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Topic: United States Census, 1910


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In the News (Tue 22 Dec 09)

  
 United States Manuscript Censuses
Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910- Population.
Index (Soundex) to the Population Schedules of the Tenth Census of the United States, 1880.
Index (Soundex) to the Population Schedules of the Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900.
www.libraries.psu.edu /newsandmicroforms/microfinder/archcens.htm   (92 words)

  
 1910 United States Census
The 1910 Census also reveals that Grandpop George, at age 50, was married to his second wife Louisa, age 25, who bore and lost one child.
Grandpop, his wife, William and Joseph did not miss any work weeks during 1910.
The Census indicates that everyone in the household was born in South Carolina with the exception of Grandpop George who was born in Virginia.
home.earthlink.net /~chearstcurry/id22.html   (454 words)

  
 web_site_ver1.ged
1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1886 2 PLAC Larbert, Stirlingshire, Scotland, United Kingdom 2 SOUR @S13@ 3 PAGE Marriage 1910-479-134 3 QUAY 3 3 NOTE Derived from age (24) on marriage certificate.
Page 43 3 QUAY 2 3 REFN rin_111_census_1891.tif 1 EVEN 2 TYPE Home address 2 DATE 31 Mar 1901 2 PLAC Stenhousemuir, Stirlingshire, Scotland, United Kingdom 2 NOTE Main Street, Morrison's Law 2 SOUR @S39@ 3 PAGE 1901.
Image C1901_424_00_024_000_2_025Z 3 QUAY 3 1 EVEN 2 TYPE Home address 2 DATE 15 Dec 1918 2 PLAC Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom 2 NOTE 8 Alley Place, Dunfermline 3 CONT 3 CONT From discussion with Sheila Fairbairn (grand-daughter): thi 3 CONC s was also known as "Wooers' Alley".
www.fairbairn.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk /FAIRB2/web_site_ver1.ged   (454 words)

  
 United States History
Poverty in the United States: 1996 (U.S. Census Bureau)
Darrell Reeck, "The Spirit of the Amistad in the United Methodist Church,"
Institute for the Study of the Americas (University of London, United Kingdom)
www.tntech.edu /history/usa.html   (7450 words)

  
 Celia Titman Jones
Her father was a merchant miller (1910 United Sates Federal Census, Blairstown Township, Warren County, New Jersey, Enumeration District 123, sheets 1A, 15 April 1910.
1920 United States Federal Census, Warren County, New Jersey
National Archives, Washington, D.C. 1870 United States Federal Census
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/564fam.htm   (7450 words)

  
 Isaac Shackleton Read, Jr.
The couple owned their home free and clear of mortgages (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 127, Hackettstown, Election Distric 1, Warren County, New Jersey, sheet number 3A, 16 April 1910).
She was employed as an interior decorater in a department store (1930 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 11-8, Braintree, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, sheet 4A, April 4, 1930).
Jay was employed as a tin smith (1880 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 199, Village of Hope, Hope Township, Warren County, New Jersey, sheet 420B, 12 June 1880)..
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/19fam.htm   (3806 words)

  
 Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places In The United States: 1790 to 1990
The urban threshold was dropped to 4,000 in the 1880 census and to 2,500 in the 1910 census.
Forstall, Richard L. Population of States and Counties of the United States: 1790 to 1990.
Population according to the 1852 state census was 34,776.
www.census.gov /population/www/documentation/twps0027.html   (4915 words)

  
 A Subject List of Book, Manuscript and Archival Collections Available in the Penn State Libraries Microforms Section (West Pattee, ground floor)
Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910 - Population.
[Index (Miracode) to the Population Schedules of the Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910.
The Vandamm Collection: Theater Photographs from the Studios of Florence Vandamm and Francis Joseph BrugiŠre from 1915 to 1960 in the New York Public Library.
www.libraries.psu.edu /newsandmicroforms/microfinder/subad.htm   (4915 words)

  
 Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places In The United States: 1790 to 1990
The urban threshold was dropped to 4,000 in the 1880 census and to 2,500 in the 1910 census.
Legally, the city of Honolulu, which is not recognized for census purposes, is coextensive with the Honolulu County.
In general, metropolitan areas were defined as cities with 50,000 or more inhabitants, their counties, and surrounding counties which had a high degree of social and economic integration with the core.
www.census.gov /population/www/documentation/twps0027.html   (4915 words)

  
 Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places In The United States: 1790 to 1990
The urban threshold was dropped to 4,000 in the 1880 census and to 2,500 in the 1910 census.
Forstall, Richard L. Population of States and Counties of the United States: 1790 to 1990.
Population according to the 1852 state census was 34,776.
www.census.gov /population/www/documentation/twps0027.html   (4915 words)

  
 Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places In The United States: 1790 to 1990
The urban threshold was dropped to 4,000 in the 1880 census and to 2,500 in the 1910 census.
Forstall, Richard L. Population of States and Counties of the United States: 1790 to 1990.
Population according to the 1852 state census was 34,776.
www.census.gov /population/www/documentation/twps0027.html   (4915 words)

  
 PUERTO RICO HERALD: Adios, Puerto Rico; Hola, United States
In 1910, the U.S. Census Bureau estimated the Puerto Rican population in the States at 1,500.
The agency said, "[The government] will shortly begin bringing Porto Rican laborers to the continental United States.
Puerto Ricans in the States, unlike those residing on the island, are now in a position to play a major role in national politics, not only in areas which traditionally have high concentrations of Puerto Ricans but throughout the nation.
www.puertorico-herald.org /issues/2004/vol8n38/CBAdiosHola.shtml   (4915 words)

  
 The First Decade of the Twentieth Century - History of the United States
The Thirteenth Decennial Census of the United States was taken in the spring of 1910.
Congress also at this session, which ended on May 30, appropriated $29,227,000 for the Panama Canal, $1,500,000 to represent the United States at the exposition in Tokio, Japan, in 1912, and remitted $10,800,000 of the Chinese indemnity from the Boxer uprising of 1900.
Taft was inaugurated President of the United States, was attended by the worst snowstorm of the winter.
www.usgennet.org /usa/ca/state1/ridpath/decade1911.html   (4915 words)

  
 Ancestry.com - 1910 United States Federal Census
This database is an index to the head of households enumerated in the 1910 United States Federal Census, the Thirteenth Census of the United States.
You are here: Search > Census > U.S. Census > 1910 United States Federal Census
By 1910, there were a total of forty-six states in the Union, with Utah and Oklahoma being the latest editions and Arizona, New Mexico, Hawaii, and Alaska as territories.
content.ancestry.com /iexec?htx=List&dbid=7884&ti=0   (464 words)

  
 Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places In The United States: 1790 to 1990
Data in this report on land area for the 1910-1990 period were published in Census Bureau publications in decennial census reports and in the annual Financial Statistics of Cities prior to 1940 (see Dubester, 1950, citations 1656-1660).
Data on the largest urban places for the 1940-1990 period are based on census reports for each of these censuses.
Reports from the 1960 census include historical tables showing the total population of each incorporated place with 10,000 or more population in 1960 from the earliest census through 1960.
www.census.gov /population/www/documentation/twps0027.html   (464 words)

  
 CUBANS-Cuban Immigration to the United States
The 1910 census showed that there were officially 15,133 Cubans living in the United States, and a report on immigration to Congress at the time included data on 44,211 Cubans.
The existence and size of the Cuban community in the United States is a result of both "push" and "pull" factors.
Given the closeness of Cuba to the United States—both geographical and, before the 1959 revolution, economic—it is no surprise that there has always been movement of people between the countries.
www.culturalorientation.net /cubans/IMMI.HTM   (356 words)

  
 Improving Education for Immigrant Students
This section seeks to defuse current myths about newcomers by providing accurate information about immigration, examining myths about immigrants, and presenting U.S. Census and other data to counter misinformation.
In 1910 (the highest point of U.S. immigration), the percentage of people who were born in another country was twice as high as it was in 1990 (the highest point in recent immigration activity).
Immigration in the 1980s and 1990s is higher than it was from 1930 to 1979, but one-third what it was in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
www.nwrel.org /cnorse/booklets/immigration/3.html   (356 words)

  
 Emergency Quota Act - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the United States, the Emergency Quota Act of May 19, 1921 limited the annual number of immigrants who could be admitted from any country to 3% of the number of persons from that country living in the United States in 1910, according to Census figures.
 This article is a stub relating to law in the United States.
Of that number just over half was allocated for northern and western Europeans, and the remainder for eastern and southern Europeans, a 75% reduction from prior years.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Emergency_Quota_Act   (162 words)

  
 Age Data
Population and Ranking Tables of the Older Population for the United States, States, Puerto Rico, Places of 100,000 or More Population, and Counties (PHC-T-13)
Age Search Service - The Census Bureau will provide confidential records from the Federal population censuses of 1910 to 1990, for a fee, and issue an official transcript of the results to satisfy situations where a birth or other certificate may be needed but is not available.
Current Population Report P23-190, 65+ in the United States
purl.access.gpo.gov /GPO/LPS28891   (162 words)

  
 FORT DODGE - LoveToKnow Article on FORT DODGE
(I89o)4S7f; (1900)12,162; (1905, state census) I4~369, (2269 being foreign-born); (1910) 15,543.
m., and considered to be the most valuable in tho United States; to the S. coal abounds; there are also limestone quarries and deposits of clay in the vicinity the clay being, for the most part, obtained by mining.
It is served by the fllinois Central, the Chicago Great Western, the Minneapolis and Saint Louis, and the Fort Dodge, Des Moines and Southern railways, the last an electric interurban line.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /F/FO/FORT_DODGE.htm   (398 words)

  
 Ada L. Reed Welter
In 1920, she was employed as a cutter in a shirt factory (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 10, Kingston Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, sheet 16A, 10 May 1910).
In 1920, Arthur was employed as a wire spooler in a rope factory (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 10, Kingston Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, sheet 16A, 10 May 1910).
According to the 1910 census, she attended school during the census year (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 10, Kingston Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, sheet 16A, 10 May 1910).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/930fam.htm   (398 words)

  
 Susan I. Read
She was 13 years old and was still in school (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 82, New Milford Borough, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, sheet 2B, 19-20 April 1910).
She was 16 years old and was still in school (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 82, New Milford Borough, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, sheet 2B, 19-20 April 1910).
Ruth Austin had moved to Wilkes-Barre in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania by 1930 and was teaching school there (1930 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 40-244, Ward 12, Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, sheet 7B, 7 April 1930).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/571fam.htm   (1349 words)

  
 Martin Winfield Allen
She was not a resident of her parents household in 1910 (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 126, West Pittston Borough, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, sheet 9B, 20 April 1910).
William was in school in 1920 (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 126, West Pittston Borough, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, sheet 9B, 20 April 1910; 1920 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 227, 4th Ward, Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, sheet 13B, 26 January 1920).
In 1850, Martin lived with his parents in Stillwater Township, probably in the village of Stillwater, as his father was a tailor and not a farmer (1850 United States Census, Stillwater Township, Sussex County, New Jersey, page 91B, 30 July 1850).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/863fam.htm   (1993 words)

  
 Susan I. Read
She was 16 years old and was still in school (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 82, New Milford Borough, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, sheet 2B, 19-20 April 1910).
She was 13 years old and was still in school (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 82, New Milford Borough, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, sheet 2B, 19-20 April 1910).
Susquehana County in 1930 (1930 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 58-27, Lanesboro Borough, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, sheet 8A, 14 April 1930).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/571fam.htm   (1349 words)

  
 William Clinton Hartung
Albert was still in school in 1910 and had been out of work for 10 weeks in 1909 (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 130, Harmony Township, Warren County, New Jersey, sheet 8A, 2 May 1910).
Charles Raub was a farmer in Harmony Township in 1900 (1900 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 188, Harmony Township, Warren County, New Jersey, sheet 2A, 4 June 1900).
He lived at home with his parents on their farm in Knowlton Township and was employed as a farm laborer, probably working on the home farm (1900 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 191, Knowlton Township, Warren County, New Jersey, sheet 7B, 28 June 1900).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/3390fam.htm   (1377 words)

  
 Orron H. Raub
As James is on the 1910 census and Harry is not, Harry was the child that died during the first decade of the twentieth century (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 203, Flournoy Precinct, Thurston County, Nebraska, sheet 5B, 10-14 May 1910).
He was to young to attend school, although his brother James was in school (1900 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 31, Logan Township, Burt County, Nebraska, sheet 2B, 7 June 1900).
Orron and Annie had two sons, James and Harry (1900 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 31, Logan Township, Burt County, Nebraska, sheet 2B, 7 June 1900).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/3083fam.htm   (1262 words)

  
 Mary Caroline Konkle Cook
Although the census states that he had been married for 10 years, his wife was not a resident of the hotel (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 185, Sussex Borough, Sussex County, New Jersey, sheet 4A, 20 April 1910).
Caroline lived with her parents when the 1850 census was enumerated (1850 United States Federal Census Hardwick Township, Warren County, New Jersey, page 494B, 9 August 1850).
She was no longer a resident of her parent's household in 1880 (1880 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 197, Hardwick Township, Warren County, New Jersey, page 388C, 3 June 1880).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/219fam.htm   (2212 words)

  
 Charles Edward Brugler and Rosa Anna Bunnell
He was also attending school (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 151, Borough of Knoxville, Tioga County, Pennsylvania, sheet 7A, 20 April 1910).
Charles and Rosa Brugler had a boader, Jennie Ulana (age 48) who worked as a printer (1910 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 151, Borough of Knoxville, Tioga County, Pennsylvania, sheet 7A, 20 April 1910).
Clair was employed as a clerk in a bank (1930 United States Federal Census, Enumeration District 19-20, Newton - Town, Sussex County, New Jersey, sheet 7A, 23 April 1930).
www.charm.net /~edrtjd/readgen/1009fam.htm   (2843 words)

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