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Showing posts with label genealogy chart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genealogy chart. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Bible Records

Family Bibles

Family bibles are like a present to genealogists. In the past most families had a bible that provided divine guidance and also served as a record of life memories and events. This was of particular importance pre-1900 as most states had no civil vital registrations requirements until the early 1900s. Even in 1906, when the federal government, for the purpose of public health, mandated state vital record keeping, some states lagged behind in compliance.1 For example, Alaska did not achieve full compliance of vital registrations until 1950 During early colonial history through to the 1900s most churches and some civic authorities recorded this information, but a family bible was like having a personal copy of all the family members vital information. This personal copy was of particular importance during the 1800s when families began in earnest to migrate to the Western United States.2 They could easily take all their family vital information with them in their bible, and events that occurred along the way, away from church and state, could be recorded.

Noel Stevenson presented a classification system for rating family bibles as to their level of reliability as evidence.  According to Stevenson, bible records rated “AAA” would be one where someone was alive that had personal knowledge of the events contained in the bible.3 As Stevenson points out, this condition is nearly impossible to meet.4 Bible records rated “AA” would be one’s where the bible is has remained in the hands of a family members, and there is evidence to show that the book has been passed down from generation to generation.5 Bible records rated “A” includes bibles in possession of a family member, but the individual possessing the bible has no first-hand information about the bible.6 For example, it was found in grandmother’s attic upon her death.  Bible records rated “BB” would be family bibles that are in the possession of a person whose spouse owned the bible, but is now dead.7 Bible records rated “B” are those that belong to distance cousins who have no information on the origin of the bible.8 Bible records rated “C” are those that belong to a non-family members, such as bibles in bookstores, libraries, archives and museums.

Here are a few links to family bibles that have been placed online.

http://www.biblerecords.com/
http://ancestorsatrest.com/family_bibles/
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~familybibles/

1.Kimberly A. M. Richards, Development of Civil Registration in Britain with Parallels to the Situation in the United States of America. Unpublished paper, American School of Genealogy
2. Michael Leclerc, “Vital Records in the United States”, Macavo Genealogy Blog, MGBblogsite, 2013, (http://blog.mocavo.com/2013/04/vital-records-in-the-united-states : 2013).
3. Ibid.
4. Noel C. Stevenson, Genealogical Evidence, rev. ed. (Laguna Hills, California: Aegean Park Press, 1989), 164.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid.
8. Ibid., 165.
9. Ibid.



Sunday, August 18, 2013

Tracing African American Roots


Tracing your family tree is a rewarding project.  However, if you are tracing African American ancestors it can be very challenging.  Prior to the Emancipation Proclamation, most enslaved people had no civil or probate records. Since it was illegal to educate slaves, most enslaved people could not write to produce letters and other personal literary items that might reveal their names, if they had children and other personal history. Though it is difficult to trace African American ancestors, do not let this deter you from finding your family.

Getting Started

Start your family tree with yourself, add your parents and work the way up your family tree. Collecting data online is good for finding vital information such as birth and death dates, but those old family stories are excellent sources of information.  Ask your elders if they know of any family stories, and if so, record them. These stories may provide information and clues that will help you trace your linage further back in time. Use open ended questions to broaden and deepen the conversation. Get as much oral history from your family members as possible.  If not mentioned, ask for names, locations, dates, professions, or anything that will provide clues to your family members’ lives.

The census of 1870 is the first census that included the names of enslaved people. For many African American ancestors this is where they are first documented.  The 1850 and 1860 Slave Schedules may be of some use, but you would need to know the name of the slave owner and even at that you may not be able to verify who were your ancestors because no names were provided. Slaves were also enumerated on federal census records from 1790 to 1840 with the families they served, but like the slave schedules, no names were recorded.

Search Free Databases!  

Freedmen’s Bureau

The "Freedmen’s Bureau," or the Bureau of Refugees, Freedman, and Abandoned Lands was established in 1865 to help newly freed slaves find relatives that they were separated from.  The Freedmen’s Bureau only existed from 1865 to 1872, but their records are still maintained and are a very good resource for tracing African American ancestry. From their website, you can look up death certificates, marriage records, birth records, documented slave owners, migration information, plantation records such as location and conditions, and African American military service documents. The website is easy to use; you just need to search by name.  The Bureau has additional website links to help you with your search through related websites. 


This website is a database of all of Confederate and Union armies for the Civil War.  The website is run by the National Park Service. This growing database includes the Colored Troops who fought in the Civil War.  Categories that can be searched are for soldiers, sailors, regiments, battles, prisoners, medals of honor, cemeteries, and monuments.


Information after the Civil War is a lot easier to find than information prior to it.  Oral histories are a tradition that humans have long used and still do.  We tell our children and our grandchildren about our lives and the people in it.  Voices from the Days of Slavery was created by the Library of Congress to help preserve these oral histories from former slaves. 


Lowcountry Africana is a fantastic resource for anyone who had ancestors in the “historic rice-growing areas of South Carolina, Georgia and extreme northeastern Florida.” The site provides information on slave-owners that in most cases includes the names of the slaves they owned. The site also has photos, tips and special projects.
The only way to explain this is to take a quote from the website “Two books you can read on-line containing about 2,000 pages of family histories based on all colonial court order and minute books on microfilm at the state archives of Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina and Delaware (over 1000 volumes), 1790-1810 census records, tax lists, wills, deeds, free Negro registers, marriage bonds, parish registers, Revolutionary War pension files, etc. There are also another 5,000 pages of abstracted colonial tax lists, Virginia personal property tax lists, census records, etc., under "Colonial Tax Lists..."

The University of Virginia has an amazing anthology of interviews with former slaves in both written and audio form. During the interviews former slaves discussed their lives before and after emancipation. In many cases, photos of the people interviewed are included. The site also has a collection of lists, photos and registers of African Americans that were free prior to the Emancipation Proclamation.


Though not all the USF project databases seem to be searchable, many are.  The site has links to a variety of resources, a mailing list, story share, and someone who you can e-mail with questions. 


If you need the help of professional genealogist to assist you with your African American  research contact Ancestry Connections Genealogy