Black Genealogy Websites

I'm black and I would like to know more about my family tree. I have about a page of information. What should I do?
I receiving an information page about the history of my family, but is very limited. says my great-great-great-grandmother {name Sophia, married a man free from Jamaica named John Williams} was the daughter of a landowner and a slave. Is there a genealogy web sites i can find the latest research in the history of my family.
the process now, Bailey, is take the information as a framework, and find solid documents verifying the information. The key is to break through person, place, event, time .. because it will help to define the records can be. Just to give an example .. see for yourself. Yes .. it may sound silly, but the point is knowing what a document is, and how to find it. Your birth certificate "documents" to their parents. Their parents do records document their parents. There are thousands of web sites relating to genealogy or documents. And the "right" one is completely dependent on what you are looking for. Look to your mother for example .. Where and when was born? She probably has his birth certificate .. if not, he or she must have that. Experience: probably 90% of us get somewhere in what we have .. and discover that oral information is some kind of error. People do not "lie" .. but rely on memory. Maybe Grandma had not been born when his father thinks, but is the place where the records. The specific sites will be different for each of us .. basics will the same. WORKING FOR YOU, at the time. Please do not overlook this. The reason .. avoids errors for you. Example .. if you believe the maiden name was Jones's grandmother, that could take a long time to find the right Jones. Had he come check .. is that his father was actually a Smith and Jones was the name of her stepfather. We are all in this. Last .. This site here is free, and helps us to love. Hang out. Ask lots of questions .. but the more specific they are, the more accurate response. "Where I can find no records of death" is widespread and generic. "I have to find the cemetery in Alabama for Grandpa James Williams, who died in 1933 "gives us the details that allow us (or you!) The taking of a site on Alabama. Hope to see you here regularly. Each step to be to illustrate more about how the facts are. edit http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/wayoflife/07/10/bia.return.south/index.html More and more blacks are investigating its history, and the search / exchange of the ways to circumvent the limitations.
Genealogy Sherri Hill 1002