I am trying to locate the free link to the Native American Roll M595. I was told this was on Access Genealogy, but I am not having any luck? Can someone help? Thanks!
You may be able to rent the film from the Family History Library and view it at a local Family History Center if there is no NARA facility in your area. Search for your “Indian census rolls, 1885-1940” film in the catalog at http://www.FamilySearch.org. You can find a list of the available films at http://goo.gl/xsmY3.
You can find “Indian Census of the United States – 1885-1940” provided by the Genealogy Center at the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and sponsored by the Internet Archive at http://archive.org/details/indian_census
Thanks so much!! I will start looking…supposedly, my great great grandfather (James D. Barnett) was 1/2 Native American. He was born in 1824 in Alabama, then moved to Arkansas. He does not shoow up on the 1840 Cencus for non-Native Americans. I am at a dead end. Any suggestions would be helpful in trying to prove Native American ancestry or find another relative. Thanks, Janie
M595 contains census which began being taken in 1885 after the Act of 1884… the only tribes that had a presence in Alabama in 1800’s which also has a relevant census in M595 were the Choctaw located in Mississippi… Roll’s 41 and 42, and the Eastern Cherokee, rolls 22-26.
Conducting research prior to 1885 with Native Americans is harder but not impossible. I would suggest you visit AccessGenealogy’s rolls page and see if your ancestor may be present on one of the earlier Native American rolls…
If your family emigrated to Arkansas, you might want to look at the 1817 Emigration Roll. These people agreed to move before the Trail of Tears, and were supposed to be paid for their losses they left behind. Also check the Old Settlers Roll. I believe these can be found at accessgenealogy. If not, do a Google Search for them.
National Archives and Records Administration publication M595; 692 rolls. You will probably want to determine which rolls you need. See http://www.archives.gov/research/microfilm/m595.pdf at http://www.archives.gov/research/census/native-americans/1885-1940.html. Use the online Microfilm Catalog at http://goo.gl/MisdC to learn which NARA units have copies of this microfilm publication.
You may be able to rent the film from the Family History Library and view it at a local Family History Center if there is no NARA facility in your area. Search for your “Indian census rolls, 1885-1940” film in the catalog at http://www.FamilySearch.org. You can find a list of the available films at http://goo.gl/xsmY3.
Was this answer helpful?
LikeDislikeYou can find “Indian Census of the United States – 1885-1940” provided by the Genealogy Center at the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and sponsored by the Internet Archive at http://archive.org/details/indian_census
Was this answer helpful?
LikeDislikeThanks so much!! I will start looking…supposedly, my great great grandfather (James D. Barnett) was 1/2 Native American. He was born in 1824 in Alabama, then moved to Arkansas. He does not shoow up on the 1840 Cencus for non-Native Americans. I am at a dead end. Any suggestions would be helpful in trying to prove Native American ancestry or find another relative. Thanks, Janie
Was this answer helpful?
LikeDislikeJanie,
M595 contains census which began being taken in 1885 after the Act of 1884… the only tribes that had a presence in Alabama in 1800’s which also has a relevant census in M595 were the Choctaw located in Mississippi… Roll’s 41 and 42, and the Eastern Cherokee, rolls 22-26.
Conducting research prior to 1885 with Native Americans is harder but not impossible. I would suggest you visit AccessGenealogy’s rolls page and see if your ancestor may be present on one of the earlier Native American rolls…
Native American Rolls
Dennis
Was this answer helpful?
LikeDislikeJack Danel’s files at http://danel.us/resources/400+Years+in+America++Garner+Tree.pdf
http://danel.us/resources/400+Years+in+America.pdf
Jack Danel • jack@danel.us • 3 Apr 2010 • Greenville SC
Was this answer helpful?
LikeDislikeIf your family emigrated to Arkansas, you might want to look at the 1817 Emigration Roll. These people agreed to move before the Trail of Tears, and were supposed to be paid for their losses they left behind. Also check the Old Settlers Roll. I believe these can be found at accessgenealogy. If not, do a Google Search for them.