African American Biography


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Biographies

African American biographies are available at the FamilySearch Library. Biographies provide useful genealogical information such as an individual’s birth date and place (including foreign birthplaces where applicable); family members; occupation and education; and social, political, and religious affiliation. They may also contain a physical description of the person, his or her previous residences, and immigration information. Biographies are the product of family knowledge or previous research compiled about early settlers and prominent citizens of the state, county, or town. Many lesser-known individuals may have biographical sketches written about them in local histories.


You will find many biographies in the biographical sections of statewide, regional, and county histories.

The following resources are available at the FamilySearch Library:

The W.P.A. slave narratives of the 1930s were part of a genré started prior to the American Civil War. This slave narrative example was published in 1871.
  • Pride of Family: Four Generations of American Women of Color, by Carole Ione. New York, New York: C. Ione, 1991. Find this title at various libraries (WorldCat).
  • Black Biographical Dictionaries 1790-1950, by Randal K. Burkett, Nancy Hall Burkett, and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds.. Alexandria, Virginia: Chadwyck-Healey, Inc., [198-]. FS Catalog book 973 F2bbd.
  • African American Biographies: profiles of 558 Current Men and Women, by Walter L. Hawkins. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Co., 1992. FS Catalog book 973 F26h.
  • Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, by Darlene Clark Hine. Brooklyn, New York: Carlson Pub., 1993. FS Catalog book 973 F26b.
  • Notable Black American Women, by Jessie Carney Smith, ed.. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1992. FS Catalog book 973 D36nbw.

Slave Narratives. In the 1930s over 3,500 typescript interviews of formerly enslaved persons were compiled by the WPA. See:

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