Who is Nicka Smith?
Who is Nicka Smith?
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Taking the #1950Census District Finder on Ancestry For a Spin!
Eek! We're just a week away from the release of the 1950 Census and Ancestry has released a beta site to help us drill down to the exact area our ancestors were living in! In this video, I share a quick tour of this new tool and how those of us with folks in both rural and urban locations can get to their records quickly!
Want to try it out? Check it out here: www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/district-map/62308
zhlédnutí: 1 854

Video

The Big Count: 17th Decennial Census Training Film (1950 Census)
zhlédnutí 938Před 2 lety
This training film was created by the Bureau of the Census to help train census enumerators in their documentation efforts of the 1950 U.S. Census. The 1950 Census was the first to document Americans living abroad including members of the armed forces and their families who were living abroad and will be released for research by the public on April 1, 2022. Notes from the National Archives: Act...
History: Unscripted - Episode 129: More Than a Notion
zhlédnutí 2,2KPřed 3 lety
Is it possible to trace your ancestry, both on paper and through DNA, to Africa? We’ll explore the advancements, and challenges, of taking on this feat in African ancestored genealogy and family history. FOLLOW US: BlackProGen neeksmith NEED HELP? SUBMIT YOUR CASE TO ASK MARIAH: Ask Mariah Submission Form - goo.gl/uQuBoN JOIN THE CONVERSATION: hashtag/BlackPr...
Episode 127 - History: Unscripted: Enslaved Laborers at UVA
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 3 lety
Do you have ancestors who lived near or around the University of Virginia? Those ancestors just may have been utilized as enslaved labor by UVA. Tune in as Dr. Shelley Murphy shows you how to identify if your ancestors were involved. Have potential ties? Complete an intake form: forms.gle/7WsWetQXsFMBsACy7 or contact enslavedlaborersuva@gmail.com Follow the project: Facebook: Findi...
Check Out New Mobile App Updates at Ancestry #AncestryPartner
zhlédnutí 2,5KPřed 3 lety
Whether its the new Discover tab, Dark Mode, or even the new avatars, the recent mobile app updates at Ancestry are awesome! Download the app at the App Store here: apps.apple.com/us/app/ancestry-family-history/id349554263 Download the app for Android here: play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.ancestry.android.apps.ancestry&hl=en_US&gl=US
Episode 123: History: Unscripted - Profiles in Racial Justice, Part II
zhlédnutí 2KPřed 3 lety
A 25 year old woman who was the last person lynched in the state of Virginia. A man who was killed after a questionable dispute. Both denied due process and justice. Both dead. Both Black. Let the stories, context, documents, and family histories be the guide to unearth the truth. “This isn’t us.” No, this has always been us. Honoring the lives of Margaret Lashley (Virginia) and Richard Kemp (S...
Episode 121: History: Unscripted - Profiles in Racial Justice, Part I
zhlédnutí 9KPřed 3 lety
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New Updates Coming at AncestryDNA! #AncestryPartner #Ad
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Episode 113 - History: Unscripted - It Works Both Ways
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Episode 111a: History Unscripted - When DNA Gets Real
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Episode 108 - History: Unscripted - Those People
zhlédnutí 759Před 4 lety
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Episode 106: History: Unscripted - Perception is Everything
zhlédnutí 734Před 4 lety
Episode 106: History: Unscripted - Perception is Everything
Episode 102: History: Unscripted: The Battle for Context
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 4 lety
Episode 102: History: Unscripted: The Battle for Context
BlackProGen LIVE! Ep 88: MAAGI 2019
zhlédnutí 1,1KPřed 5 lety
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BlackProGen LIVE: Ep 65 Lagniappe: Navy and Confederate Pensions
zhlédnutí 356Před 6 lety
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Why MAAGI? - Carmen White
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Why MAAGI? - Carmen White
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BlackProGen LIVE! Ep 53: RootsTech 2018
zhlédnutí 830Před 6 lety
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BlackProGen Live - 2018 Season Promo
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How to Trace Your Ancestors as Slaves
zhlédnutí 40KPřed 6 lety
How to Trace Your Ancestors as Slaves
3 Minutes at MAAGI
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 7 lety
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"Grandma Was... " Why It's Not Showing Up In Your DNA Results
zhlédnutí 31KPřed 7 lety
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5 Lies About African American Genealogy and Family History Research
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Happy New Year! 2017 BlackProGen LIVE is Going to be Lit!
zhlédnutí 365Před 7 lety
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BlackProGen LIVE Ep20b: Talks Diversity in Genealogy and Family History Research
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 7 lety
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5 Truths About DNA Tests (23andMe, Ancestry DNA, Family Tree DNA, MyHeritage DNA, LivingDNA)
zhlédnutí 617KPřed 7 lety
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zhlédnutí 1KPřed 7 lety
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BlackProGen LIVE Promo
zhlédnutí 546Před 8 lety
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Midwest African American Genealogy Institute (MAAGI)
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Komentáře

  • @rollinthunderwolf4407
    @rollinthunderwolf4407 Před 3 hodinami

    Show me proof that so called Blacks came of ships from Africa. It is a Historical fact that many Indians copper tone alias Negro/Blacks was enslaved not just by so called white there was also so called Black European slave masters. The 1619 projects in references to the 20 odd Negroes show no proof that these people came from Africa. It is clearly conjecture. here is a quote: Historians have long believed these Africans to have come to Virginia from the Caribbean, but Spanish records suggest they had been captured in a Spanish-controlled area of West Central Africa. It starts of by saying believed they came from Virginia from the Caribbean (conjecture) then states Spanish records suggest they have been captured in Spanish controlled area of West Central Africa again conjecture or consideration. It is also a fact that the Spanish many who are Sephardic and Muslim Moors was of a swarthy complexion who used the term Negro/Black as a descriptive term for the Ingenious Aboriginal American Indians. Then it mentions the Anglo Powhatan Wars that slowed down the alleged trafficking of African which was in fact them, taken people from the South and North America's and Island's. To further show that the term Black which is Negro was given to Powhatan Wahunsonacock by Captain John Smith stating Powhatan, more like a devil than a man, with some two hundred more as black as himself. It is a shame you people are misinforming people by twisting to meet the narrative of an alleged African slave trade which did not happen until the late 1700's according to Slave Voyages.org. I am considered Black and have done my Genealogy and found no African but I did find Powhatan, Shawnee, Black Foot, Black Scottish/Irish and French to which some of the Scottish and Irish came from Iberia which take you right back to the Spanish who are from Iberia. Tell the Truth and stop this false interpretation of an African Slave trade.

  • @rdb.9
    @rdb.9 Před 2 dny

    Hm..the 1970s census is out there now? On the Louisiana 1900 census my ancestor was indicated as “AI” under her gender, it’s very clear to me it is an AI, perhaps American Indigenous or American Indian. I heard those indicators were changed to make it look like something else 🤨.

  • @AmericanDragon777
    @AmericanDragon777 Před 6 dny

    Im awake i know my kin folk from arkansas. I know im cherokee indian.

  • @honeyb2917
    @honeyb2917 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you Beautiful for the much needed clarifications it is greatly appreciated ❤

  • @sharronewilson4761
    @sharronewilson4761 Před 3 měsíci

    18:46 so records from Natchez, Mississippi can be found in Louisiana? I just found out I’m related to abdul rahman ibrahima but I have no connection on how. Just DNA from others

    • @whoisnickasmith
      @whoisnickasmith Před 3 měsíci

      Yep. Trade was heavy between Natchez and New Orleans along with cities along the Mississippi Delta.

  • @jyoung5102
    @jyoung5102 Před 3 měsíci

    So glad I found this presentation on LA and MS, and how to research! My family on both sides are only from LA and MS that I know of, and from many parishes. Many of my mtDNA and autosomal matches are spread all over LA and we’ve never been able to find a family connection, probably because of the nature of American slavery. I will listen a 2nd time and take detailed notes. Most valuable and relevant teaching I’ve had on these 2 states, and on how to do basic research. Thank you all!

  • @mpaige7081
    @mpaige7081 Před 4 měsíci

    Researching Red Shoals Plantation in Stokes Co NC .

  • @maryriser7836
    @maryriser7836 Před 5 měsíci

    I keep noticing something occurring from 1830 to 1850 Census in families in our area, there seems to be large increase in the population of the slaves on rural farms. Example; SC Rural back woods farmer owns 10 slaves in 1830 then in 1840 he owns 56 slaves. How does someone acquire that many slaves in 10 yrs? What happened in that time period that caused such a shift?

  • @tyronewilson-bey7563
    @tyronewilson-bey7563 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm flooding my page with your work 🫱🌹🫱💞💪🫡🔥⚡🫱👁️

  • @tyronewilson-bey7563
    @tyronewilson-bey7563 Před 5 měsíci

    Peace and love sister I love your your work I love to follow you but it's one time a couple of times you have a guest and the energy is not good with him so it's offensive so it pushes me away from watching your video I look for the videos that doesn't have this individual in it. (Non-masculent)

  • @vernitaonanitanita8000
    @vernitaonanitanita8000 Před 5 měsíci

    I hope I'm in the right place to ask a question. I'm looking for my GGF James Guess. I found him in the 1910-20-30-40-50 census with various spelling of his last name such as Guest. Goss. Graees. and Guess. Guest is in the 1930 census. Born in Louisiana. Goss is in the 1880 census also born in Louisiana. Graees is in the 1910 census born in Louisiana. Guess, who is in the 1940-50 census born in Louisiana. And, Guess is in the 1920 census born in Mississippi. After typing this out and seeing it on paper, I conclude that My James Guess was born in Louisiana, in 1872, and I don't have a birth or death Cert. I have traced My GGGMother Parthenia Osborne almost up to Charlotte Osborne and kids born in Arkansas where I found all of them, and My GGMother Litha Moore's family. I know it's too late to make a long story short. But how do I trace James Guess's family in Louisiana? when I don't know where in Louisiana. What little information I have is just in the 1950 census he was living with his daughter Willie Guess' Champ, separated. I still haven't found much about her. How do I find James Guess in Louisiana? Thank you all.

    • @whoisnickasmith
      @whoisnickasmith Před 5 měsíci

      Hi there! This is the right place to ask a question. Don't get so caught up on spelling that you miss finding your person. Where did you find GGF James living in 1910-1950? Is it in an area that borders Louisiana? if so, you could check the parish just on the other side of the state line to see if you can find him there. You can also do wildcard searches such as James G*s which will pick up all the variations you listed above.

  • @latoyabutler7149
    @latoyabutler7149 Před 5 měsíci

    Greetings all! I have an original newspaper clipping of my great great grandmother's death announcement, obituary draft, and photo. She was born in natchez Mississippi. From a little black catholic prayer book, it appears either she or her daughter had a connection to the O.S.P. of Baltimore, MD. She was born Margaret or Maggie Miller. In 1930, in Leavenworth, KS, she married William Brown. She also married another man in 1945. Deacon Joseph R. Cromwell of The Second Baptist Church in Ann Arbor, Michigan. My search, also, surprisingly lead me to Nova Scotia. She passed in 1955 in Ann Arbor.

  • @tanelise4673
    @tanelise4673 Před 6 měsíci

    I must have watched this episode ten thousand times today. My family's enslavers lived in Chester county SC (after leaving colonial VA, and then migrated to KY) and I was able to find the loose papers today from 1789! Those documents confirmed relationships for me. Thanks for all you do (and your panel) to help us find our peeps. ❤

  • @montedogfish2626
    @montedogfish2626 Před 6 měsíci

    The first lie is the term (African American)

  • @tanelise4673
    @tanelise4673 Před 6 měsíci

    Virginia research is next on my list. Last night I found my 3X great grandfather on a SC estate bill dated 7 April 1790 - 4 months before the first US Federal census! I didnt initially recognize what I was even looking at. The currency was still in British pounds. I already knew my gfg grandfather was enslaved by his son so this was a great find. The slave owners were from VA but Im not sure yet which county or when they left VA for SC. I dont think there are any census records so I'll have to see what I can find in tax records perhaps. VA had a lot of records that didnt survive. I hope Im not at the end of road as far as records go, but if I am, Im glad to have gotten back to 1790.

  • @k.a.lindsey4349
    @k.a.lindsey4349 Před 6 měsíci

    Great show....

  • @cassandrahenderson7336
    @cassandrahenderson7336 Před 7 měsíci

    I don’t know my father and my mom didn’t know her parents. It’s impossible for me to find my roots and it sucks.

    • @Nickelniner09
      @Nickelniner09 Před 10 dny

      its not impossible both of you need to get tested on every platform to guide your research good luck in your research

  • @renee5506
    @renee5506 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing

  • @myb4200
    @myb4200 Před 7 měsíci

    That fact that these videos don’t have more than a million views or likes just motivates me even more to find my family lineage 😢 as African Americans we need to know and we to know are real history not what school told us…

  • @Civilwar.relics
    @Civilwar.relics Před 8 měsíci

    Why not start at the beginning the slave kings and queen of Africa and the slave markets they ran, in deals with the north Atlantic slave trade company, made up of Spain, France and the English, then a high percentage arrived in the north before it was illegal, but legal to take a man off the street and bring him to a plantation from the north this was common then you in 1830, there were 3,775 black (including mixed-race) slaveholders in the South who owned a total of 12,760 slaves, William ellison being one of the biggest and I believe his son was the first black confederate on record, there's the full story no halfway truth! Who said that.

  • @tanelise4673
    @tanelise4673 Před 8 měsíci

    There wasn't a Field Office where my people were. Frustrating to think that I have to go on a wild goose chase to try and find out where they might have gone to get assistance. 😢

  • @seagoddess524
    @seagoddess524 Před 9 měsíci

    All of my great grandparents was born in Arkansas. Problem is: We Not from Arkansas. We did own slaves, tho. For those whose ancestors ended up in AR in the mid to late 1800s, your family were most likely plantation/farm/slaves owners. And them evil demons had to wait for your ancestor to die before they could steal the land. My father's side had plantations in North Carolina until my 4th great grandfather died in 1884. Lastly, Arkansas was once apart of the Louisiana Territory. That alone makes Louisiana better.

  • @debradebraw9031
    @debradebraw9031 Před 9 měsíci

    This was so informative. I’m learned so much. The most valuable thing was it gave me inspiration to persist trying to find slave info at a point in time when it would be easier for me to just give up.

  • @JamisonJohnson-bn9mi
    @JamisonJohnson-bn9mi Před 9 měsíci

    Im biracial 57% European 43% African My dad is african american and my mom is white

  • @tanelise4673
    @tanelise4673 Před 9 měsíci

    I have a Freedmens Marriage Register for my great great grandparents. Underneath the clerk's name is another person with the initials DC following their name. Does anybody know what that stands for?

    • @whoisnickasmith
      @whoisnickasmith Před 9 měsíci

      It likely stands for deputy clerk.

    • @tanelise4673
      @tanelise4673 Před 9 měsíci

      @@whoisnickasmith thank you so much! Couldn't find anything on Google and was about to contact the KY Archives who sent me the register

    • @maracleyoung3677
      @maracleyoung3677 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@whoisnickasmith do you know about anyone Ida bell Rogers born abt 1910. She says her parents were Alex and Ida (Rogers) Rogers, not known where.

  • @Iammyaboriginalsoul
    @Iammyaboriginalsoul Před 10 měsíci

    That all I have to work from is my grandmother on my mother side ,is her obituary. But am stuck there...because I have no BIRTH PLACE.

  • @adinamack6317
    @adinamack6317 Před 10 měsíci

    I just asked ChatGPT if the first African’s to arrive in the United States were servants ad this is what it said. Yes, the first Africans who arrived in Virginia in 1619 were brought as indentured servants, not slaves. Over time, the institution of slavery developed in the American colonies, but it wasn't fully established at that point.Indentured servants typically worked under a contract for a set number of years in exchange for passage to the New World, after which they could gain their freedom. Slavery as we know it in the United States became more entrenched in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.

  • @nailahdawkins
    @nailahdawkins Před 10 měsíci

    Ben Carson is so whitewashed. The fact he used immigrants and slaves/enslaved is so telling. I've never seen him more than an accomplished clown and a face for the only "urban" office in the executive cabinet. Kidnapped Africans are *_never_* the same as immigrants who _willingly_ choose to come to the U.S. by whatever means necessary!

  • @shaypink40
    @shaypink40 Před 11 měsíci

    Black🖤, Negro & Colored North Americans 🇺🇸 are NOT Africans⚠️

  • @sunmoonstarrays
    @sunmoonstarrays Před 11 měsíci

    14:08 💜

  • @brandontillman553
    @brandontillman553 Před 11 měsíci

    My name is Brandon Tillman my family was born in Little Rock Arkansas Jonesboro Arkansas pine bluff Arkansas but my mom last name is Harrison I took my dad last name

  • @nailahdawkins
    @nailahdawkins Před 11 měsíci

    02:03:00: That's not a conclusive answer! 20 documents? 30 documents?! How much can I amass on an ancestor born in 1801? Like come on. It's difficult, yes not impossible but it's still an enormous task.

  • @nailahdawkins
    @nailahdawkins Před 11 měsíci

    The playlist doesn't work in 2023! Can't add to it

  • @nailahdawkins
    @nailahdawkins Před 11 měsíci

    01:05:00: Just point out the elephant in the room! The conference(s) are racist and don't want to hear the work of Black researchers and genealogists in the space. Don't be PC about it Ms. Angela! I wouldn't patronize them and support the conference if they have a preference for White and non-Black presenters. Thanks for all the library recommendations folks.

  • @nailahdawkins
    @nailahdawkins Před 11 měsíci

    The links used need in the pinned comment section or the video description please!

  • @nailahdawkins
    @nailahdawkins Před 11 měsíci

    44:20: Disobeying his Dad, he shouldn't be expected to live on the plantation *forever!* After emancipation, he should rightfully cut all ties. Thank God he was able to escape but his Dad is evil period for thinking his son would stay forever tied to him in more ways than one.

  • @tinabranch2713
    @tinabranch2713 Před rokem

    What part of Arkansas cause Little Rock Arkansas had no slaves

  • @tinabranch2713
    @tinabranch2713 Před rokem

    They have Blackfoot Indians there also and been there all there lives some moved to Canada never heard of Native American but Indians in Arkansas

  • @kudjoeadkins-battle2502

    Rice Ballard. Franklin ,Armfield Some off the largest slave traders in Virginia. Tredger, Lumpkins Jail.

  • @kudjoeadkins-battle2502

    Virginia is the South. We are not a part of the DMV. I had to say it again.

  • @kudjoeadkins-battle2502

    I wish I could have been in this conversation. I gotta get my credentials up

  • @kudjoeadkins-battle2502

    Virginia was the main source of enslaved people sold during The Domestic Slave Trade. Richmond and the majority of Virginia is not remotely a part of a “DMV”.

  • @kudjoeadkins-battle2502

    You can’t leave Virginia out of this conversation. Loved it though. Great job surprised I’m just seeing this

  • @raycarter8070
    @raycarter8070 Před rokem

    I had the exact same issue when I was studying and found two ancestors' information from the WPA slave narratives. I noticed Alabama - I can definitely understand some of the kind feelings for the original bond between the plantation, but I think, for me, the Great depression-lack of upward mobility of blacks at this time contributed greatly to their overall thinking. I also notice a big lack of self confidence-it's almost shocking and evident when I started reading a lot of them. So for me- I definitely take the ones where it's somewhere in between. I was surprised, however, that older relatives have pointed out white friends who helped them out-or stood up against racism. So-that's the surprise me.

  • @benrobinson77
    @benrobinson77 Před rokem

    I agree with Shelly about what the term "free" means. I'm a descendant of Black slaves in Rhode Island. My people were still slaves beginning in the early 1700s, they just freed at an earlier time the same horrible environment ... in 1784 they made an Act to free anyone free who was born after that year. Life still sucked from my research. New England slavery was definitely prominent, but also different in other ways due to the landscape, climate, social setup, English influence, and many other factors.

  • @valeriej.porter3658

    I’ve been away a while, but what a time to comeback.

  • @billiejac
    @billiejac Před rokem

    7 years late from California...Did a youtube search for Free people of color Mississippi and found your video. I've been stuck for 2 years on 2 people and kind of desperate at this point

  • @maryriser7836
    @maryriser7836 Před rokem

    What is the name of the book(referenced 38:10) and the author about Colored Confederate Soldiers Pensioners in South Carolina? i want to buy one

    • @whoisnickasmith
      @whoisnickasmith Před rokem

      Searching for Black Confederates: The Civil War’s Most Persistent Myth by Kevin M.Levin - amzn.to/3rvILgt

  • @evelyn7881
    @evelyn7881 Před rokem

    My father's family is from Anson County ,NC. The Carpenter and Davis families are his ancestors.