Prologue | Genealogy Notes African American History
Testing the 15th Amendment (Winter 2016) - Following the passage of the 15th Amendment, African Americans still faced obstacles to exercising their right to vote.
Bankruptcy
Boxer Rebellion
Census
The WPA Census Soundexing Projects (Spring 2002) - The indexing projects put unemployed people to work during the Great Depression of the 1930s and were begun because the Bureau of the Census needed indexes for its own needs.
Civil War
Confederate Medical Personnel (Spring 1994) - How to find your Civil War-era ancestor, if he or she served the Confederate army in a medical capacity, in the War Department Collection of Confederate Records.
Civilian Service
Women Workers in Wartime (Fall 2016) - Explore the personnel records osf women who worked for the federal government during both World War I and World War II.
Court Records
Headstones
Immigration and Naturalization
The A-Files (Spring 2013) - Find out about the Alien Files, an unparalled resource for 20th-century immigration research.
Korean and Vietnam Wars
Local History
Where'd They Go? (Winter 2014) - Find out how to use migration records in family research.
Mexican Punitive Expedition
Military Service Overview
Native Americans
Homes on the Range (Fall 2017) - The Bureau of Indian Affairs Industrial Surveys reveal a rich portrait—in words and pictures—of Native Americans in the 1920s.
Lead the Way (Summer 2009) A guide to researching U.S. Army Indian Scouts from 1866 to 1914.
New Deal
Family Experiences and the New Deal (Fall 2012) - The correspondences files of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration document personal experiences during the Great Depression.
Question 22 (Summer 2012) - The 1940 census provides a glimpse of the demographics of the New Deal.
Panama Canal
Philippine Insurrection
Pre–Civil War
Prison Records
Private Claims
Spanish-American War
Veterans Homes & Military Hospitals
World War I
The Army in the Woods (Summer 2014) - Some World War I soldiers harvested spruce trees for airplane production.
World War II
Articles published in Prologue do not necessarily represent the views of NARA or of any other agency of the United States Government.
Ireland’s Famine Children “Born at Sea” Homes on the Range
“General Condition: Fairly Good”
The records of tuberculosis patients at the hospital in Fort Bayard, Arizona, highlight an important era of Army medicine. Searching for Captain Blye
Testing the 15th Amendment
Women Workers in Wartime
The CCC Indian Division
Army Chaplains in the Civil War
The Fate of Mali Kaltman
Discovering Your Neighborhood
Revolutionary War Pension Files
U.S. Soldiers’ Home
Where’d They Go?
Broke, But Note Out of Luck
The Army in the Woods
When Saying I Do Meant Giving Up Your Citizenship
Ancestors from the West Indies
We’re Still Alive Today
The A-Files
Find out about the Alien Files, an unparalled resource for 20th-century immigration research.The 1940 Census Revisited
Family Experiences and New Deal Relief
Question 22
Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?
Dangers in the Civilian Conservation Corps
Leaving the Army during Mr. Madison's War
The Rejection of Elizabeth Mason: The Case of a Free Colored Revolutionary Widow
I Am Still in the Land of the Living
New Questions on the 1940 Census
The 1940 census will be released in 2012. Learn what new information to expect that will reflect America in the Great Depression. U.S. Census Schedules for Americans Living Overseas
68,937 and Counting
Slavery and Emancipation in the Nation's Capital
Damani Davis shows how to use federal records to explore the lives of African American ancestors from Washington, DC.
How an eagle feels when his wings are clipped and caged
Coastal Bastions and Frontier Forts
Lead the Way
Track down U.S. Army Indian Scouts who served from 1866 to 1914. Find out more in Lead the Way. Follow the Money
Federal Census of 1885
Exodus to Kansas
D.C. Metropolitan Police
Native Americans in the Military
Panama Canal Zone
Their . . . Bedding is wet Their floors are damp
A Final Appeal to Capitol Hill
The Final Voyage of the Portland
Female Yeomen in World War I
Native Americans in the Census
Although many sources state that the 1870 census is the first to enumerate the Indian population, genealogists can find Native Americans in the 1860 census. Find out more in Native Americans in the Census, 1860–1890. World War II Army Enlistment Records
Senate Nomination Papers
Freedmen's Bureau Marriage Records
American State Papers
Habeas Corpus Case Records