she states otherwise then it will be that! WHAT? ARE YOU ALL GOING TO TAP INTO HER FAMILY TREE!!!!

  5. msme says:

    colored (other than brown) eyes and even white skin occur more often than “reported” without having an obvious race mixture…a lot of times it is a recessive gene; one that could show signs of carrying albinism

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