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'''Mortality Schedules''' <br> | '''Mortality Schedules''' <br> | ||
<blockquote>The 1850, 1860, 1870, and 1880 censuses included inquiries about persons who had died in the twelve months immediately preceding the enumeration. Mortality schedules list deaths from 1 June through 31 May of 1849–50, 1859–60, 1869-70, and 1879–80. They provide nationwide, state-by-state death registers that predate the recording of vital statistics in most states. While deaths are under-reported, the mortality schedules remain an invaluable source of information. </blockquote><blockquote>Mortality schedules asked the deceased's name, sex, age, color (white, black, mulatto), whether widowed, his or her place of birth (state, territory, or country), the month in which the death occurred, his or her profession/occupation/trade, disease or cause of death, and the number of days ill. In 1870, a place for parents' birthplaces was added. In 1880, the place where a disease was contracted and how long the deceased person was a citizen or resident of the area were included (fractions indicate a period of time less than a year).<ref />Loretto Dennis Szucs and Matthew Wright, "Census Records." &amp;amp;amp;lt;i&amp;amp;amp;gt;The Source: A Guidebook to American Genealogy&amp;amp;amp;lt;/i&amp;amp;amp;gt;, 3d ed., Loretto Dennis Szucs and Sandra Hargreaves Luebking. (Provo, UT : Ancestry, 2006), 196-97.</blockquote> | <blockquote>The 1850, 1860, 1870, and 1880 censuses included inquiries about persons who had died in the twelve months immediately preceding the enumeration. Mortality schedules list deaths from 1 June through 31 May of 1849–50, 1859–60, 1869-70, and 1879–80. They provide nationwide, state-by-state death registers that predate the recording of vital statistics in most states. While deaths are under-reported, the mortality schedules remain an invaluable source of information. </blockquote><blockquote>Mortality schedules asked the deceased's name, sex, age, color (white, black, mulatto), whether widowed, his or her place of birth (state, territory, or country), the month in which the death occurred, his or her profession/occupation/trade, disease or cause of death, and the number of days ill. In 1870, a place for parents' birthplaces was added. In 1880, the place where a disease was contracted and how long the deceased person was a citizen or resident of the area were included (fractions indicate a period of time less than a year).<ref />Loretto Dennis Szucs and Matthew Wright, "Census Records." &amp;amp;amp;lt;i&amp;amp;amp;gt;The Source: A Guidebook to American Genealogy&amp;amp;amp;lt;/i&amp;amp;amp;gt;, 3d ed., Loretto Dennis Szucs and Sandra Hargreaves Luebking. (Provo, UT : Ancestry, 2006), 196-97.</blockquote> | ||
==== Slave Holder Schedules ==== | |||
'''1850 United States Census Slave Schedules'''—A free Internet index and images to the 1850 United States Census Slave Schedules can be viewed on the [http://pilot.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html#c=1420440;p=collectionDetails;t=searchable FamilySearch Record Search – Pilot Site] listing each '''slave owner's''' name and residence. It also shows the age, gender, and color of the slaves. Slave names are not normally listed. | |||
== Territorial and State Censuses == | == Territorial and State Censuses == | ||
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