Searching
the 1880 US Census Index?
Ron Wild offers advice on how to take advantage of the
census' search capabilities.
HAVE
YOU TAKEN
full advantage of the search capabilities of the 1880 US Census
Index?
No other genealogical
indexing project took more millions of volunteer hours and
years to complete than the 1880 US Census Index. Once the
data was captured using the LDS Family History Library triple
check system the programming of the data took many months
and much testing before it was ready to be released early
in 2001 to genealogical researchers. Fifty million residents
of and visitors to the US were captured on this census with
a wealth of data about each person that makes this index the
most powerful database available for those with 19th-century
US research interests. The index was released on 55 CD-ROM
discs with national and seven regional research capabilities
and is available for purchase for the very reasonable price
of $49.95.
Creative
Searching
The key to creative searching of the 1880 Index is the search
table that allows combinations of single or combined search
fields to come into play so that each search can be a custom
search for your ancestors based on the information you have
available. The more information you can include on the search
form the more precise the search can be and the following
examples give some insight into different ways in which searches
can be organized to pin down an elusive ancestor. The most
basic of searches can tell you how many persons of different
nationalities are on the national census database or in a
particular region. By entering a country in the Country
of Birth field the following information becomes available:
| Birthplace |
Individuals |
| Canada |
709,919 |
| England |
665,924 |
| Germany |
1,974,776 |
| Ireland |
1,878,062 |
| Scotland |
171,759 |
| Wales |
83,938 |
Obviously
no one is going to page down these hundreds of thousands of
individuals to find an ancestor they know was born in Germany
or elsewhere. Let's suppose you know that your ancestor was
named Collins and came from Scotland. It could also be Wilson
who was born in Tennessee or any other name place combination
relevant to your search. What would this do to your search results?
We would enter Collins in the Surname field and Scotland
in the Country of Birth field and then do the search.
Entering birthplace Scotland and surname Collins, we turn up
200 entries.
We
immediately see the difference that just one additional piece
of information can make and instead of looking at 171,759
different Scottish entries we now only need to look at 200.
But why stop there, when we know from information in our file
that he likely settled in Ohio? When we add this additional
piece of information, the list really gets manageable. By
adding the state of residence the list shrinks from 200 entries
to a mere 14.
This is very manageable,
but let's suppose that we knew from our previous research
that his wife was named Jane and was born in England around
1830. Then by switching our search to Jane we could likely
get exactly the right family by filling in Birthplace England,
Resident Ohio, Birthdate 1830 and Surname
Collins, Given Name Jane. The result points to
just one family with a Hugh Collins father born in 1825 in
Scotland with wife Jane born in England in 1829. Not only
does this give you the name of your Scottish and English ancestors
and their children but probably a new mystery to solve, since
the results suggest that Jane had a previous marriage to someone
named Petcrew born in Scotland and that her husband Hugh also
had a previous wife born in Scotland from which sons Hugh
and William, who were born in Pennsylvania, resulted. As so
often happens with genealogical research, a problem solved
generates new problems that require different approaches usually
in different places.
We started with
an impossible search but by adding information that we knew
or surmised from our previous research on this ancestor we
were able to pinpoint a family and provide the possibility
of finding other generations in England and Scotland. This
is a very basic search strategy that allows you to enter information
in any of the fields that were indexed on the CD version of
the census. Keep in mind that not all fields were indexed,
so it is important to look up the actual enumeration page
on a film since other valuable information is included that
will provide family history data that could help with ongoing
research.
Finding Families
One area of research that has always been of above average
difficulty in Irish and German research is knowing from where
in the old country an ancestor came. The 1880 US census is
full of surprises in this respect: the example shown below
for Magdalena Lamparter indicates her birth in Wurtemberg
and that her father and mother were born there too. Magdalena
appears to have been married twice and it would appear that
both her husbands were born in Baden. These are wonderful
finds and the ease with which the 1880 census can be searched
and the ability to search equally easily for neighbors frequently
turns up relatives living nearby or sons and daughters who
have married and live on an adjacent farm. The possibility
for creative research of this kind has never been better and
what took hours of patient film cranking can now be accomplished
in a few minutes.
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"The
results of a search for Magdalena Lamparter." |
With
the ability to quickly search by ethnicity and group, the possibilities
are endless. Although many names may have been Americanized
or misspelled, searching by country of birth will bring together
some common facts that will allow families to be identified.
Added bonuses include having mothers-in-law living with families
so that daughters' names can be revealed and frequently the
parents of either the husband and or the wife are living with
the family and provide unexpected information that quickly adds
an earlier generation. The ease of searching will guarantee
that you will be motivated to spend more time searching the
indexed 1880 census and you have immediate access, no waiting
for films and then finding that the family you want are in another
county or have moved on from where they were in 1870. The 1880
National Index will help you find them wherever they moved in
the entire US.
This article originally appeared in our January/February
2002 issue.
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