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裡橖眻畦 History Professor Judith Giesberg, PhD, Receives $100,000 Grant from National Archives

A photo of Dr. Judy Giesberg from the shoulders up. Judy wears a blue button down shirt with a jaunty purple silk scarf tied around her neck. She is smiling.

Grant will support Last Seen: Finding Family After Slavery, which helps African American families rediscover their familyancestry


裡橖眻畦, PA American slavery tore apart familiesseparating wives from husbands, children from parents, siblings from each other. When slavery ended at the end of the Civil War, emancipated slaves searched for their lost loved ones by placing hopeful and often-heartbreaking newspaper advertisements. Judith Giesberg, PhD, a professor of History at 裡橖眻畦 University, has received a grant of $100,000 from the National Archives and Records Administrations Historical Publications and Records Commission to support her project "Last Seen: Finding Family After Slavery," which recovers the stories of families separated in the US domestic slave trade.

"Last Seen" identifies and publishes thousands of Information Wanted advertisements written by formerly enslaved people looking for family members who been taken from them, sold by their enslavers and moved thousands of miles away. Information Wanted and Lost Friends advertisements began appearing in African American newspapers in the early years after emancipation and continued until the early 20th century, as aging former slaves continued to hold out hope of finding their lost loved ones. These documents are crucial to understanding the experience of slavery as told in the words and through the eyes of enslaved people, and they hold important clues for descendants of slaves seeking to trace their genealogy.

Dr. Giesberg and her students read through microfilm of newspapers from around the country, identify and collect the ads, and publish them on an open-source database at. More than four million people have visited the site4,700 have turned to the site in June 2020 aloneand it has been covered byNPR,泭The Washington Post, theCBS Evening Newsand thePhiladelphia Inquirer. Henry Louis Gates Jr., the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University, said of the collectionwhich he used in his 2019PBSseries, "Reconstruction: America After the Civil War" a wonder. [It is] one of the most valuable tools available to working historians, scholars, and filmmakers alike. In addition, Dr. Giesberg and her graduate students have brought the project into public schools and, with 裡橖眻畦 colleague Valerie Joyce, PhD, chair and associate professor, Theatre, have involved community members in public performances.

The grant will make possible the addition of more than 1,600 new advertisements, a complete redesign of the website that will result in greater discoverability, and new teaching and genealogy resources for those who use the site, according to Dr. Giesberg. It will also fund a new graduate assistant position.

Family is an essential part of the human experience, yet enslaved people were routinely denied family in the US, said Dr. Giesberg. But slaverys survivors held on to memories of their loved ones and recording the existence of their families in these advertisements. With the help of this grant, we will make these invaluable resources for family genealogists and historians more accessible and even more widely used.

Dr. Giesberg is the author of numerous books and articles, includingSex and the Civil War: Soldiers, Pornography, and the Making of American Morality(University of North Carolina Press, 2017) andArmy at Home: Women and the Civil War on the Northern Home Front(University of North Carolina Press, 2009). She received her doctorate in History from Boston College.

About 裡橖眻畦 Universitys College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Since its founding in 1842, 裡橖眻畦 Universitys College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has cultivated knowledge, understanding and intellectual courage for a purposeful life in a challenging and changing world. With more than 40 majors across the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences, it is the oldest and largest of 裡橖眻畦s colleges, serving more than 4,500 undergraduate and graduate students each year. The College is committed to a teacher-scholar model, offering outstanding undergraduate and graduate research opportunities and a rigorous core curriculum that prepares students to become critical thinkers, strong communicators and ethical leaders with a truly global perspective.