Welcome back to the African Roots Podcast! You can reach me HERE.
Happy Birthday Dr. King!
I hope that you have had a good week of research. Today is the beginning of the holiday weekend, and this is the historical date of Martin Luther King’s birthday. Although the official holiday is Monday, today is a good day to pause, taken a moment to reflect on the legacy left by Dr. King. May we all be people of courage, leadership and dignity. We have so much to learn from his history and devotion to social change.
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I have had a good week and have gotten good feedback from a blog post that I made on my Choctaw Freedman Blog. I placed a link to a new set of records recently digitized by Ancestry. This was the 1885 Choctaw Freedman Census, and I was happy to point out to readers that this database has been made available, and how to use them. And I am more than excited that Ancestry partnered with the Oklahoma Historical Society to get these records in the hands of a larger community.

Source: CTN 07 Choctaw Citizens and Freedmen Ancestry.com. Oklahoma and Indian Territory, Marriage,
Citizenship and Census Records, 1841-1927 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Since the posting, I have heard from three people in the past day that this new record set has helped them find out more about their history. What a joy to know that something that I wrote made a difference in one’s research. I hope to expand this into a new series about additional Ancestry Oklahoma Freedmen records available.
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Image showing my DNA composition from 23andMe
DNA conncetions have been in the news in recent days. I have been fascinated reading a number of articles about hos people are not only solving research questions, but how they are also making connections with new “relatives” previously unknown in Africa.
One article about a young lady who used DNA connections to help her find and define who she was. The article focused on a student attending MIT, who came to feel that she did not belong there. This led to a period of depression as she struggled through self reflection and began to search for a way to define herself. Eventually family history and later DNA testing assisted her. A second article referred to an ongoing event encouraged in West African countries. Places like Ghana and Cameroun are beginning to accept and welcome lost “family” consisting of descendants of those captured and taken to the Americas as slaves. Both articles reflected a desire on the parts of many to find “that place called home” and DNA is part of the process expanding.

And speaking of DNA—remember that there is a brand new DNA Track at MAAGI this summer. 12 classes are in place to help you with triangulation, recombination, and other aspects of DNA for genealogists. Registration is now open!
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If you missed last night’s episode of Bernice Bennett’s show, you can tune in to catch it online. Her guest was Marcellus Joiner who spoke about his own research connecting his family to the slave holders William Neal in North Carolina. He himself is an archivist and works to help others with preservation. But he is also now focusing on his own history and quest to connect the dots. If you missed the show, you can download it and hear it in its entirety as a podcast or download from Itunes. Ms. Bennett’s show airs every Thursday evening at 9m on Blog Talk Radio.
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I want to extend a wish for a Happy Founder’s Day to the women of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. who ware celebrating their own history and legacy. Also note that several days ago the ladies of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc, also celebrated their founders day as well. Both were founded at Howard University and both organizations are devoted to uplift and dignity of women. Both groups are to be celebrated and honored and regardless of differences, both are on the same side, and I wish them all well and all reflect a strong legacy of dignified and devoted women.|
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I want to thank you all for taking time to listen again this week. I appreciate hearing from you all, and hope that you enjoy what you hear each week. Thank you for your warm letters and emails as well. Remember to take some time out on Monday on this holiday weekend honoring Dr. King. And also, remember to keep researching, keep documenting and keep sharing what you find!











