Genealogists and historians can get a microscopic look at sweeping historical trends when records on 151 million people from the 1950 census are released. FOX13
It was the first census after World War II. The baby boom had begun. The Great Migration of Black residents from the Jim Crow South to places like Detroit and Chicago was in full swing. And some industrial cities reached their peak populations before Americans started moving to the suburbs.
Researchers view the records as a gold mine, and amateur genealogists see it as a way to fill gaps in family trees, a field of research that has seen dramatic growth in recent years through the popularity of home DNA testing kits. For Wendy Kalman, an amateur genealogist in Atlanta, the 1950 records will help her solidify details about her parents and grandparents and their relatives. She has traced her father's side of the family back to 18th century Ukraine, and her research has put her in touch with previously unknown third and fourth cousins in the U.S. whom she talks to regularly.
Ronnie Willis’ relatives from both sides of his grandparents’ families were itinerant farmers who traveled through Texas and Oklahoma as a blended group throughout the 1930s and 1940s. But they broke into nuclear family units after World War II. Willis hopes the 1950 census records help him piece together what happened to those relatives who settled in other states.
Deutschland Neuesten Nachrichten, Deutschland Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
'Gold mine' of census records being released from 1950Starting Friday, genealogists and historians can get a microscopic look at those sweeping historical trends when individual records on 151 million people from the 1950 census are released.
Weiterlesen »
'Gold mine' of census records being released from 1950Genealogists and historians can get a microscopic look at sweeping historical trends when individual records from the 1950 census are released this week.
Weiterlesen »
1950 Census data to be unveiled Friday, after 72 years under wrapsThe information should be a gold mine for scholars and genealogists, the Census Bureau says, and will provide a fascinating look at America at the midpoint of the 20th century.
Weiterlesen »
'Gold mine' of census records being released from 1950Genealogists and historians can get a microscopic look at sweeping historical trends when individual records from the 1950 census are released this week.
Weiterlesen »
'Gold mine' of census records being released from 1950Starting Friday, genealogists and historians can get a microscopic look at those sweeping historical trends when individual records on 151 million people from the 1950 census are released.
Weiterlesen »
1950 Census data to be unveiled Friday, after 72 years under wrapsThe information should be a gold mine for scholars and genealogists, the Census Bureau says, and will provide a fascinating look at America at the midpoint of the 20th century.
Weiterlesen »