
Belle da Costa Greene - Wikipedia
After her parents' separation, the light-skinned Belle, her mother, and her siblings passed as white and changed their surname to Greene to distance themselves from their father. [7][8][9] Her mother changed her maiden name to Van Vliet in an effort to assume Dutch ancestry. [10] .
Belle Da Costa Greene: The Black Activist's Daughter Who …
2019年5月3日 · She and her siblings had all plugged “Da Costa” into their names; should anyone remark on her complexion, Belle mentioned Portuguese ancestry. Greene’s literary and artistic background may have produced the addition.
Family | The Reinvented Life of Belle da Costa Greene
For many, racial passing involved cutting ties with family members who were unable to pass as white. Despite this trend, Belle da Costa Greene kept much of her family intact, since her mother and three siblings also chose to pass.
The true story of a famed librarian and the secret she guarded …
2024年10月29日 · After the separation, Genevieve dropped the last letter of their family name and was lighter-skinned enough to pass as white, as were Greene's siblings. This opened doors for Belle da Costa Greene in segregated America, and she worked at Princeton before joining the research library.
Belle da Costa Greene | Black Librarian & Bibliographer, J.P.
Together with her mother and siblings, Greene determined to “pass” as white, and they were listed so beginning with the 1905 New York state census. She settled on the name Belle da Costa Greene and would explain that “da Costa” reflected Portuguese ancestry, as did (she implied) her olive complexion.
Belle Marion Da Costa Greene (1879–1950) - FamilySearch.org
Discover life events, stories and photos about Belle Marion Da Costa Greene (1879–1950) of District of Columbia, United States.
New Light on Belle da Costa Greene - The Morgan Library
2021年3月15日 · From then on, the Greenes identified themselves as being of Portuguese descent, with Belle adopting the middle name “da Costa,” her older brother Russell, “de Costa,” while Genevieve took a Dutch middle name, “van Vliet,” possibly because it sounded like her maiden name “Fleet.”
Belle da Costa Greene (1883-1950) - Blackpast
2021年6月9日 · Belle da Costa Greene was one of the most prominent librarians in American history. She was born Belle Marion Greener to African American parents Richard Theodore Greener and Genevieve Ida Fleet Greener, in Washington, D.C., on November 26, 1879. Her parents separated in her childhood.
2023: Spring This Photo Is a Rare, Important Find - Amherst
2023年5月12日 · Belle and some of her siblings added the middle name “da Costa” to denote Portuguese ancestry, as a way to explain their darker complexion. Ardizzone adds that Greene would tell people she had Egyptian, Middle Eastern or Abyssinian as well as Portuguese roots, but it also appears it was an open secret to some that she had Black heritage.
Black History Month Highlight: Belle da Costa Greene
Belle had four siblings: her older brother Russell, her older sisters Louise and Ethel, and her younger sister Theodora. The family was raised in DC, alongside Genevieve’s relatives, but they relocated to New York in the mid-1880s when Richard was offered a position with the Grand Monument Association.