Sinopsis
Welcome to Research at the National Archives and Beyond! This show will provide individuals interested in genealogy and history an opportunity to listen, learn and take action.You can join me every Thursday at 9 pm Eastern, 8 pm Central, 7pm Mountain and 6 pm Pacific where I will have a wonderful line up of experts who will share resources, stories and answer your burning genealogy questions. All of my guests share a deep passion and knowledge of genealogy and history.My goal is to reach individuals who are thinking about tracing their family roots; beginners who have already started and others who believe that continuous learning is the key to finding answers. "Remember, your ancestors left footprints".
Episodios
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The African Americans Presence in Brooklyn Wilhelmena Kelly
27/04/2012 Duración: 01h11minJoin Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly with host Bernice Bennett for an exciting discussion of the African Americans presence in Brooklyn, and their long residence in Bedford Township (today's Bedford-Stuyvesant) and the Dutch community of Flatbush - founded in the 1650. Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly is a third generation Brooklyn native with roots in both Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights. An avid genealogist who discovered the hidden foundations of Brooklyn history, and the vanishing roots of central Brooklyn in particular. This moved her to write a pictorial history titled, “Bedford-Stuyvesant” in 2007, and a second book titled, “Crown Heights & Weeksville” in 2010. Wilhelmena is an honorary Regent of the Manhattan Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, and has recently organized a new DAR chapter in Queens. She sits on the boards of the African Atlantic Genealogy Society, Manhattan’s Solders’ and Sailors’ Memorial Association, and the Erasmus Hall High School Alumni Association
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The Dred Scott's Family History with Lynne M. Jackson
20/04/2012 Duración: 01h10minLynne M. Jackson, Dred Scott's Great-great granddaughter, shares what family research has revealed in the last five years that amazed living family members. The famous slave's goal, whose freedom suit was a major catalyst for the civil war, was all about family. Lynne M. Jackson is the Founder and President of The Dred Scott Foundation. www.thedredscottfoundation.org. Theme music - Sweet Mello Spice by composer / producer Alvin K. Alexander. (Pianist Ayako Higuchi)
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Genealogical Resources in Ohio & Michigan with Derek Davey
13/04/2012 Duración: 58min8pm central and 9 pm eastern Join Derek S. Davey for an exciting exploration of available collections at libraries and educational institutions in Ohio and Michigan as well various genealogical groups that specialize in this region. Derek S. Davey is a professional genealogist and sales manager for an Ohio Industrial Distributor. He has been researching his own family since 1974 when he was thirteen years old. For the past fifteen years, his primary areas of professional research are Northwest Ohio and South Eastern Michigan. Derek also serves as the administrator of the Ohio and Michigan Research communities on Facebook that is sponsored by Family Search. Derek lectures on a variety of topics related to genealogy in Ohio, Michigan and Indiana. His specialty areas are Computer Genealogy, Civil WarResearch and New England Research. Derek teaches genealogy at Lourdes University, Terra Community College and the Monclova Community Center. He is a member of the Ohio Genealogical Society, NEHGS, Genealogica
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From Shanghai to Harlem with Sylvia Wong Lewis
06/04/2012 Duración: 01h14min‘From Shanghai to Harlem,’ is journalist and genealogist Sylvia Wong Lewis’ narrative about her multicultural family’s journey that includes slavery, indentured servitude, exploitation, courage, intrigue, determination and triumph. She shares how her ancestors left footprints for her to follow from Mississippi, New Orleans, China, South America, Caribbean to converge at the Harlem Renaissance. She will talk about the diaspora or ‘scattered people,’ her Hakka ancestors and more. Tune in for an interesting show that explores how the United Kingdom’s and American slavery system intersect. Sylvia is a journalist with over 20 years experience and a lifelong genealogist. She holds a degree in African American History from Smith College and, is also CEO of Narrative Network, (www.yonarrative.com) a multicultural public relations consulting firm specializing in messaging and positioning.
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Freedmen Bureau Records with Selma Stewart
30/03/2012 Duración: 01h20minFinding Your Ancestors in the Freedmen Bureau Records between 1865-1872. Host - Bernice Alexander Bennett and Co-Host - Natonne Elaine Kemp. Selma Stewart will discuss and provide examples of what is available and how to use Virginia Freedmen Bureau Records that are digitized and available on-line at www. FamilySearch.org. Selma Stewart is an avid family researcher and genealogist. She is the current President of the Afro American Historical and Genealogical Society Hampton Roads Chapter and serves on the Board of the Virginia Genealogical Society. In addition, she is the former National 2000-2002 Corresponding Secretary for Afro American Historical and Genealogical Society. Her work on numerous transcription projects include the Brantley Association Southampton County Virginia Project and Whispers from the Dust - Virginia Freedmen's Project Freedmen Bureau Record Group 105. Theme music - Sweet Mello Spice by composer / producer Alvin K. Alexander. (Pianist Ayako Higuchi)
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Maryland State Genealogy Resources with Michael Hait, CG
23/03/2012 Duración: 01h03minDo you want to know where to begin your research in Maryland? Have you discovered a link to Maryland in the census and other documents? Callers and chatters are encouraged to come with your burning questions for this exciting show with Michael Hait, CG and host Bernice Bennett. Michael Hait, CG, is a full-time professional genealogist, with over fifteen years of research experience across the United States, from Connecticut to Louisiana, Tennessee to South Dakota. His specialties include Maryland research, African American genealogy, and records of the Civil War and Reconstruction era. Michael is a frequent contributor to genealogy magazines and journals, and a popular lecturer in the Mid-Atlantic area. Sweet Mello Spice by composer AKAlexander (Pianist Ayako Higuchi & Nikki Darling Lead Vocalist) (c)Copyright Secured All Rights Served 2012.
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Research in St. Helena Parish, La with Antoinette Harrell
16/03/2012 Duración: 01h02minPreviously aired in September- 2011. Please join host Bernice Alexander Bennett and her special guest Antoinette Harrell - genealogist, family historian & host of Nurturing Our Roots Educational Television Program. Antoinette has conducted African American genealogy research at the St. Helena Parish Courthouse for the past seventeen years. Please join my special guest as she discuss the type of documents she found inside the St. Helena Courthouse vault.
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Preserving Local History-Marion Woodfork Simmons
09/03/2012 Duración: 01h00s9pm est and 8pm central Join Marion Woodfork Simmons with host Bernice Bennett for a discussion on preserving local history. Marion Woodfork Simmons has been researching her family history for over 20 years. She is the owner of Woodfork Genealogy, LLC a research consulting company that assists individuals to preserve their family and communities history. Her website (http://www.woodforkgenealogy.com) provides a wealth of information for individuals performing genealogy research in Caroline County, Virginia. Ms. Simmons recently published her new book, Memories of Union High: An Oasis in Caroline County, Virginia 1903-1969. Theme music - Sweet Mello Spice by composer / producer Alvin K. Alexander. (Pianist Ayako Higuchi)
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Preserving Black Cemeteries with LaDonna Garner, B.S.,CG
02/03/2012 Duración: 01h19minJoin LaDonna Garner and Host Bernice Bennett and Co-Host Natonne Elaine Kemp for a discussion concerning the plight of Black Cemeteries and the process of documenting and preserving abandoned and neglected African American Cemeteries. LaDonna Garner is a Historic Preservationist and Certified GenealogistSM specializing in Southeast Missouri. Board-Certified in genealogy in 2006, Garner has been researching her family history for over 20 years. She is an active member and volunteer of several societies including the St. Louis Genealogical Society, Jefferson County Genealogical Society, the Association of Professional Genealogists, the Association for Gravestone Studies, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The present Curator of Bolduc House Museum in Ste. Genevieve, MO she has held various positions in promoting genealogy research and historic preservation including Roundtable Chair of the African American Special Interest Group, St. Louis Genealogical Society; and Vice-President & Newslet
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Piecing Together Your Heritage: A Journey of Discovery
24/02/2012 Duración: 01h30minJoin Host Bernice Alexander Bennett and the faculty of the recent Third Annual Genealogy Conference of the St. Louis African American History and Genealogy Society for a discussion on an array of genealogy topics. Guest will include - Charles Brown, Jr., President of the St. Louis African American and Genealogy Society. Angela Walton-Raj- nationally known genealogist and producer of the African Roots Podcast. Lynne M. Jackson- President and Founder of the Dred Scott Heritage Foundation. www.thedredscottfoundation.org Janis Minor Forte'- genealogist, writer and lecturer who has received awards and citations. She publishes her research as methodologies, case studies and record reviews incorporating theory, documentation and practical study. Angela McGhee- is the immediate past President of the Afro-American Genealogical and Historical Society of Chicago. Theme music - Sweet Mello Spice by composer / producer Alvin K. Alexander. (Pianist Ayako Higuchi)
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The Digital Diaspora Family Reunion with Thomas Allen Harris
17/02/2012 Duración: 01h01minJoin Thomas Allen Harris founder and President of Chimpanzee Productions for a lively discussion on searching for identity, family and sprituality through sharing family stories and images in a virtual family reunion format called the Digital Diaspora Family Reunion Roadshow (DDFR). DDFR brings to the forefront stories and histories suppressed and/or hidden that show the fullness of Who We Are. This important and timely project provides a gathering place where lost, neglected and discarded shards of history can once again be seen, shared and appreciated. A graduate of Harvard College, Mr. Harris lectures widely on the use of media as a tool for social change. Chimpanzee Productions is currently in production on Through A Lens Darkly: Black Photographers and the Emergence of a People, a feature-length documentary and multimedia project that explores the role of photography in shaping the identity, aspirations, and social emergence of African Americans from slavery to the present. Its companion proj
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America's Best Kept Secret- Slavery in the 20th Century
16/02/2012 Duración: 01h32minJoin this special show for a discussion with Antoinette Harrell, Professor Clare Washington, and Instructor- Rebecca Hensley on America's Best Kept Secret- Slavery in the 20th Century. Many individuals were shocked and saddened by the recent PBS Special on Slavery by Another Name, and the dialogue should not stop. Antoinette Harrell renowned genealogist uncovered information 20 years ago concerning the issue of 20th Century Slavery. The goal is to raise awareness. Clare Washington- Professor at Portland State University developed the first curriculum on Peonage, and challenged her students to study the issue. Rebecca Hensley- Instructor of Sociology at Southeastern Louisiana University (areas of expertise- Power Relations, Race, Gender and Globalization) has also explored and collaborated with Ms. Harrell to exame the evidence of 20th Century Slavery. This show will further explore the evidence and listeners are encouraged to call in, and participate in the chat on this very important discussion. P
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Research in the Florida Parishes-Stephanie Martin-Quiatte
10/02/2012 Duración: 01h01minHave you ever wondered if your surname is unique to a particular region of the country? Stephanie Martin Quaitte shared her research in the Florida Parishes of Southeast Louisiana. This research will provide other researchers an opportunity to learn how she gathered over 10,000 surnames for a specific region of Louisiana. For Stephanie what began as a search for her own identity has grown into an ultimate goal of documenting as many African-Americans from the Florida Parishes as possible for future researchers. Stephanie is Manager of the African American Archives for the Louisiana Genealogy Project, and has submitted work to Afrigneas and to Christine’s Genealogy website. She is also published in the “The Louisiana Genealogical Register”. Though she submits file from throughout Louisiana she primarily researches the Florida Parishes of Southeast Louisiana. She maintains and constantly adds information to a 10,000 plus names database from those parishes. Her surnames are: ADDISON, JACKSON, BANKS, M
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Miles Lassiter- A Black Quaker with Margo Williams- 9pm est
03/02/2012 Duración: 01h02minJoin Margo Lee Williams with Host Bernice Bennett for a moving discussion of her research to uncover the story of her Quaker ancestor Miles Lassiter. This story follows her research through court records and the Carolina countryside to uncover her roots as a descendant of an early African American Quaker. Margo Lee Williams was born in New York. She holds an MA in Sociology and an MA in Religious Education. She developed an interest in genealogy early in life, but only after moving to Washington DC did she actively pursue family research. In the 30+ years since, she has researched and written extensively on her family. She is a well-known lecturer for the Family History Centers of the LDS Church in the Washington, DC area, a former editor of the Journal of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society, and through her private research company, Personal Prologue, has developed expertise in identifying heirs for intestate probates. She is currently a National Service Officer with Vietnam Veterans
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The Lipscomb Plantation Slaves with Gwendolyn Olson
27/01/2012 Duración: 01h16minJoin Gwendolyn Olson as she describes the process of identifying and documenting the slaves on the Lipscomb Plantation in Durham, NC. Gwendolyn Olson is a Registered Nurse at Stanford Hospital in the California Bay Area. Her family roots have fascinated her as long as she can remember. Her father was an only child, and the youngest grandchild of a proud Spokane, Washington family. His mother, who belonged to an old respected Spokane African American family, died when he was very young. Raised by his widowed father, he was told stories about his family’s Durham, North Carolina roots by his doting maternal aunts and cousins, and he shared these stories with his daughter. Gwendolyn’s research has led her to document the Slaves on the Lipscomb Plantation in Durham, NC and to meet many slave descendants of these families. She is also actively looking for more photographs of the former slaves, and their first generation descendants. She has complied a short history, of the slave history of the Lipscomb Planta
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Allen County Public Library with Curt B. Witcher - 9pm est
20/01/2012 Duración: 01h12minThe ACPL Genealogy Center is a unique and valuable resource with one of the largest research collections available, incorporating records from around the world. Curt B. Witcher is the Senior Manager for Special Collections at the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne, Indiana, where he manages The Genealogy Center, serves as general curator for that institution’sRare and Fine Book Collection and the institutional archives, and is the Supervisor for the newly acquired Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection. Curt is the project lead on the library’s digitization initiatives that include partnerships with the Internet Archive, ProQuest, Footnote/fold3, and WeRelate as well as growing a site of free, searchable data files. He is a former president of both the Federation of Genealogical Societies and the National Genealogical Society, and the founding president of the Indiana Genealogical Society. He currently serves as vice-president of development for FGS. Curt was distinguished in 1995 as a fe
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Journey to Discovering the Truth with Charles Brown, Jr.
13/01/2012 Duración: 59minCharles Brown, Jr., provides a moving account of his quest to find truth concerning his family in Missouri. Charles Brown is the President of St. Louis African American History & Genealogy Society. He was born and raised in the Carondelet Neighborhood of South St. Louis City and attended North East Missouri State University. His strong religious foundation was rooted in the Quinn Chapel AME Church. After retiring as a coach and educator, Charles helped organize a family reunion on his paternal side. This genealogical journey had a lot of secrets, hidden agendas, and valuable history. He discovered that his immediate ancestors were involved in a racial cleansing and a hanging which occurred in Pierce CityMissouri in 1901. The events of this travesty were never discussed by any of his family. After the incident was uncovered, a documentary was produced explaining this incident as one of three such incidents in the United States in the early 1900s. Charles is a participant in the film Bani
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From the Spoils of War with Arthur Thomas
06/01/2012 Duración: 01h01minJoin Art Thomas as he describes why and how he started on his family history and genealogical journey and the advances and changes he has noticed in the past 20-25 years. Art Thomas has been involved in genealogy for 25 years. Art is a member of several Local, County and State genealogical societies. He is a founding member of the African American Genealogy Group of the Miami Valley (AAGGMV), located in the Miami River Valley of Ohio. Art is also a member of the Ohio Genealogy Society “First Families” and the “Ohio Civil War Family” lineage societies having proven and documented his descent from Free Persons of Color residing in Ohio prior to Statehood in 1803 and to men who fought and served as USCT’s in the Civil War. Art’s main focus in genealogy and family history has been the activities in religion, the underground railroad, education, occupations and politics of his ancestors and the communities in which they resided from their first days of freedom in the early 19th century. Art’s earliest docu
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Conducting Slave Era Research - Part II with Aaron Dorsey
30/12/2011 Duración: 01h27minConducting Slave Era Research Part II is a continuation of the discussion on strategic approaches to finding your enslaved ancestors. A majority of the show will respond to questions from the listening audience. Aaron Dorsey, has been doing genealogical research for over 10 years. His undergraduate degree in U.S. History and graduate degree in Education Policy is from Stanford University. He began researching his family history after reading Jubilee by Margaret Walker-Alexander for a Survey of African American Literature at the College of Alameda. He has documented the history of his family in Alabama, California, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. However, the focus of his research has been concentrated in Texas where he has traced his ancestors to 1839. His Texas research has been featured in the ARK-LA-TEX Genealogical Association, Inc.’s The Genie. Aaron is currently working on two books one focusing on slave era research and the other pertaining to the 1868 voter registra
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ZULU CHEST CUTTER by Arthur N.S. Mcunu, Jr., M.D.
23/12/2011 Duración: 01h07minFrom the Slums of Soweto to the Success in America Join my special guest Doctor Arthur Mcunu, Jr. for a moving story of his life and new book. (http://www.zuluchestcutter.com) Doctor Arthur N.S. Mcunu was born in Soweto, South Africa in 1963, the year the urban settlement was officially named (Soweto is an abbreviation for Southwest Townships). He was raised in a tiny, two-bedroom structure, which he shared with eighteen relatives, spanning four generations. Arthur, or Sibusiso (his Zulu name, which means blessing), grew up during the height of black South Africa's rebellion against Apartheid, witnessing much of the movement's history firsthand. He participated in the Soweto Uprising of 1976 and was present for the massacre at the University of Zululand in 1983.The latter of these tragedies prompted Arthur to immigrate to the United States to further his education and pursue a career in medicine. Dr. Mcunu serves as Assistant Professor of Surgery and Director of Cardiothoracic Surgery at the Howard Univer