Online Data For South
Carolina:
Diary of David Gavin
Mr. Gavin was an attorney in St. George's Parish (modern Dorchester County), who maintained almost a
daily journal from 1855 until his death in 1874. In his diary he recorded
information about people and events of "Lowcountry" SC. This source contains much slave data; Mr. Gavin attended
every slave sale in the area, so there is a large index of slave names.
African-American Genealogies
Data for Allendale County
African Americans
in the South Carolina Room Rich resource for Anderson, Clarendon, Greenville, Kershaw, Orangeburg, Richland,
Sumter, Union and Williamsburg Counties
The Afrigeneas Slave
Data Project an excellent resource for African American
Genealogy is Afrigeneas. The URL is www.afrigeneas.com. They have a section
for the collection of slave data for all states - even with recommended
formats and an online form.
Avery Research Center
"The Avery Research Center for African American History & Culture of the College of
Charleston is an archives and small museum that has been established to document, preserve
and make public the unique historical and cultural heritage of South Carolina Low Country
African Americans."
If you have ancestors from Charleston, don't miss this site.
How to Research
African American
Obituaries Help for beginners.
First Person
Narratives of the American South
documents the American
South from the viewpoint of Southerners. It focuses on the diaries,
autobiographies, memoirs, travel accounts, and ex-slave narratives of
relatively inaccessible populations: women, African Americans, enlisted
men, laborers, and Native Americans. The texts for this project come
from the Academic Affairs Library of the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, and the Editorial Board for Documenting the American South
guides its development.
Free African
Americans of North Carolina and Virginia Lists numerous free slaves throughout various
counties in North Carolina and Virginia. Provides in-depth explanation of information.
Free
African Americans of Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Maryland,
Delaware Researcher Paul Heinegg lists numerous free slaves throughout
various counties in North Carolina and Virginia. Slaves brought into Brunswick County,
Virginia, from North and
South Carolina, 1780 -1781
RESOURCES AND DATA COVERING ALL STATES:
The Afrigeneas Homepage
"Afrigeneas is a mailing list focused on genealogical research and resources in
general and on African ancestry in particular." Their home page provides a focus for
resources across the Internet, and if you are just beginning your search, this is a
must
place to visit.
U. S. Colored Troops
A wonderful resource provided by the National Park Service for those whose ancestors
served in the Civil War / War Between the States. You will find photographs and service
records online.
North American Slave
Narratives, Beginnings to 1920 From the U. of North Carolina collections.
Slave Voices from the Duke
University Special Collection
Black Genealogy
Exchange
Black Families
Christine's African American Genealogy Site
Africans in
America
Distant
Cousins African American Genealogy
Genealogy
Forum: African American Resource Center
Recommended reading
Koger, Harry
Black Slave Owners.
(Yes, that's right; there were Free Black Slave Masters in South Carolina.)
Explores little-known history of black slave holding. 286 pages.
Slave narratives from Georgetown County, South Carolina.
Ten interviews with ex-slaves from the rice planting section
of Georgetown. By Christopher C. Boyle, edited by James A. Fitch.
When Roots Die: Endangered Traditions on the Sea Islands.
The author explores the changing lifestyle of African Americans
on the Sea Island of South Carolina and Georgia. By Patricia
Jones-Jackson, forward by Charles W. Joyner. 189 pages.
The water brought us: The story of the Gullah speaking people.
By Muriel Miller branch. 106 pages.
My folks don't want me to talk about slavery.
Narratives
by former North Carolina slaves. Edited from remarkable interviews
sponsored by the Federal Writer's Project during the 1930s. By
Belinda Hurmence. 103 pages.
Before freedom. Narratives by former South Carolina slaves.
Edited by Belinda Hurmence.
We lived in a cabin in the yard. Narratives by Virginia
slaves. Edited by Belinda Hurmence. 103 pages.
Rice and Slaves: Ethnicity and the slave trade in Colonial
South Carolina. Daniel C. Littlefield explores the slave
trade through shipping records and other sources to explain why
certain African tribes were more valuable to the American Colonists
than other tribes. 199 pages.
Back of the Big House: The architecture of plantation slavery.
A study of the structures on the plantations that are often overlooked.
The work includes both blueprints and pictures of mills, icehouses,
dairies, kitchens, slave cabins and much more. By John Michael Vlack.
290 pages |