Connecticut Census
United States U.S. Census
Connecticut
Census
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Online Connecticut indexes and images[edit | edit source]
Template:Census Online Connecticut
Federal population schedules[edit | edit source]
Microfilm images[edit | edit source]
Indexes: fiche, film, or book[edit | edit source]
For a list of microform and book indexes for the population schedules of Connecticut, click here
Federal non-population schedules[edit | edit source]
Online indexes and images[edit | edit source]
Online Federal Non-Population Schedules for Alaska | ||||||||||
Free | Free at Some Libraries (usually with library card) | Pay | ||||||||
Year | Type | Record Search | Census Bureau | Google Book | Heritage Quest | Ancestry FHL | Ancestry Library | Ancestry Home | ||
1880 | Mortality | - | - | - | - | Link | Link | Link | ||
1870 | Mortality | - | - | - | - | Link | Link | Link | ||
1860 | Mortality | - | - | - | - | Link | Link | Link | ||
1850 | Mortality | Link | - | - | - | Link | Link | Link | ||
1840 | Pensioners | - | BookLink | BookLink | - | Link | Link | Link |
Microfilm images[edit | edit source]
Indexes: fiche, film, or book[edit | edit source]
For a list of microform and book indexes for the non-population schedules of Connecticut, click here.
State, territorial, and colonial censuses[edit | edit source]
- 1917 The Connecticut State Library also has a special military census taken in 1917.
- 1821 Glastonbury school census[1]
- 1782 statistics only[1]
- 1779 statistics only[1]
- 1776 Newington[2]
- 1774 statistics only[1]
- 1762 statistics only[1]
- 1756 statistics only[1]
- 1669-1670 Hartford, Wethersfield, and Windsor grain inventory census[3] For a reconstructed census of over 2,300 heads of families recorded in tax lists and other records see Jay Mack Holbrook, Connecticut 1670 Census (Oxford, Mass.: Holbrook Research Institute, 1977)[FHL Book 974.6 X2h 1670].
Existing and lost censuses[edit | edit source]
For a list of available and missing Connecticut censuses, click here.
Why use a census?[edit | edit source]
A well-indexed census is one of the easiest ways to locate where an ancestor's family lived and when they lived there. You can also use censuses to follow the changes in a family over time, and identify neighbors. These and other clues provided by censuses are important because they help find additional kinds of records about the family.
More about censuses[edit | edit source]
Click here for additional details about how to use censuses, such as:
Sources and footnotes[edit | edit source]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Connecticut State Library, "Research Guide to Colonial and State Census Records at the Connecticut State Library" at http://www.cslib.org/colcens.htm#10 (accessed 11 January 2010).
- ↑ Josiah Willard, A Census of Newington, Connecticut : Taken According to Households in 1776 (1909; reprint, Bowie, Md.: Heritage Books, 1986)[[Template:Newington]].
- ↑ Connecticut State Library, "Research Guide to Colonial and State Census Records at the Connecticut State Library" at http://www.cslib.org/colcens.htm#10 (accessed 11 January 2010), citing The Wyllys Papers, Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society, volume 21 (1924), pp. 190-199 [CSL call number HistRef F 91 .C7 vol. 21].
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