
AF-1078: Tracing Formerly Enslaved Ancestors: A Companion to the 1870 Census
The 1870 U.S. Census is a milestone for many family historians. For those tracing African American ancestry, it often marks the very first time their ancestors appear in a public federal record by nam...
25 Apr 20259min

AF-1077: Inside the 1870 Census | Ancestral Findings Podcast
The 1870 U.S. Census might be one of the most meaningful records ever created in the history of the country. For the first time, every person—Black, white, free-born, formerly enslaved, immigrant, far...
23 Apr 20258min

AF-1076: Richard Mentor Johnson: A Controversial Hero
As we continue through our The Forgotten Seconds series—exploring the lives of vice presidents who never became president—we now turn to one of the most unusual figures ever to hold the office. Richar...
21 Apr 20259min

AF-1075: The Sacrifices of Daniel D. Tompkins | Ancestral Findings Podcast
Daniel D. Tompkins was born on June 21, 1774, in the town of Scarsdale in Westchester County, New York. He came into a world still under British rule, just two years before the colonies would declare ...
18 Apr 20258min

AF-1074: Inside the 1860 Census | Ancestral Findings Podcast
The 1860 U.S. Census might be one of the most emotionally charged documents in early American history. On the surface, it looks similar to 1850—names, ages, occupations, birthplaces, property values. ...
16 Apr 20259min

AF-1073: Inside the 1850 Census | Ancestral Findings Podcast
By the time the 1850 U.S. Census was taken, the United States was no longer a slow-growing collection of coastal settlements. It was a booming, restless, coast-to-coast land of contradictions. The pop...
14 Apr 202512min

AF-1072: Inside the 1840 Census | Ancestral Findings Podcast
The 1840 U.S. Census might be the most overlooked turning point in early American recordkeeping. On the surface, it still looks like the older ones—just one name listed, a page full of tick marks, and...
11 Apr 20258min

AF-1071: Inside the 1830 Census | Ancestral Findings Podcast
By 1830, the United States had reached a new kind of maturity. The Revolution was no longer in living memory for some—though a surprising number of veterans were still alive and tucked into households...
10 Apr 202512min




















