Alexandria County, Virginia, Free Negro Register, 1797-1861

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Description

his volume contains abstracts of the registration records of free blacks in Alexandria County, Virginia. Alexandria County was created in 1801 when Virginia ceded part of Fairfax County to create the District of Columbia. It comprised that portion of the District of Columbia which lay on the west side of the Potomac River, and was referred to as Alexandria County, District of Columbia. Alexandria County remained part of the District of Columbia until the territory was returned to Virginia in the retrocession of 1846. It then continued to exist as Alexandria County, Virginia, until 1920 when it was renamed Arlington County. The registration records abstracted here were originally created in response to a Virginia law of 1793 which required all free blacks to register with the town or county clerk, and get a freedom certificate to carry with them always as ready proof of their free status. With a purpose to get a freedom certificate, the blacks had to produce acceptable evidence of their freedom. A black person could be free by virtue of being the child of a free mother, by manumission under all kinds of conditions (such as at the owner’s death per the terms of the owner’s will), by self-purchase, and so forth. These abstracts indicate the nature of the proof provided, be it references to wills, deeds, and bills of sale, or affidavits by credible witnesses. Thus these abstracts name a great many people along with several thousand free blacks (the various people named being white), and they provide quite a lot of data on relationships, and some physical descriptions, all of which is of great interest to genealogists and social historians

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