Researching Family Tree August 21, 2008
Posted by Reginald Johnson in Africa, African-American, Blacks, Culture, Domestic Issues, Family, Friends, Life, Minority Issues.add a comment
Blacks first came to North America from Africa, via slave ships. These ships were crowded, smelly, and those that traveled as part of the cargo were put under extremely harsh conditions. The Africans that were stuffed into the belly of these ships, susceptible to illnesses and hundreds of thousands, if not millions) died on the way to the New World – or other points unknown.
Today, there have been a growing number of African Americans who have decided to research their family trees. Making the decision to follow your ancestral tree can be a lengthy venture – and costly.
People of African decent (primarily during the Western Slave Trade) have constantly asked for websites, links, or organisations that will aide in this sometimes long journey.
Before you start your journey, please remember that if you are trying to “prove” something to someone, whether it’s the DAR, the government, the Civil War organizations, or an Indian Nation, you will need the hard copy yourself. So it would be most advisable that you do the research yourself.
In some cases you might have to use someone’s information to get started or if you come across a stumbling block. There’s nothing wrong with it, just make sure they list the sources for you.
The best place the most people have found to be the most helpful is Rootsweb Metasearch. Rootsweb has a strong reputation in information gathering and is respected by researchers everywhere. In searching through Rootsweb, you will find what you need [and what you don’t need]. Chances are if this is your first time trying something so challenging, it will probably be overwhelming for you. I say, hang in there.
Another website that can warrant much success is the USGenWeb State Search. This is not so overwhelming. You can type in your last name and the county name; it narrows the search even better.
One very important tip is to make sure you try every possible and even UNTHINKABLE spelling of the name. Trust me on this. Try every way you can imagine your name could have been spelled over the hundreds of years. In some places, people spelled their name the way it sounded, others spelled the same name the way they thought they heard it. A last name like Johnson could easily become Johnston, or Johnsson, or Jonson, or even Junshon in just a couple of hundred years.
The Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records is another wonderful site that many people use to verify family ties (go to their GLO Records). There are all sorts of ways you can search this site. When you become familiar with it, you can search by township, section and range and see who all lived in the same vicinity as every one else.
Another page to consider is the National Archives and Records Administration Search page at NAIL Form. Click the Standard Search and then make sure you click the “Only Descriptions Linked to Digital Copies.” Under keywords, just play. Use the last name you are looking for in the first blank. Then hit “Submit Search”. If there are any results it will tell you. You then select “Display Results” and have fun.
There will come a time where you feel like the web can no longer help you, you are going to have to check out alternatives. Going to the local library where you were born is going to be the best help, but don’t forget to check out the local library of where you are presently living too.
Now once you feel you have exhausted the web, go out to your local library and search their records. Going to the library can give you lots of information that the web cannot. People who have in the past searched their families are usually kind enough to give a copy of all their records to the library. This is great and will help you save a lot of time researching those who have already been found. And there is usually an endless supply of books recording the local history and other records-including newspapers.
This should be enough to get you started and keep you busy for quite a while.
Try to keep your “research” organized. Start by sticking to one generation at a time, though this can include many people according to how far out you want to reach in your tree and how far up you are in your generations.
Most people say their personal goal is to have at least the birth date and place, the death date and place, the marriage date and place, and the burial place for each of their grandparents, or at least as far back as they can go.
Also, keep in mind that disasters happen: burning buildings, floods, lack of records, no enduring headstone if one at all, and other things as such.
Look at records kept from the Federal Census. When recording information from the census, make sure you note the neighbors as you might find later that they were related. Children were usually given land as they moved out of the house.
Another thing you’d like to note when just writing down the info, write down the page number. If you are viewing an image, it was be a stamped number on the right top. If there is not a stamp there, it’s “b”, the second half of the page. So if the stamped number is there, it’s “a”. E.g. “140a”. These come in extremely handy when looking at indexes as these are the numbers they are using. Also, you need to write the county to get a copy of it.
Don’t be afraid to check out these sites too:
Library of Congress
AccessGenealogy
Latter Days Saints
GenWeb
GNIS Search
CemeteryRecordsOnLine
Ancestry.Com
Ohio Congresswoman Dies August 21, 2008
Posted by Reginald Johnson in African-American, Blacks, Celebrity, Domestic Issues, Government, Healthcare, Life, Medical, Minority Issues, News, U.S. Congress, Washington.add a comment
The House of Representatives and the Democratic lost what many refer to as a courageous fighter for those whom other government officials have forgotten. U.S. Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, the first black woman to represent Ohio in Congress died Wednesday after suffering a brain hemorrhage.
Cleveland Clinic spokesperson, Eileen Sheil, said the 58-year old congresswoman died of a brain hemorrhage caused by an aneurysm that burst and left her with limited brain function. The hospital where the congresswoman died in (the Huron Hospital in East Cleveland) is owned by Cleveland Clinic.
A brain aneurysm is a bulge in an artery in the brain. It can leak or rupture, causing bleeding in the brain.
Tuesday night Congresswoman Tubbs Jones was driving her car in Cleveland Heights when she suffered the hemorrhage. The official police report states that her car then went out of control and crossed several lanes of traffic before coming to a stop. A nearby policeman found the distressed lawmaker behind the wheel.
When the congresswoman was admitted she was alive but throughout the course of the day and into this evening her medical condition declined.
Tubbs Jones first came onto the national scene by winning her first House seat in 1998. The liberal Democrat won the heavily Democratic 11th District. She chaired the ethics committee in the House. Not only was she the first black woman to represent Ohio in the House, she was also the first black woman to serve on the massively powerful Ways and Means Committee.
While as a member of the committee, she strongly was adamant in protesting and opposing President George W. Bush’s tax cuts and his efforts to create personal accounts within Social Security. Tubbs Jones was also a strong critic of the Iraq war, and in 2002 voted against using military force. She knew her vote might be unpopular to many but she felt all diplomatic options had not been exhausted.
She worked tirelessly to expand the rights of all Americans, especially those that felt like government had forgotten about them a long time ago.
Tubbs Jones was a firm supporter of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton during the primaries. It has been noted that she was felt Clinton could bring the country back to the social boom of her husband’s administration. She eventually fell into the democratic wave of Obama supporters. This was in June. She was to have been a superdelegate at next week’s Democratic National Convention in Denver.
Obama called Tubbs Jones “an extraordinary American and an outstanding public servant.”
Interestingly enough, in March 2002, just as the war was starting, she was one of only 11 House members to oppose a resolution supporting U.S. troops in Iraq. She has often been quoted as saying, “I completely support the soldiers doing their job, but I am not in support of sending these brave American men and women into harms way.”
She said she opposed the war because the resolution connected Iraq to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and said Iraq poses a continued threat to the United States.
She affirmed that neither of those claims had been proved. She also saw this as the main reason why the United States couldn’t persuade the United Nations to support an attack.
Tubbs Jones has consistently been known as an outspoken critic of the political right and specifically President Bush’s administration.
On the House floor she has received notary of being a very passionate speaker. He had been known to have the ability to inspire crowds at political rallies.
She will be missed.