Before royal titles, global headlines, and an audience of millions, Meghan Markle was simply a young girl growing up in Los Angeles, navigating childhood questions about identity, belonging, and family in a multicultural American city.
Born on August 4, 1981, to Doria Ragland and Thomas Markle Sr., Meghan entered the world as the daughter of a Black mother and a white father, a background that shaped many of her early experiences.
Her parents’ relationship ended when she was still young, but both remained present in her upbringing during her early childhood, each contributing to the values and perspectives that would later influence her personal journey.
Growing up biracial in the 1980s and 1990s sometimes meant navigating social environments where identity categories felt rigid. Meghan has spoken openly about how she occasionally struggled to understand where she fit within those expectations.

In interviews, she explained that people often made assumptions about her background based solely on appearance. These assumptions sometimes created awkward moments when she was out in public with her mother.
Her mother, Doria Ragland, worked in several professions during Meghan’s childhood, including as a makeup artist and later as a social worker and yoga instructor, building a life through determination and resilience.
Her father, Thomas Markle Sr., worked behind the scenes in television production as a lighting director and director of photography, spending many years working on the popular sitcom Married… with Children.


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