African American Resources for Illinois

United States Illinois  African American Resources



Brief History
The Great Migration of African Americans brought many from the rural South to Chicago. Most came from Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas. By 2008, 15.0% of the population in Illinois was African American, with the majority living within the city of Chicago and the surrounding areas.

Slavery was banned by 1818 when Illinois became a state, though the southern part continued to allow slavery for several more years. This part, called "Little Egypt", was mostly settled by Southerners. By 1853 laws were passed prohibiting all African Americans, including freedmen, from settling in the state. This eventually changed after the Civil War.

In October 1871, the Great Chicago Fire destroyed many buildings and records.

Illinois Repositories with African American Collections

 * Illinois State Archives Margret Cross Norton Building Springfield, IL 62756 Telephone: 217-782-4682 Fax: 217-524-3930 "African–American Records" describes what records are at the State Archives with an online method for ordering records.


 * DuSable Museum of African American History 740 East 56th Place Chicago, IL 60637-1495 773-947-0600


 * Springfield Illinois African American History Foundation 883 Roanoke Drive Springfield, IL, 62702 Tel: 217-698-6339


 * Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library 112 N. Sixth Street Springfield, IL 62701 Telephone: 800-610-2094 or 217-782-5764 Holdings include materials on various ethnic groups and ethnic migration patterns as well as a collection of oral interviews conducted by the Springfield African-American History Foundation. Search the card catalog.


 * Newberry Library 60 West Walton Street Chicago, IL 60610 Telephone: 312-943-9090 "African American Genealogy" lists sources and helps for African American research.

Published Sources
Books about African American Research 


 * Witcher, Curt Bryan. African American Genealogy: a Bibliography and Guide to Sources. Fort Wayne, Indiana: Round Tower Books, 2000. Available at many libraries (WorldCat).
 * Rose, James M. and Alice Eichholz.Black Genesis: a Resource Book for African-American Genealogy. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Pub. Co., 2003. Many libraries (WorldCat);
 * Burroughs, Tony. Black Roots: A Beginners Guide to Tracing the African American Family Tree. New York, New York: Simon &amp; Schuster, 2001.
 * Beasley, Donna. Family Pride: the Complete Guide to Tracing African-American Genealogy. New York, New York: Macmillan Publishers Limited, 1997. Many libraries (WorldCat);

Books about African Americans


 * Hine, Darlene Clark. The Black Women in the Middle West Project: a Comprehensive Resource Guide, Illinois and Indiana; Historical Essays, Oral Histories, Biographical Profiles, and Document Collections. Indianapolis [Indiana]: Indiana Historical Bureau, 1986. Many libraries (WorldCat);.
 * Miller, Edward A. The Black Civil War Soldiers of Illinois: the Story of the Twenty-Ninth U.S. Colored Infantry. [Columbia, South Carolina]: University of South Carolina Press, 1998. Many libraries (WorldCat); Google Books;
 * Smith, John David. Black Soldiers in Blue: African American Troops in the Civil War Era. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2002. Many libraries (WorldCat)

Additional Published Sources


 * African American Research has more information about researching African Americans
 * Parrish, Randall. "The Battle Against Slavery," in Historic Illinois: The Romance of the Earlier Days. Chicago: A.C. McClurg and Co., 1905; pages 318-332. Free online at Google Books.
 * Additional books found at many libraries (WorldCat). Click the title to see libraries with the book.
 * Additional books at the.
 * See Illinois ethnic group records for additional resources.

Web Sites

 * African Americans in Illinois Places Other Than Chicago has links to library catalogs with African American collections.
 * The History Makers, based in Chicago, is dedicted to preserving African American history.
 * Pullman Porter National Historic Registry of the African-American Railroad Employees