THE FUGATES Were So Inbred They Turned Blue: Their Inbred Family Tree Explained- Mortal Faces
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
- The Fugates of Kentucky's Inbred Family Tree Explained. I go through their ancestry to see how tangled their family tree was. Also known as the Blue People of Kentucky, the Fugates had a recessive gene that caused their skin to turn blue. They settled in Troublesome Creek, Kentucky in the 1800's and due to the lack of roads, weren't able to meet many new people. As a result they married into only a few families, and even themselves. This resulted in their recessive methemoglobin gene to be passed down and reappear in multiple generations of Fugates, turning their skin blue.
THE WHITTAKERS: A West Virginia Inbred Family Tree Explained: • THE WHITTAKERS: A West...
MORE INBRED FAMILY TREES:
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2) Cleopatra's Inbred Family Tree: • CLEOPATRA: Insanely In...
3) Rameses II married his daughters: • RAMESSES II Had Kids W...
4) Wu Zeatin (China's Only Female Emperor): • EMPRESS WU ZETIAN's Fa...
5) I'm My Own Grandpa: • I'm My Own Grandpa Son...
6) How Inbred Is Elizabeth II? (Her Family Tree Explained): • How Inbred Was Queen E...
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SUBSCRIBE for more recreations/trees: / @mortalfaces
#Inbred #FamilyTree #MortalFaces
SUBSCRIBE for more recreations/trees: ruclips.net/channel/UCLkN9aa7m2J4PKtSTs4DrlQ
MORE INBRED FAMILY TREES:
1) King Tut's Inbred Family Tree: ruclips.net/video/LU_6F6ZQMGA/видео.html
2) Cleopatra's Inbred Family Tree: ruclips.net/video/EaGuMrs_x2M/видео.html
3) Rameses II married his daughters: ruclips.net/video/YKdj-Gsa258/видео.html
4) Wu Zeatin (China's Only Female Emperor): ruclips.net/video/u-IuRqrmTyo/видео.html
5) I'm My Own Grandpa: ruclips.net/video/jHrKDjbawaE/видео.html
6) How Inbred Is Elizabeth II? (Her Family Tree Explained): ruclips.net/video/T1-oG20pf34/видео.html
Especially the Hapsburg line ....look at some of the poor souls in that line like Charles II ...so deformed. Then u look at Queen Victoria who passed on Hemophilia to her children and their children. As well as Porphyria being passed generation to generation...like in the case of Mad King George III.
I was already confused by 3:35, lol. This family tree is quite tame when you compare it to all those dastardly royals of old but still, I get completely confused when a married couple can be cousins in more than one way, lol.
It happens ...my Great grandparents were both Combs ...so cousins. So the lines do become intertwined and confusing to say the least. We are still talking 1800s and early 1900s as far as my Great grandparents. I'm sure people back then didn't realize there could be repercussions. When u live in restricted areas with few families its bound to happen.
@@tracycombs1484 back in the day lethal genes would make sure children didn't survive: we know have kidney transplants, etc. but don't intermarry often. Maybe New Brunswick. I genetically "outcrossed" my breeding: my wife in Chinese and about as far genetically removed from Sweden and Norway as you can get.
Why aren't there blue skinned royals though? 🤔💭
I was confused by like 15 seconds in 😂😂😂😂
This still happens in small communities. Growing up I refused to date in high school because I was related to almost everyone and some I was their first cousin on their moms side and their third cousin on their dads side so yeah… my hubs of from thousands of miles away from my hometown.
The thing that leaps out at me from this family tree is that, in the late 1700s, three apparently unrelated families; the Fugates, the Wells', and the Smiths, all carried the rare met-H gene. There's definitely a lot more crossover in this family tree before 1750!
yea i noticed many of the blue people were born from unrelated parents, only 1 was inbred.
Maybe its just bad genetic luck
@@Alpha1918 genes are hereditary. People do not just "spawn" into life. They are "bred" for lack of a better term.
@@msylvini and you know how genetic traits come to be? It’s a little thing called mutation, independent assortment, and recombination! So traits can “spawn out of thin air” in that your gametes can randomly change in a way that either harms or benefits your offspring. Where do you think the blue skin gene came from?
That was interesting to say the least , It got a little scary when he mentioned the smith family, Bc my Father is from Kentucky , his Grandfather was named Zachariah , for which I’m named after.. I’m black not blue.. Unless I’m extremely dark Blue…😂😂😂😂
When I was a kid, I had a lamb with dark wool, so I called it Blackie. After Blackie was shorn later, I saw that under the wool Blackie was actually dark blue.
So, it could happen. 😸
@@abbieb8130 I have "blue/black" chickens. It's everywhere. They're taking over.
😂😂
I hope you are doing ok.
I think youre navy blue with a touch of jet black.
As someone who’s grown up on a small island, checking to see if you’re related in any way is actually something common to do when you’re dating a new person
Iceland?
@@gavanwhatever8196 Nah, Newfoundland
@@yeetyeet1655 Well I didn't know that! Do you have an app like the Icelanders?
@@gavanwhatever8196 Not to my knowledge, actually! We usually just ask around. That is a really good idea though
Chincoteague island va
It was really less uncommon than we may think, especially in the past and in more remote areas - given a few generations, it was hard to find a partner you had no kind of blood kinship to!
Yep. This is a very different scenario than royals marrying thier relatives. They had no excuse while people of the lower classes did.
My mom will tell you….she lived in WV and would come home to tell grandma she was going out with so and so…..Grandma would say, “Oh!! He’s your cousin…”.
Yes ive tried to explain this ...when u are in remote areas the families end up with intermarriage. There were Fugates, Combs, and Stacy's. I'm from this line way back ...I know my Combs line is so confusing because family names over and over ...Jerry, Nicholas, John, William...ect.
My best friend’s dad had to drive 2 hours out of town to date someone who wasn’t related
It’s kinda gross to us now, but the majority of our ancestors were most likely 2nd or 3rd cousins. Idk, I don’t judge them for it, it’s not their fault that the gene pool was constricted. It’s just what happens 🤷🏻♀️
I'd heard about these people when I was a kid, but everyone made it sound like they were very inbred, like genetic mutations level inbred, which is why many had blue skin. According to this family tree they weren't any more "inbred" than a lot of rural families since before modern times. It looks like they at least tried to avoid marrying too close, but just not enough bloodlines and the blue skin thing was just a rare genetic coincidence made possible by isolated gene pools.
So basically they weren't the "wicked perverts" I was led to believe.
exactly
I think this is just a tragic consequence of living in a small community that's mostly isolated from other communities. Your comment is compassionate.
Banjo music intensifies
You know you play that stereotype but the worst well documented inbreeding comes from the ancient Egyptian pharaohs. I mean if the Hapsburg line closer resembled a Christmas wreath. king tuts line is literally a tangled extension cord.
“Play Dixie”
Deliverance 😂
@@metalavenger23 Appalachians beat both the Egyptians and Royals by far. They still inbreed
Sweet home Alabama.
This gives the term ‘ blue bloods’ a new meaning.
💀
Makes you wonder why you don't see more royals with blue skin... 🤔💭
I believe that's precisely why the term was coined.
@@dubuyajay9964 because around the later 1800 the royal families decided they didn't like the hapsberg jaw and blue skin that's why they powdered their faces white.
It came from Spanish following the _Reconquista_ where the new Christian state (Espanya) recaptured territory that was previously under hundreds of years of rule by the Islamic Moors. Since the Moors had darker skin (they were mostly Arab and African), the Castilian Spanish who were from the northern regions along the border with France would boast of being able to see their _sangre azul_ ("blue blood") through their fairer skin and thus coined the term to refer to the Christian nobles of Castile and Aragon. The royals of Spain were severely inbred as well, e.g., the Hapsburgs.
Who married who and who turned blue! Made me laugh
Me too
"So in this family tree if their names are blue, it means they became blue."
was definitely not a sentence I ever expected to hear
Ahaha best quote💀🤣
LISTEN UP HERES A STORY ABOUT A FAMILY THAT LIVES IN A BLUE WORLD
"it's interesting to see who married who and who turned blue" why was this funny to me
It’s generally better to marry someone with grandparents who have differing names from each other and yourself😅
Location, location, location....
Hahahaha🤣
@@pamelapoulos5019 Actually, if you think about it, the movement to the new world was the greatest NON VIOLENT experiment in genetic "outcross" in the history of humanity. Most "outcross genetic" experiments involved slavery, the Mongols, military conquest, the Mongols, natural famine and other disasters, and the Mongols. The "Mongol Mark" screws up a lot of genetic research as it's not supposed to be so prevalent. Apparently the Mongols had a grand time with the "Kim Kardashians" of their day.
Check the bloodline still
I just finished reading a very good book about the “blues in Kentucky”, called The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek. It was very good, I recommend it.
❤️that
Thank you Melinda.
Thank you.
Great book, I'd read there may be a sequel?
When I was a teenager, my cousin visited from out of town. I took her sightseeing in the "big city" for a day. My Grandmother commented that we made a lovely couple. 🥺 Um, no. Just no.
Yikes…
WTFrack?
🤨😵💫😱
Oh no
Ur grandma trippin 💀
God this is so disturbing!! My kin on my moms side came up out of the hills of Kentucky, half of my grandma's DNA came from a Fugate.... and what's really really weird, and I cant help but wonder if that fact has something to do with my life long illnesses. I was sick pretty much from birth, at 9 they discovered I had extremely low PLATELETS!! After a bone morrow test they settled on a diagnosis of ITP which is an auto immune disorder, my immune system destroys my platelets in the same way a healthy person's would attack and remove bacteria or a virus.... but it didn't stop there, initially they told us that I would grow out of it, but that never happened.... my symptoms continued to mount becoming more and more severe, so they decided a more in depth look into exactly what was happening was needed, so I was then sent to a rheumatologist.... this doctor was completely stumped, I had/have all the hallmarks of Lupus, but then there is a whole bunch of symptoms they couldn't quite fit into either diagnosis so I was basically told Lupus would be my diagnosis, it would be the fastest way to get doctors, nurses, emt's etc. Understand where to start until I or a loved one could give them a more in depth history.... ive had flares present in every known way and subcategory for Lupus (there are 4 known types). I was 13yo.... one of the issues none of my doctors have been able to rectify is its a genetic disorder, but couldn't be found anywhere in my immediate family. We weren't really able, at least at that time, to trace family medical history back beyond my great grandparents because they all migrated North out of the mountains of Kentucky and West Virginia.... not a whole lot of doctorin was done back then, let alone the kind that would lead to medical records, outside of digging through some backwoods doctors notes.... but there no way of knowing where to even start!! Alot of that information died with them.... Sorry for such a long comment, I just thought you might find it interesting.... I know I do!! I've always known my great grandma was a Fugate, but I didn't know there was anything notable about the name!! Let alone THIS insanity!! Might bring it up to my doctor next time I see him, see what he thinks about it!! But for all intents and purposes im considered kind of medical mystery.... I was used like a lab rat until i was 19 when i finally put my foot down and said no more, you wouldnt believe the amount kf trauma i carry with me because lf the things i was put through as just a child, and for alot of it, completely alone!! My mother had two other children to worry about, so she would basically get me checked in, and then leave. So all the tests, iv's, blood draws, the list is endless, but it was all done with me not being able to refuse, and no one to advocate for me.... my mother just blindly approved everything.... needless to sat, I can attest to the fact that white coat syndrome is a VERY real thing!! But Omgoodness im sure ive already said too much.... Thank you so much for ALWAYS coming through with the most FASCINATING content!! You truly have a way, beyond just the visuals, of bringing a story, history for that matter, to life in a way ive never really ever experienced... until running across your content anyway!! Im gonna close it here, thank you again, and as always, sending lots of love and positive energy your way hun!! MommaBear Hugs from Ohio!! 🥰🥰🤗🥰🥰
You have definitely suffered!
I had seen a documentary on this family a few years ago. It said that a couple of the kids went to a little hut of a female Dr. She became friends with them and realized that it was a medical condition that meds or shots could help. According to it, within a few weeks the family were no longer blueish. Idk if there was any truth to it but thats what it said.
What a fascinating story. I would be curious if your condition could in fact be traced to the Fugates from this tree. Thanks for sharing.
That’s very fascinating, I’m sorry you had to suffer like that
Sending light your way and hoping that you are doing well.
🍀
I actually knew a woman who was blue. She worked in a sister store for the company I worked for.
They're blue, da ba dee da ba di. 🎶
Amazing ability to keep track of all that! Wish there was a recreation of how they looked with their blue skin. Fascinating! Thanks for the great videos.
It looks like darker skin with a slight bluish tent. Basically just looks like a funny looking dark skinned person. I knew my grandma and some of her siblings looked different. Her last name was “Fugate.” There are actually some of the younger generation who still have these features.
My second great grandmother is Rachel fugate the daughter of the brother to Martin. We are all white
Lol
How do you keep track?! I swear I almost went cross eyed trying to follow...is it possible inbreading was outlawed just for the purpose of keeping family lines UNtangled in this manner? if it was I d understand.
🤣😂🤣😂
@@STScott-qo4pw "Inbreading" usually involves a few crums. It's like the scum theory: if you do it long enough you float to the top. I suggest frying a few.
Most places still allow you marry your cousin.
I was born in 1989 in Corvallis, Oregon. There was a near by family that lived in a small town near here that had blue silver-ish skin. They would come in town for McDonald's sometimes. At least 4-5 of the family members were blue. It was the only time I've ever seen that condition. Other than this story. I'm curious if there is a way to see if a carrier of the trait lived in NW Oregon?
My husband said that family could be a bunch of crazy hippies who drank colloidal silver assuming it's good for their health. Oregon is famous for a bunch of hippies experimenting on dangerous health stuff. There is also a famous blue guy in Oregon who drank colloidal silver that turned him blue. It caused methemoglobinemia similar to the Blue Fugates.
A DNA test would prove that. My mom grew up near a family with the last name Fugate and they were from the Seattle area.
I grew up in a very small town where two families frequently intermarried: the Ludys and the Emericks. Well, the Ludys and one of the strains of Emericks: the overweight Emericks with dark, very curly hair. The other strain of Emericks were slight and had sandy, straight hair. They didn't marry Ludys. And of the 18 kids in the special ed class, 5 of them were Emericks.
🎶 And that’s the way they became the Fugate Bunch… 🎶
this was harder to keep up with than cleopatra's family tree omg
Would love to see the family tree of Joan of Arc. I have never heard anything about her bloodline. Thank you.
My neighbors baby is blue on the back. Something to do with the blood. Doctor said it's bc the mom and dad are a rare mix. Middle eastern father, aboriginal (indigenous) mother.
My three children had the blue spot as well. Long disappeared now, my youngest is 40.. Regards from Scotland.
@@zainabsiddiqui7358 Or is taqiyya bluey-broon? No response required ...
very common in polynesian babies- disappears within a few months after birth.
My grandson had blue back when he was little but he outgrew it around 2 years old. We thought at first that it was some problem with delivering him but it was nothing. Some type of temporary skin pigmentation. The pediatrician said it happens to some babies. He’s 28 years old now. His son has blue marking (more like a big spot) on his back. When I told his wife about my grandson’s blue back, she was greatly relieved. Obviously no one told her that her husband had the same thing as a baby.
@Gold
Its called Dermal melanocytosis, or in past times Mongolian Blue Spots in the West.
Its a harmless birthmark most common among ethnicities with dark skin that usually appears on the butt or back. It happens because some melanin making cells aka melanocytes collect in clumps and stay deep under the skin instead of going where they are supposed to go when the fetus is developing.
So the baby gets bluish spots where the cell clumps are from the melanin being made by the melanocytes. Its harmless and usually disappears by the time youre 12 or so. I had one on my butt as a baby. It faded away when I was about 10.
my husband's maternal grandparents were first cousins (both their mothers were sisters) and due to this both my husband and his brother have severe vision and eye problems . thankfully his parents were from very distant countries and both of my parents and myself are also from different countries and therefore if we ever have children they will have a very diverse and hopefully healthy genetic bloodline and whatnot.
My family are in KY. They’ve told this story for years. We just found out we are descendants of Daniel Boone. We’re doing extensive research on how we came from Scotland and ended up in KY. I named my son Levi. Guys, I’m scared. 😂 My parents played together up in the holler as little kids. One never knows when it’s up in the Appalachian Mts. But the blue people most definitely is a real family. 💙
Genetic tracking, research, and scanning is growing by leaps and bounds today, EVEN IN KENTUCKY. So back in the day a medical issue might be known. In cattle, we know as long as you "throw" the genetics forward you only have a 4% chance of getting worse. It's when you inbreed generation after generation that the bad stuff really starts to get to the top.
Daniel Boone is my great4x grandfather.
Yes. I’m related to them on my moms side. Honestly, I’ve know all kinds of “blueish” looking “fugates.” I am from the area described in this video.
And also interesting that at the end of this video it mentions fugates frequently marrying smiths. My grandma other was a bluish looking Fugate who married a smith. From se ky.
colloidal silver can turn your skin blue. I wonder if the ground water had silver in it.
Remarkable work on this very complicated family tree
The Smurfs
i wanted to see blue recreations >_
I'm sure there will be all kinds of kissing cousins jokes but it would do one well to remember the only fact you aren't inbred is bc your parents had options. That's all.
Or they didn’t mind walking an hr to the next town
One does not need to get married or have kids. If marrying my kin was my only option, I’d take my chances with spinsterhood.
when in doubt have a baby with someone that has different skin color than you. Mixed race is the superior race lol
@Miffet Blue religion, especially American Christianity, really pushes hard for people to get married and have children as young as possible. I grew up in the Midwest, my parents aren't that old but they literally only had kids because they 'knew that was expected of them'. Hell, my step dad didn't marry his first wife because he felt anything for her, but because they had been technically dating for two years, so it was time they got married and had kids. Neither of my dads wanted kids, my bio mum wanted them but she's so religious that she wouldn't not have kids, even if nunnery was available to her, because her parents really hammered home that you have a have a lot of kids for God. Ya can't just look at these things in a vacuum, the only thing that happens in a vacuum is space. Social pressures and lack of options really did small town people in. Hell, still does.
@@annaelisavettavonnedozza9607 so true. Some people lack this comprehension till this days and age let alone in the olden times. They acted/thought they were on a secluded island and all they had was family members to mate with. These messed up people effed up their children's livelihood
If the gene is fully recessive then carriers should have normal white skin phenotype, but it is often more complicated than that so it is possible carriers were blue (or midway between blue/white). Clearly this condition did not affect reproductive capabilities so it continued to be passed on to descendents
Yup. I can dilution genes and blue/black/white splash in my chickens. Genetics is complicated. In East Indians colour doesn't "dilute" like black colour. It may "pop up" and I have a Dutch friend that is very, very dark red, and his brother looks like a poster child for the Aryan Nation. Apparently 150 years ago (Dutch East India Company) a relative had an East Indian wife lost to history.
Melanocytic genes, the ones that determine your entire body's skin tone, arent as simple as dominant/recessive, as theyre multigenetic. Bluish skin tone can be caused by argyria (a chemical effect caused by silver), methemoglobinemia (a buildup of blue hemoglobin- a blood disorder that has nothing to do with melanocytes), and cyanosis (a lack of oxygen provided to red hemoglobin). The second case is greatly recessive but likely requires several recessive genes to build up that much blue hemoglobin. This is the primary problem with inbreeding- that possibly life altering recessive genes are more likely to pass through and express in a thinner bloodline.
I usually like to play your videos while relaxing so I can fall asleep because I think your voice is soothing but oh my god, this shit is weird
Makes me wonder why this physical phenomenon didnt happen to the Royal families : Like the Hapsburgs .
lol look at Queen Elizabeth’s, Charles and all of their noses. Very freaking prominent genes right there.
Because it's a myth. It's the rare gene that they both possessed. If it was due to incest, many, many other families would have been blue back then. This nonsense never dies.
They just inherited the uglies.
The Hapsburgs had their own genetic aesthetic and health problems, they just didn't have this type of recessive trait at all apparently
💯🎯... Spot on. Agree, the bs nonsense never ends....
My mom's family comes from the Midwest (Monon, Indiana to be exact) and there were in-laws marrying each other (two families: the Clarks and the Dentons) but to my knowledge, that was the extent. It's pretty likely that most people have that somewhere in their family trees.
Anyone else notice that he used the members of the Brady Bunch to name all the family members with unknown names?
Watching this with my eldest child and I noticed the Brady Bunch reference and mentioned it, and she was like “who’s the Brady bunch?”
My great grandmother grew up on troublesome creek. Surprised we have no common ancestors with the Fugates. Not a lot of people from that area.
I always have to watch these twice. But when you zoom out, and you see that their tree is a circle, that explains everything.
Growing up in KY I knew some Fugates but, none were blue!
Hapsburgs jaw.
Hemophilia
Would you consider doing the "Colt" family from Australia? I don't want it as exploitation, but their tree was so tangled it's unbelievable.
Hey, the Colts were Kiwis who just moved to Australia! If you want to talk about inbred Australians just go to Tassy
@@ray.shoesmith What are kiwis?
@@KMAllmond People from New Zealand
I'm totally confused lol 🔵
so's their county clerk.
Inbreeding is common amongst deep south. They love cousin marriages in Alabama, Kentucky and Mississippi
Can't really lie. From Mississippi. With my second cousin. 🤣 And he's the second of my second cousins that I've been with. Not necessarily proud of it or anything. Just upholding the stereotype I suppose.
And West Virginia and Tennessee also.
Hilarious at first I thought you were just being funny but seriously, you have the Brady TV family through the smith lineage
Hah! I didn't notice that.
They are literally the Smurfs.
OMG I worked in a state mental hospital in Illinois in the 70's, there was a fugate on our cottage with bluish lips!!...
I know these Fugates and am descended from the line before the inbreeding. It’s not that they specifically were so inbred because they were cousins that caused it. They did a dna study and found that this disorder came from Native American heritage. There are some strong genetic variations in Native Americans due to a genetic bottleneck that contributed to this disease being passed down so easily. There are some Fugates who aren’t from this line or inbred and still carry the gene. Same for the Native lines who carry it. Thankfully, it’s not as deadly as some genetic disorders.
Rob Zombie Presents: The Smurfs.
We're going to be all blue in Scotland this coming winter. (fuel prices!!!)
What happened to the supposed 'heatwave'?
From a milk bottle white Scottish Granny.
Thank you from Scotland.
Username checks ou...wait.
I’m so sorry….please keep warm. Here in Florida we don’t have to worry about the cold, just Hurricanes. Have you seen the tea light terra cotta flower pot heater? Keeps a room fairly warm.
lol @ Widdershins
Since the arctic tends to warm faster than surrounding areas, that'd mean that the temperature gradient decreases leading to a larger region being exposed to cooler arctic air.
I'd think that since Scotland is pretty north I'd probably experience more cold events due to the polar vortex compared to areas further south
There is a condition you can get which leaves you looking blue, if you use colloidal silver as a medicine. I'm not saying this is anything to do with this families predicament, that is obviously a genetic thing, but if you see someone who looks blue, it could be down to that. Also my veins are very close to the surface and gave me a bluish tinge when I was young. My school friends once said "Oh we are so bored, I know let's look at Lily's veins!!" How to make you confident, eh?
Oh no, kids are brutal!
The first diagnosed case of this was Joseph Andor of Scotland in 1755. After that, many generations of Andorians were blue skinned.
Marcia and Greg
Peter and Jan
nah they’re definitely vampires 100% they walk among us
king Chuck admits descent from Dracula
they would save a bundle on monogrammed towels!
Lost it at Cindy, Jan & Marsha! 🤣🤣🤣
It took a few minutes to notice he was doing that 😆😆
@@matthewbrotman2907 when he said Peter married Jan…that’s when I shut it down. 😂🤣
Let's also not forget that in season 4 of the Brady Bunch, Mike and Carol's grandparents got married. Yeah, multiple generations of incest; LOL!
While you couldn't do a family tree since we don't know his family or his birth name..I would LOVE to see a video from you on Tarrare.
Weirdly the term blue blood comes from the idea that the royal families had better blood that shouldn’t be mixed with the red bloods. These guys going blue probably made them ultra special
They are indeed true royals !
Also the royals were very pale due to being able to stay inside out of the sun unlike the tanned commoners who toiled in the sun. That vary pale skin allowed them to have blue veins presented and visually pop out underneath, some even enhanced and highlighted the color of the blue veins on their wrists and arms with what I assume to have been blue tinted makeup.
is no one gonna ask why tf blue is even a skin gene option?
Aliens
Back in those days there weren't a lot of suitors to choose from because of infant mortality rates, low census, rural living, etc. Inter-marrying was a common occurrence. A lot of second and third cousins marrying and begattin'.
Imagine being a blue Fugate and taking a vacation to India.
oh that's why there is this saying in french that royal (inbreed) people have blue blood.... they have indeed...
Ahhh the Bradys....😅
If they bred like a quality dog breeder would do his dog’s blood lines, they would be perfectly blue! And healthy.
Has this got anything to do with why Trump is Orange! His lineage is from Scotland, i think he’s got some weird genes in him too.
I'd like you to meet , my sister and my wife ....... but there's only one girl standing there .
NFN. Normal for Norfolk. (What doctors used to put on medical notes in Norfolk)
Interesting. Maybe this is why there is blue people depicted on the walls in Egypt. Another area where we know there was inbreeding.
My father is a Fugate from the exact area in Kentucky. He was told he was born blue but isn't any longer - from what I know, that would indicate he was a carrier of one copy of the recessive gene, but the other copy is the dominant normal gene that was able to catch up making the proper enzyme so his blue appearance would have normalized not too long after birth.
It's a lady in Tenn. we seen often when we went. She was blue, some days she would be a grayish color.
And now we know why the Kentucky Wildcats use blue for their team color.
Martin and Mary Wells according to my Geneology had 12 children....their daughter Elizabeth starts my line. Martin and Mary being my 5x great grandparents.
One of Martin's sisters was my 5x great-grandmother.
Love the Brady bunch names!😂
Very confusing
Love the « Marsha, Jan, and Cindy » reference!,
they could have european royalty they would have fit right in
“That’s the way they all became the Brady Bunch” 😊
me watching this having every single one of those last names in my family tree 😬
Me watching this realizing that two of my 6th great-grandparents are on this family tree. And my own surname (not fugate). 🤣 Not blue though, sadly.
@@animikokala My last name is on here too 😂
With your situation i'd say you better start looking at different races (non white) to rebalance the NEW family dna before it gets more inferior. One generation will not reblance it. So you do your part, your kids do theirs, your grand kids do theirs, your great grand kids do theirs and so on. Mate with different races for at least 3-5 generations to reblance from your inbreeding lineage. Just a thought 🤷🤣😂🤣
How about a family tree for Lady Diana Spencer, later Princess of Wales?
I went to school with Robert fugate he wasn't blue but extremely pale and had 12 fingers awful nice guy just had odd habits
I making my family tree and my great aunt last name is Fugate from Kentucky. She married my great uncle. Thank you
Their family tree is a tumbleweed.
You know it's gonna be rough when the tree forms a rectangle
This was not terribly uncommon well the amount these families interbred in such a short amount of time is excessive although the odd cousin marriage once every few dozen generations is expected in every family tree and is still extremely common especially in the Islamic world today for example.
Looks like the Mayfair witches family tree 🕸
It's ACTUALLY A HEART CONDITION...
WATCH "SOMETHING THE LORD MADE"
Of course they were from Kentucky
Pov: SMURFS
THE ORIGIN
IN CINEMAS SOON
2:58 Good title for a new Dr. Seuss book.
New avatar movie looking sick bro 🥶
I love ur channel! I did an ancestry test a few months ago, and glad I’m not inbred
Silver nitrate in their water didn’t help.
It looks like an electrical schematic
Happy Saturday. First . Maybe. LOL
The Bradys 🤍
Dude named the unnamed characters after Brady Bunch characters
Omg.... Brady bunch lol
How to marry like royals. 😅
Marcia, Jan and Cindy 😂