Showing posts with label Beauty Pageant families. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beauty Pageant families. Show all posts

Monday, December 15, 2014

Megan Young: Tracing her Paternal Grandmother's Genealogy

In a few hours a new Miss World will be crowned by Megan Young, last year’s Miss World winner.

Megan Young added another first for the Philippines when she won for the country the crown of Miss World in 2013. Though the Philippines placed several times in this pageant in the past this was the first time that the country got the coveted title. By winning the crown this also completed the country’s possession of the major beauty titles of the world: Miss Universe, Miss International, Miss Earth, and finally, Miss World.

It was no wonder that the missosologists in the Philippines trumpeted this victory far and wide. But Filipinos were not the only ones who were overjoyed with Young’s victory. Because Megan Young was half-Filipino and half-American people from the United States were also claiming her victory as their own. Just as Filipinos love to claim anyone in the world who has done something unique or who has won any type of award or title no matter how small the Filipino ancestry, so are Americans also happy to claim Megan Young as their own considering several things: she was born in the United States, she carries an American last name, and her family still lives in the US.

Although I would have loved to trace her maternal, Filipino family tree to celebrate the beauty and empowerment of women as well as her turning over the title of Miss World to her successor, records are a little scarce for the moment so I have decided to trace her paternal grandmother’s side, which has quite a lot of available information online.

Megan Lynne Young was born to Victoria Talde, a Filipina whose roots are from Pandan, Antique, and Calvin Cole Young III. Calvin’s parents, Calvin Young, Jr. and Ella McCaleb, live in Natchez, Mississippi. The McCaleb’s roots are very deep and prominent in Mississippi, and before that to South Carolina and even before that to Scotland, where they belonged to several important clans.

The earliest of Ella McCaleb’s known ancestor is William MacKillop who was born in Loch Aber, Scotland in 1695. He married Mary McDonnell McDonald of the Keppoch Clan. The McKillips were believed to be a branch of the Keppoch Clan, thus making him a relative of his wife Mary.  The family believe that the earliest McCalebs were probably Roman Catholic and were opposed to the Tudor rulers of England. Both the McKillip and McDonnell clans fought in the battles to return Bonnie Prince Charles to the throne of England.

One of their sons, William Neil McKillip, born in 1715, married Sarah McAlpin, who was the daughter of a highland chieftain of the McAlpin clan. Some traditions of the family suggest that William Neil and Sarah eloped to Dublin, Ireland. Whatever the truth, William Neil (McKillip) McCaleb and his wife Sarah were the first McCalebs to set foot in the American colonies in 1746. They landed in South Carolina together with other exiled supporters of Bonnie Prince Charles.

It was William Neil’s and Sarah’s son William McCaleb, who settled in Mississippi and founded the line that has given birth to Megan Young. William married Ann Mackey and they had five children. According to the family’s official history: “William McCaleb served as Captain in the patriot army in the Revolutionary War under Generals Marion and Pickins. He commanded a company of Hussars or Horse of the 91st Militia, South Carolina Line. He participated in the battles of Camden, the Cowpens, Eutaw Springs, Ninety-Six, the siege of Charleston and Guilford Court House.

“William McCaleb and his family were living in the Pendleton District of South Carolina in 1784. William McCaleb and Wade Hampton represented the South of Saluda District at the South Carolina Convention which ratified the Federal Constitution.

“Later, in 1799, William McCaleb and his family moved from the Pendleton District, S.C. to Mississippi, settling on the Bayou Pierre, Claiborne County, Mississippi and served as a member of the territorial legislature of Mississippi.”

From the Horstman Family webpage where the McCaleb genealogy is extensively discussed, the earliest ancestor in the webpage is John McCaleb, son of William and Ann. John McCaleb married Maria Collins and had 3 children. One of these 3 was James Franklin McCaleb, who married Sophie Washington Moore. One of their children, Douglas Bisland McCaleb, married Louisa Witherspoon Robson, whose son, Sydney Briscoe McCaleb, is the father of Ella McCaleb-Young.

Ella McCaleb-Young and her husband, grandparents of Miss World 2013 Megan Young
(from the Natchez Democrat website)

In one news article after Megan Young’s coronation, Ella McCaleb Young was interviewed and she and her husband Calvin couldn’t stop being so proud about their granddaughter. Truly, though Megan Young won the title of Miss World for the Philippines, her American side has every right to claim her victory as theirs. From a Pinoy genealogist’s point of view, the genealogy of Megan Young just goes to prove that while our genes are spreading to almost every corner of the globe, the same can also be said of other nationalities marrying into our citizens. As the world grows smaller and smaller, so do families become more intertwined and intermingled with one another.

Sources:

Monday, April 22, 2013

Filipino Beauty Pageants: A Family Affair

Beauty in the family. From L-R, T-B: Anita Noble and her daughter Edith Nakpil, Pura Villanueva
and daughter Maria V. Kalaw, and Nieves Gonzales and granddaughter Margie Moran. 
Although this write-up is more for the benefit of the readers of my good friend and fellow blogger, Domz of Kattera, as with my previous article on the inter-relatedness on Filipinopolitical families, this article will work on the same concept. That is, that all famous personalities in the Philippines are related.

The other night, my missosologist friend asked me if I could write a brief article on beauty pageants so he could list my Genealogy blog as one of his favorite blogs. Naturally, the first thing to cross my mind was to connect various beauty pageant titleholders to each other.

So let us start with "the first". The first ever Miss Philippines. This was Anita Agoncillo Noble, a granddaughter of another "first", Felipe Encarnacion Agoncillo, the first Filipino diplomat. The choosing of Anita Noble as the first Ms. Philippines can be best recounted through the souvenir program of those times:

"In 1926, a nationwide beauty search was announced which was generally greeted with enthusiasm. Just as it is now practiced in international beauty searches, the local candidates are pitted against each other until the most beautiful is discovered. This was generally how most of the local Ms. Pageants were conducted in 1926. In Batangas, however, the provincial governor already had a candidate in mind. He then cancelled the search in his province and named Anita Noble from Lemery, Batangas as “Miss Batangas” who was then immediately sent to the national contest.

"The candidates for Ms. Philippines attended a tea dance party given by the Bachelors’ Club at the Hotel de Francia along Avenida Rizal, were paraded in the evening in decorated automobiles around Rizal, Escolta, Taft Avenue and ending at the Manila Grand Carnival auditorium at the Luneta. Alighting from the cars, the candidates boarded individual wheeled chariots bearing the name of their respective provinces. Before an adoring crowd and a panel of judges, the candidates were thus presented and voted on.

"The regional winners—Misses Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao—proved easy to choose. When it came to awarding the Miss Philippines title there was a tie between Miss Zamboanga (Carmen Fargas) and Miss Batangas (Anita Noble). A more stringent process then followed in order to break the deadlock, with even the president of the Commonwealth, Manuel L. Quezon, joining in the process. Noble and Fargas were even, at one point, asked to wear simple baro at saya without any makeup. Finally, Noble earned the honor of becoming the first Filipina to be awarded with a national beauty title."

Anita went on to marry Juan Nakpil, the son of composer and revolutionary hero Julio Garcia Nakpil and Gregoria de Jesus, widow of Katipunan founder Andres Bonifacio. Two of Anita and Juan's daughters became beauty titlists themselves: Annie, who became Ms. Batangas, and Edith, who also bore the title Ms. Philippines  in 1955 and would have represented the country in the Ms. Universe pageant in 1956 but decided not to join. 

Anita's marriage into the Nakpil family also gives us our first connection with another beauty titlist. Juan Nakpil's uncle, Ramon Melecio, younger brother of Julio, had a son, Angel Nakpil, who married Carmen Guerrero Cruz, whose daughter from her first husband, Ismael A. Cruz, was Gemma Guerrero Cruz-Araneta, another first in Philippine pageants. Gemma Cruz represented the Philippines in the 1964 Ms. International beauty pageant held in Long Beach, California. By winning that year's crown she became the first Filipina to win the Ms. International title. True to her heritage, being a Rizal descendant, she apparently donated her $10,000.00 prize to the orphanages Boys' Town and Girls' Home.

And then, two of Gemma's first cousins, Paz and Maria Cruz Banaad, married Bienvenido and Roberto Laurel, respectively, relatives of President Jose P. Laurel. It must be recalled that one of President Laurel's sons, Vice-President Salvador "Doy" Laurel, had a dalliance with 1967 Bb. Pilipinas-Universe contestant Pilar Pilapil.

Another connection of Gemma Cruz Araneta is through her husband's prominent family. Gemma's marriage to Antonio Sebastian Araneta goes on to connect her further with many beauty pageant winners. A distant cousin of Antonio Sebastian (5th cousin, once removed) is Jorge Leon Araneta, whose wife is Stella Marquez, formerly from Colombia and the first woman to win the title of Ms. International. Jorge Araneta's sister, Judy Araneta, married Senator Gerardo Roxas, whose mother, Trinidad de Leon Roxas, was not only first lady of the Philippines but was also the Queen of the 1920 Carnival of Victory.

Meanwhile, Gerardo's half sister, Charo Roxas Moran, was the mother of Margarita "Margie" Moran Floirendo, the 1972 Ms. Universe winner. Margie Moran's paternal grandmother, Nieves Gonzales Moran, became the Queen of the Pangasinan Carnival of 1919. Nieves's first cousin, Augusto, was married to the 1916 Manila Carnival Queen, Manolita Barretto.

Antonio Sebastian's first cousin is Greggy Araneta, husband of Irene R. Marcos, in turn the daughter of President Ferdinand Marcos and Imelda Romualdez Marcos, herself a winner of several beauty titles such as Ms. Leyte and the Rose of Tacloban. She also was awarded the title Muse of Manila when she failed to win the Ms. Manila title. Imelda's own first cousin, Amelia Z. Romualdez, was named Ms. Leyte of 1927 and went on to compete but failed to win in the Ms. Philippines beauty contest. Imelda's eldest daughter, Imee Marcos, married Tommy Manotoc, whose first wife was Aurora Pijuan, the 1970 Ms. International titleholder.

Furthermore, another first cousin of Imelda's was Danieling Romualdez, who married Pacita Gueco whose first cousin was Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr. Ninoy's own mother, Aurora Aquino Aquino, served as one of the princesses in the 1927 Petit Carnival of Concepcion, Tarlac. Ninoy's second cousin was Eva Estrada Kalaw, whose husband, Teodoro Kalaw, Jr., was the son of Pura Villanueva Kalaw, the first ever Carnival Queen in the Philippines. She was named Queen of the Orient in 1908, to distinguish her from the Caucasian beauty that was also named Queen of the Occident. Pura's daughter Maria Kalaw would later follow in her footsteps and be crowned 1931 Ms. Philippines.

Finally, Ninoy Aquino's marriage to Corazon Cojuangco goes on to relate the Aquinos with the Cojuangcos, whose one member, Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr., was Cory's first cousin. A son of Eduardo Jr. is Carlos "Charlie" Cojuangco whose wife, Rio Diaz, was a younger sister of Gloria Diaz, the first Filipina to win the title of Ms. Universe.

Of course, it is quite obvious that the beauty queens of yesteryear were connected in one way or another. Just like politics, beauty pageants in the past were not as democratized as today and only the well-born and the daughters of the elite competed or were chosen to be contestants.

Regardless, in the end, just like everything else in the Philippines, beauty pageants and pageant winners have proven to be a family affair.

© 2013. Todd S. Lucero / Filipino Genealogy Project
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Sources for the photos and the article:

1. Alex R. Castro's Manila Carnival blogsite
2. Lipa City Tourism and Heritage: Lipa's Famous Families
3. Araneta Family Tree
4. Miss Universe website