
Florence Hargrave Curtis, a native of Buffalo, is the daughter of the late Ashley S. and
Annie Whitehead Hargrave. She began her education in the Buffalo Public Schools. She has an
Associate’s degree in Applied Sciences and Nursing from Erie Community College ; a Bachelor of
Science degree in Community and Human Services with a concentration in Studies in Chemical
Dependence; and a Master of Arts degree in Culture and Policy Studies. She is the mother of
one daughter, Dawn C. Roberts, and the grandmother of three, Alvin, Alicia, and John Roberts.
Florence's fascination with her second great-grandmother, Landonia Epps, led to her
most unprecedented scholarly achievement, Daughter Be Somebody - a book that traces her
family's history from 1740 through 1997. It is a testament to the strength of the human spirit
and the determination of two families to break the shackles of slavery and overcome its legacy
through knowledge and education. It is a powerful and dramatic source of genealogical information
that warms the heart, brings tears to ones eyes, but most of all it takes the reader on a
magnificent journey into yesterday.
For Ms. Curtis, there is nothing about which she is more passionate than African
American history. For this reason, she has written five other books. Three of these books are
tools for the researcher to make their search a little easier and help knock down the brick
wall that every historian confronts in his or her search. The other two, He Heard My Cry and
Everlasting Memories are books of original inspirational poetry.
Ms. Curtis has searched her maternal lineage back to 1066 AD and her paternal ancestry
back to 1634 AD. For her, the search never ends for there are always new roads to explore and
new visions of old materials to document. In addition to Daughter Be Somebody, she has written
He Heard My Cry; Landonia Epps, a Paper Trail of Her Times and Travels; Halifax Country, North
Carolina Coroner's Inquests 1841-1891; Everlasting Memories; and In the Footsteps of Our
Forefathers, the Churches Where They Worshipped, the Graves In Which They Slumber. Her books
have found a home at the Schomburg Center for research in Black Culture; Duke University's
John Hope Franklin Research Center for African and African American Documentation; Virginia
State University; Saint Paul's College, Lawrenceville, Virginia; Halifax County, North Carolina
Library; as well as other educational venues.
Ms. Curtis has spoken at numerous universities and for many genealogical societies on
the importance and value of family research.
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