1810 United States Census
Search the breadth of our Census records on key fields that will bring you to the most matches. Best suited for broad searches by Name and basic personal information that is common across all census records.
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At the beginning of each decade, the United States federal census was taken in each state to determine the number of representatives it could send to the House of Representatives. A Census taker’s task was to record all the information regarding individuals in a certain household.
Very similar to the 1800 federal census, the 1810 federal census can offer you a vast amount of information including: -name of the county, parish, township, town, or city in which each family resided-name of the head of the household-number of free white males age under 10 years of age-number of free white males age of 10 years but under 16 years-number of free white males age of 16 years but under 26 years-number of free white males age of 26 years but under 45 years-number of free white males age 45 years and upward-number of free white females age under 10 years of age-number of free white females age of 10 years but under 16 years-number of free white females age of 16 years but under 26 years-number of free white females age of 26 years but under 45 years-number of free white females age 45 years and upward-number of all other free persons-number of slaves
Remember that if an ancestor was born near the cutoff for an age bracket, they may appear in the next bracket. Ages were not recorded for non-white free persons and slaves.Because no paper or form was provided to enumerators, the organization of the information varies from enumerator to enumerator. Navigating the originals can sometimes be challenging. Indexes, whether manuscript, printed, or digital, are nowhere near perfect. Because names are easily misread by people unfamiliar with certain localities, indexes can be filled with incorrect names. This situation is only exacerbated in cases where residents do not necessarily speak the same primary language as the census taker. One way to find your missing ancestors is to look for families that lived next to them in previous or succeeding censuses. Search for those families and scan the pages around them. Hidden ancestors may pop right out at you.
Original data: Third Census of the United States, Bureau of the Census. National Archives and Records Administration, Record Group 29. Micropublication M252.
For more information about the 1810 census, visit www.census.gov.
Original data: Third Census of the United States, Bureau of the Census. National Archives and Records Administration, Record Group 29. Micropublication M252.