Caring for Your Family Tree
Tools and Strategies for the Lay Genealogist
Williams Research Center, 410 Chartres Street
Pay what you can: $50 suggested, $10 minimum
In this seminar, guest speakers will explore the resources and root concepts of researching family histories. Whether you have a shoebox full of photos, a digital family tree, or established family papers, this program is ideal for a general audience, particularly the budding or self-taught family historian who wants to transition from name gathering to research.
Throughout the day, industry experts will address the responsibilities of researching your family tree, record types and resources, methods and strategies, DNA as an important research tool for tough-to-trace family lines, and “how to be a good ancestor”—best practices for preserving and sharing your findings with the next generation.
This program will be moderated by Jari C. Honora, a reference associate at the Williams Research Center of The Historic New Orleans Collection, Certified Genealogist®, New Orleans native, and proud Louisiana Creole with roots dating back more than two centuries along Bayou Lafourche and the German-Acadian coast.
Space is limited, and advance registration is required. The “pay what you can” pricing model for this program allows us to make it more accessible to the community. When you pay the suggested amount, your contribution helps to offset the program cost for others who might not otherwise be able to attend.
Featured Speakers
Jari C. Honora
Jari C. Honora
Jari C. Honora, a Certified Genealogist®, works as Family Historian at the Williams Research Center of the Historic New Orleans Collection. He is a native New Orleanian and graduate of St. Augustine High School and Tulane University. He also does historical and genealogical research professionally, including previous research for the TV programs “Finding Your Roots,” “We’ll Meet Again,” and the Georgetown Memory Project. He is a trustee of the Board for Certification of Genealogists and board member of the Louisiana Historical Society and Genealogical Research Society of New Orleans.
Bernice Alexander Bennett
Bernice Alexander Bennett
Bernice Alexander Bennett is an award-winning author, genealogist, nationally recognized guest speaker, storyteller, and producer-host of the popular Research at the National Archives and Beyond Blogtalkradio programs. She is also the first recipient of the Ida B. Wells Service Award given by the Sons and Daughters of the United States Middle Passage for her dedication to broadcasting stories about enslaved and indentured ancestors of African descent. In addition, she received the Elizabeth Clark-Lewis Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society (AAHGS) Genealogy Award in 2019 for original research in support of African American genealogy. Bennett is a founding director and faculty member with the award-winning Midwest African American Genealogy Institute. She received the 2022 Midwest Region's Hartzog Award from the National Park Services for being a leader in unearthing and sharing Black homesteading stories and important historical documentation. Bennett—a New Orleans native and current resident of Maryland—enjoyed a 35-year career in domestic and international public health. She received an undergraduate degree from Grambling State University and a graduate degree in public health from the University of Michigan.
Melvin Collier
Melvin Collier
Melvin Collier has been conducting genealogical research for 30 years. Currently employed by the Department of Defense in Washington, DC, he is a former archivist at the Archives Research Center of the Robert W. Woodruff Library–Atlanta University Center, where he has worked on the Morehouse College Dr. Martin Luther King papers, the Maynard Jackson administrative papers and photographs, the Dr. Asa Hilliard III papers, and other collections. Collier has appeared as an expert genealogist on the PBS show “Who Do You Think You Are” and has given numerous presentations on genealogy, enslaved ancestral research, and genetic genealogy (DNA). Collier is the author of Mississippi to Africa: A Journey of Discovery; 150 Years Later: Broken Ties Mended; and Early Family Heritage: Documenting Our Legacy. His books have been used by genealogical and historical scholars as great reference sources for genealogical methodologies. Collier earned a Master of Arts degree in African American studies from Clark Atlanta University in 2008, with additional graduate coursework in archival studies from Clayton State University, 2010 –2012. He was the recipient of the 2012 Marsha M. Greenlee History Award from the National Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society (AAHGS).
Jay Schexnaydre
Jay Schexnaydre
Jay Schexnaydre is a 10th-generation native of Convent in St. James Parish, where his ancestors have resided for 300 years, but he currently resides in Thibodaux. He has been employed as the manager at Laura Plantation in Vacherie, Louisiana, since 2001. He has been a member of the German-Acadian Coast Historical & Genealogical Society since 1999 and since 2016 has served as president of that organization. Jay also served two terms as president of the Genealogical Research Society of New Orleans (2011–2013 and 2015–2017). Schexnaydre has intensely studied the families of St. Charles, St. John the Baptist, St. James, Ascension, Assumption, Iberville, and Lafourche Parishes. He is particularly interested in the complex and extended network of families (and their origins) found along the German Coast, the Acadian Coast, and the Bayou Lafourche region. He holds a wealth of knowledge on available digital and printed resources, tips for research, and ready answers to commonly asked genealogical questions. Also, he holds memberships in the Historic New Orleans Collection and the Terrebonne Genealogy Society and is a board member of Lafourche Heritage Society.