African American Resources for Virginia

United States   Virginia    African Americans

Strategies
African American research in Virginia can be divided into two general time periods - before and after the Civil War.

This Wiki page describes research strategies, and major sources of information about African American families from Virginia. As you read this Wiki page, also study the African American Research Wiki pages, which will help you understand more strategies, and the contents and uses of other African American genealogical records.

History
The first slaves were imported into Virginia in 1619. Slaves were emancipated in 1865. The Official Tourism Website of the Commonwealth of Virginia has prepared a nice history of African-Americans in Virginia.

Number of slaves in Virginia:


 * 1830: 469,757
 * 1840: 449,087
 * 1860: 490,865

Slavery Legislation. To learn about the laws that affected Virginia slaves, see:


 * Finkelman, Paul. State Slavery Statutes: Guide to the Microfiche Collection. Frederick, Md.: University Publications of America, 1989. . Pages 317-56 pertain to Virginia and cover the years 1789-1865. The advertisements are indexed. The records list the names of many slaves and slave owners.

1619-1865: Period of slavery
Slaves are sometimes mentioned by first name in slavemasters' deeds (see the Virginia Land and Property),slave schedules (see Virginia Census), wills (see Virginia Probate Records), tax lists (see Virginia Taxation), and in court order books (see Virginia Court Records). A few parish registers (see Virginia Church Records) list slaves who attended church with their masters. In Virginia the births of slave children should be listed in county birth registers starting in 1853 (see Virginia Vital Records).

African American Families Database online The Central Virginia History Researchers (CVHR) has now released the African-American Families Database online. The first stage of this website provides a template for researchers trying to locate specific African- Americans who lived between circa 1850 and 1880. This period is particularly challenging for African-American family research because of the difficulty in relating ante-bellum and post-bellum records. The two plantations on which the website currently focuses are Hydraulic Plantation (5 miles north of Charlottesville, W.V.), and the Bleak House Plantation (9 miles northwest of Charlottesville W.V.).The site contains information on the plantations and information on the enslaved people living on these two plantations. The site also contains a blog focusing on the activities of the CVHR group, and details about the Database project.

Paul Heinegg prepared a detailed list of slaves manumitted between 1782 and the 1820s:


 * Virginia Slaves Freed After 1782

Unknown No Longer: A Database of Virginia Slave Names is a free online database created by the Virginia Historical Society. Information on many Virginia slaves is available in this work in progress.

Names of hundreds of runaway slaves, their descriptions, owners, and ages appeared in newspapers. They have been published and can be found in:


 * Windley, Lathan A., comp. Runaway Slave Advertisements. 4 vols. (Virginia and North Carolina) Wesport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983. . For Virginia, see volume one.

Many eighteenth-century runaway slave advertisements were published in the Virginia Gazette. Indexed images of the Virginia Gazette(1736-1780) are available online through the Colonial Williamsburgwebsite. Professor Tom Costa and The Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia have indexed all the runaway advertisements for slaves mentioned in this publication and other Virginia newspapers (1736-1803), see: The Geography of Slavery in Virginia. These newspapers are valuable resources for all Virginia regions.

Virginia Plantation Records Occasionally, slaves are mentioned in plantation records. The Family History Library has several series of plantation records from the periods before and after the Civil War. These are listed in the Author/Title Search of the Family History Library Catalog under the STAMPP, KENNETH M. or in the Subject Search under PLANTATION LIFE - VIRGINIA or PLANTATION LIFE - SOUTHERN STATES. Records are available at:


 * Library of Congress: inventory, ; original records, films beginning with.
 * University of Virginia Library: inventory, ; original records, films beginning with.
 * Duke University Library: inventory, ; original records, films beginning with.
 * University of North Carolina Library at Chapel Hill: inventory, ; original records, films beginning with.
 * Colonial Williamsburg Foundation Library: inventory, ; original records, films beginning with . These records are from the Shirley plantation of the Carter family.
 * College of William and Mary, Earl Gregg Swem Library: inventory, ; original records, films beginning with.
 * Virginia Historical Society: inventory, ; original records, films beginning with.

The Family History Library has microfilms of most of the records described in the guide booklets. Virginia plantation records are scattered throughout.

Free People of Color
Not all blacks were slaves in Virginia before the Civil War. Many black families had been free since the 1600s. Some of the largest families had the surnames Cumbo, Driggers, and Goins. A large percentage of free people of color descend from black slave men who had children by white indentured servant women.

Prior to the Civil War, each Virginia county court kept a register of free negroes. Documentation of a black person's freedom status prevented them from being forced to be slaves. These registers may give the person's name, age, color, stature, marks and scars, and name the court of emancipation. Several of these registers are found at the Library of Virginia. The Family History Library has copies of some of these registers. They are usually found in the Family History Library Place Search under VIRGINIA, [COUNTY] - COURT RECORDS.

Here is an example of a register that has been published:


 * Boyd-Rush, Dorothy A. Free Negroes Registered in the Clerk's Office, Botetourt County, Virginia, 1802-1836. Athens, Georgia: Iberian Pub. Co., 1993..

Black families freed prior to 1820 are found in:


 * Paul Heinegg, Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware at http://freeafricanamericans.com/ (accessed 25 May 2012). About 2,000 pages of family histories based on colonial court order and minute books 1790-1810 census records, tax lists, wills, deeds, free Negro registers, marriage bonds, parish registers, and Revolutionary War pension files.

For an index of slaves and free men of color, listed in the Index to Sons of the American Revolution applications, see the Virginia Periodicals section.

1865 to the Present
After the Civil War, African Americans appears in the same sources as white people, such as censuses (beginning in 1870), marriage registers (though there was often a separate register for "colored marriages"), deeds, wills, court records, and cemeteries (though they were usually segregated cemeteries).

Cohabitation Records are registers created when the former slaves legalized their marriages which was not allowed until 1866. This valuable genealogical data is being made available online through the Library of Virginia's Virginia Memory Collection. See the online resources below for a direct link to the database. More about this source is also found on the Cohabitation Records Wiki page, and the Virginia Cohabitation Records Wiki page.

Freedman's Savings and Trust Company signature cards or registers may list the slave's former masters, birth date, birthplace, occupation, residences, death information, parents, children, spouse, or siblings. Virginia had three branches of this bank:


 * Lynchburg 1871
 * Norfolk 1871-1874
 * Richmond 1867-1874

The signature registers for these branches are listed in:


 * Freedman's Savings and Trust Company (Washington, DC) 1865-1874. Registers of Signatures of Depositors in Branches of the Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, 1865-1874. Washington, DC: National Archives, 1969. Digital version ; also on film: . In each city, depositors' names are arranged by account number.

Two valuable sources for the period after the Civil War are:


 * 1) United States. Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. Records of the Superintendent of Education for the State of Virginia, Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1865-1870. Washington, DC: National Archives, 1977. . Most volumes are indexed.
 * 2) United States. Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. Records of the Assistant Commissioner for the State of Virginia, Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1865-1869. Washington, DC: National Archives, 1988. . There are several indexes.

Freedmen's Bureau Virginia Marriages ca. 1815-1866--Names of thousands of former slaves are included in these records. A free index can be viewed at. Records may include the name of the bride and groom, date of marriage registration, residence, previous marriages, names and ages of children.

For a list of blacks who held public office during Reconstruction, see:, by Luther Porter Jackson.

Cemeteries
Large African American cemeteries in Virginia include:


 * The African American Historic Cemeteries of Portsmouth VA on Facebook: A friend's group of descendants and volunteers of the African American Cemeteries of Portsmouth: The Mt. Calvary Cemetery Complex (est 1879), Lincoln Memorial Cemetery (est 1912), and Grove Baptist Church cemetery (est 1840)
 * The African American Historic Cemeteries of Portsmouth Virginia (web): A friend's group of     descendants and volunteers of the African American Cemeteries of Portsmouth:  The Mt. Calvary Cemetery Complex (est. 1879), Lincoln Memorial Cemetery (est 1912), and Grove Baptist Church Cemetery (est. 1840).
 * African American Cemeteries of Hampton Roads on Facebook. A community forum for the African American cemeteries of Hampton Roads, Virginia.  Included are burial sites located in Norfolk, Hampton, Portsmouth, Suffolk, Virginia Beach, Newport News, and additional areas throughout the Tidewater region.

Websites

 * African Ancestry in Virginia at Afrigeneas includes a concise history of black people in the state. The site includes links to databases for several record sets.
 * Register of Colored Persons…cohabiting together as Husband and Wife on 27th February 1866 Under "What's New" are listings of various digital collections. You will find the "Cohabitation Registers" at the bottom. Click on the thumbnail picture rather than the link which does not work at this time.
 * Freedmen's Bureau
 * Patriots of Color. Free database at Archives.com. Includes details about 700+ black Virginians in the Revolutionary War.
 * Cemeteries in Albemarle and Amherst Counties at African American Cemeteries Online - free.
 * J. F. Bell Funeral Home Records, Charlottesville, VA 1917-1989
 * African American History of Accomac County, Virginia at Accomac Roots. Includes genealogy, census data, tax lists, indentures, cemeteries, maps, pictures, documents, and sources.
 * Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States, From Interviews with Former Slaves
 * History of the American Negro, Virginia editionSee page 728.
 * World War I History Commission Questionnaires.Read more about the questionnaires.
 * African-American Newspapers Held at the Library of Virginia
 * Reconstruction:The Second Civil War
 * State online resources for African-American genealogy: Virginia
 * More state online resources for African-American genealogy: Virginia
 * African-American Manuscripts (Virginia Historical Society)
 * Virginia Black History Archives Collections
 * Geography of Slavery in Virginia
 * Access Genealogy: Virginia African American Genealogy. Includes a large list of online resources.