2023 Spring Seminar

Research and the Law: Legal Knowledge Needed to Find Your Ancestors

April 22, 2023

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The Legal Genealogist Judy G. Russell is a genealogist with a law degree. She writes, teaches and lectures on a wide variety of genealogical topics, ranging from using court records in family history to understanding DNA testing. A Colorado native with roots deep in the American south on her mother’s side and entirely in Germany on her father’s side, she holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism with a political science minor from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. and a law degree from Rutgers School of Law-Newark. She has worked as a newspaper reporter, trade association writer, legal investigator, defense attorney, federal prosecutor, law editor and, for more than 20 years before her retirement in 2014, was an adjunct member of the faculty at Rutgers Law School.

She is a member of the Association of Professional Genealogists, the National Genealogical Society and numerous state and regional genealogical societies. She has written for the National Genealogical Society Quarterly (from which she received the 2017 Award of Excellence), the National Genealogical Society Magazine, the FGS Forum, BCG’s OnBoard, and Family Tree Magazine, among other publications. On the faculty of the Institute of Genealogy and Historical Research, the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy, the Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh, the Midwest African American Genealogy Institute, and the Genealogical Institute on Federal Records, she is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Board for Certification of Genealogists®, from which she holds credentials as a Certified Genealogist® and Certified Genealogical Lecturer℠. Her award-winning blog appears at The Legal Genealogist website (https://www.legalgenealogist.com/).

Research and the Law: Legal Knowledge Needed to Find Your Ancestors

  • Finding the Law – Time and time again we’re told as genealogists that we need to look at records in the context of the law at the time and in the place where the records were created. Easier said than done! With 50 states and the federal government all passing laws, how do we find the laws we need?
  • Making a Federal Case Out of It – Even genealogists who have a good background in court records often overlook the wealth of detail available in the records of the federal courts: the District Court, the Circuit Court, the modern Circuit Court of Appeals, and even the Supreme Court. From bankruptcies to copyrights to patents to cases in admiralty and more, federal court records merit a close look.
  • From 1619 to Juneteenth – Slavery and the Law Before the Civil War – No issue more bitterly impacted early America than slavery. Defended by some, decried by others, slavery left its mark on the laws of the nation and all the states, enslaved or free. The records created by those laws provide critical clues for genealogists, whether descended from enslaved or enslaver. [For northern states only, see “Deemed a Runaway.”] 
  • Dower and Dowry: Women, Property, & Legal Records Bringing – Property into marriage or trying to take it out, our female ancestors were governed by laws that generated valuable records. Learn about the common law dower and the civil law dowry, how they differed, and how to find the stories the records tell.

Location & Recordings

Join us live at the Dallas Public Library or online on Zoom.

Recordings of each session will be available to registered attendees from April 22, 2023 through May 7, 2023.

Schedule

Saturday April 22 (all times CT)

10:0010:10Welcome & Opening Remarks
10:1011:10Finding the Law
11:1011:30Break
11:3012:30Making a Federal Case Out of It
12:301:30Lunch
1:302:30From 1619 to Juneteenth – Slavery and the Law Before the Civil War
2:302:45Break
2:453:55Dower and Dowry: Women, Property, & Legal Records Bringing
3:554:00Closing Remarks

Cost (USD)

By April 2, 2023After April 2, 2023
DGS Member$50$60
Others$70$80

Box Lunches available for $14 (must be ordered by April 19)

Join DGS Register

Refund Policy: Requests for refunds made prior to the early-bird cutoff date (April 2, 2023) will be granted (less a $10 handling fee). DGS will not issue refunds after 5:00 pm on April 2, but we will provide a syllabus (PDF) and access to the recorded lectures for two weeks after the April 22, 2023 presentation. 

Deadline to Order a Lunch with a Registration: April 19th, 2023