African American Genealogy Resources Guide

Specialized resources available in the History & Geography Department for conducting research on African American families, including works on the related subject of Native American genealogy.

HOW-TO BOOKS & RESEARCH GUIDES

  • African American Genealogical Sourcebook
    Call Number: E 185.96 .A444 1995
  • Burroughs, Tony. Black Roots: A Beginner’s Guide to Tracing the African American Family Tree
    Call Number: E 185.96 .B94 2001
  • Carpenter, Cecelia Svinth. How to Research American Indian Blood Lines: a Manual on Indian Genealogical Research
    Call Number: Ref. CS49 .C376 1987
  • Fears, Mary L. Jackson. Slave Ancestral Research: It’s Something Else
    Call Number: E 185.96 .F42 1995x
  • Guide to Tracing Your African Ameripean Civil War Ancestor
    Call Number: E 540.N3 G85x
  • On the Trail of the Buffalo Soldier: Biographies of African Americans in the U. S. Army, 1866-1917
    Call Number: Ref. U 52 .O5 1995
  • Smith, Franklin. A Genealogists Guide to Discovering your African-American Ancestors
    Call Number: E 185.96 .S6514 2003
  • Streets, David H. Slave Genealogy: A Research Guide with Case Studies
    Call Number: E 185.96 .S817 1986
  • Taylor, Frazine K. Researching African American Genealogy in Alabama: a Resource Guide
    Call Number: E185.93.A3 T39 2008
  • Thackery, David T. Finding your African American Ancestors: A Beginner’s Guide
    Call Number: E 185.96 .T425 2000
  • Walton-Raji, Angela Y. Black Indian Genealogy Research
    Call Number: E 98.R28 W35 2007
  • Witcher, Curt B. African American Genealogy: A Bibliography and Guide to Sources
    Note: History has reference copy. Literature Department has circulating copies.
    Call Number: Z 1361 .N39 W75 2000
  • Woodtor, Dee. Finding a Place Called Home: a Guide to African-American Genealogy
    Call Number: E 185.96 .W69 1999

RESEARCH DATABASES

  • Cleveland Public Library subscribes to a number of expensive research databases helpful to genealogists. The Library uses your tax dollars to pay for access to these databases.
  • The only way to access these databases for free (using the Library’s subscription) is through the Library’s Web site: www.cpl-redesign.org.
  • Some subscription databases are available inside the Library only.
  • Personal laptops with wireless capability that are used inside the Library are able to access all databases (no library card needed).
  • Some subscription databases are available remotely through home PCs, laptops, wireless devices, etc. using a library card as noted below.
  • CPL card members include people who live in the city of Cleveland.
  • CLEVNET card members include everyone else who has a library card issued by any CLEVNET library.

African American Biographical Database

[Access: Available in all CPL branches and remotely to CPL Cardholders]
This database is a substantial compilation of biographical material on more than 30,000 African American individuals covering the period 1790-1950. This resource includes both famous and everyday people and is of interest to both historians and genealogists.

Call and Post, 1934-1991

[Access: Available in all CPL branches and remotely to CPL Cardholders]
Full-text searching of all issues of the (Cleveland) Call and Post, Cleveland’s longtime African American newspaper, published between 1934 and 1991. Search for articles and obituaries.

Ethnic Newswatch

[Access: Available in all CPL branches and remotely to CPL Cardholders]
Ethnic NewsWatch is a full-text database of minority, Native American and ethnic U.S. newspapers, magazines and journals. Includes the full text of the Cleveland Call & Post from 1992 to the present.

HeritageQuest

[Access: Available in all CPL branches and remotely to CLEVNET Cardholders]
HeritageQuest features the U. S. Census, 1790-1930 (1850-60 Slave Census Schedules not included), the Periodical Source Index (PERSI), a digitized collection of more than 25,000 family and local history books, Records from the Revolutionary War Era Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files. ALSO INCLUDES the Freedman’s Bank Records (1865-1874).

Ancestry Library Edition (Includes Federal Slave Narratives and many other resources.)

[Access: Available inside the Library only.]
Ancestry Library Edition provides easy access to more than 4,000 genealogy databases with a single search. Coverage focuses primarily on the United States and the United Kingdom, although other areas are covered. Databases include the complete U.S. Census & Index (1790-1930), vital, church, court, and immigration records. The Map Center contains more than 1,000 historical maps. Other notable collections include Daughters of the American Revolution Lineage Books; Social Security Death Index (updated monthly); WWI Draft Registration Cards; Federal Slave Narratives; and a strong Civil War collection. Databases are updated continuously as new information becomes available.

REFERENCE BOOKS, INDEXES & ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS

  • Abajian, James
    Blacks in Selected Newspapers, Censuses and Other Sources: an Index to Names and Subjects
    Call Number: Ref. Z 1361.N39 A28x
  • Buchanan, Jim
    The Blacks of Pickaway County, Ohio in the Nineteenth Century
    Call Number: Ref. F497.P5 B87 1988
  • Call & Post Newspaper Index of Deaths, 1934 through 1959, compiled by the African-American Genealogical Society, Cleveland, Ohio
    Note: For use on History & Geography Department PCs only.
    Call Number: Ref. F499.C69 N43 2008 CD-R
  • District of Columbia Free Negro Registers, 1821-1861
    Call Number: Ref. F205.N4 P76 1996
  • Haller, Stephen E.
    Registers of Blacks in the Miami Valley: a Name Abstract, 1804-1857
    Note: Relates to the Miami River Valley of Ohio
    Call Number: Ref. F497.M64 H34
  • Ham, Debra Newman.
    List of free Black Heads of Families in the First Census of the United States, 1790
    Call Number: Ref. E185.96 .N47 1973
  • Heinegg, Paul
    Free African Americans of Maryland and Delaware: from the Colonial Period to 1810
    Call Number: Ref. E185.96 .H46 2000
  • Heinegg, Paul
    Free African Americans of North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina from the Colonial Period to about 1820
    Call Number: Ref. E185.96 .H48 2005
  • Lawson, Sandra M.
    Generations Past: a Selected List of Sources for Afro-American Genealogical Research
    Call Number: Ref. E 185.96 .L34 1988
  • Nitchman, Paul E.
    Blacks in Ohio, 1880, in the Counties of …
    Call Number: Ref. E185.93.O2 N57 1985
    v. 1 (Adams–Carroll), v. 2 (Champaign–Clinton), v. 3 (Columbiana – Fayette), v. 4 (Franklin-Fulton-Gallia-Geauga), v. 5 (Cincinnati), v. 6 (Greene-Guernsey-Hamilton-Hancock-Hardin-Harrison-Henry), v. 7 (Highland-Hocking-Holmes-Huron-Jackson-Jefferson-Knox-LakeLawrence-Licking-Logan-Lorain), v. 8 (Lucas-Morrow), v. 9 (Muskingum-Ross), v. 10 (Sandusky-Wyandot)
  • Records of Southern Plantations from Emancipation to the Great Migration
    Microfilm is located in Microform Center
    Printed Guides are located in History & Geography Department
    Access Printed Guides Online: http://library.lexisnexis.com/ws_display.asp?filter=UPA_guides
    Call Number for Microfilm and Printed Guides: Ref. F215 .R423
  • Records of the National Association of Colored Women’s Clubs, 1895-1992
    Microfilm is located in Microform Center
    Printed Guide in History & Geography Department
    Access Printed Guide Online: http://library.lexisnexis.com/ws_display.asp?filter=UPA_guides
    Call Number for Microfilm and Printed Guide: Ref. E185.86 .R42X
  • “Registrations of free Negroes commencing September court 1822, book no. 2”, and “Register of free Blacks 1835, book 3” : being the full text of the two extant volumes, 1822-1861, of registrations of free Blacks now in the County Courthouse, Fairfax, Virginia
    Call Number: Ref. F232.F2 V495 1977
  • Turpin, Joan
    Register of Black, Mulatto, and Poor Persons in Four Ohio Counties, 1791-1861
    Call Number: Ref. F490 .T87 1985
    Counties include Clinton, Highland, Logan and Ross.
  • Woodson, Carter G.
    Free Negro Heads of families in the United States in 1830
    Call Number: Circ. & Ref. E185 .W887 1925

Slavery Research

  • Byrd, William L.
    In Full Force and Virtue : North Carolina Emancipation Records, 1713-1860
    Call Number: Ref. E185.96 .B99 1999
  • Byrd, William L.
    North Carolina Slaves and Free Persons of Color: Burke, Lincoln, and Rowan Counties
    Call Number: Ref. F262.B96 B97 2000
  • Potts, Howard E.
    A Comprehensive Name Index for the American Slave
    Call Number: Ref. E 444.A45 – Supplement #4
    From 1936 to 1938, more than 2,300 former slaves from across the American South were interviewed by writers and journalists under the aegis of the Works Progress Administration. These former slaves provided first-hand accounts of their experiences on plantations, in cities, and on small farms. Their narratives remain a peerless resource for understanding the lives of America’s four million slaves.
  • Records of Antebellum Southern Plantations, from the Revolution to the Civil War
    Microfilm is located in Microform Center
    Printed Guides are located in History & Geography Department
    Access Printed Guides Online: http://library.lexisnexis.com/ws_display.asp?filter=UPA_guides
    Microfilm Call Number and Printed Guides: F213 .R42X
    Note: A name index for this collection is available in the History & Geography Department
    (Call Number Ref. F213 .C66 2009).
  • Virginia Slave Births Index, 1853-1865
    Call Number: Ref E445.V8 V57 2007
  • Woodson, Carter G.
    Free Negro Owners of Slaves in the United States in 1830: Together with Absentee Ownership of Slaves in the United States in 1830
    Call Number: Ref. E185 .W8873 1924

Military Service Research

  • The Black Loyalist Directory: African Americans in Exile after the American Revolution
    Call Number: Ref. E277 .B57 1996
  • Compiled Military Service Records of Volunteer Union Soldiers Who Served With the United States Colored Troops:
    • 55th Massachusetts Infantry [Microfilm Call Number: CD3027.M5 N3 NO.1801]
    • 1st Through 5th United States Colored Cavalry, 5th Massachusetts Cavalry (Colored), 6thUnited States Colored Cavalry [Microfilm Call Number: CD3027.M5 N3 NO.1817]
    • Artillery Organizations [Microfilm Call Number: CD3027.M5 N3 NO.1818]
    • 1st United States Colored Infantry, 1st South Carolina Volunteers (Colored), Company A, 1st United States Colored Infantry (1 Year) [Microfilm Call Number: CD3027.M5 N3 NO. 1819]
    • 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment [Microfilm Call Number: CD3027.M5TH N3 NO. 1898]
  • Online Index: Ancestry Library Edition (U.S. Colored Troops Military Service Records, 1861-1865)
    Compiled Service Records document U.S. Civil War (1861-1865) soldiers. The files consist of service cards that contain information extracted from muster rolls, regimental returns, descriptive books, and other records. A new card was created each time a soldier’s name appeared on a new document. The Compiled Service Records also consist of original documents that pertain to individual soldiers. These documents could include enlistment papers, casualty sheets, death reports, and correspondence, among others. A typical packet for each soldier will include a jacket-envelope that lists his name, rank, unit, and card numbers, followed by the extract cards and original documents. A section called “bookmark” may also be included. This “bookmark” was used to link the packet with related records.
  • Greene, Robert Ewell
    Black Courage, 1775-1783: Documentary of Black Participation in the American Revolution
    Call Number: Ref. E 269 .N3 G74 1984
  • Grundset, Eric
    Forgotten Patriots: African American and American Indian Patriots in the Revolutionary War: a Guide to Service, Sources and Studies
    Call Number: Circ. & Ref. E269.N3 G78 2008
  • Hewett, Jane B.
    The Roster of Union Soldiers, 1861 to 1865
    Call Number: Ref. E494 .H4 1997x
    Note: United States Colored Troops are contained in the last 2 volumes of the set.

Native American Research

  • Armstrong, K. M.
    Chickasaw Rolls: Annuity Rolls of 1857-1860 and the “1855” Chickasaw District Roll of 1856
    All Number: Ref. E99.C55 A7 1995
  • Blankenship, Bob
    Cherokee Roots
    Call Number: Ref. E99.C5 B53 1992
    v. 1. Eastern Cherokee rolls — v. 2. Western Cherokee rolls
  • Blankenship, Bob
    Dawes Roll “Plus” of Cherokee Nation “1898”
    Call Number: Ref. E99.C5 B534 1900zx
    Includes the 1898 Dawes Roll plus Guion Miller Roll information for those that were on both rolls. One can look forward in time from 1898 to the 1906 Guion Miller Roll and see such things as a 1906 surname change due to marriage, divorce, or adoption. Includes all 36,714 Cherokee Nation Citizens of Cherokee Blood, plus ages, addresses, relationships, Miller Roll Number and Miller Application Number.

    The Dawes Rolls (or Final Rolls of Citizens and Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes, or Dawes Commission of Final Rolls) were created by the Dawes Commission. The Commission, authorized by United States Congress in 1893, was required to negotiate with the Five Civilized Tribes to convince them to agree to an allotment plan and dissolution of the reservation system. One of the consequences was the creation of rolls of the members of the five tribes (Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw, and Seminole). The rolls were needed to assign the allotments and to provide an equitable division of all monies obtained. These rolls became known as the Dawes Rolls. The Dawes Commission was quickly flooded by applicants from all over the country trying to get on the rolls.
  • Blankenship, Bob
    Guion Miller Roll “Plus” of Eastern Cherokee, East & West of Mississippi “1909”
    Call Number: Ref. E99.C5 G85 1990
    Includes 1909 Guion Miller Roll plus 1898 Dawes Roll information for those who were on both lists. Includes all applicants for the Guion Miller Roll, both accepted and not accepted for the Court of Claims settlement. Includes Dawes Roll Number, Census Card Number, Degree of Cherokee Blood, and Surname in 1898.

    The Guion Miller Roll is a list of Eastern Cherokees who applied for money awarded in 1905 because of a 1902 lawsuit in which the Eastern Cherokee tribe sued the United States for funds due them under the treaties of 1835, 1836 and 1845. Claimants were asked to prove they were members of the Eastern Cherokee tribe at the time of the treaties, or descended from members who had not been affiliated with any other tribe. Guion Miller, an agent of the Interior Department, was appointed as a commissioner of the Court of Claims to compile a list of claimants. He made an extensive enrollment of the Cherokees in 1907 and 1908.
  • Bowen, Jeff
    Eastern Cherokee Census: Cherokee, North Carolina, 1915-1922
    Call Number: Ref. E99.C5 B744 2004
  • Bowen, Jeff
    Indian Wills, 1911-1921: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
    Call Number: Ref E98.G44 B68 2005
  • Bowen, Jeff
    Native American Wills and Probate Records, 1911-1921
    Call Number: Ref: E98.G44 N38 2009
  • Jordan, Jerry Wright
    Cherokee by Blood: Records of Eastern Cherokee Ancestry in the U.S. Court of Claims, 1906-1910
    Call Numbers: Ref E99.C5 J63 1987 (Volumes 1-9) and Ref E99.C5 E125 2005 (Volumes 10-11)
    The index includes the names of all persons applying for compensation arising from the judgment of the United States Court of Claims on May 28, 1906, for the Eastern Cherokee tribe. While numerous individuals applied, not all the claims were allowed. The information included on the index is the application number, the name of the applicant, and the State or Territory in which the individual resided at the time the application was filed. The name being there does not mean the person was admitted.
  • Mauldin, Dorothy Tincup
    Complete Delaware Roll 1898
    Ref. E99.D2 M383 2001
  • Page, Jo Ann Curls
    Index to the Cherokee Freedmen Enrollment Cards of the Dawes Commission, 1901-1906
    Call Number: Ref. E185.93.O4 P33 1996x
  • Smith, James F.,
    The Cherokee Land Lottery: Containing a Numerical List of the Names of the Fortunate Drawers in Said Lottery, with an Engraved Map of Each District
    Call Number: 419.3758 Sm61c