Music
Elvis Presley's ethnicity includes several nationalities, including Native American. The singer and actor paid tribute to his ethnicity in one film.
Updated on November 20, 2023
Published on March 23, 2021
2 min readElvis Presley is remembered as a legend for his music and movies, however, his ethnicity is less well-known. The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll had a multicultural background. Here’s a look at his ancestry — and how one of his movies reflected it.
Firstly, here’s a look at Elvis’ parent’s ethnicities. On his mother’s side, Elvis had some Native American ancestry, specifically Cherokee ancestry. According to the book Elvis and Gladys, his maternal great-great-great grandmother was a Cherokee woman named Morning White Dove. She married a man named William Mansell, who was of French ancestry. They got married at a time when marriage between Native Americans and white people was not uncommon in the American South.
As a teenager, Mansell fought alongside future president Andrew Jackson at the 1814 Battle of Horseshoe Bend in the Mississippi territory. Mansell and Morning White Dove had three children who survived to adulthood, including Elvis’ great-great-grandfather, John Mansell. John fathered a son named White.
According to Snopes, White married Martha Tackett. Tackett had a Jewish mother. Elvis and Gladys reports Tackett became the mother of Doll Mansell, who became the mother of Gladys Presley, Elvis’ mom. Gladys has a Star of David on her gravestone, an acknowledgment of her heritage.
Elvis’ paternal line is very different. According to Elvis Australia, the singer descended from a German vine dresser named Johannes Valentin Bressler who moved to New York in 1710. As time went on, the family’s last name evolved from Bressler to Presley.
Bressler was the ancestor of a woman named Minnie Mae, who became the mother of Vernon Presley. Vernon was Elvis’ father. The Presley family welcomed Elvis on Jan. 8, 1935, in Tupelo, Mississippi. In honor of Minnie Mae, there’s an ice cream parlor named Minnie Mae’s Sweets in Memphis, Tennessee — the same city Graceland is in.
It may come as a surprise to learn Elvis Presley’s ethnicity includes a Native American heritage. However, one of his movies reflects this part of his family tree. Elvis starred in a Western musical/drama called Flaming Star in 1960. In the film, he played a man with a Native American mother and a white father. While many Westerns portray Native Americans in a negative light, Flaming Star is sympathetic in its portrayal. The film was released during the civil rights movement and arguably mirrors changing attitudes about race in America.
According to the book Elvis Presley: Silver Screen Icon, the Los Angeles Tribal Indian Community liked Elvis’ performance in the film. Because of this, the community inducted him into their tribe. Despite this positive reception toward the film, it didn’t become a huge box office success. Neither did it produce an enduring soundtrack single like “Jailhouse Rock” or “Blue Hawaii.” Regardless, Flaming Star reflected Elvis’ multicultural roots.
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7pLTEmqusoJWawW%2BvzqZmnqakmr%2B1rcinpJ6mpGSyrcLIrGSpqpWouabFjJ6roaaZmLa1xYyfmKahnK56qbXSraarsV6dwa64jg%3D%3D