Speaking & Workshops: Discovering African Caribbean Ancestry

Many ancestry searches reach a point where records stop connecting, names no longer align, or identities shift across time.

These talks focus on where records stop connecting—and what that reveals about identity, history, and reconstruction.

Paul Crooks’ work has been cited by archives and institutions working with Caribbean records, informing how historical sources are interpreted. See Institutional Use & Citations.

Select a talk that reflects where your research has stalled.

Paul Crooks examining historical records and writing notes during Jamaican genealogical research

Paul Crooks, Jamaican genealogist and author with a specialist interest in African Caribbean Ancestry

When records stop connecting

Tracing Jamaican Ancestry: Breaking Through the 1878 Record Barrier

Records stop making sense—and the trail disappears.

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Tracing Jamaican Roots: Unlocking Names Beyond the 1840 Barrier

Records thin out, identities shift, and family lines become harder to follow.

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Tracing Jamaican Ancestry: Help Making Sense When Records Don’t

Names change. Details shift. Records exist—but do not align.

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When names and identities shift

Trace Jamaican Ancestors: Rethinking the Origins of Surnames

Family names do not always trace as expected.

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 Jamaican Ancestry: Revealing Mixed Heritage in Evolving Records

Mixed ancestry appears in records, but not in a consistent or clearly recognisable way.

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When records appear but mislead

Tracing Jamaican Ancestry: DNA Results—What They Reveal and Miss

DNA results raise new questions about identity, origin, and what can be confirmed.

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Tracing Windrush Ancestry: What Passenger Lists Really Show

Migration records contain gaps that obscure identity and movement.

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Expert Help: Jamaican Archives and Slave Compensation Hidden Clues

Compensation records reveal connections that are not immediately visible.

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When tracing back to Africa

Tracing Jamaican Ancestry: Reconnecting to Africa Through the Records

Tracing lineage beyond the Caribbean requires a different interpretation of the archive.

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Tracing Jamaican Ancestry: Uncovering African and Irish Caribbean Connections.

Historical records reveal relationships that reshape assumptions about identity.

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Tracing Jamaican Ancestry: What the Slave Registers Hide

Records exist—but key details are often overlooked.

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Tracing Jamaican Ancestry: Colorism — What Slave Records Reveal

Records reflect distinctions that shaped identity within slavery.

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Where these talks are presented

These talks are presented through libraries, cultural institutions, and educational programmes, and are delivered through both online sessions and institutional programmes internationally.

→ Evidence-led talks on identity, history, and interpretation

These talks draw on Paul Crooks’ published work on Caribbean genealogy and historical records, including A Tree Without Roots: The Guide to Tracing British, African, and Asian Caribbean Ancestry and Ancestors, which provide additional context for those working through the same research challenges.