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<div id="fsButtons"><span class="online_records_button">[[African American Online Genealogy Records]]</span></div>
* Strategies for discovering your African American


== Introduction ==
ancestors in various periods of history:
This section describes strategies for discovering African American ancestors in various periods of history:
*Beginning Your Search
*Searching Recent Records
*Searching Transition Records from Slavery to Freedom
*Searching Records for Enslaved Persons
Most of these records are available through the [https://www.familysearch.org/ FamilySearch] or other similar websites, such as [https://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry] ($) and [https://www.myheritage.com/ MyHeritage] ($).


== Beginning Your Search ==
*
=== Gathering Information ===
** Beginning Your Search
To begin researching, write down what your family knows about your ancestors. Interview the older generation, including grandparents, aunts, and uncles. The knowledge gained from interviewing these relatives will be beneficial in finding ancestors in the actual records. Record and keep track of names, dates, and places on family group record forms or other such documents.
** Searching Recent Records
** Searching Transition Records from Slavery to
=== Research Tips ===
** Freedom
Here are some tips when researching:
** Searching Records for Slaves
*Search as many kinds of records as you can find to document the lives of your family back to 1870.
* The most useful records and indexes to search.
*Study the lives of all family members, including aunts, uncles, and cousins—not just your direct ancestors.
*Look for changing surnames. Some African Americans changed surnames several times. If you can’t find your family in a census record, but you know the family’s location at the time of the census, look for first names and approximate ages of family members. You may find a match.
*If your ancestor is not listed in an index, check the original records anyway. Some indexes do not include African Americans.
*Understand that some old records may have described your ancestor in terms used at the time that are not considered appropriate today.
*African Americans may be listed in "colored" registers. You may also see the abbreviation "Col" next to your ancestor’s name.  This was common practice in many states even after the civil war and emancipation.
*If your ancestor is not in a "colored" register, try the "white" register. Your ancestor’s race may not have been accurately recorded.


See [[How to Begin a Search for Your Ancestor|''How Do I Begin?'']] for more information.
Most of these records are available through the Family History Library and Family History Centers. The letters FHL begin the Family History Library call number of the record described.


=== Searching Recent Records  ===
* Specific information you need to trace your African American ancestors.


Start with the most recent generations. Look at general federal and state records and then look at records specifically for African Americans.
=== BEGINNING YOUR SEARCH ===


For more instructions on finding African American families in recent U.S. records, see [https://www.familysearch.org/blog/en/tracing-africanamerican-ancestors/ Tracing Your African-American Genealogy].
*
==== General United States Records  ====
** Write down what your family knows about your ancestors.
** Record names, dates, and places on family group record forms and pedigree charts.
** See How Do I Start My Family History? (32916) for more information.


1. Search United States records, as described in the [[United States]] Wiki page, such as:
=== SEARCHING RECENT RECORDS ===
:*[[United States Census|Census records]]
:*[[United States Military Records|Military records]]
:*[[Homestead Records|Homestead records]]
:*[[Social Security Death Index (SSDI)|Social Security Death Index]]


:You can see more information about these records by clicking on them.
Start with the most recent generations. Look at general federal and state records and then look at records specifically for African Americans.


2. Search records from the [[United States#States|state]] where your ancestor lived, including:.
For step-by-step instructions for finding African-American families in recent U.S. records, see Finding
:*[https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/African_American_Cemeteries Cemetery records]
:*[[United States Directories|City directories]]
:*Church records
:*Court records
:*Land records
:*Probate records
:*School records
:*Vital records (government records of births, marriages, and deaths)
:*Voting records


:These records are described in the Wiki pages for each state.  
Records of Your Ancestors, Part A: African American, 1870 to Present (36367). You can see this as another [http://www.familysearchwiki.org/36367_African_American_Records.pdf article]on this site.


3. Study the local histories for each town, county, and state where your ancestor lived.  
'''General U. S. Records'''
:*Look for information on African American churches, schools, and cemeteries.
:*Learn about local laws that affected your ancestors: Did African Americans vote? Did they have a curfew? Were there laws specifically for African Americans?


4. An excellent guide that carefully explains how to search for your ancestors is: ''Finding a Place Called Home: An African American Guide to Genealogical and Historical Identity.''  by Dee Parmer Woodtor, New York, New York, Random House, 1999. {{FSC|829837|item|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F2wd}}; {{WorldCat|40331192|item|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}. This book explains the basic as well as complex research techniques required for African American research. It includes unique sources such as the records of the Freedmen’s Bureau.
1. Search United States records, as described in the United States Research Outline (30972) such as:
 
* [[United States Census Online|Census records]][[United States Military Records|<br>]]
* [[United States Military Records|U.S. military records]][[United States Land and Property|<br>]]
* [[United States Land and Property|Homestead records]][[Social Security Death Index (SSDI)|<br>]]
* [[Social Security Death Index (SSDI)|Social Security Death Index]]
 
You can see more information about these topics by clicking on them.
 
2. Search records from the state where your ancestor lived.
 
* [http://www.africanamericancemeteries.com/ Cemetery records]<br>
* City directories
* Church records<br>
* Court records
* Land records
* Probate records
* School records
* Vital records (government records of births, marriages, and deaths)
* Voting records
 
These records are described in research outlines for each state on this site.
 
3. Study the local histories for each town, county, and state where your ancestor lived.
 
* Look for information on African American churches, schools, and cemeteries.
* Learn about local laws that affected your ancestors: Did African Americans vote? Did they have a curfew? Were there laws specifically for African Americans?
 
4. An excellent guide that carefully explains how to search for your ancestors is:
 
Woodtor, Dee Parmer. Finding a Place Called Home: An African American Guide to Genealogical and Historical Identity. New York: Random House, 1999. (FHL book 973 F2wd.) This explains basic as well as complex research techniques. It includes unique sources such as the records of the Freedmen’s Bureau.


5. Join an African American Genealogical Society in your area or the area where your ancestors lived.
5. Join an African American Genealogical Society in your area or the area where your ancestors lived.


==== African American Records  ====
'''African American Records'''
 
* African American records at the Family History Library are listed in the bibliography below. Look for records from the place and time your ancestor lived.
 
Taylor, Marie. Family History Library Bibliography of African American Sources. Salt Lake City: Family History Library, 2000. (FHL book 973 F23tm; fiche 6002568.) This bibliography:
 
*
** Has citations for about 3,320 African American sources.
** Includes Canadian records.
** Includes records in the collection by 1994. (The Family History Library Catalog does not list all these records.)
** Includes articles from historical and genealogical periodicals.
 
This bibliography has two sections:
 
*
** Search the "Bibliography Arranged by Subject" section for general types of records, such as church, court, slavery and bondage, or vital records.
** Search the "Bibliography Arranged by Locality" section for records from the U.S. state or Canadian province where your ancestor lived. Each state or province has a subject section, followed by a section for each county.
 
Over the years African American sources have been cataloged in many different ways at the Family History Library. This Bibliography was created to make the African American genealogical sources easier to locate. For example:
 
Burkett, Randall. Black Biographical Dictionaries 1790 –1950: Cumulative Index. 3 vols. Alexandria, Va.: Chadwyck-Healey, 1991. (FHL book 973 F2bbd.) The 300 African-American biographical dictionaries indexed in this work are available in the Family History Library, but they are not listed separately in the FHL Catalog by title. The bibliography corrects this problem by listing each title separately. You will also find numerous entries for articles from historical and genealogical periodicals you would not find by using the library catalog.
 
For information about Melungeons, tri-racial families, African Americans with Native American ancestry, and free people of color see the Taylor bibliography, pages 54–56.
 
Also see:
 
[http://www.members.aol.com/strat43z/melung.html www.members.aol.com/strat43z/melung.html]
 
and
 
[http://www.ccharity.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Web_Links&file=index&req=viewlink&cid=21 www.ccharity.com/modules.php?op=modload&amp;name=Web_Links&amp;file=index&amp;req=viewlink&amp;cid=21]
 
The following records can help you determine if an ancestor was born free or freed by a slave owner.
 
*
** Federal censuses, 1790–1860. Any ancestor listed in the federal population schedule was free.
** Local government registers of free persons of color. Freed slaves had to register with the local government to prove their freedom.
** Local court, land, and probate records. The lives of free African Americans were still closely regulated by law and custom.
 
=== SEARCHING TRANSITION RECORDS FROM SLAVERY TO FREEDOM ===
 
'''Records of the Underground Railroad'''
 
Many slaves "stole" themselves. See:
 
Family History Library Bibliography of African American Sources, by Marie Taylor, 2000. (FHL fiche 6002568)
 
Look under "Migration" in both sections. Also see:
 
[http://www.freedomcenter.org/freedomstations/ www.freedomcenter.org/freedomstations/]
 
and
 
[http://www.nationalgeographic.com/features/99/railroad/j1.html www.nationalgeographic.com/features/99/railroad/j1.html]
 
'''Making the Slave Connection'''
 
You must first identify the slave owner, and then study the owner’s records for clues to your family. Correctly identifying your ancestor in slave records is difficult. Even professional researchers are successful only about 50 percent of the time.
 
Keep in mind that only about 15 percent of former slaves took their last slave owner’s surname. Some took the surname of people they admired, such as Lincoln or Washington, and some took a surname they had been using for many years without the knowledge of the slave owner.
 
Sources for identifying the slave owner:
 
'''Military Records'''


African American records at the FamilySearch Library are listed in the bibliography below. Look for records from the place and time your ancestor lived.  
Civil War Colored Troops Service and Pension Records. These records list the date and place of birth of the soldier and may name the last slave owner.


*''FamilySearch Library Bibliography of African American Sources,'' by Marie Taylor,  Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch Library, 2000. {{FSC|956235|title-id|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F23tm}}; {{WorldCat|866458882|item|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}
Other useful military records:
:This bibliography:
:*Has citations for about 3,320 African American sources.
:*Includes Canadian records.
:*Includes records in the collection by 1994. (The FamilySearch Catalog does not list all these records.)
:*Includes articles from historical and genealogical periodicals.


:This bibliography has two sections:
*
** Buffalo Soldiers (Indian wars)
** Philippine Insurrection (1898)
** Spanish-American War (1899–1901)
** Mexican border disputes (1905–1907)
** World War I (1917–1918)


:*Search the "Bibliography Arranged by Subject" section for general types of records, such as church, court, slavery and bondage, or vital records.
For information on the above records, see:
:*Search the "Bibliography Arranged by Locality" section for records from the U.S. state or Canadian province where your ancestor lived. Each state or province has a subject section, followed by a section for each county.


Note: To download pages or to peruse pages continuously rather than one at a time, select Print Version Part 1 (Alabama - Ohio: Jackson County) or Print Version Part 2 (Ohio: Jackson County - Wisconsin: Milwaukee County and Canada: Alberta - Quebec.) Below Part 1 or Part 2 select Print Version to print or view.  
*
** U.S. Military Records Research Outline available at this site.
** Research outlines for the states where your ancestors lived - available on this site.


:Over the years, African American sources have been cataloged in many different ways at the FamilySearch Library. This Bibliography was created to make the African American genealogical sources easier to locate. For example:
'''Freedman’s Savings and Trust Records'''


:*''Black Biographical Dictionaries 1790–1950: Cumulative Index,'' by Randall Burkett. Chadwyck-Healey, Alexandria, 1991. {{WorldCat|23047573|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}
Registers of Signatures of Depositors in Branches of the Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, 1865–1874. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M0816. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1969. (FHL films 0928571–91.)


For information about [[Melungeons]], tri-racial families, African Americans with Native American ancestry, and Free People of Color see the Taylor bibliography, pages 54–56. <br>
*
** Information includes birthplace, place brought up, residence, age, complexion, name of employer or occupation, spouse, children, father, mother, brothers and sisters, remarks, and signature.
** Early books give the name of the former master or mistress and the name of the plantation.
** The Freedman's Bank records are part of National Archives Record Group 101, Records of the Comptroller of the Currency. For more information, see: [http://www.rstl.com/freedman.htm www.rstl.com/freedman.htm]


The following records can help you determine if an ancestor was born free or freed by a slaveholder.  
Note: Do not confuse records of the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company with records of the Freedmen's Bureau listed below. When the trust company closed, the Freedmen’s Bureau tried to recover the money. Freedmen’s Bureau records are part of National Archives Record Group 105.


:*[[United States Census|Federal censuses, 1790–1860]]. Any ancestor listed in the federal population schedule was free.
'''Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned ''''''Lands (Freedmen’s Bureau)'''
:*Local government registers of Free Persons of Color. Formerly enslaved individuals had to register with the local government to prove their freedom.
:*Local court, land, and probate records. The lives of free African Americans were still closely regulated by law and custom.


== Searching Transition Records from Slavery to Freedom  ==
There are two sets in this collection: commissioner’s records and field office records. The field office records are the most useful, but can be searched only at the National Archives.
For more instructions on finding African American families in records, see [https://www.familysearch.org/blog/en/tracing-africanamerican-ancestors/ Tracing Your African-American Genealogy].
*[https://statelibrary.ncdcr.gov/ghl/genealogy/finding-slave-records State Library of North Carolina: How to Find Records of Enslaved Persons]


=== Records of the Underground Railroad  ===
For a guide to the field office records, see:


Many enslaved persons "stole" themselves and escaped north into Canada and freedom from the Fugitive Slave laws that required their return from northern states. See:  
Everly, Elaine, and Willna Pacheli. Preliminary Inventory of the Records of the Field Offices of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands: Record Group 105. Washington, D.C.: NARA, 1973. (FHL book 973 F23ea.)


*''FamilySearch Library Bibliography of African American Sources''. by Marie Taylor, Salt Lake City: FamilySearch Library, 2000. {{FSC|956235|title-id|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F23tm}}. Look under "Migration" in both the "Subject" and "Locality" sections. (For help see "Note" under the heading, African American Records.)
The records are divided as follows:
*National Underground Railroad Freedom Center at [http://tinyurl.com/6sktldj Freedman's Bank Records] (accessed 22 Dec. 2011).
*National Geographic - Kids, [https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/the-underground-railroad "The Underground Railroad"] (accessed 1 Jan. 2025).
*FamilySearch Wiki Article, "[[African American Migration]]" will have a number of sources on the Underground Railroad, Fugitive Slave Laws, and the American Colonization Society.


=== Making the Slavery Connection  ===
*
** Part 1, Alabama–Louisiana
** Part 2, Maryland–South Carolina
** Part 3, Tennessee–Virginia and Records of the Field Offices of the Freedmen's Branch, Office of the Adjutant General, 1872–78


[[Image:James Hopkinsons Plantation Slaves Planting Sweet Potatoes.jpg|thumb|right|400px|<center>James Hopkinson's plantation enslaved persons planting sweet potatoes</center>]]You must first identify the slaveholder, then study his records for clues to your family. Correctly identifying your ancestor in records of the enslaved can be difficult. Professional researchers are successful only about 50 percent of the time.<br><br>
More information on the Freedmen's Bureau is available at that wiki.


Keep in mind that only about 15 percent of formerly enslaved persons took their last slaveholder’s surname. Some took the surname of people they admired, such as Lincoln or Washington, and some took a surname they had been using for many years without the knowledge of the slaveholder.
'''Southern Claims Commission Records'''


*'''[[Southern States Slavery and Bondage Collections | Southern States Slavery and Bondage Collections in the FamilySearch Catalog]]'''
United States. House of Representatives. Commissioners of Claims. Records of the Commissioners of Claims 1871–1880. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M0087. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1945. (FHL film 1463963–76.)
*'''[[North Carolina Slavery and Bondage Collection | North Carolina Slavery and Bondage Collection in the FamilySearch Catalog]]'''


=== Sources for Identifying a Slaveholder ===
*
** Nearly 22,300 cases are filed by individuals, family groups, churches, and businesses.
** Case files include items such as family letters and Bibles, wills, probate records, personal accounts, property inventories, and other genealogical data.
** These records can help you learn if an ancestor had been a slave.
** Records include testimony of neighbors, relatives, and former slaves to support a claimant’s assertion that he or she is due repayment for property taken during the Civil War because of loyalty to the Union.


==== Military Records  ====
A master index to these case files is:


[[United States Colored Troops in the Civil War|United States Colored Troops (USCT) in Civil War service]] and pension records. These records list the date and place of birth of the soldier and may name the last slaveholder.  
Mills, Gary B. Southern Loyalists in the Civil War: The Southern Claims Commission. Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Publishing, 1994. (FHL book 975 M2s) Gives the name of the claimant, his or her county and state, the commission number, office and report numbers, and the year and status of the claim.


Other useful military records:
'''American Slave Narratives'''


:*Buffalo Soldiers (Indian wars)
Typescript pages of interviews with more than 3,500 former slaves. For an index, see:
:*Philippine Insurrection (1898)
:*Spanish-American War (1899–1901)
:*Mexican border disputes (1905–1907)
:*World War I (1917–1918)


For information on the above records, see:  
Potts, Howard E. A Comprehensive Name Index for the American Slave [Narratives]. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1997. (FHL book 973 F22p.)


:*[[African American Military Records | African American Military Records]] in the FamilySearch Wiki.
Search the narrative collection online for a fee at:
:*[[United States Military Records | United States Military Records]] in the FamilySearch Wiki.
:*Wiki [[United States Genealogy#States| pages for the states]] where your ancestors lived.


==== Freedman’s Savings and Trust Records ====
[http://www.ancestry.com/search/rectype/biohist/slavnarr/main.htm www.ancestry.com/search/rectype/biohist/slavnarr/main.htm]


*'''1865-1874''' {{RecordSearch|1417695|United States, Freedman's Bank Records, 1865-1874}} at FamilySearch - [[United States, Freedman's Bank Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; index & images
'''Apprenticeship and Orphans’ Records'''


See both Freedmen’s Bureau and county court records for information on guardianship and apprentices. Former slave owners often became the legal guardians of infants and small children. Orphans old enough to work were also apprenticed to the former slave owner.


Registers of Signatures of Depositors in Branches of the Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, 1865–1874. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M0816. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1969.
'''Another Way of Identifying the Slave Owner'''


:*Information includes birthplace, place brought up, residence, age, complexion, name of employer or occupation, spouse, children, father, mother, brothers and sisters, remarks, and signature.
If the sources listed above do not help you identify a slave owner, try the following technique:
:*Early books give the name of the former slaveholder and the name of the plantation.
:*The Freedman's Bank records are part of National Archives Record Group 101, Records of the Comptroller of the Currency. For more information, the {{FSC|996737|item|disp=Freedman Bank Records (FS Catalog CD Rom)}}; {{WorldCat|866528560|item|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}.
:*Note: Do not confuse records of the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company with records of the Freedmen's Bureau, listed below. When the trust company closed, the Freedmen’s Bureau tried to recover the money. Freedmen’s Bureau records are part of National Archives Record Group 105.


==== Freedmen’s Bureau  ====
1. Find your family on the 1870 census.
*See [[African American Freedmen's Bureau Records]] for more resources.
There are two sets in the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Land (Freedmen’s Bureau) collection--commissioner’s records and field office records. The field office records are the most useful but can be searched only at the National Archives.  


For a guide to the field office records, see:
2. Make a list of every family with property on the 10 pages before and 10 pages after your ancestor. Add your ancestor’s surname to this list if it is not already there.


Everly, Elaine, and Willna Pacheli. Preliminary Inventory of the Records of the Field Offices of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands: Record Group 105. Washington, D.C.: NARA, 1973. {{FSC|702586|item|disp= FS Catalog book 973 F23ea pt. 1-3.}}
3. Act as if each family name on the list was the name of the former slave owner. Use the records listed under Search Records of Slaves. As you use the records you will start eliminating some names, and others will look more promising.


The records are divided as follows:
4. If you don’t find a match, try to find out if the family moved from a different location. If so, repeat this process as you check the census records for the other location.


:*Part 1, Alabama–Louisiana; '''''Online at''''' {{FSDB|294566}}
=== SEARCHING RECORDS FOR SLAVES ===
:*Part 2, Maryland–South Carolina; '''''Online at''''' {{FSDB|321539}}
:*Part 3, Tennessee–Virginia and Records of the Field Offices of the Freedmen's Branch, Office of the Adjutant General, 1872–78; '''''Online at:''''' {{FSDB|263792}}


More information on the [[United States Freedmen’s Bureau Letters - FamilySearch Historical Records|Freedmen's Bureau]] is available on the FamilySearch Wiki.
When you know the slave owner’s name or if you have a list of possibilities:


==== Southern Claims Commission Records  ====
1. Study the life and records of the slave owner and his family. Your ancestor’s life was inseparably connected with the slave owner. Your ancestor will be listed in records of the slave owner’s property.


2. Look for the slave owner’s name in:


* Federal census schedules, 1850 and 1860. Slave schedules give the age and sex of each slave. For information on using slave schedules, see: [http://www.webarchaelogy.com/html/slavschd.htm www.webarchaelogy.com/html/slavschd.htm]
* The 1850 and 1860 federal census mortality schedules. These give the names of slaves who died and the names of the slave owners.
* Tax records. These list slaves and their monetary value.
* Land and property records. Search for information about deeds, sales, mortgages, or rental transactions of slaves.
* Probate, estate, and chancery court records These show the distribution of slaves at the death of a slave owner.
* Plantation records. Account log books give the names of slaves, family relationships, and their assigned tasks. Some records give the slaves’ birth and death dates. They also record when a slave was bought, from whom, and for how much.
* Antebellum Southern Plantations from the Revolution through the Civil War, Frederick, Md.: University Publications of America, 1966.


United States. House of Representatives. Commissioners of Claims. Records of the [[Southern Claims Commission|Commissioners of Claims ]]1871–1880. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M0087. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1945.  
See Family History Library Bibliography of African American Sources for the films and guide books for this collection. Whenever possible, these records are listed under the county or state where the plantation was located. They are then listed alphabetically by the name of the slave owner.


*'''1871-1880''' Records of the Commissioners of Claims (Southern Claims Commission) 1871-1880 : NARA, M0087. {{FSC|452638|item|disp=FS Library Films}}
'''Other Slave Owners'''


:*Nearly 22,300 cases are filed by individuals, family groups, churches, and businesses.
Several large industries owned slaves. See:
:*Case files include items such as family letters and Bibles, wills, probate records, personal accounts, property inventories, and other genealogical data.
:*These records can help you learn if an ancestor had been enslaved.
:*Records include testimony of neighbors, relatives, and formerly enslaved persons to support a claimant’s assertion that he or she is due repayment for property taken during the Civil War because of loyalty to the Union.


A master index to these case files is:  
Slavery in Antebellum Southern Industries. Bethesda, Md.: University Publications of America, 1991. (FHL book 975 H6s.)


*''Southern Loyalists in the Civil War: The Southern Claims Commission,'' by Gary B. Mills. Baltimore, Maryland, Genealogical Publishing Company, 1994. {{FSC|107378|item|disp=FS Library book 975 M2s.}}. This book gives the name of the claimant, his or her county and state, the commission number, office and report numbers, and the year and status of the claim.
Indian tribes also owned African slaves. See:


==== American Slave Narratives  ====
* Native American records. Slaves are often listed as members of the tribe.
* [http://www.hometown.aol.com/angelaw859/index.html www.hometown.aol.com/angelaw859/index.html]


In the 1930s, the WPA Writers Project compiled over 3,500 typescript interviews of formerly enslaved Americans. Access and indexes are available through:
'''Emancipation Time Line'''


:*Library of Congress' free Internet site that indexes 2,300 narratives in ''[https://www.loc.gov/collections/slave-narratives-from-the-federal-writers-project-1936-to-1938/about-this-collection/ Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project]''.  
Slavery began in 1620 in the colonies. The following are key dates for emancipation:
:*A Comprehensive Name Index for the American Slave, by Howard E. Potts, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1997, {{FSC|731705|item|disp=FS Catalog Book 973 F22p}}; {{WorldCat|36284310|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}.
:*[http://www.fullbooks.com/Slave-Narratives-A-Folk-History-of-Slaveryx1026.html Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery]
:*[http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/ North American Slave Narratives], Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina.


==== Apprenticeship and Orphans’ Records  ====
1777 Vermont is the first colony to abolish slavery.


See both the Freedmen’s Bureau and county court records for information on guardianship and apprentices. Former slaveholders often became the legal guardians of infants and small children. Orphans old enough to work were also apprenticed to the former slaveholder.  
1780 Pennsylvania passes a gradual emancipation law.


==== Another Way of Identifying the Enslaver  ====
1783 Massachusetts prohibits slavery.


If the sources listed above do not help you identify an enslaver, try the following technique:
1783 New Hampshire prohibits slavery.


#Find your family on the 1870 census.
1784 Connecticut bars slavery.
#Make a list of every family with property on the 10 pages before and 10 pages after your ancestor. Add your ancestor’s surname to this list if it is not already there.
#Act as if each family name on the list was the name of the former slaveholder. Use the records listed under Search Records of the Enslaved. As you use the records you will start eliminating some names, and others will look more promising.
#If you don’t find a match, try to find out if the family moved from a different location. If so, repeat this process as you check the census records for the other location.


== Searching Records for Enslaved Persons  ==
1784 Rhode Island bans slavery.
For more instructions on finding African American families in records, see [https://www.familysearch.org/blog/en/tracing-africanamerican-ancestors/ Tracing Your African-American Genealogy].


When you know the slaveholder’s name you have a list of possibilities:
1790 Boston becomes the first U.S. city without slaves.


1. Study the life and records of the slaveholder and his family. Your ancestor’s life was inseparably connected with the slaveholder. Your ancestor will be listed in records of the slaveholder’s property.  
1799 New York begins gradual emancipation.


2. Look for the slaveholder’s name in:
1804 New Jersey begins gradual emancipation.


=== 1850 Slave Schedules ===
1807 The U.S. Congress bans the slave trade by prohibiting "the importation of slaves into the United States or the territories thereof" after 1 January 1808.


*'''1850'''  {{RecordSearch|1420440|United States Census (Slave Schedule), 1850}} at FamilySearch - [[United States Census, Slave Schedule, 1850 - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; index & images
1863 The Emancipation Proclamation frees only slaves in states in rebellion against the Union.


* '''1850''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/8055/ U.S. Federal Census - Slave Schedules] at Ancestry - index & images ($)
1865 Last slaves in America freed on 19 June.


=== 1860 Slave Schedules ===
=== FOR MORE INFORMATION ===


* '''1860''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/7668/ U.S. Federal Census - Slave Schedules] at Ancestry - index & images ($)
Guidebooks and Histories


*'''1860''' {{RecordSearch|3161105|United States Census (Slave Schedule), 1860}} at FamilySearch - [[United States Census (Slave Schedule), 1860 - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; — index & images
Walker, James D. Black Genealogy: How to Begin. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia, Center for Continuing Education, 1977. (FHL book 973 F27w.)


Slave schedules give the age and sex of each enslaved person.  
Gutman, Herbert G. The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom. New York: Pantheon, 1976. (FHL book 973 F2gu.)


:*The 1850 and 1860 federal census mortality schedules. These give the names of enslaved persons who died and the names of the slaveholders.
* A short, step-by-step guide with charts,worksheets, and definitions.
:*Tax records. These list enslaved persons and their monetary value.
* Good background information about family life in various parts of the country at different times.
:*Land and property records. Search for information about deeds, sales, mortgages, or rental transactions of enslaved persons.
* Tells about surname customs and how surnames changed.
:*Probate, estate, and chancery court records. These show the distribution of enslaved persons at the death of a slaveholder.
:*Plantation records. Account logbooks give the names of enslaved persons, family relationships, and their assigned tasks. Some records give the enslaved person's birth and death dates. They also record when an enslaved person was bought, from whom, and for how much.
:*Antebellum Southern Plantations from the Revolution through the Civil War, Frederick, Md.: University Publications of America, 1966.


=== Databases of Names of Enslaved Persons ===
Burkett, Randall. Black Biographical Dictionaries 1790–1950: Cumulative Index. 3 vols. Alexandria, Va.: Chadwyck-Healey, 1991. (FHL book 973 F2bbd.)
There are various websites where researchers submit names of enslaved persons they have come across in records. Try searching these databases for known enslaved persons or elslavers:
* [http://slavenamerollproject.blogspot.com/ Slave Name Roll Project]<br>
There are several other projects dedicated to specific regions or record types, for example:
* [http://www.virginiamemory.com/collections/aan/search-the-narrative Unknown No Longer: A Database of Virginia Slave Names] at the Virginia Museum of History & Culture
* [http://digital.sfasu.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/RSP Texas Runaway Slave Project], indexing names of self-liberated enslaved persons found in Texas newspapers
* [https://nyslavery.commons.gc.cuny.edu/ New York Slavery Records Index]
* [https://theyhadnames.net/ African Americans in early Liberty County, Georgia, Records]
Also see [https://www.thoughtco.com/great-databases-for-slave-genealogy-1421640 10 Databases for Researching Enslaved Ancestors]


=== Other Enslavers  ===
* Indexes 300 African American biographical dictionaries that are available on microfiche
* Available for a fee on the Internet at:


Several large industries owned enslaved persons. See:
[http://www.il.proquest.com/products/pt-product-AfricanAmBio.shtml www.il.proquest.com/products/pt-product-AfricanAmBio.shtml]


Slavery in Antebellum Southern Industries. Bethesda, Md.: University Publications of America, 1991. {{FSC|975 H6s }}
=== Internet Sites ===


Native American tribes also enslaved African Americans. See:
* [http://www.afrigeneas.com/ www.afrigeneas.com]


*Native American records. Enslaved persons are often listed as members of the tribe.
Supports research of African American ancestors.
*[http://www.african-nativeamerican.com/ African-Native American Genealogy Homepage] containing African American - Freedmen Records of Oklahoma, Black Families of the Mississippi Choctaw, and Eastern Cherokee Records sites.


== Emancipation Timeline  ==
* [http://www.aagsnc.org/genlinks/Genealogical www.aagsnc.org/genlinks/Genealogical]_ Resources/


Slavery began in 1620 in the colonies. The following are key dates for emancipation:
Has links to African American history and genealogy divided into 17 categories.


:1777 Vermont is the first colony to abolish slavery.
* [http://www.athena.english.vt.edu/~LIT/BWW/ www.athena.english.vt.edu/~LIT/BWW/] chronology.html


:1780 Pennsylvania passes a gradual emancipation law.
Has chronological information about Africans in America.


:1783 Massachusetts prohibits slavery.
* http://www.co.forsyth.nc.us/library/SubjectGuide_BlackHistory.aspx


:1783 New Hampshire prohibits slavery.
African American History and Culture


:1784 Connecticut bars slavery.
* http://www.africanamericancemeteries.com/


:1784 Rhode Island bans slavery.
African American Cemeteries Online


:1790 Boston becomes the first U.S. city without enslaved persons.
* http://www.afrigeneas.com/aacensus/<br>


:1799 New York begins gradual emancipation.
African American Census Schedules Online


:1804 New Jersey begins gradual emancipation.
== Tips ==


:1807 The U.S. Congress bans the slave trade by prohibiting "the importation of enslaved persons into the United States or the territories thereof" after 1 January 1808.
* Search as many kinds of records as you can find to document the lives of your family back to 1870.
* Study the lives of all family members, including aunts, uncles, and cousins—not just your direct ancestors.
* Look for changing surnames. Some African Americans changed surnames several times. If you can’t find your family in a census record, but you know the family’s location at the time of the census, look for first names and approximate ages of family members. You may find a match.
* If your ancestor is not listed in an index, check the original records anyway. Some indexes do not include African Americans.
* Understand that some old records may have described your ancestor in terms used at the time that are not appropriate.
* African Americans may be listed in "colored" registers. You may also see the abbreviation "Col" next to your ancestor’s name.
* If your ancestor is not in a "colored" register, try the "white" register. Your ancestor’s race may not have been accurately recorded.


:1863 The Emancipation Proclamation frees only enslaved persons in states in rebellion against the Union.
© 2000 by Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in


:1865 June 19 - The Emancipation Proclamation was read in Galveston, Texas.
the USA. English approval 8/03.


:1865 December 6 - The 13th Amendment was passed, abolishing slavery across the entire United States.
No part of this document may be reprinted, posted on-line, or reproduced in any form for any purpose without the prior written permission of the publisher. Send all requests for such permission to:


== Guidebooks and Histories  ==
Copyrights and Permissions Coordinator


*''Black Genealogy: How to Begin,'' by James D. Walker. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia, Center for Continuing Education, 1977. {{FSC|34436|item|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F27w}}; {{WorldCat|12237630|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}
Family and Church History Department
*''Black Roots: a Beginners Guide to Tracing the African American Family Tree,'' by Tony Burroughs. New York: Fireside Book, 2001. {{FSC|1012177|item|disp=FS Catalog book 973 D27bt 2001}}; {{WorldCat|45068561|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}
*''The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom,'' by Herbert G. Gutman. New York: Pantheon, 1976. {{FSC|144315|item|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F2gu}}
:*A short, step-by-step guide with charts, worksheets, and definitions.
:*Good background information about family life in various parts of the country at different times.
:*Tells about surname customs and how surnames changed.
*''Black Biographical Dictionaries 1790–1950: Cumulative Index,'' by Randall Burkett. 3 vols. Alexandria, Va.: Chadwyck-Healey, 1991. {{FSC|599784|item|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F2bbd}}
:*Indexes 300 African American biographical dictionaries that are available on microfiche
:*Available for a fee on the Internet at:
*''African American Women: a Biographical Dictionary,'' by Dorothy C. Salem. New York, New York: Garland Pub. Co, 1991. {{FSC|587539|item|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F26a}}; {{WorldCat|27266277|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}; '''''Online at:''''' [https://archive.org/details/africanamericanw0000unse_v1x9 Internet Archive]
*''African American National Biography,'' by Henry Louis Gates Jr. Oxford University Press: New York, New York, 2008. {{FSC|1474214|item|disp=FS Catalog book 973 F26aan v. 1-8}}; {{WorldCat|156816848|disp=At various libraries (WorldCat)}}; This title includes 8 volumes.  The 2008 edition contains biographical entries, historical and contemporary, for 4100 African Americans indexed alphabetically, arranged by birthplace and by subject area and realm of renown; as well as a list of African American prizewinners, medalists, members of Congress, and judges.


== Tutorials at FamilySearch Learning Center  ==
50 E. North Temple Street, Room 599


''View these lectures online for an in-depth training experience:''
Salt Lake City, Utah 84150-3400


*[https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Classes_in_the_Learning_Center Beginning African American Research, post-1865 Series] at FamilySearch
USA
*[https://www.byutv.org/player/0366f779-32c1-4679-bb53-351fd07f39ae/ancestors-african-american-research Ancestors Season 1: African American Research] at BYUTV
*[https://www.familysearch.org/help/helpcenter/lesson/1001 Freedmen's Bureau Records] at FamilySearch


== Websites  ==
Fax: 1-801-240-2494


*[https://aagsnc.org/ African American Genealogical Society of Northern California (AAGSNC)] has links to African American history and genealogy divided into seventeen categories.
[[Category:African-American]] [[Category:United_States_of_America]]
*[[African American Cemeteries|African American Cemeteries]]
*[https://dlas.uncg.edu/ Digital Library on American Slavery] at the University of North Carolina - Greensboro,  has digitized documents about enslaved Americans from thousands of court and legislative petitions filed between 1775 and 1867 in fifteen different states. Search by name, petition or browse subjects.
*[https://slavebiographies.org/ Slave Biographies (Atlanta Database Network)]
*[http://barbsnow.net/AfricanAmerican.htm Your Guide to Finding African American Ancestors]
A wiki article describing an online collection is found at:
* [[United States Freedmen’s Bureau Letters - FamilySearch Historical Records]]
{{African American|African American}}{{-}}
[[Category:Melungeons]][[Category:African_American_Records]]

Revision as of 15:08, 29 January 2008

This guide describes:

  • Strategies for discovering your African American

ancestors in various periods of history:

    • Beginning Your Search
    • Searching Recent Records
    • Searching Transition Records from Slavery to
    • Freedom
    • Searching Records for Slaves
  • The most useful records and indexes to search.

Most of these records are available through the Family History Library and Family History Centers. The letters FHL begin the Family History Library call number of the record described.

  • Specific information you need to trace your African American ancestors.

BEGINNING YOUR SEARCH[edit | edit source]

    • Write down what your family knows about your ancestors.
    • Record names, dates, and places on family group record forms and pedigree charts.
    • See How Do I Start My Family History? (32916) for more information.

SEARCHING RECENT RECORDS[edit | edit source]

Start with the most recent generations. Look at general federal and state records and then look at records specifically for African Americans.

For step-by-step instructions for finding African-American families in recent U.S. records, see Finding

Records of Your Ancestors, Part A: African American, 1870 to Present (36367). You can see this as another articleon this site.

General U. S. Records

1. Search United States records, as described in the United States Research Outline (30972) such as:

You can see more information about these topics by clicking on them.

2. Search records from the state where your ancestor lived.

  • Cemetery records
  • City directories
  • Church records
  • Court records
  • Land records
  • Probate records
  • School records
  • Vital records (government records of births, marriages, and deaths)
  • Voting records

These records are described in research outlines for each state on this site.

3. Study the local histories for each town, county, and state where your ancestor lived.

  • Look for information on African American churches, schools, and cemeteries.
  • Learn about local laws that affected your ancestors: Did African Americans vote? Did they have a curfew? Were there laws specifically for African Americans?

4. An excellent guide that carefully explains how to search for your ancestors is:

Woodtor, Dee Parmer. Finding a Place Called Home: An African American Guide to Genealogical and Historical Identity. New York: Random House, 1999. (FHL book 973 F2wd.) This explains basic as well as complex research techniques. It includes unique sources such as the records of the Freedmen’s Bureau.

5. Join an African American Genealogical Society in your area or the area where your ancestors lived.

African American Records

  • African American records at the Family History Library are listed in the bibliography below. Look for records from the place and time your ancestor lived.

Taylor, Marie. Family History Library Bibliography of African American Sources. Salt Lake City: Family History Library, 2000. (FHL book 973 F23tm; fiche 6002568.) This bibliography:

    • Has citations for about 3,320 African American sources.
    • Includes Canadian records.
    • Includes records in the collection by 1994. (The Family History Library Catalog does not list all these records.)
    • Includes articles from historical and genealogical periodicals.

This bibliography has two sections:

    • Search the "Bibliography Arranged by Subject" section for general types of records, such as church, court, slavery and bondage, or vital records.
    • Search the "Bibliography Arranged by Locality" section for records from the U.S. state or Canadian province where your ancestor lived. Each state or province has a subject section, followed by a section for each county.

Over the years African American sources have been cataloged in many different ways at the Family History Library. This Bibliography was created to make the African American genealogical sources easier to locate. For example:

Burkett, Randall. Black Biographical Dictionaries 1790 –1950: Cumulative Index. 3 vols. Alexandria, Va.: Chadwyck-Healey, 1991. (FHL book 973 F2bbd.) The 300 African-American biographical dictionaries indexed in this work are available in the Family History Library, but they are not listed separately in the FHL Catalog by title. The bibliography corrects this problem by listing each title separately. You will also find numerous entries for articles from historical and genealogical periodicals you would not find by using the library catalog.

For information about Melungeons, tri-racial families, African Americans with Native American ancestry, and free people of color see the Taylor bibliography, pages 54–56.

Also see:

www.members.aol.com/strat43z/melung.html

and

www.ccharity.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Web_Links&file=index&req=viewlink&cid=21

The following records can help you determine if an ancestor was born free or freed by a slave owner.

    • Federal censuses, 1790–1860. Any ancestor listed in the federal population schedule was free.
    • Local government registers of free persons of color. Freed slaves had to register with the local government to prove their freedom.
    • Local court, land, and probate records. The lives of free African Americans were still closely regulated by law and custom.

SEARCHING TRANSITION RECORDS FROM SLAVERY TO FREEDOM[edit | edit source]

Records of the Underground Railroad

Many slaves "stole" themselves. See:

Family History Library Bibliography of African American Sources, by Marie Taylor, 2000. (FHL fiche 6002568)

Look under "Migration" in both sections. Also see:

www.freedomcenter.org/freedomstations/

and

www.nationalgeographic.com/features/99/railroad/j1.html

Making the Slave Connection

You must first identify the slave owner, and then study the owner’s records for clues to your family. Correctly identifying your ancestor in slave records is difficult. Even professional researchers are successful only about 50 percent of the time.

Keep in mind that only about 15 percent of former slaves took their last slave owner’s surname. Some took the surname of people they admired, such as Lincoln or Washington, and some took a surname they had been using for many years without the knowledge of the slave owner.

Sources for identifying the slave owner:

Military Records

Civil War Colored Troops Service and Pension Records. These records list the date and place of birth of the soldier and may name the last slave owner.

Other useful military records:

    • Buffalo Soldiers (Indian wars)
    • Philippine Insurrection (1898)
    • Spanish-American War (1899–1901)
    • Mexican border disputes (1905–1907)
    • World War I (1917–1918)

For information on the above records, see:

    • U.S. Military Records Research Outline available at this site.
    • Research outlines for the states where your ancestors lived - available on this site.

Freedman’s Savings and Trust Records

Registers of Signatures of Depositors in Branches of the Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, 1865–1874. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M0816. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1969. (FHL films 0928571–91.)

    • Information includes birthplace, place brought up, residence, age, complexion, name of employer or occupation, spouse, children, father, mother, brothers and sisters, remarks, and signature.
    • Early books give the name of the former master or mistress and the name of the plantation.
    • The Freedman's Bank records are part of National Archives Record Group 101, Records of the Comptroller of the Currency. For more information, see: www.rstl.com/freedman.htm

Note: Do not confuse records of the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company with records of the Freedmen's Bureau listed below. When the trust company closed, the Freedmen’s Bureau tried to recover the money. Freedmen’s Bureau records are part of National Archives Record Group 105.

'Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned 'Lands (Freedmen’s Bureau)

There are two sets in this collection: commissioner’s records and field office records. The field office records are the most useful, but can be searched only at the National Archives.

For a guide to the field office records, see:

Everly, Elaine, and Willna Pacheli. Preliminary Inventory of the Records of the Field Offices of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands: Record Group 105. Washington, D.C.: NARA, 1973. (FHL book 973 F23ea.)

The records are divided as follows:

    • Part 1, Alabama–Louisiana
    • Part 2, Maryland–South Carolina
    • Part 3, Tennessee–Virginia and Records of the Field Offices of the Freedmen's Branch, Office of the Adjutant General, 1872–78

More information on the Freedmen's Bureau is available at that wiki.

Southern Claims Commission Records

United States. House of Representatives. Commissioners of Claims. Records of the Commissioners of Claims 1871–1880. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M0087. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1945. (FHL film 1463963–76.)

    • Nearly 22,300 cases are filed by individuals, family groups, churches, and businesses.
    • Case files include items such as family letters and Bibles, wills, probate records, personal accounts, property inventories, and other genealogical data.
    • These records can help you learn if an ancestor had been a slave.
    • Records include testimony of neighbors, relatives, and former slaves to support a claimant’s assertion that he or she is due repayment for property taken during the Civil War because of loyalty to the Union.

A master index to these case files is:

Mills, Gary B. Southern Loyalists in the Civil War: The Southern Claims Commission. Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Publishing, 1994. (FHL book 975 M2s) Gives the name of the claimant, his or her county and state, the commission number, office and report numbers, and the year and status of the claim.

American Slave Narratives

Typescript pages of interviews with more than 3,500 former slaves. For an index, see:

Potts, Howard E. A Comprehensive Name Index for the American Slave [Narratives]. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1997. (FHL book 973 F22p.)

Search the narrative collection online for a fee at:

www.ancestry.com/search/rectype/biohist/slavnarr/main.htm

Apprenticeship and Orphans’ Records

See both Freedmen’s Bureau and county court records for information on guardianship and apprentices. Former slave owners often became the legal guardians of infants and small children. Orphans old enough to work were also apprenticed to the former slave owner.

Another Way of Identifying the Slave Owner

If the sources listed above do not help you identify a slave owner, try the following technique:

1. Find your family on the 1870 census.

2. Make a list of every family with property on the 10 pages before and 10 pages after your ancestor. Add your ancestor’s surname to this list if it is not already there.

3. Act as if each family name on the list was the name of the former slave owner. Use the records listed under Search Records of Slaves. As you use the records you will start eliminating some names, and others will look more promising.

4. If you don’t find a match, try to find out if the family moved from a different location. If so, repeat this process as you check the census records for the other location.

SEARCHING RECORDS FOR SLAVES[edit | edit source]

When you know the slave owner’s name or if you have a list of possibilities:

1. Study the life and records of the slave owner and his family. Your ancestor’s life was inseparably connected with the slave owner. Your ancestor will be listed in records of the slave owner’s property.

2. Look for the slave owner’s name in:

  • Federal census schedules, 1850 and 1860. Slave schedules give the age and sex of each slave. For information on using slave schedules, see: www.webarchaelogy.com/html/slavschd.htm
  • The 1850 and 1860 federal census mortality schedules. These give the names of slaves who died and the names of the slave owners.
  • Tax records. These list slaves and their monetary value.
  • Land and property records. Search for information about deeds, sales, mortgages, or rental transactions of slaves.
  • Probate, estate, and chancery court records These show the distribution of slaves at the death of a slave owner.
  • Plantation records. Account log books give the names of slaves, family relationships, and their assigned tasks. Some records give the slaves’ birth and death dates. They also record when a slave was bought, from whom, and for how much.
  • Antebellum Southern Plantations from the Revolution through the Civil War, Frederick, Md.: University Publications of America, 1966.

See Family History Library Bibliography of African American Sources for the films and guide books for this collection. Whenever possible, these records are listed under the county or state where the plantation was located. They are then listed alphabetically by the name of the slave owner.

Other Slave Owners

Several large industries owned slaves. See:

Slavery in Antebellum Southern Industries. Bethesda, Md.: University Publications of America, 1991. (FHL book 975 H6s.)

Indian tribes also owned African slaves. See:

Emancipation Time Line

Slavery began in 1620 in the colonies. The following are key dates for emancipation:

1777 Vermont is the first colony to abolish slavery.

1780 Pennsylvania passes a gradual emancipation law.

1783 Massachusetts prohibits slavery.

1783 New Hampshire prohibits slavery.

1784 Connecticut bars slavery.

1784 Rhode Island bans slavery.

1790 Boston becomes the first U.S. city without slaves.

1799 New York begins gradual emancipation.

1804 New Jersey begins gradual emancipation.

1807 The U.S. Congress bans the slave trade by prohibiting "the importation of slaves into the United States or the territories thereof" after 1 January 1808.

1863 The Emancipation Proclamation frees only slaves in states in rebellion against the Union.

1865 Last slaves in America freed on 19 June.

FOR MORE INFORMATION[edit | edit source]

Guidebooks and Histories

Walker, James D. Black Genealogy: How to Begin. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia, Center for Continuing Education, 1977. (FHL book 973 F27w.)

Gutman, Herbert G. The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom. New York: Pantheon, 1976. (FHL book 973 F2gu.)

  • A short, step-by-step guide with charts,worksheets, and definitions.
  • Good background information about family life in various parts of the country at different times.
  • Tells about surname customs and how surnames changed.

Burkett, Randall. Black Biographical Dictionaries 1790–1950: Cumulative Index. 3 vols. Alexandria, Va.: Chadwyck-Healey, 1991. (FHL book 973 F2bbd.)

  • Indexes 300 African American biographical dictionaries that are available on microfiche
  • Available for a fee on the Internet at:

www.il.proquest.com/products/pt-product-AfricanAmBio.shtml

Internet Sites[edit | edit source]

Supports research of African American ancestors.

Has links to African American history and genealogy divided into 17 categories.

Has chronological information about Africans in America.

African American History and Culture

African American Cemeteries Online

African American Census Schedules Online

Tips[edit | edit source]

  • Search as many kinds of records as you can find to document the lives of your family back to 1870.
  • Study the lives of all family members, including aunts, uncles, and cousins—not just your direct ancestors.
  • Look for changing surnames. Some African Americans changed surnames several times. If you can’t find your family in a census record, but you know the family’s location at the time of the census, look for first names and approximate ages of family members. You may find a match.
  • If your ancestor is not listed in an index, check the original records anyway. Some indexes do not include African Americans.
  • Understand that some old records may have described your ancestor in terms used at the time that are not appropriate.
  • African Americans may be listed in "colored" registers. You may also see the abbreviation "Col" next to your ancestor’s name.
  • If your ancestor is not in a "colored" register, try the "white" register. Your ancestor’s race may not have been accurately recorded.

© 2000 by Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in

the USA. English approval 8/03.

No part of this document may be reprinted, posted on-line, or reproduced in any form for any purpose without the prior written permission of the publisher. Send all requests for such permission to:

Copyrights and Permissions Coordinator

Family and Church History Department

50 E. North Temple Street, Room 599

Salt Lake City, Utah 84150-3400

USA

Fax: 1-801-240-2494