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  • Tracing Your Roots: Did a White Lawyer Adopt My Granddad?

    A family legend points to a turn-of-the-20th-century transracial adoption. Could that have actually happened? Dear Professor Gates: My mother and I have been tracing the family tree on the side of my father, Samuel Gibbs, for a while now. We have not been successful in finding out who the mystery white attorney is on my…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    July 14, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: Was My Ancestor Deported to Ghana?

    A series of run-ins with law enforcement in the United Kingdom splits a family apart. Now the family is seeking answers. Dear Professor Gates: I’m trying to trace my great-grandfather, whose name was either David Sebe Agyemah Darku or David Sebe Agyeman Darku. He was sent to jail in England for a high-profile crime involving…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    July 7, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: How Did My Ancestor Escape Slavery?

    In revisiting the story of black refugees to Trinidad, we came across the tale of a foiled slave rebellion in Maryland. Dear Professor Gates: I am a Trinidadian who has been searching for information on my ancestor Henry Ransom, a black Colonial Marine who joined with the British in 1814 and was resettled in 5th…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    June 30, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: Is My Family’s Big Secret Presidential?

    A reader wonders if she could be related to Andrew Jackson through one of his slaves. Dear Professor Gates: The story goes that my great-grandmother Laura Emily Jackson shouted to her only daughter, “I found my family. I found my family!” That night my grandmother went downstairs and found her mother burning all the family…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    June 23, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: Were Slaves’ Surnames Like Brands?

    We made a surprising discovery while addressing a question about how slaves got their last names. Dear Professor Gates: Were the surnames of enslaved people changed when they were sold, or were they allowed to keep the surnames of their former slave owners? It would seem plausible that a slave’s name was like a brand…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    June 16, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: I Want to Post the Names of My Ancestors’ Slaves

    Her ancestor’s will named 13 slaves, and she seeks help getting this information to their descendants. Dear Professor Gates: My ancestors were slave owners in Victoria County, Texas. My three-times great-grandfather John James named 13 enslaved people in his will, dated Sept. 3, 1863, in Victoria County. They included three boys, named Woodson, George and…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    June 9, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: My ‘Merikin’ Ancestor Escaped Slavery

    Researching those who chose to fight for the British and emigrate to Trinidad in order to be free. Dear Professor Gates: I was wondering if you could help identify the parents of my five-times great-grandfather Ezekiel Loney, who was among the “Merikins” (formerly enslaved African-American soldiers who fought for the British) who settled in Trinidad. …

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    June 2, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: My Black Ancestors Were Indian Scouts

    Research reveals a Black Seminole family’s continent-crossing migration in search of freedom and battlefield glory. Dear Professor Gates: I’ve discovered that my paternal great-grandmother, Leona July Blanks, was a descendant of the Black Seminoles who migrated with the Native American Seminoles from Florida all the way through Mexico. She was born in April 1900 in…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    May 26, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: Deciphering Illegible Genealogy Records

    Use these pro tips for handling poorly reproduced images from microfilm or microfiche. Dear Professor Gates: You answered a question I had about one of my ancestors in the 2016 column “Was My Southern Ancestor Adopted?” I have since been able to get ahold of the medical records of Mary Ryman from Bryce Hospital. However,…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    May 19, 2017
  • Tracing Your Roots: The Black Side of My Family Is a Mystery!

    A biracial woman yearns to know more about her African-American ancestors, about whom she has little information. It’s a good thing we found a lot of it. Dear Professor Gates: I am a 39-year-old biracial woman who was born in North Carolina. My father, George Newton Watson (Newton Watson Jr. on his birth certificate), was…

    By





    Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






    Published

    May 12, 2017
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Henry Louis Gates Jr. and NEHGS Senior Researcher Meaghan E.H. Siekman






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