From OnBoard - Newsletter of the BCG
Elizabeth Shown Mills, "Censuses - Often-Overlooked Basics," OnBoard 4 (January 1998): 8.
“I checked the 1850 census of Jones County and did not find Peleg Pettipool.”
As genealogists, we have probably seen or heard such a statement at least 4,327 times. It comes to us from relatives working the same family lines. We hear it from fellow members of genealogical societies. If we are professionals, we get it from clients. We read it in reports written by people who have been paid to do research for others. BCG even sees it in applications.
Such a barebones account of census work raises several crucial questions:
A generation ago, available resources were much more limited. American genealogists who spoke of “using the census” almost invariably referred to the National Archives (NARA) microfilm of the population schedule of the federal copy of the U.S. census.
Today’s genealogists have far more options available. Thorough researchers use them all—and take care to identify exactly the record they consulted.
MAXIMIZING RESULTS
Proficient use of today’s supply of census records is a complex process requiring a broad knowledge of research methodology and human nature. The following are just the “absolute basics”:
Simple search:
Censuses and indexes vary widely between areas and across time. Learn the strengths and weaknesses of those relevant to your place of interest.
Primarily, these treat population schedules. Whether you use the Census Bureau’s miracode or soundex, or the various commercially prepared indexes, the principle is the same. The index is not the record. It is only a finding aid to the actual record—and invariably it is a flawed one. Any data found in an index is used only to locate the actual entry.
Extract all data. This includes all information on the page heading, all page numbers penned or stamped on the sheet, all details for the entire household in which the relevant person lived, and identification of neighbors. Judiciously consider all other individuals of the same surname in the same district—if not the same county. Their identities may be meaningless to us now, but they often hold the clue to our ancestor’s birth family and origins.
The detail provided by the population schedule normally suggests whether the ancestor should be found on another schedule as a slaveowner; a farmer; a craftsman; or the owner of a business, mine, or fishery. If so, additional information should be available on the related schedule.
In all cases, the mortality schedule (when available) should be checked—as should any extant state and local copies of the population schedule.
If the ancestor does not seem to be in indexes, then we have several additional
steps to perform.
Basic trouble-shooting:
Above all, we keep a full log of the efforts we have made—the exact
schedules we checked, the exact variants we searched for, the exact materials
we tried to find but could not locate. We owe this “track record” to
ourselves and anyone else to whom we report, “I checked the 1850 census
but could not find Peleg.”
Elizabeth Shown Mills, CG, CGL
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