A National Geographic Society DNA test reveals that the
Blake Family is not Celtic Irish or Anglo
Saxon, but "ultra-Norse," descended from Danish Vikings. Blaecs (Old English) were "huscarls," their feudal lords' field officers and long-ship chieftains, "men of renown" who settled in the vicinity of Rouen,
France, in the
AD 850s. Attached to the court of the dukes of Normandy, a Blaec accompanied
William the Conqueror to England for the Battle of Hastings in 1066.
After the English Civil War of the 1640s, Admiral Sir
Robert Blake, 1599-1657, commanded the nation's entire war fleet for
Oliver Cromwell's Puritan Commonwealth. Fighting the Netherlands,
France, Spain, Portugal and the Barbary Pirates in the 1650s,
Blake's administrative reforms and his tactical battle instructions, in use through the Napoleonic Wars, earned him the title, "Father of the
Royal Navy." By "making England terrible at sea," Adm.
Blake laid the foundation for the British Empire.
In the mid-1600s, branches of the English
Blake family immigrated to Massachusetts, Maryland,
Virginia and South
Carolina. Lt.
Col.
John Blake, c.1626-1705, Adm.
Blake's first cousin once removed, owned a 3,200-acre corn and tobacco plantation in Virgina, sat in the House of Burgesses, and was sheriff of Nansemond County.
John Young Fillmore "
Beau"
Blake, 1856-1907, was a West Point officer with the 6th U.S. Cavalry in the final Apache Wars in Arizona and New Mexico in the 1880s. In March 1884 Apache Chief
Geronimo adopted the tall, handsome lieutenant as "my brother," the only white man to be so honored. Having resigned from the army in 1889,
Blake went to South
Africa, where he explored the Zambezi
River and
Lake Kariba, and commanded the Transvaal Republic's Irish Brigade for President
Paul Kruger in the Anglo-Boer War of 1899-1902. "Under Brilliant Stars," a biography of
Col.
Blake with the 1,160-year history of his family, is in progress.