LeVar Burton got hit with a one-two punch while tracing his family’s ancestry on the Jan. 16 episode of PBS’ hit series “Finding Your Roots.”
Burton rose to fame as a child actor in the TV adaptation of Alex Haley’s “Roots,” the show that host Henry Louis Gates cited as an inspiration for the PBS show, and went on to star in “Star Trek” and host “Reading Rainbow.”
On the PBS show, he discovered a hidden family secret. Burton learned that a great-great-grandmother on his mother’s side, Mary Sills, was raised by a man she thought was her biological father, but wasn’t. (Burton knew Sills when he was a young boy).
Sills was the biological daughter of a white farmer named James Henry Dixon who had a wife and family at the time of her birth.
“And she was the other family on the other side,” Burton said in shock.
“Were you expecting that? Did you have any idea you had a white ancestor?” Gates asked the star.
The 66-year-old shook his head and laughed.
“No, no. I had no idea. So Granny was half white. Wow,” he said.
Then, Gates revealed that Dixon served in the Confederate Army as a teenager.
“Are you kidding me? Oh my God, oh my God. I did not see this coming,” Burton said.
Gates said that Dixon likely never saw battle since he was a part of the junior reserves, which was mostly used for guard duty. However, he noted that Dixon still served in an army whose goal was to protect slavery. Then, later in life, Dixon had a child with a woman who was born into slavery.
“I often wonder about white men of the period and how they justify to themselves their relations with Black women, especially those in an unbalanced power dynamic. There has to be a powerful disconnect created emotionally and mentally,” Burton said while processing the news.
“So it’s possible in my mind that he could’ve contemplated it and was conflicted at worst, maybe repentant at best. And then there’s the possibility that he didn’t think about it at all,”…
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