African Roots Podcast Episode #427 June 10, 2018

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Welcome back to this episode of the African Roots Podcast and I am here with Shelley Murphy and we are digging the Roots! Recently Shelley Murphy and I had  a chance to sit down and have a great discussion about the one thing that genealogists use all the time: Let’s talk about the records!

We both attended an event in Charlottesville and someone commented that they basically just stick to the census. Listen to Shelley and I as we discuss the basic records, our “favorite” records, and the rest of the records!

Here are some of the bullet points that stemmed from that conversation:
*Census records, both federal and state should be explored.*Determine if the family was in the same area where they were enslaved?
*Did they use a Field Office of a Freedman’s Bureau? There is a good record set from 1865 to 1872 to use.  (Mapping the Freedmen’s Bureau could assist in finding that office.)
*If one can get to 1870,—then of course to start by analyzing that census—who lived near them. Who were the neighbors, and basically—the entire county!
*Who was of age to have served in the Union Army? Critical records are found with pension files and service records.

Strategies:
*Remember that every record creates additional records.
*Create a critical time line!
*Explore Essential records for Free People: Certificate of  Freedom (This is critical for Virginia ancestors)   and also manumission records

Freedom/Emancipation Era Records:
Labor contracts, transportation records, school records, hospital records and so much more. Freedmen’s Court

Records in the 1880-1900 gap—Marriage records, tax records,

Final Tips:
-Become flexible
-Encompass all kinds of records in one’s research.
-Revisit the old sites: Google, Family Search
-Get a research buddy
-Take only a genealogist with you on a research trip!

In the meantime, remember to keep researching, keep documenting and to keep sharing what you find!

Posted by Angela Y. Walton-Raji

Author, lecturer and researcher. Author, "Black Indian Genealogy Research, An Expanded Edition". Editor, Voices of Indian Territory. Member AAHGS -Afro-American Historical & Genealogical Society. PAAC-Preservation of African American Cemeteries. Founding Member of AfriGeneas. Faculty member for Samford IGHR, MAAGI-Midwest African American Genealogy Institute.

2 thoughts on “African Roots Podcast Episode #427 June 10, 2018

  1. I am delighted to have found this site. I connected through Family History Daily. Great information. I have much to learn as I continue my family tree.

  2. I am headed to the Family History Center in Salt Lake City, Utah in October. Can you tell me what records I should look for that I cannot find on Ancestry while I am there. I have the death certificate for a woman who was born in 1890 and died in 1980 in Alabama. Her mother is listed as unknown on the death certificate. The earliest I have found her and her sister on the census records is 1900 and they were not living with the mother but, family historians say, their aunt. I have been able to trace the aunt’s life from birth to death but I have yet to find anything on the mother. I have the father’s name but am not able to locate him either. I’d love some advice on where to look while I’m in Utah. Thank you.

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