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The 1890 census was begun on 1 June 1890. The enumeration was
to be completed within thirty days, or two weeks for communities
with populations of more than 10,000.
- The surviving 1890 schedules provide the address
- Number of
families in the house
- Number of persons in the house, and number
of persons in the family.
- Individuals are listed by name
- Whether a soldier, sailor, or
marine during the Civil War; and whether Union or Confederate
- Whether
the widow of a veteran
- Relationship to head of family
- Whether white, black, mulatto,
quadroon, octoroon, Chinese, Japanese, or Indian
- Sex
- Age
- Marital status
- Whether married during the year
- If a mother, number of children
and number living
- Place of birth of the individual and his or
her father and mother
- If foreign born, how many years in the
United States
- Whether naturalized or in the process of naturalization
- Profession,
trade, or occupation
- Months unemployed during census year
- Ability to read and write
- Ability to speak English; if not,
language or dialect spoken
- Whether suffering from acute or chronic
disease (if so, name of disease and length of
time afflicted)
- Whether defective in mind, sight, hearing, or speech; or whether
crippled, maimed, or
deformed (with name of defect)
- Whether a prisoner, convict, homeless child, or
pauper
- Whether the home is rented or owned by the head or a
member of the family (if so,
whether mortgaged)
- If the head of family was a farmer, if he or a family member
rented or owned
the farm; and, if mortgaged, the post office address of the owner
Most of the original 1890 population schedules were destroyed
or badly damaged by a fire in the Commerce Department in 1921.
Records enumerating only 6,160 individuals—less than one
percent of the schedules—survived.
Because it is well known that the 1890
census records were destroyed by fire,
few researchers think to check the index
to the remaining schedules.
Special 1890 schedules enumerating Union
veterans and widows of Union veterans
of the Civil War are sometimes useful as a
substitute for the missing 1890 population
schedules.
The information above is an excerpt from
The Source: A Guidebook of American
Genealogy, edited by Loretto D. Szucs and Sandra
H. Luebking, Chapter 5, “Research
in Census Records,” by Loretto
D. Szucs (page 116).
1890 Census Information Links |