Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
Ko e fakatahá ni ʻoku ʻi he ʻinitanetí
Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2025

Discovering Enslaved Ancestors Through Civil War Military Records

African American genealogists often refer to the 1870 “Brick Wall” as one of their biggest challenges. For Black genealogists with ancestral ties to the border states of Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, West Virginia, and Missouri, there are unique Civil War military records that may help you leap over that Brick Wall. With clues from military records, you may be able to find other records that mention your ancestors by name (probate records, deeds, church records, etc.) This session will provide a deep dive into these primary sources to find clues that may allow you to trace your family tree back several generations into the slavery era. We will use actual case studies of soldiers from border states to illustrate how this may be done.

Syllabus for Discovering Enslaved Ancestors Through Civil War Military Records (Syllabus)

Slides for Discovering Enslaved Ancestors Through Civil War Military Records (RootsTech2025).pdf

Fakamatala ne Fokotuʻu Maí


Thumbnail ki he Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen - Culling Evidence From Freedman's Bank Postmortem Records
Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
Ko e fuoloa ʻo e vitioó ko e 1:00:44
Thumbnail ki he Using Indirect Evidence to Identify Enslaved Parents
Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
Ko e fuoloa ʻo e vitioó ko e 1:00:1
Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2025

Using Indirect Evidence to Identify Enslaved Parents

LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson

Thumbnail ki he Three Ways To Identify Your Ancestor's Enslaver
Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
Ko e fuoloa ʻo e vitioó ko e 52:15
Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2025

Three Ways To Identify Your Ancestor's Enslaver

Orice Jenkins

Thumbnail ki he Utilizing AI and Full-Text Search to Advance Your African American Research
Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
Ko e fuoloa ʻo e vitioó ko e 51:4
Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2025

Utilizing AI and Full-Text Search to Advance Your African American Research

Julia A. Anderson

Kau ʻi he Fepōtalanoaʻakí