Gullah is the dialect, a combination of west African, English, French and Carribean words and dialects. Geechee is a term signifying the people of the barrier island regions who speak Gullah.
There are very few Geechee left now that Dafuskie Island has been developed. Pat Conroy wrote one of his very early books "Conrack" based upon a year that he spent teaching school on Dafuskie in the early 70s. He does a pretty good job "pigeoning" the dialect into print as most of the speakers of Gullah were not literate and it was rarely, if ever, written.
My grandfather grew up on one of the barrier islands near Charleston and was very comfortable conversing in Gullah with the Geechee until his death a few years ago.
Having grown up in that part of the country, i'm not so sure that anyone I knew thought of Frogmore Stew (most towns call the stew by their own town name-Frogmore has stuck outside the region because it is unique) was a bastardized of anything. Instead, I think that its components, shrimp, sweet corn, smoked sausage and onion reflected the regionalism of the local harvest on those islands where basically, all of those things could be had for free if you didn't mind tending your own garden plot or raising and butchering your own hog. It's a truly unique regional dish.
Last edited by
YourPalWill on October 21st, 2004, 7:24 am, edited 1 time in total.