JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================J" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?j)j}:?<FAyچImv%ycB$WuRTҸMh]#b;OR1SKC-4$dN<Ϡh?҆n5{On\/'>Úx>w=0&C mX69d~QO48EMOr4yz~fXl}0*žq>gx?'$9I!8Vԑ[֪'[^MCְ܊uevGRǚL| <9\(2^tRk1iRI"-[D쌯z6y~} +~=+ĵؙ>/+th#G;qN&ަ˹iQjV-i26V ^ ZVqhbb:_G%REyg{CJG-:M3)r̝e38?SQ54I2r+:]2GCgkS (L2l{Q3ϟZFH0vR2M3ŭK;cǩ4\ol}M=GzBG@E1 %KQ%$b:}jfk|+}๴E|wMnH20CIkw-z6(*~7hRc׊.&!bs X'<ޜ-$C"3i+gwW7t(-}DQ}ܔ4w˨kVg=&FF,aL/ Bl[Ƞդ!H-zT= 2InMBMGi)v-qMN 'Lԭcmڱw c\oC\CF'GRꠎg9/sP2;jM4xmO";[%E~g1l-%#m A*Ƹ,7dq֓J*p5j^;HGc=<[u[AhXߚ,2:U+H}B1'~kXɸݜJ3F!F@\r:dK:}էNP`N7SVF"Uŗ;ϵs2]=3$1j'{m%cg ~4JIhA{o.{sSIAtxW܏*V:洡/MOR5Xh5y3ƋF&^x4_M 6+)dH3؜1W=Uњbbt[\IOR+KS^i&Q qG ;zz17݋F3I S^i=U?v霎+4aibBc\MKSsZj(OYRCs[Q 0z]TԴ5KF\Ob*e Ju9%sb%nU@neؿzVzlJ#nw;j-STq#୘Mn0? R9ֹk^Elrf> YZQbVz]fͿ-r?[C1kP•p~-5 Yj$^+(+?,I.G%R((((({e9A#W:t'eE2bpC]ULc5~\.2)Q;LZH|b4 ~z~fv1t/G,\|G ڢdۻ(AEPEPEPEPtimated 10 million African-Americans living today have ancestors who deposited money in Freedman s Bank. Bank workers recorded the names and family relationships of account holders in an effort to establish bank customers identities. In doing so, they created the largest single repository of lineage-linked, African-American records thought to exist. <br>Family history researchers have long known about the Freedman s Bank records. The originals are preserved in the National Archives. But the data on microfilm has been essentially useless because it lacked effective and reliable indexes. The microfilm contains mid-19th century family records of 480,000 African-Americans. <br> Marie Taylor discovered these Freedman s Bank records and envisioned African-Americans breaking the chains of slavery and forging the bonds of families. She put together an inspired plan for the daunting task of compiling all these records into a useable format. The day-to-day efforts of extracting, linking and automating the 480,000 names contained in the bank records, were performed by a team of inmates from the Utah State Prison. Approximately 550 prisoners donated their time to this project. They worked in a unique, three-room facility filled with microfilm and microfiche readers and 30 computer stations. After 11 years, the project was completed in the form of a CD of the Freedman s Bank records. Another CD in the works which will be ready this year is the record of the 1880 census, which includes 6.5 million cit