-
Title |
1910 United States Census (15 April 1910) |
Short Title |
1910 United States Census (15 April 1910) |
Publisher |
www.familysearch.org |
MEDI |
Census |
Source ID |
S187 |
Text |
Sources of Information for This Collection:
"United States Census, 1910" index, FamilySearch (<http://www.familysearch.org>); from United States Bureau of the Census. Digital images of originals housed at the National Archives, Washington, D.C. FHL microfilm. Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah. |
Linked to (51) |
Anna B.
Augusta M.
Eva May
Mary
Backus, Carrie Eliza
Bridges, Lusinda Elizabeth
Bridges, Minnie Marion
Brust, Adeline T.
Cotter, Etta Jane
Cregg, Fannie Ellen
Dunton, Carrie Almena
Froebel, Alvina Adela Mary
Glew, Evelina
Green, Elsie Maria Pedersen
Henbest, Rosa Jane
Hogan, Mary A.
Lewis, Miriam Holder
Maw, Arthur Robert "Red"
Maw, Charles Eli
Maw, Charles H.
Maw, Charles Leonard
Maw, Clara J.
Maw, Edna K.
Maw, Ellen
Maw, Emma E.
Maw, Frances L.
Maw, Francis Robert
Maw, Frank
Maw, Frederick "Fred" James
Maw, Frederick C.
Maw, George H.
Maw, Grace L.
Maw, Harriet L.
Maw, Harry Loren
Maw, Harvey Gordon
Maw, Irene A.
Maw, John Moses
Maw, John Parker
Maw, Joseph A.
Maw, Joseph Mark N.
Maw, Julius B.
Maw, Julius N.
Maw, Kate
Maw, Lillian "Lillie" N.
Maw, Madeline Amelia
Maw, Mark
Maw, Mary Esther
Maw, Matilda M.
Maw, Maurice Edward "Morris"
Maw, Mildred H.
Maw, Millie
[More individuals] |
-
Notes |
- Record History
Federal census takers were asked to record information about all those who were in a household on the census day, which was April 15 for the 1910 census. A census taker might have visited a house on a later date, but the information collected was supposed to have been about the people who were in the residence on the census day. The basic census enumeration unit was the county. Each county was divided into enumeration districts, one for each enumerator. The completed forms were then sent to the Census Office of the Commerce Department in Washington, D.C.
In the 1940s, after microfilming the schedules for 1910, the Commerce Department destroyed the originals. Microforms of the originals are well preserved at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.
The 1910 census covers 95 to 97 percent of the population.
|