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genealogy



  • Francesca Morgan Dissects the American Obsession with Genealogy

    by Thomas Laqueur

    Questions about how Americans practice genealogy are in some ways less interesting that questions about why they do; all genealogies are ways of constructing pasts that explain and justify the present, and in America they are impossible to disentangle from racism. 



  • Two Women Tackle Their Shared History

    by Ann Banks

    Ann Banks is interviewed along with Karen Orozco Guttierez about the two women's shared roots in antebellum Alabama. 



  • The Problem With Ancestory.com

    by Adam H. Domby

    The search engine functions to hide both slave ownership and enslaved people from the eyes of contemporary genealogists.



  • How Do I Decode Slave Records?

    For many African Americans the paper trail back to your ancestral origins hits a wall once you reach the slavery era. During the hunt for information about my great-great grandmother, Jane Gates, who was born into slavery in 1819, we were able to find her in the 1870 census, the oldest census to list all African Americans by name. Before then, few counties listed slaves by name, so we shifted gears and searched the "slave schedules" for the 1860 and 1850 census information for slave owners named Gates. However, we weren't able to find anyone under that name who owned a slave that was around her age. This means that she was owned by someone with a surname other than Gates, and the only way to find her by using records would be to undertake a systematic search of the estate papers, wills and tax records, and other documents of every slave holder in Allegany County, Md....