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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AkataDocumentary - One Woman's Journey to Find Her Ancestry with Victoria Gregg
30/09/2016 Duración: 01h05minFirst-time filmmaker, Victoria Gregg, will share her current project entitled "Akata Documentary. A film that follows her journey of FINDING who her ancestors were and how she deals with the surprises along the way. In this program, Victoria will share exclusive details about the film: from the hurdles of trying to finance an independent project to meeting distant relatives face to face. Most importantly she will let the listeners know how they can get involved. Victoria Gregg, affectionately known as “Queen V”, is the Executive Producer and the focal point of the Akata Documentary. This film highlights her story as she shares her frustrations of not knowing her ancestral heritage and seeks to find answers. Prior to her life as a filmmaker, she worked as a digital media consultant helping small and large businesses build their online presence. After graduating with her MBA, from Hawaii Pacific University, she moved back to her hometown of Silver Spring, MD. Victoria is now the co-founder of Up Studios LLC,
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A Legend in the Classroom-The Life Story of Ms Yvonne Busch - Leonard SmithIII
23/09/2016 Duración: 01h15minA Legend in the Classroom-The Life Story of Ms Yvonne Busch Leonard Smith III is a self-proclaimed technology geek, with a passion for genealogy and story. He has authored many articles and workshops on research techniques, storytelling, and filmmaking. In 2008, he started LS3 Studios. This multimedia studio has produced interviews and award-winning documentary films. Leonard has helped his clients unearth their family history dating back centuries. He has over forty years of researching on his own family history. This experience allows him to mentor others looking for that “next step.” https://www.ls3studios.com/ Leonard’s style of teaching is in plain everyday language for the non-technical individual. This enables students to understand and learn with ease. He loves teaching others on how to apply technology in their genealogy research. His mission, “Educate, Entertain, and Inspire Others To Tell Their Stories.” Some of the most recent projects include; “A Place Called Desire”, “From Shang
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Challenges in Searching for your African American Roots with Nicka Sewell-Smith
16/09/2016 Duración: 01h21minChallenges and Opportunities in Searching for your African American Roots! Nicka Sewell-Smith is a professional photographer, speaker, and documentarian with more than 17 years of experience as a genealogist. She has extensive experience in African ancestored genealogy, reverse genealogy, and family reunion planning and execution. She is also an expert in genealogical research in the Northeastern Louisiana area, sharing genealogy with youth, documenting the ancestral journey, and employing the use of new technology in genealogy and family history research. Nicka has diverse and varied experience in communications, with a background in publications, editing, graphic design, radio, and video production. She has edited and designed several volumes of family history that include narratives, photos, and genealogical information and has also transferred these things to an online environment. Nicka Smith is also the producer and host of the Black ProGen Live! www.whoisnickasmith.com
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Wilmington on Fire with Christopher Everett
09/09/2016 Duración: 01h00sWilmington on Fire chronicles the bloody attack on the African-American community and unseated elected officials in the port city of Wilmington, North Carolina November 10, 1898. The massacre and coup d’etat was the springboard for the white supremacy movement and Jim Crow segregation throughout the state of North Carolina and the American South. This discussion will focus on the historical research and documentation that lead to the creation this valuable documentary film. Never forget because this could happen again. Christopher Everett is a writer, film director and film producer from Laurinburg, North Carolina. He has experience in film, graphic design, marketing and advertising. He recently directed and produced his first feature-length documentary entitled “Wilmington on Fire” which is on the 1898 Wilmington Massacre/Coup in Wilmington, NC. Website: wilmingtononfire.com Facebook: facebook.com/wilmingtononfire Twitter: twitter.com/wilmington1898 Instagram: instagram.com/wilmingtononfire SoundCl
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Typical Actions in Probate of a Slaveholding Estate with David E.Paterson
02/09/2016 Duración: 01h28minRebroadcast: Public historian David E. Paterson studies people who lived in nineteenth-century Upson County, Georgia, especially those who experienced slavery and Reconstruction. A civilian employee of the US Navy by day, he spends his leisure hours researching and writing local history. David has helped manage the Slave Research Forum at AfriGeneas.com since about 2001. David emigrated to the U.S. in 1958 from Scotland and was granted U.S. citizenship in 1975. He lives in Norfolk, Virginia. We will discuss the most fruitful probate records for slavery research in most states, for the period about 1800 to 1865. The discussion may be less useful for the colonial period, or for the records of Louisiana or Spanish colonial Florida whose laws and processes derived from different legal traditions. In addition, David will describe the process flow from one record to the next – the purpoe of each record – and what kinds of slavery-related information maybe found in the record. Particular attention will focus
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Researching African American Ancestors, LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson, JD, LLM, CG(SM)
26/08/2016 Duración: 01h04minA Guide to Researching African American Ancestors in Laurens County, South Carolina LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson, CG, is a board-certified genealogist since 2015. She teaches and lectures on African-American genealogy, and serves as the co-chair of BCG's Intellectual Property Committee. She has written a reference book that is both a locality guide (with tips on where to look for records) and a "how to" manual to aid in the development and execution of research plans relating to African American ancestors . Although the book focuses on a single county in South Carolina, it provides background information regarding laws and history that apply to all SC counties, and more general guidance relevant to genealogical methodology. The author has included practical advice based on her own research and formal studies, as well as up-to-date information about internet and other resources.
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Records of the Post Civil War Federal Agencies at NARA with Reginald Washington
19/08/2016 Duración: 01h16minRebroadcast The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is the official repository of the permanently valuable records of the U.S. Government. NARA's vast holdings document the lives and experiences of persons who interacted with the Federal Government. The records created by post-Civil War Federal Agencies are perhaps some of the most important records available for the study of black family life and genealogy. This discussion will focus on NARA's Reference Information Paper 108. This reference information paper describes three post-Civil War Federal agencies' records: the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands; the Freedman's Savings and Trust Company; and the Commissioners of Claims. Case examples will be shared to illustrate the value of researching these important records. Reginald Washington is a retired archivist/ genealogy specialist with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). He lectures frequently on records and research procedures at the National Archi
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Radiant Roots and Boricua Branches with Teresa Vega
30/07/2016 Duración: 59minTeresa Vega will share her journey to discover her tri-racial roots in the United States, Puerto Rico and Madagascar. Teresa Vega's background in cultural anthropology helped her to research her ancestral roots. She began blogging to document the genealogy research she had been doing over the past several years. She is a proud member of both the NJ and NY Chapters of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society (AAGHS) and the Facebook Group African American Genealogy & Slave Ancestry Research. She is currently featured in an ancestry.com commercial. http://radiantrootsboricuabranches.com/about/ Music by AK Alexander Productions
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Race, Music and Message at The Dawn of Recorded Sound with Bill Doggett
22/07/2016 Duración: 01h25minThis program will examine the suppressed history of the commercialization of Race and Race Consciousness through the lense of sheet music and early sound recordings of turn of the century Coon Songs and Minstrel Shows produced by Victor and Columbia Records 1900-1910. Bill Doggett is a California based archivist and specialist in Race and Race Consciousness in recordings at the Dawn of Recorded Sound. With hundreds of rare 1900-1920 78rpm recordings of Coon Songs and other "Race Records" in his Sound Archive, Doggett was commissioned in 2015 by The Sound Division of The Library of Congress to create a project for The National Juke Box which will launch in 2017. The Sound files are: (a) Jests from Georgia by Ralph Bingham- attached is Jest#1(b) Two Negro Stories by Nat Wills: Attached is Story#1-The Head Waiter (c) Collins and Harlan: Nigger Loves His Possum-a 1905 Platinum Gold record for Victor Records (d) Moonlight in Jungleland by Collins and Harlan-excerpt (e) The Whistling Coon sung by the George W. J
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African North American Genealogy Across the US-Canada Border with Adam Arenson
10/06/2016 Duración: 01h05minDr. Adam Arenson discusses his ongoing research about African North Americans—those men and women, born free or enslaved, who crossed or re-crossed the U.S.-Canada border in the era of emancipation, Civil War, and Reconstruction. We will discuss how difficult it is to determine how many fugitive slaves and free blacks were in Canada; the history of the more than 600 African North Americans who returned to fight for the U.S. Colored Troops; the thousands more who returned to the United States in the decades that followed; the hundreds of men, women, and children who traveled north to Canada after emancipation; and even the reason Civil War records are filled with fake claims of Canadian and other citizenship. Dr. Adam Arenson is an associate professor of history and the director of the urban studies program at Manhattan College. He is the author of the award-winning The Great Heart of the Republic: St. Louis and the Cultural Civil War (Harvard, 2011 — now out in paperback from Missouri, 2015); as well as
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Do You Have An Artificial Brick Wall? with Robyn Smith
02/06/2016 Duración: 01h02minAuthor and Genealogist Robyn Smith has been researching her family and others for 18 years. An engineer by day, Robyn makes good use of those research and problem-solving skills in the field of genealogy. She specializes in Maryland research, African-American and Slave-era research and Court Records research. Robyn has a strong interest in promoting the documentation of families and communities, and emphasizing the use of proper genealogical standards in our research. Robyn teaches an Advanced African-American Genealogy class part-time at Howard Community College in Columbia, MD, lectures locally and has published several genealogy articles in local journals. She is also the author of a new book The Best of Reclaiming Kin and the genealogy blog "Reclaiming Kin" which can be viewed at http://msualumni.wordpress.com.
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Slavery at James Madison's Montpelier with Zann Nelson and Elizabeth Chew
27/05/2016 Duración: 01h06minJoin Zann Nelson and Elizabeth Chew for a discussion on the following topics: African American research in Virginia: (challenges, what works, successes) Why is it important? How Montpelier's African American heritage project differs from other plantations and how it relates to the ongoing discussions about the Constitution. Zann Nelson is an award-winning freelance writer specializing in African American historical investigations. She is the former president of the preservation nonprofit organization, Friends of Wilderness Battlefield, Inc., the current president of History Quest, co-founder of the African American Heritage Alliance, and is currently the Consultant for “The African Americans of the Montpelier Community Project.” Elizabeth Chew is Vice President for Museum Programs at James Madison's Montpelier. She has worked in the museum field for thirty years, focusing on the interpretation of women's and African American history. At Monticello, where she was Curator for 13 years, she co-organized,
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Slaves Waiting For Sale with Maurie D. McInnis
13/05/2016 Duración: 01h04minSlaves Waiting For Sale In 1853, Eyre Crowe, a young British artist, visited a slave auction in Richmond, Virginia. Harrowed by what he witnessed, he captured the scene in sketches that he would later develop into a series of illustrations and paintings, including the culminating painting, Slaves Waiting for Sale, Richmond, Virginia. This innovative book uses Crowe’s paintings to explore the texture of the slave trade in Richmond, Charleston, and New Orleans, the evolving iconography of abolitionist art, and the role of visual culture in the transatlantic world of abolitionism. Tracing Crowe’s trajectory from Richmond across the American South and back to London—where his paintings were exhibited just a few weeks after the start of the Civil War—Maurie D. McInnis illuminates not only how his abolitionist art was inspired and made, but also how it influenced the international public’s grasp of slavery in America. With almost 140 illustrations, Slaves Waiting for Sale brings a fresh perspective to the America
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Ebony and Ivy with Dr. Craig Steven Wilder
29/04/2016 Duración: 01h09minRebroadcast Join author Craig Steven Wilder for a discussion of his research and book - Ebony & Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the Troubled History of America's University. Craig Steven Wilder is a professor of American history at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and has taught at Wiliams College and Dartmouth College. Many of America's revered colleges and universities - from Harvard, Yale, and Princeton to Rutgers, Williams College, and UNC - were soaked in the sweat and the tears, and sometimes the blood of people of color. The earliest academies proclaimed their mission to Christianize the savages of North America, and played a key role in white conquest. Later, the slave economy and higher education grew up together, each nurturing the other. Slavery funded colleges, built campuses, and paid the wages of professors. Enslaved Americans waited on faculty and students; academic leaders aggressively courted the support of slave owners and slave traders. Significantly, as Wilder shows, our leading uni
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Why Should You Consider Joining A Lineage Society? Shelley Murphy & True Lewis
22/04/2016 Duración: 01h14minHave you considered joining a lineage society? Why is a lineage society important? Do you know what information and research is required to qualify for membership? Dr. Shelley Murphy and True Lewis will answer your questions and discuss the research and documentation process to prove your ancestors connection to the Revolutionary War. Chatters are encouraged to call in to share their thoughts and research on joining a lineage society. Dr. Shelley Murphy, aka "familytreegirl" is a native of Michigan. Shelley has been an avid genealogist for over 25 years researching the Davis, Marsh, Goens/Goins/Goings, Roper, Boyer, Worden, Cureton, & Murphy, etc. family lines. She attends and presents at local and national conferences and currently works for a nonprofit and serves as adjunct faculty at Averett University. In addition, Shelley is a Coordinator of the Track 1 for the Midwest African American Genealogy Institute. The only Institute developed exclusively to address the issues associated with African A
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Finding Samuel Lowe with Paula Williams Madison
15/04/2016 Duración: 01h24minFinding Samuel Lowe is a remarkable journey about one woman’s path to self-discovery. It is a story about love and devotion that transcends time and race, and a beautiful reflection of the power of family and the interconnectedness of our world. Paula Williams Madison is Chairman and CEO of Madison Media Management LLC, a Los Angeles based media consultancy company with global reach. In 2011, Madison retired from NBCUniversal, where she had been Executive Vice President of Diversity as well as a Vice President of the General Electric Company (GE), then the parent company of NBCU. During her 22 years with NBCU, she held a number of successful leadership roles, including President and General Manager of NBC4 Los Angeles, Los Angeles Regional General Manager for NBCU’s Telemundo TV stations and Vice President and News Director of NBC4 New York. She’s been honored by Asian organizations as well, having been recognized in 2014 as one of the Outstanding 50 Asian Americans in Business and in 2015, she was honored
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Documenting Fraternal and Benevolent Ancestry - James Morgan III and Jari Honora
08/04/2016 Duración: 01h16minJari C.Honora and James Morgan III will discuss a step by step guide to documenting fraternal society participation of ancestors and relatives as well as offer tips and tricks on how to locate documents in this field of study. They will show that through understanding fraternal happenings in state and local communities, researchers will be able to get a better understanding of not only who their ancestors were, but also a better understanding of relatives contributions to society at large. James Morgan III is a Prince Hall Mason serving as Worshipful Master of Corinthian Lodge #18 in Washington, D.C. and as the Worshipful Associate Grand Historian of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the District of Columbia. Mr. Morgan is a member of the Phylaxis Society, the only independent research organization dedicated to study African American Freemasonry and Fraternalism and has published several critically acclaimed research papers in their journal. He recently co-wrote and published the 2016 book “T
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Slave Era Research with Char McCargo Bah
01/04/2016 Duración: 01h12minChar McCargo Bah is the CEO/Owner of FindingThingsforU, LLC. She has been a genealogist since 1981; she has appeared in numerous television interviews with CBS, FOX-5, Comcast, Public Broadcasting Services just to name a few and documentaries. She has received numerous awards in 2014, 2013, 2010, and in 2009 for her work in genealogy. She was the City of Alexandria’s genealogist on the Alexandria Freedmen and Contraband Cemetery. She became a “Living Legend of Alexandria in 2014.” She is co-author of “African Americans of Alexandria, VA: Beacons of Light in the Twentieth Century.” Char is currently working on her second book which will be available in the late Fall of 2016. Char will provide an overview of the following topics: (1) Take a Close Look at Slave owners’ Probate Records and where their slaves went (2) I was hired out – Case Studies on Slave owners hiring their slaves out (3) Slaves and Free people of color working on State and County Projects (4) Catch Me If You Can – Runaway Slaves: How
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An African's Perspective on DNA Testing with Ada Anagho Brown
18/03/2016 Duración: 01h13minAda Anagho Brown will explore as an African why she tested her DNA and the questions raised after identifying the many people who share her DNA outside the continent of Africa. How did they get here? Where were they taken? Where they alone? How did they survive captivity? Who are they? Are there more out there? These question stimulated so many more questions and emotions.... Ada Anagho Brown is a native of Cameroon whose family moved to the United States in 1975. She is the third child of the current Chief of Ngwo located in the Njikwa subdivision of Cameroon. Over the years, she has dedicated her life to promoting Africa. For several years she worked with a non-profit American based organization whose mission was to give back to the children of the United States through music and culture. For the past three years, she has organized trips to Cameroon with African Americans who traced their DNA to Cameroon. Collectively, she has facilitated the travel of over 160 individuals. In 2012 she launched Roots
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Fraternalism and African American Genealogy with James Morgan III
11/03/2016 Duración: 01h21minIn this program Mr. Morgan will seek to show the benefits of studying African American Fraternal and Benevolent Organizations. Mr. Morgan will provide some historical narrative on various organizations as well as give tips on how these organizations can provide some in-depth analysis of how ancestral communities functioned and organized within these groups. James Morgan III is a graduate of Howard University where he studied Mass Communications and African American History. James is a very active Prince Hall Mason serving as Worshipful Master of Corinthian Lodge #18 in Washington, D.C. and as the Associate Grand Historian of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the District of Columbia. Mr. Morgan is a member of the Phylaxis Society (the only independent research organization dedicated to study African American Freemasonry) as well as the James Dent Walker Chapter of AAHGS. You can catch Mr. Morgan's monthly thoughts on black fraternal history on the Prince Hall Think Tank which airs the last S