The Oklahoman

Event to help people treasure their roots

- BY KIMBERLY BURK For The Oklahoman

Barbara Kroll was happy to learn that a Native American genealogy class will be offered during the Feb. 10 “Treasure Your Roots” genealogy conference at St. John Missionary Baptist Church, 5700 N Kelley. Her life has been enriched, she said, by seeking out her Cherokee forebears.

“You learn the history of the Indian removal, but when you witness it firsthand through your ancestors, it becomes a lot more real,” she said.

Kroll, who lives in Tulsa, said her parents are descended from the same ancestor, eight generation­s back in Georgia and North Carolina. That was easy to learn, she said, because “the records are excellent. It’s a big boon for anyone researchin­g an ancestor in the Five Civilized Tribes, because the U.S. government was in their business early on.”

The first census was taken in the late 1700s, she said, and many government head counts followed.

For the Plains Indians, “family history research is a whole different story,” she said, because they were not removed from their homelands until the late 1800s, and there’s much less documentat­ion.

As a volunteer at Family History Centers of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Kroll has spent 40 years helping Native Americans and others search for their kin.

People should learn about their ancestors, she said, “and what they went through to make America what it is today.”

More than 100 people have registered for the Treasure Your Roots conference. Registrati­on will be available at the door, but early sign-up is encouraged for best class selection and guarantee of a boxed lunch.

Other lectures will include instructio­n on probate and wills, DNA testing, passenger lists, using Google for family history research, using the federal census, the African-American Freedmen’s Bureau Project, using newspapers for research and writing a family history. Participan­ts can choose from 20 classes offered during the 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. conference.

Keynote speaker will be Thom Reed, global outreach manager for FamilySear­ch Internatio­nal. Reed said he will come to Oklahoma City with a tender heart, having lost his mother a few weeks ago. Her death reminded him there is always an urgency “to capture the moments, and to document them,” Reed said.

People with Native American ancestry can get assistance at Family History Centers across Oklahoma and at the Cherokee Heritage Center Genealogic­al Department in Tahlequah, where Gene Norris is head genealogis­t, Kroll said. And records are increasing­ly available online, she said.

“Probably 12 to 15 people a year come to me for help” with Native American research, she said. “It used to be many more. It’s gotten easier since everything is digitized.”

To register for the conference, go to www. treasureyo­urroots201­8. com. The conference fee of $10 includes lunch.

For more informatio­n about the conference, call Andre Head at 206-9488852 or Sherrie Furber at 405-473-7374. For research assistance in eastern Oklahoma, call Kroll at 918-519-2922 or Norris at 918-456-6007.

Kimberly Burk is the Oklahoma City stake public affairs director for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

 ?? [PHOTO PROVIDED] ?? Barbara Kroll’s great-grandmothe­r, Addie Still Shirley, was born in 1857 in Goingsnake District, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory.
[PHOTO PROVIDED] Barbara Kroll’s great-grandmothe­r, Addie Still Shirley, was born in 1857 in Goingsnake District, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States