Genealogist

Orice Jenkins

Orice Jenkins is a recording artist, genealogist, educator, and author, born and raised in Hartford, Connecticut. He began researching his family history after discovering that Whitney Houston’s grandparents were from his grandmother’s hometown of Blakely, Georgia. Since then, he has traced his ancestry back to 1745 in Central Virginia, uncovering the stories of several formerly enslaved Americans. Orice is a member of the Sons and Daughters of the U.S. Middle Passage and the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society. He has presented his findings at the College of William & Mary, Yale University, FamilySearch’s RootsTech Conference, and the International African American Museum’s Center for Family History. His research has been featured in The Washington Post, National Parks Magazine, PBS’s Finding Your Roots, and on the National Park Service website. He is the author of The Early County Massacre: Goolsby vs. The State of Georgia, a book chronicling the family of Grandison Goolsby, a prominent farmer who was extrajudicially lynched in Early County, Georgia, in 1915. Orice also publishes a blog called Chesta’s Children and serves as the Executive Director of a youth music program in Greenfield, Massachusetts.

جميع الجلسات واللغات


صورة مصغرة لـ Taxes and Tithes: Researching Enslaved Communities in Colonial Virginia
لغة هذه الجلسة هي الإنجليزية

Taxes and Tithes: Researching Enslaved Communities in Colonial Virginia

Orice Jenkins

صورة مصغرة لـ Using Historical Geography to Pinpoint Locations in Your Family’s Past
لغة هذه الجلسة هي الإنجليزية

Using Historical Geography to Pinpoint Locations in Your Family’s Past

Orice Jenkins

صورة مصغرة لـ Three Ways To Identify Your Ancestor's Enslaver
لغة هذه الجلسة هي الإنجليزية
52:15
صورة مصغرة لـ African American Genealogy: Ancestral Connections to a Revolutionary Black Church
لغة هذه الجلسة هي الإنجليزية
51:31