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Table of Contents Records Of The Family History Library Familysearch™ Familysearch™ At Family History Centers Familysearch™ Internet Genealogy Service Family History Library Catalog Archives And Libraries Archives And Libraries National Archives University Collections Inventories Of County Records Computer Networks And Bulletin Boards Bible Records Biography Cemeteries Internet Tombstone Transcripts And Index Wpa Cemetery Index Cemetery Records Census Federal Censuses State Census Colonial Census Substitutes Church Records Baptist Disciples Of Christ Episcopal Lutheran Methodist Moravian Presbyterian Roman Catholic Society Of Friends (quakers) Court Records Colonial And State Courts County Courts Confederate States Court Federal Courts Directories Emigration And Immigration People Records Gazetteers Genealogy Nationwide Indexes Statewide Bibliography Manuscript Collections Published Collections History Land And Property Government Land Grants Land Grant History In North Carolina Land Grant Indexes Land Grant Records From The Provincial Or Proprietary Era (1663–1729) Land Grant Records From The Revolutionary War And State Era (1777–1959) Subsequent Exchanges Of Land Maps Military Records Colonial Wars Revolutionary War (1775–1783) War Of 1812 (1812–1815) Indian Wars (1711–1858) Mexican War (1846–1848) Civil War Spanish-american War (1898–1899) World War I (1917–1918) World War I And Later Wars Minorities African Americans Other Minorities Native Races Cherokee Families That Stayed In North Carolina Cherokee Families That Moved To Oklahoma Naturalization And Citizenship Pre-1906 Naturalization Records Naturalization Records After 1906 Newspapers Inventory On The Internet Published Inventories Birth, Marriage, And Death Notices In Newspapers Availability Obituaries Occupations Apprenticeship Bonds, Ca. 1840–1925 Periodicals Probate Records Index To Wills Wills Estate Papers Public Records Colonial Records Boards Of County Commissioners Schools Societies Taxation Vital Records Birth And Death Records Bastardy Bonds Marriage Records, Early To 1868 Marriage Records After 1868 County Marriage Records At The Family History Library Divorce Records Voting Registers For Further Reading Comments And Suggestions CENSUS Census
Population Schedules The Family History Library has microfilm
Statewide indexes For an index of individuals in the 99 North Carolina families recorded in the surviving fragments of the 1890 population schedule, see:
Nelson, Ken. 1890 U.S. Census Index to Surviving Population Schedules and Register of Film Numbers to the Special Census of Union Veterans. Rev. ed. Salt Lake City: Family History Library, 1991. (FHL book 973 X2na 1890; computer number 609990; 1984 ed. on film 1421673 item11; computer number 279653.) Another index, Index to the Eleventh Census of the United States, 1890, is on FHL films 543341–42; computer number 58517. The existing original 1890 census records for North Carolina are on FHL film 926499; computer number 59484.
Countywide indexes
“Internet FamilyFinder.” In FamilyTreeMaker.com [database on-line]. Novato, Calif.: Brøderbund Software, 21 July 1999 [cited 31 July 1999]. FamilyTreeMaker and FamilyFinder are trademarks of Brøderbund Software, Inc. Available at www.familytreemaker.com/allsearch.html; INTERNET. You can search the Internet FamilyFinder index for free. It displays the census year and state for each name matching the search. It may also list many vital records, and genealogical collection citations. Once you know the census year and state, you must use the original index on compact disc, microfiche, or book to obtain enough data to easily find the name in the original census schedules. Similar index information is also available at www.Ancestry.com/census/ Internet site for a subscription fee. The FamilyFinder Index includes the following Jackson indexes: Jackson, Ronald Vern. AIS Microfiche Indexes of U.S. Census and Other Records. Bountiful, Utah: Accelerated Indexing Systems International, 1984. (No FHL fiche number but available at many Family History Centers). North Carolina tax lists (1680s–1810) and census indexes (1790, 1800, and 1810) are combined on Search1. The North Carolina 1820, 1830, 1840, and 1850 indexes are on Searches 2–5 and 7a. A composite mortality schedule index is on Search8. African Americans in the 1870 Census. This census index is cited fully in the “Minorities” section of this outline. When indexes are not available, or they incorrectly record or omit a name, you can still look for the name in the census. For large cities, it helps to first learn the person’s address by searching the city directories created near the time of the census. (See the “Directories section of this outline for more information.) Once you learn a person’s address, search the original census schedules for that address. The following reference tools help determine which census enumeration district to search for specific addresses: Census Descriptions of Geographic Subdivisions and Enumerations Districts, (1880–1920). National Archives Microfilm Publications, T1224 and T1210. These descriptions were prepared by the United States Bureau of the Census. The Family History Library film numbers are:
A 1910 street index with corresponding census enumeration district numbers for the city of Charlotte is: United States. Bureau of the Census. Cross Index to Selected City Streets and Enumeration Districts, 1910 Census. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M1283. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1984. (On 51 FHL fiche 6331480–1; computer number 258163.) Mortality Schedules Almasy, Sandra Lee. North Carolina Mortality Census, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880. 13vols. Joliet, Ill.: Kensington Glen Publishing, 1994. (FHL book 975.6 X2a; computer number 702623.) These volumes contain information from the 1850–1880 mortality schedules arranged by county, then by census year. Each volume has the 1850–1880 mortality schedules for a region of North Carolina, and each volume is fully indexed. The 1850–1860 mortality schedules list the first names and sometimes last names of slaves who died. Slave Schedules Veterans Schedules A General Index to a Census of Pensioners for Revolutionary or Military Service, 1840. Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Publishing, 1965. (FHL book 973 X2pc 1965 index; fiche 6046771; computer number 270948; film 899835 items 1–2; computer number 271067.) The book with the actual 1840 census information is: A Census of Pensioners for Revolutionary or Military Service: With Their Names, Ages, and Places of Residence, as Returned by the Marshalls of the Several Judicial Districts, Under the Act for Taking the Sixth Census. Washington D.C.: Printed by Blair and Rives, 1841. (FHL book 973 X2pc 1840; film 1064759 item3; computer number 270766.) Veterans Schedules (1890). For the 1890 census of North Carolina Union Army veterans of the Civil War, see: United States. Census Office. 11th Census, 1890. Schedules Enumerating Union Veterans and Widows of Union Veterans of the Civil War. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M0123. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1948. (On 118 reels, beginning with FHL film 338160; computer number 59376.) Indexes to the veterans schedules are: Almasy, Sandra L. North Carolina, 1890, Civil War Veterans Census. Joliet, Ill.: Kensington Glen Publishing, 1990. (FHL book 975.6 M2a; computer number 591926.) Jackson, Ronald Vern. 1890 North Carolina Census Index. North Salt Lake, Utah: Accelerated Indexing Systems, 1985. (FHL book 975.6 X28j 1890; computer number 437500.)
In 1784 the U.S. Continental Congress requested a list of the number of inhabitants in each state. North Carolina took three years (1784–1787) to complete the count. The records for 24 of the 50 counties then existing are available in:
Register, Alvaretta K. State Census of North Carolina, 1784–1787, 2nd rev. ed. 1971. Reprint, Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Publishing, 1973. (FHL book 975.6 X2r; computer number 111972.) The lists include white and African American heads of families. This census shows heads of households, their residence, and the age categories of their household members. It is indexed.
For the colonial period, there are many indexes that you can use as census substitutes such as indexes to taxation records and probate records. Many tax lists and lists of residence for the 1680s–1831 are published in:
Jackson, Ronald Vern. Early North Carolina. 7vols. Bountiful, Utah: Accelerated Indexing Systems, 1980–. (FHL book 973 D2jeno; computer number 121249.) Each volume is alphabetized. The names of these volumes are also listed in the Accelerated Indexing Systems fiche searches 1, 2, and 3 and in the FamilyFinder™ Index and Viewer described previously.
Census records and indexes can be found in the Family History Catalog by using a Locality Search under:
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