Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
13 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Shout out to Charles L. Hocker, Enumerator for Ohio County, Kentucky (Original Post) kdmorris Apr 2012 OP
I am BEYOND jealous! Dem2theMax Apr 2012 #1
look nearby tru Apr 2012 #3
Oh, I have looked at EVERY page of the darned town. Dem2theMax Apr 2012 #4
Thinking back tru Apr 2012 #5
Unfortunately, my people were not in that one kdmorris Apr 2012 #6
LMAO! Dem2theMax Apr 2012 #7
Ruth tru Apr 2012 #8
That is a really good point. Dem2theMax Apr 2012 #9
Ruth tru Apr 2012 #12
every so often tru Apr 2012 #2
This message was self-deleted by its author Iterate Apr 2012 #10
That's really cool. PAMod Apr 2012 #11
My mother worked for the census, came home with some stories... Rhiannon12866 Apr 2012 #13

Dem2theMax

(9,650 posts)
1. I am BEYOND jealous!
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 06:41 PM
Apr 2012

I had to laugh when I saw the first pages I looked at - as though they used the thickest
sharpie they could find!

My Mom is from a VERY small town in PA. I cannot find her in the 1940 census. Mom is still
alive. She knows where she was living in 1940. But she, and her sisters, and her mother, are missing.
I'm wondering if someone missed part of the street she lived on, or if Ancestry.com missed
some pages of the town's census. AAAAARRRRGGGG.

It NEVER ends on her part of the family tree! LOL?

 

tru

(237 posts)
3. look nearby
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 08:37 PM
Apr 2012

Dem2,

Check neighboring areas. You probably know this, but sometimes one side of a street is in one section and the other is in the neighboring section.

Dem2theMax

(9,650 posts)
4. Oh, I have looked at EVERY page of the darned town.
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 08:41 PM
Apr 2012

Last edited Wed Apr 4, 2012, 10:23 PM - Edit history (2)

I am on my second go-round right now. Get this. My Mom KNEW the enumerator, or at least her family.
Mom is going on 94. I have my very own history book sitting in the kitchen, eating dinner as I type this!

Adding:

Now I'm on a second enumerator, and Mom knew her too!
And this one is taking data ACROSS THE STREET from my Mom's house.
I'm yelling the computer - GO ACROSS THE STREET, GO ACROSS THE STREET!

If I wasn't insane before I took up this 'hobby,' I sure am now.

Adding more:

FOUND THEM!!!! Must have been moving too fast yesterday. YEAH!!!!!!!!! Or is it YEAH!!1111!!!!!? Happy dance!

 

tru

(237 posts)
5. Thinking back
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 08:43 PM
Apr 2012

I believe I have only been contacted about two censuses in my life, which is a heck of a lot longer than two decades.

kdmorris

(5,649 posts)
6. Unfortunately, my people were not in that one
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 09:06 PM
Apr 2012

LOL.. the rest of Ohio County - they used the biggest sharpie they could find... and they wrote while on the back of a mule. Completely illegible.

Dem2theMax

(9,650 posts)
7. LMAO!
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 10:03 PM
Apr 2012

I think Ruth Rush, the enumerator I'm following, was drunk at the time. You should see the writing.
It gets worse and worse as the pages go by. She's writing "this line is blank" instead of just leaving
blank lines, writes "end of block" in the lines, and has somehow forgotten houses on many streets.
On numerous pages she seems to have gone back to pick up the forgotten houses.
She'll have five or six streets on one page, and just one family listed for each of the streets.
And if you want to figure out the names of those folks, you'll have to find a way to
bring Ruth Rush back from the dead to decipher her handwriting.

In other words, just another day of genealogy. LOL!

Dem2theMax

(9,650 posts)
9. That is a really good point.
Thu Apr 5, 2012, 03:49 PM
Apr 2012

And I bet she did in some cases. But Ruth also did something I've never
seen on a census report before. At more than one house, she would
write in the margin to the left of the data. What did she write there?
She wrote in who she got the data from, if it wasn't from the folks
who actually lived in the residence! At one house, she wrote
that she got the information from a Mrs. 'put the name of a neighbor'
in here, and a nurse. Go figure! LOL.

 

tru

(237 posts)
2. every so often
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 08:35 PM
Apr 2012

I run across a census taker, for any of the censuses, with beautiful, careful handwriting, and I wish I could meet them and say Thank you! What were the supervisors thinking to let so much illegibility get accepted.

Response to kdmorris (Original post)

PAMod

(906 posts)
11. That's really cool.
Fri Apr 6, 2012, 07:25 AM
Apr 2012

I've been at this (genealogy) for about 12 years and you're the first person I've "met" that had a direct ancestor doing the census.

What a great thing to find.

My retired father did it in 2010 and loved, loved every minute of it. I bet your grandfather did too.

Rhiannon12866

(205,182 posts)
13. My mother worked for the census, came home with some stories...
Fri Apr 13, 2012, 02:35 AM
Apr 2012

She was also a stay-at-home mom (like many from her generation), but she went to work every ten years.

Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Ancestry/Genealogy»Shout out to Charles L. H...