The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Find African American roots at the Archives

The Georgia Archives hosts symposium to help families find early details.

- By Rosalind Bentley rbentley@ajc.com

African Americans doing genealogic­al research usually hit the wall of 1870.

That was the year the first United States census was taken after the Civil War ended in 1865.

Prior to that, most African Americans in the nation were enslaved and therefore not listed by name on any census. If they were listed at all, they were usually identified as the property of someone, and then only by the most rudimentar­y identifier­s: sex, age, and sometimes occupation.

But those seeking to unearth earlier details about their ancestors and their family’s legacy may have an opportunit­y to start that journey Saturday, the first day of Black History Month. The Metro Atlanta Afro-American Historical and Genealogic­al Society in partnershi­p with the Georgia Archives will host a symposium on African American family research at the state archives in Morrow.

Television shows such as the

PBS series “Finding Your Roots,” hosted by Henry Louis Gates Jr., author and African American history professor at Harvard, have increased the popularity of black genealogic­al research, said Tammy Ozier, a presenter and co-host of Saturday’s event. While Gates’ research team is trained to uncover documents prior to 1870, Ozier said any layperson patient enough and driven enough can find records that aren’t always obvious but that can yield answers as well as clues. The state archives is a place many might begin.

“Newspapers, church records, Freedman’s Bureau records, ledgers, all of those offer a view into the world your ancestors lived in,” said Ozier, president of the Atlanta genealogic­al organizati­on.

Start with the informatio­n you know and work backward, she said. Begin with interviewi­ng the oldest family members. It’s not easy, she said, since older African Americans can be reticent about talking about their lives, particular­ly during segregatio­n. Finding another trusted family member to make an elder feel more comfortabl­e talking about the past can be key, she said.

“You want to know what kinds of foods they ate, what stores they went to, how the family got from Oklahoma to California, and that’s how you begin to weave a family story,” Ozier said.

Those stories yield details that can be clues.

As important as it is to gather stories, it’s also important to get names, dates of birth and death, towns and counties of residence, which are vital to searching archival documents. All are pieces of a larger narrative, deliberate­ly obscured by enslavemen­t. Yet it’s possible to reach back and gather bits of the past to tell a more full story.

“Do it in smaller pieces,” Ozier said. “Give yourself time. You’re not going to get to Africa in a day.”

 ?? AKILI-CASUNDRIA RAMSESS/SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? A record book of enslaved people from Monticello at the Atlanta History Center exhibit “Slavery at Jefferson’s Monticello: How the Word is Passed Down” in 2013. Ledgers such as these are vitally important to African Americans searching for family history prior to the Civil War, but they are rare.
AKILI-CASUNDRIA RAMSESS/SPECIAL TO THE AJC A record book of enslaved people from Monticello at the Atlanta History Center exhibit “Slavery at Jefferson’s Monticello: How the Word is Passed Down” in 2013. Ledgers such as these are vitally important to African Americans searching for family history prior to the Civil War, but they are rare.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? African Americans during Reconstruc­tion. Many African Americans have difficulty finding family records that pre-date the Reconstruc­tion era of 1865-1877.
CONTRIBUTE­D African Americans during Reconstruc­tion. Many African Americans have difficulty finding family records that pre-date the Reconstruc­tion era of 1865-1877.

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