National Archives |
Ex-Slave Pension Correspondence and Case Files 1892 - 1922
In an effort to share overlooked research records that may assist in slave ancestry research, here is a small collection, but yet powerful, if your ancestor is named. The “Freedmen’s Pension Bill” was led by a Nebraska white
newspaper editor but was championed by the National Ex-Slave Mutual Relief,
Bounty and Pension Association (MRB&PA). It is often referred to as
"the first mass reparations movement led by African Americans."
1892 - 1922. Information from Alabama to Colorado, etc. are represented in these case files.
Learn More:
- Vaughan’s “Freedmen’s pension bill.”
- Full Article No Pensions for Ex-Slaves by Miranda Booker Perry. Printed in the Prologue Magazine, National Archives
- Book: My Face is Black is True: Callie House and the Struggle for Ex-Slave Reparations.
Note for SLIG participants: This topic was designed as supplement for the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy (SLIG) Show Me Missouri: Uniquely Missouri - African American Research, presentation 13 Jan 2021. Keep checking back and follow blog, facebook page or linkedin to get updated postings (see below buttons).
Be Historically Correct
Kathleen Brandt
a3genealogy@gmail.com
A few months agao I came across a book about Callie House in a bookstore's remainder bin. A good read and a sad story for this women who was trying to help ex-slaves get reparations!
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