Finding Your United States Indigenous Ancestor

FINDING YOUR INDIAN ANCESTOR

United States American Indian Genealogy  Finding Your Indian Ancestor

Identify the tribe of your ancestor
Begin with yourself, get a pedigree chart and fill it in with the knowledge you have. Collect photos, documents and stories of you family as you search.

1. Find out where your ancestor lived.

Interview the ancestor’s living relatives and friends. Ask them if they have certificates, family Bibles, obituaries, diaries, letters, or other sources which may contain birth, marriage, or death information and places. Ask them to tell you where the person lived at different times in his or her life.


 * Be sensitive when interviewing others. Some tribes believe it improper to speak of a deceased ancestor.

Search non-Indian records such as census, church, and vital records for the ancestor’s family. See the United States Research Outline (30972), the Canada Research Outline (34545), and individual state and provincial research outlines for sources to search.


 * The 1900 and 1910 U.S. federal censuses list the person’s tribe. (Remember this does not indicate official membership in a tribe.)

If you know the tribe and which reservation they were living on between the years 1885-1940 search the Indian Census records. Online at Fold 3 or ($) www.ancestry.com

Tips:


 * If relatives have mentioned a tribe their ancestors may have belonged to, assume this is correct until you can prove otherwise.
 * If you do not know the tribe, consider that your ancestor may not be Indian until you can prove the name of the tribe.
 * Indians may have hidden their tribal identities for social, economical, or political reasons.
 * Search non-Indian records for clues.

2. Find what tribes were located in the area where your ancestor lived, and learn who kept the records (Tribe, Agency, Bureau of Indian Affairs, etc.).

Learn about your ancestor’s tribe. Learn about other tribes in the area to find background information. Learn their naming and relationship customs. Use the following sources:


 * FamilySearch Research Wiki at: FamilySearch.org has over 1700 pages including tribal, agency, and reservation pages.


 * Tribal pages include time line, history, agencies, records, reservations, references and links to online sources and the Family History Library catalog.

• Swanton, John Reed. The Indian Tribes of North America. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1974. This book is arranged by region, then by state, then by tribe.On Line at: Access Genealogy

• Malinowski, Sharon, et. al. The Gale Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes. 4 vols. Detroit, Mich.: Gale Research, 1998. It includes:records of churches, schools, government agencies, forts, reservations, reserves, and tribes which may include your ancestor.

3. Search Online Databases


 * FamilySearch.org
 * Fold3.com
 * Ancestry.com

4. Search all record types for your ancestor’s time period and location.

To determine which record types are most helpful for researching your ancestor’s time period.

5. Identify and locate specific records by using the Family History Library Catalog.

If your ancestor lived in Oklahoma (Indian Territory) in 1900 and was a member of the Five Civilized Tribes (Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, or Seminole Indian tribes in the southeastern United States), use the Dawes Commission Enrollment Records, Online at: Fold3.

If your ancestor was Eastern Cherokee, use the Guion Miller Roll found Online at: Fold3


 * See also:


 * The U.S. Eastern Cherokee or Guion Miller Roll
 * Dawes Commission Enrollment Records for Five U.S. Indian Tribes
 * American Indian Enrollment Records

Search the Family History Library Catalog, using the following searches:

Keyword Search under the name of the TRIBE

Subject Search for INDIANS OF NORTH AMERICA—[STATE]

Place Search under the name of the STATE and the COUNTY using the topic NATIVE RACES Example of a Place Search for North Dakota under the topic Native Races

Print out the record descriptions from the catalog and write the sources you plan to search on your Research Log.

Example of catalog record description

6. Search the records for your ancestor.


 * Using the book call number or microfilm numbers you found, search these records for your ancestor.


 * Make copies of documents relating to your family, and write the source citation (film or book call number, title, author) on the back.


 * Add sources and citation to FamilySearch Family Tree


 * Transfer the information from these documents to the appropriate family group record.


 * Look for clues suggesting other records or places to search for these ancestors.

Find FamilySearch Center near you where you get free personal help with your family history.

Tips: If you did not find your ancestor:


 * They may have been listed as “white” and living among the Indians.
 * They may be living with a different tribe that is not their own.
 * Search the FamilySearch Research Wiki for other clues.