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    Fugates of Kentucky: Skin Bluer than Lake Louise

    Benjamin "Benjy" Stacy so frightened maternity doctors with the color of his skin -- "as Blue as Lake Louise" -- that he was rushed just hours after his birth in 1975 to University of Kentucky Medical Center.

    As a transfusion was being readied, the baby's grandmother suggested to doctors that he looked like the "blue Fugates of Troublesome Creek." Relatives described the boy's great-grandmother Luna Fugate as "blue all over," and "the bluest woman I ever saw."

    In an unusual story that involves both genetics and geography, an entire family from isolated Appalachia was tinged blue. Their ancestral line began six generations earlier with a French orphan, Martin Fugate who settled in Eastern Kentucky.

    Doctors don't see much of the rare blood disorder today, because mountain people have dispersed and the family gene pool is much more diverse.

    But the Fugates' story still offers a window into a medical mystery that was solved through modern genetics and the sleuth-like energy of Dr. Madison Cawein III, a hematologist at the University of Kentucky's Lexington Medical Clinic.

    Cawein died in 1985, but his family charts and blood samples led to a sharper understanding of the recessive diseases that only surface if both parents carry a defective gene.

    Fugate's great-great-great-great grandson Benjamin "Benjy" Stacy so frightened maternity doctors when he was born in 1975, that they rushed him to a University of Kentucky medical clinic.

    As a transfusion was being readied, Benjy's grandmother suggested to doctors that the boy looked like the "blue Fugates of Troublesome Creek." Relatives described the boy's great-grandmother Luna Fugate as "blue all over" and "the bluest woman I ever saw."

    The most detailed account, "Blue People of Troublesome Creek," was published in 1982 by the University of Indiana's Cathy Trost, who described Benjy's skin as "almost purple."

    The Fugate progeny had a genetic condition called methemoglobinemia, which was passed down through a recessive gene and blossomed through intermarriage.

    "It's a fascinating story," said Dr. Ayalew Tefferi, a hematologist from Minnesota's Mayo Clinic. "It also exemplifies the intersection between disease and society, and the danger of misinformation and stigmatization."

    Methemoglobinemia is a blood disorder in which an abnormal amount of methemoglobin -- a form of hemoglobin -- is produced, according to the National Institutes for Health. Hemoglobin is responsible for distributing oxygen to the body and without oxygen, the heart, brain and muscles can die.

    In methemoglobinemia, the hemoglobin is unable to carry oxygen and it also makes it difficult for unaffected hemoglobin to release oxygen effectively to body tissues. Patients' lips are purple, the skin looks blue and the blood is "chocolate colored" because it is not oxygenated, according to Tefferi.

    "You almost never see a patient with it today," he said. "It's a disease that one learns about in medical school and it is infrequent enough to be on every exam in hematology."

    The disorder can be inherited, as was the case with the Fugate family, or caused by exposure to certain drugs and chemicals such as anesthetic drugs like benzocaine and xylocaine. The carcinogen benzene and nitrites used as meat additives can also be culprits, as well as certain antibiotics, including dapsone and chloroquine.

    The genetic form of methemoglobinemia is caused by one of several genetic defects, according to Tefferi. The Fugates probably had a deficiency in the enzyme called cytochrome-b5 methemoglobin reductase, which is responsible for recessive congenital methemoglobinemia.

    Normally, people have less approximately 1 percent of methemoglobin, a type of hemoglobin that is altered by being oxidized so is useless in carrying oxygen in the blood. When those levels rise to greater than 20 percent, heart abnormalities and seizures and even death can occur.

    But at levels of between 10 and 20 percent a person can develop blue skin without any other symptoms. Most of blue Fugates never suffered any health effects and lived into their 80s and 90s.

    "If you are between 1 percent and 10 percent, no one knows you have an abnormal level and this might be the case in a lot of unsuspecting patients," he said.

    Many other recessive gene diseases, such as sickle cell anemia, Tay Sachs and cystic fibrosis can be lethal, he said.

    "If I carry a bad recessive gene with a rare abnormality and married, the child probably wouldn't be sick, because it's very rare to meet another person with the [same] bad gene and the most frequent cause therefore is in-breeding," Tefferi said.

    Such was the case with the Fugates.

    Martin Fugate came to Troublesome Creek from France in 1820 and family folklore says he was blue. He married Elizabeth Smith, who also carried the recessive gene. Of their seven children, four were reported to be blue.

    There were no railroads and few roads outside the region, so the community remained small and isolated. The Fugates married other Fugate cousins and families who lived nearby, with names like Combs, Smith, Ritchie and Stacy.

    Benjy's father, Alva Stacy showed Trost his family tree and remarked, "If you'll notice -- I'm kin to myself," according to Trost.

    One of Martin and Elizabeth Fugate's blue boys, Zachariah, married his mother's sister. One of their sons, Levy, married a Ritchie girl and had eight children, one of them Luna. Luna married John E. Stacy and they had 13 children.

    Benjy descended from the Stacy line.

    Modern Fugates Still in Kentucky

    ABCNews.com was unable to determine if Benjamin Stacy is still alive -- he would be 37 today. Trost writes that he eventually lost the blue tint to his skin, but as a child his lips and fingernails still got blue when he was angry or cold.

    His mother Hilda Stacy, who is 56, appears to still live in Hazard, Ky., but did not answer calls to her home. Other relatives are scattered throughout Virginia and Arkansas.

    Most of what scientists know about the family was discovered by Cawein, the grandson of Kentucky's poet laureate, who had done pioneering research on L-dopa as a treatment for Parkinson's disease.

    Later in 1965 he was famous for another reason. His wife was murdered by chemical poisoning, but no one was ever indicted.

    Cawein heard rumors about the Fugates while working at his Lexington clinic and set off "tromping around the hills looking for blue people," according to Trost's account.

    At an American Heart Association clinic in the town of Hazard, Cawein found a nurse, Ruth Pendergrass, and she was willing to assist. She remembered a dark blue woman who had come to the county health department on a frigid afternoon seeking a blood test.

    "Her face and her fingernails were almost indigo blue," she told Trost. "It like scared me to death. She looked like she was having a heart attack. I just knew that patient was going to die right there in the health department, but she wasn't a'tall alarmed. She told me that her family was the blue Combses who lived up on Ball Creek. She was a sister to one of the Fugate women."

    More families were found -- Luke Combs, and Patrick and Rachel Ritchie, who were "bluer'n hell" and embarrassed by their skin color.

    Cawein and Pendergrass began to ask questions -- "Do you have any relatives who are blue?" -- and mapped a family tree and took blood samples.

    The doctor suspected methemoglobinemia and uncovered a 1960 report in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. Dr. E. M. Scott, who worked in public health at the Arctic Research Center in Anchorage, had seen a recessive genetic trait among Alaskans that turned their skin blue.

    That suggested an inbred line that had been passed from generation to generation. To get the disorder, a person would have to inherit two genes -- one from each parent. When both parents have the trait, their children have a 25 percent chance of getting the disorder.

    Scott speculated these people lacked the enzyme diaphorase in their red blood cells. Normally diaphorase converts methemoglobin back to hemoglobin.

    All of the blue Fugates he tested had the enzyme deficiency, just like the Alaskans Scott had observed.

    Their blood had accumulated so much of the blue molecule that it over-powered the red hemoglobin that normally turns skin pink in most Caucasians.

    The bluest of the bunch was Luna, and she lived a healthy life, bearing 13 children before she died at the age of 84.

    As coal mining arrived in Kentucky in 1912 and the Fugates moved outside of Troublesome Creek, the blue people began to disappear.

    Doctors say Benjy likely carried only one gene for methemoglobinemia, because he eventually had normal skin tones, and the likelihood of him marrying a woman with the same recessive gene would have been small.

    By the time reports appeared in the media on the disorder, the Stacy family was upset with insinuations about in-breeding that fed into stereotypes of backwoods Appalachia.

    "There was a pain not seen in lab tests," wrote Trost. "That was the pain of being blue in a world that is mostly shades of white to black."

    Also Read
     
    • linguist  •  21 hrs ago
      I knew of the "Blue Fugates" phenomenon some years back. The article laid it out pretty well. There is a story on the Melungeons today as well. It's worth reading if you're into genealogy. Great reading!
      • ConnieD 19 hrs ago
        I read the Melungeon article as well as this one and found them both facinating. I have a vested interest in the Mulungeon article as I have traced some of my ancestors to this group. I am now thinking seriously about doing the DNA tests just to see if my families stories have any validity or not.
    • linguist  •  21 hrs ago
      There was a time when community and family was hard to distinguish. It wasn't that long ago and it is true today in many places. This goes for America and just about anywhere else in the world.
    • ConnieD  •  18 hrs ago
      An absolutly amazing story! Since I am my familie's unofficial historian I can say without a doubt there it was very common for small groups of families to intermarry in the early years of this country. One example is Daniel Boone, he and two of his brothers married sisters of the Bryan family. Their familie's relationship were interlinked for generations before and after Boone's Station.
      • A Yahoo! user 16 hrs ago
        Where do you think Cain and Abel got their wives?
      • Mickey N 15 hrs ago
        I'm from Eastern Ky, and I have never heard of them. I lived 15 to 20 miles away from where they are located
      • Shannon Statler 14 hrs ago
        Abel never got maried, he was murdered, After the murder God confronted him and he left, after awhile he met a woman and married her.
    • Actor  •  18 hrs ago
      if they moved to Asia would they be seen as God-people?
    • Anne H  •  Wallingford, Connecticut  •  7 hrs ago
      This can be due to a lack of Niacin Vitamin B3 because Niacin Vitamin B3 and Vitamin B12 help to bring oxygen to the system !
    • igotJesus  •  Mountain Home, Arkansas  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      yea buddy
    • Chuck  •  Roanoke, Virginia  •  22 hrs ago
      I wonder about the term "blue blood" used in reference to the "royals". It is my understanding that inbreeding is extensive throughout all the European royal families.

      Chuck
    • j  •  Owensboro, Kentucky  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      Make good Kentucky Wildcat fans, and in off season Indianapolis Colts fans
    • idamannowdog  •  Lexington, Kentucky  •  1 day 2 hrs ago
      I bet he had the blues.
    • T  •  13 hrs ago
      One of my dearest freinds in a Fugate, not a Blue, but oddly a Melungeon as recent testing showed. The testing was done for the fun of it just to find more information on who we are. Highly recommend it, cheap no, worth it, of course.
    • LotterywinnerJimmy  •  17 hrs ago
      I suppose we could all chat about this until we're blue in the face.
    • Nonya  •  15 hrs ago
      This is a great story for the sanctity of marriage and why we shouldn't let gays get married. (sarcasm) Because we need more blue people and disease running around these inbred backwoods states. Nasty people.
      • Sherri 5 hrs ago
        OMG Nonya, Didn't you get the memo? "Gays" can't reproduce!! Really as a women of color, you of all people should understand how the biased and hatefuly opinionated persons can create the intolerance of others! I'm SURE you'd be the 1st to holler racism if someone exchanged the word blue to black. Shame on you!
      • Paul E 3 hrs ago
        Don't get upset, Sherri. Nonya is probably 12-years-old and living in HIS momma's basement. ;-)
    • Georgina  •  2 hrs 25 mins ago
      Science thinks it is an abnormality due to lack of this and that or that it is genes related, however the blue skinned individuals are very healthy and living long lives. We know that some deities in India were also blue skinned and by ancient alien theorists they are though to be extra terrestrials that visited earth tens of thousands of yeas ago. Maybe there was a gene mutation with the help of some aliens and so these people have alien genes. Interestingly the name of the woman who had 13 children and was very blue skinned was Luna!
    • DJ 33 1/3  •  New York, New York  •  7 hrs ago
      This of course makes the complexities of the construction of anatomy & physiology to the point where, we had to have evolved rather than been created in our current form; for to just miss on enzyme that converts the blue hemoglobin to the natural green - which means that in order to create man (if God did) he would have also had to have created this failsafe to deliver oxygen to our cells. I do believe in God though, & don't want to start a fight, this is just an example of an argument of the intricasies of bodily design.
    • Atomus  •  San Diego, California  •  20 days ago
      Colloidal Silver has been exonerated, while the newmedia has been harping on Paul Karason, and other people that were reported to have argyria, with this finding its possible that they may have been misdiagnosed and instead have "methemoglobin". With over 20 million users of colloidal silver, if it were that dangerous, you would see blue people on every corner, maybe 1 out of 20. The fact is that most of the 5 people that have been found to have argyria are actually genetically proned to being blue.
    • ToothAche  •  Yakima, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      This is one of the most informative articles I have read in days, Thank you.
      • Charles 2 mths ago
        and stolen by Yahoo as usual
      • igotJesus 1 day 1 hr ago
        we all fell a tremblin wen I her 'bout 'ol mother havin' dem 'ol blues......
    • Rolanda  •  3 mths ago
      inbreeding isn't limited to those regions, its been going on for centuries in all countried. the more isolated the community the higher the inbreeding becomes. we see so little of it now, due to modes of travel. kids leaving home (not just the house, but the town) and heading to parts unknown. and it makes you go hmmmm no wonder the royals (monarchy and uber rich) are called blue bloods. ;)
      • DittaL 3 mths ago
        Yes your right travel has become more easy as the result of vehicles and planes since then.
      • ย  3 mths ago
        You should look up King Charles II of Spain. That poor guy was seriously screwed-up by all of the inbreeding in his family.
      • Matthew 3 mths ago
        If Mr. Sweater Vest and RP have their way......those days will be back
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      My Mother is a Fugate from Ball Creek. A time or 2 I have turned blue, and of course know about the Fugate Blue Blood history. Can't believe it made the news!!!
    • M  •  3 mths ago
      Doing genealogy, I found out that it was pretty common for folks to marry their cousins back in the day, no matter where they were from. It was accepted back then. Now I don't know about that guy marrying his aunt. That's beyond the beyonds.
    • Look here  •  3 mths ago
      I did a report on this in college a few years ago. Benjy lives in Kentucky, went to UofK in the 1990s, and has kept a low profile.
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