Documenting Native American Families in 19th and 20th Century Records

Angela Walton-Raji
Jun 25, 2014
8.0K views
Want to watch the full webinar?
Join now to access all 2,311 webinars and unlock all features.

Content

Play. Playing.
Welcome
2m 11s
Play. Playing.
Speaker's Introduction
1m 54s
Play. Playing.
Introduction
2m 58s
Play. Playing.
Census Schedules
1m 13s
Play. Playing.
Local & Regional Records
56s
Play. Playing.
Realities
2m 46s
Play. Playing.
What Are The Steps?
2m 39s
Play. Playing.
Oral History
1m 33s
Play. Playing.
Census Search
2m 04s
Play. Playing.
Geography & History
1m 08s
Play. Playing.
Challenges
6m 23s
Play. Playing.
Cherokee Rolls
59s
Play. Playing.
Census
19m 36s
Play. Playing.
Military Records
42s
Play. Playing.
Indian Records
4m 29s
Play. Playing.
Guion Miller Index
52s
Play. Playing.
The Dawes Roll
5m 08s
Play. Playing.
Mississippi Choctaws
2m 35s
Play. Playing.
Conclusion
4m 21s
Play. Playing.
Announcements / prizes
7m 56s
Play. Playing.
Questions / answers
18m 45s

About this webinar

Native American ancestry is often perceived as a lineage difficult to trace. There are a number of records from public resources that reflect Indian communities, both large and small. This workshop will illustrate the records found in both 19th and 20th century collections. To be discussed will be traditional census records and how to find unique tribal communities, as well as specific Indian rolls from New England to the western frontier.

About the speaker

About the speaker

Angela Walton-Raji is known nationally for her genealogical and historical research and work with Oklahoma Native-American records.  Her book, “Black Indian Genealogy Research” was the first book of its kind focusing on the unique record set refle
Learn more...

Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

1000 characters remaining

Sort by Newest
Sort by Close.
  • Newest
  • Oldest
  • Likes

Related Webinars