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How do I go about researching my Algonquin genealogy?

Filed under: General — aaanativearts on Friday, February 29th, 2008 at 2:05 pm

QUESTION:
My family is descended from the Algonquin’s. If I were to try to get in touch with a member of the tribe to learn more about where my family comes from how would I go about it

~Submitted by Grace K.

Answer:

Hi Grace,
Tribes don’t usually offer any genealogy services, at least none that I am aware of. The tribe will not be able to “look you up” and see if you are a descendent of theirs. You will need to do this work yourself or hire a professional genealogist to do the work for you, which is not usually cheap.

Once you have all your genealogical information including your ancestor’s full name, presence on any Indian rolls with applicable roll numbers, and exact relationship to you, then you may contact the tribal enrollment office of your specific tribe and inquire about their citizenship laws.

There is no point in contacting the tribe before you have obtained this information–if you can’t even find this information about your own family, then how could they? By now, each tribe has thousands (some hundreds of thousands) of decendants with various intermarriages with a number of other indian and non-indian cultures, varying mixtures of tribal blood, and many misspellings of each family surname. In addition, many individuals had both an Indian name and an English name, and some changed names several times in their lifetimes. Most tribes couldn’t possibly afford office staff to offer such services to sort it all out for you and the thousands of others like you who are searching for their native american roots.

The majority of native american tribes still do not have internet connections or websites. Many do not even have phone lines yet. Most tribes in America, with a few exceptions, still have an economic status comparable to third world countries, and tracing genealogy for people who “might” be related to their tribe is the least of their worries.

They expect you first to do the legwork and find out what government role lists your ancestor with Algonquin blood. Then you must trace down all the birth and death certificates establishing the bloodline from that ancestor directly to yourself, and provide them with the name and numbers of the rolls you found your ancestor on and also provide them with originals of the documents that prove that lineage continues to you, before they will even consider starting the enrollment process. This can take hundreds of man hours to accomplish, and none of the tribes I am aware of have funding for such services. Once you have accomplished all this, then they may be able to “look you up” and confirm your ancestor is on thier rolls.

First you would need to establish which Algonquin tribe you are talking about, as there are a number of them. There is a loose confederacy of Algonquin tribes in Canada. They number about 8,000 tribal members, organized into ten separate First Nations, nine are in Quebec and one in Ontario.

….Read more about Algonquin genealogy

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