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Population Schedules: Population Schedules

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Population Schedules

 

 US Census Population Schedules  Overview

1900 Trumbull County, Weathersfield Township

,  Mineral Ridge, Ohio   (click to enlarge)

 

Population schedules are the main census materials of interest to historians and genealogists. They name the head of households from the original 1790 census until today. From 1850 on, an entire family is listed by name with age, vocation, education, nationality, birthplace, birthplace of parents and home ownership are listed. As the census taker went door to door and street by street, entire neighborhoods and cities can be examined, documented, and recreated. An example is shown above

The 1940 Census was released in April 2,  2012 as the first census fully digitized upon release.  While great indexing work is continuing,   this collection is a snapshot of Americans who had just survived the Great Depression of the 1930s and were about to enter the Second World War.   Below is the announcement from the National Archives web site.

Please bookmark this page: 1940census.archives.gov.
This is where you will be able to access the digitized census records.The digital images will be accessible free of charge at NARA facilities nationwide through our public access computers as well as on personal computers via the internet.

The Microforms Center houses the entire population schedules for Ohio from 1820, which was the first extensive enumeration after statehood, until the dawn of the American Civil War in 1860. Additionally, Mahoning and Trumbull Counties schedules are available from 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920,  and 1930. Many records from the important 1890 census when the greatest European immigration was in full swing were tragically lost in a fire.

The population schedules are fascinating primary resources whose use is often hindered by the handwriting and spelling of the local person hired to tabulate his particular section of town. However many pages are written with beautiful penmanship.  For some states, there are online versions of the first census which can be accessed via the following links: MaineNew YorkNorth CarolinaRhode IslandSouth CarolinaVermont, and Virginia.

United States Census Population Schedules in Maag Library  Microform Center,   3rd Level
United States Population Schedules 1790-1820
CENSUS
YEAR
MICROFILM NUMBER
1st
1790
0101 no. 1-3
2nd
1800
0063
3rd
1810
0064
4th
1820
0067
Ohio
Population Schedules for Ohio
CENSUS
YEAR
MICROFILM NUMBER
4th
1820
0566
5th
1830
0567
6th
1840
0568
7th
1850
0569
8th
1860
0570
Mahoning County
Population Schedules for Mahoning County
CENSUS
YEAR
MICROFILM NUMBER
10th
1880
0556
11th
1890
unavailable
12th
1900
0559
13th
1910
0560
14th
1920
0571
15th
1930
0572
Trumbull County
Population Schedules for Trumbull County
CENSUS
YEAR
MICROFILM NUMBER
10th
1880
0557
11th
1890
unavailable
12th
1900
0559
13th
1910
0561
14th
1920
0571
15th
1930
0572
Paper  Indexes at Maag

Paper indexes with an alphabetical list of the heads of household for the Ohio censuses from 1820 to 1860 are located in the Microform Guides and Indexes area in front of the Microform Center. They are arranged by call number, matching the film. For example, the call number for the 1830 Ohio Population schedule is Microfilm 0567. The paper index call number is Microfilm 0567 Index.

Subject Guide

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Christine Adams
Contact:
Christine Adams, MLS
Co-Director & Head of Research and Academic Support
William F. Maag Jr. Library
Information Services
Phone: 330.941.3681
Email: cmadams02@ysu.edu
330.941.3681

It Doesn't Take a Genius... but

A True Greek Tragedy:: The Holocaust in Salonika

A True Greek Tragedy: The Holocaust in Salonika

A YSU Documentary That Aired on PBS Western Reserve

Ash and Smoke cast photos

Now Available at Maag Library!

A joint effort of YSU’s Maag Library, History Department and the Department of Media & Academic Computing, this one hour documentary was broadcast by Public Television’s  Western Reserve Public Media  during the 2011-12 season and was rebroadcast in 2013. Here is a preview.

This Jambar article  https://digital.maag.ysu.edu/xmlui/handle/1989/10751  discussed the creation of the program. It was featured at the Youngstown Area 2012 Jewish Film Festival   Dr. Saul Friedman taught at YSU from 1969 to 2006 and was founder of our Holocaust Studies program. In addition to a dozen books, he created 13 documentaries of which 5 received regional Emmy Awards.   He  died March 31, 2013.

According to the records of the Greek government, 56,500 Jewish citizens lived in the city of Salonika on the eve of the Holocaust.   By December 1944 only three remained.  This is their story–and by extension–it is the story of the Jews of Greece.

 Ash and /Smoke  may be borrowed from the Maag Library AudioVisual Collection, Call number  DVD 0432.

https://www.worldcat.org/title/ash-and-smoke-the-holocaust-in-salonika/oclc/752326798 

It will appear online in the Maag archives in the future.

Photos from the Ash and Smoke premiere 2012