Utah African American Records
Ancestry.com
Slave Narratives
Perhaps no other resource
approaches the range of human experience found in Ancestry.com's Slave
Narratives. This collection of interviews stands in contrast to other slave
narratives that
appear in most literature anthologies which were written by
the rare few who, against staggering odds, had become literate. This
database provides a more poignant picture of what it was to live as a slave
in the American South. Taken from The American Slave: A Composite
Autobiography, this collection is the most complete available picture of the
African-American slavery experience. There is simply no other historical
document quite like it. The collection contains over 20,000 pages of
type-scripted interviews with more than 3,500 former slaves collected over a
ten year period.
Articles to Assist
Your research:
African American Research, Part 1
African
American Research, Part 2
African
American Research, Part 3: Case Studies
Searching for African American families
involves two distinct research approaches. These approaches correspond to
the distinct change in the legal status of African Americans in the United
States before and after the Civil War. Genealogical techniques used to track
slave families before the war are necessarily quite different than those
used for white or free African Americans; however, research conducted on
African Americans after the war usually involves the same types of records
as those used for whites.
African
American Genealogy Program at Indiana Historical Society
Internationally known genealogist Tony
Burroughs will present a lecture titled "Black Roots: A Beginner's Guide to
Tracing the African American Family Tree" at the Indiana Historical Society
on February 10, from 1–4 p.m. The program, cosponsored by the IHS and the
Indiana African American Genealogy Group, will discuss conducting African
American family history research. IHS Program Archivist Wilma Gibbs will
present a discussion on research resources available at the IHS and other
repositories.
Finding
Your African American Ancestors: A BeginnerÆs Guide
Few areas of American genealogy pose as
much challenge as the search for African American ancestry prior to the
Civil War. Notwithstanding the inherent difficulties, there are few areas
that contain as much unrealized potential. Despite great strides within the
last two decades, the basic outlines of the field are only now being
clarified. While the difficulties of African American genealogical research
are not to be discounted, these difficulties are not always insurmountable.
Celebrating
African American Family History
February is Black History Month in the
United States. If you have Black American ancestry, you might want to begin
tracing your family tree this month while many museums and archives have
special exhibits to mark the month.
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