Anna Bustill Smith

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DiedAugust 1945(1945-08-00) (aged 82–83)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
OccupationsAuthor and genealogist
KnownforDocumenting the history of the Bustill family
Anna Bustill Smith
Born1862
DiedAugust 1945(1945-08-00) (aged 82–83)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
OccupationsAuthor and genealogist
Known forDocumenting the history of the Bustill family
Notable workFirst known Black genealogist in the United States

Anna Bustill Smith (1862 – August 1945) was a cousin of Paul Robeson[1] and member of Philadelphia's prominent Bustill family.[2] A suffragist, who was the first known African-American genealogist in the United States,[3] she also achieved recognition as an African-American author during the 20th century. Among her most important works are biographical sketches about members of the Bustill family, as well as her Reminiscences of Colored People of Princeton, N.J., 1800–1900, which was a study of Princeton's Black community that was published in 1913.[4][5]

Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1862 as Anna Amelia Bustill, Anna Bustill Smith was a great-granddaughter of Cyrus Bustill (1732–1806), a formerly enslaved man who purchased his freedom and later became a founding member of Philadelphia's Free African Society,[6] and was the daughter of Sarah Bustill (1828–1891) and her husband, Joseph Cassey Bustill (1822–1895),[7] who had become the youngest member of the Underground Railroad when he was just seventeen years old.[8]

In addition to being prominent members of the African-American community in the Philadelphia area, she and her parents were also members of the Quaker church. In 1880, she resided with her parents in Lower Oxford, Chester County, Pennsylvania.[9]

Later life and death

References

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