African American genealogical research often presents additional difficulties because record keeping for Black individuals was limited before the Civil War. For this reason, a separate section devoted to African American resources is appropriate, similar to the approach taken for Native American research, which faces comparable challenges. The resources linked from this page provide the principal sources currently available for researching Black genealogy in Florida.
Although progress has been made in recent years, African American genealogy still requires careful, methodical work. New publications, bibliographies, and guides issued by genealogical societies and interest groups have improved access to relevant information, but the first step remains the same: organizing personal materials and applying standard research practices.
Researching African American families involves two broad periods, divided by the Civil War. Methods used for tracing enslaved individuals differ significantly from those used for white families or free African Americans before emancipation. After the war, African Americans appear in most of the same record types as white families, and research techniques largely converge.
- National Archives
- Archives
- Societies
- Florida African American Cemeteries
- Access Genealogy’s Florida Cemetery Records
The most complete coverage of Cemetery records available on the web. They are broken down by county. We do know know if there are African Americans in these cemeteries, so you should browse them for ancestors also.
- Access Genealogy’s Florida Cemetery Records
- Florida African American Census Records
- Hosted at Ancestry.com
- Access Genealogy’s Florida Census Records
Providing the most complete coverage of census records available on the web. We’ve broken the list down by county, and take a careful look at the index page where we explain which records are missing from the census data and may never be recovered.
- Church Records
- Hosted at Ancestry.com
- Court Records
- Florida Freedman
- Hosted at Ancestry.com
- Freedmen’s marriage certificates, 1861-69
- Freedmen and Southern Society Project
- History
- Ancestry.com Slave Narratives $$
Perhaps no other resource approaches the range of human experience found in Ancestry.com’s Slave Narratives. This collection of interviews stands in contrast to other slave narratives that appear in most literature anthologies which were written by the rare few who, against staggering odds, had become literate. This database provides a more poignant picture of what it was to live as a slave in the American South. Taken from The American Slave: A Composite Autobiography, this collection is the most complete available picture of the African-American slavery experience. There is simply no other historical document quite like it. The collection contains over 20,000 pages of type-scripted interviews with more than 3,500 former slaves collected over a ten year period. (Requires Ancestry.com Membership) Get 14 Days Free Access!!!
- Ancestry.com Slave Narratives $$
- Judicial Cases Concerning Slavery
- Slave sales
- Estate of Elizabeth Harvey 1852, – Jackson County, Florida, provides a list of Slaves in her estate.
- Estate papers of Rebecca (Harvey) (1) Davis (2) DeVaughn, Florida 1852, provides a list of Slaves in her estate.
- SlaveHolders In Jackson County Florida 1860
- American Slave Narratives, An Online Anthology
- Slave Data Collection
- Hosted at Slaveholders and African Americans 1860-1870
- Military Records
- Military Records (hosted at AccessGenealogy)
- World War 1 Records
- Hosted at Ancestry.com
- World War II Records
- Florida World War II Army – Air Corps Casualty List
- Florida World War II Navy – Marines Casualty List
- Hosted at Ancestry.com
- African-American Civil War Soldiers & Sailors
- Military Records (hosted at AccessGenealogy)
- Miscellaneous
- Surnames
- Vital Records