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bigtree

(85,986 posts)
Wed Feb 22, 2012, 04:54 PM Feb 2012

Preliminary Report on 1860 Census

Last edited Wed Feb 22, 2012, 11:46 PM - Edit history (2)

These are scans from a hardback Preliminary Report on the U.S.census from 1860, summarized (and supervised) by Jos. C.J. Kennedy at the beginning of the stirrings of our Civil War. It's a fragile and degraded book, but it's a treasure. It was the first U.S. census which counted Indians; but only those who had 'renounced tribal rules'.

Joseph Camp Griffith Kennedy (April 1, 1813 – July 13, 1887) of Pennsylvania, was a 19th century Whig politician, lawyer and journalist who supervised the United States Census for 1850 and 1860. Initially a prosperous farmer and journalist from a prominent Pennsylvania family, Kennedy was appointed to supervise the Census because of his political activism in the 1848 Pennsylvania election.

. . . by the time the 1860 census returns were ready for tabulation, the United States was moving toward the American Civil War. As a result, Superintendent Kennedy and his staff produced only an abbreviated set of reports, which included no graphic or cartographic representations. As the war began, however, Kennedy and the Census staff used the new statistics to produce maps of Southern states for Union field commanders. These maps displayed militarily vital topics, including white population, slave population, predominant agricultural products (by county), and rail and post-road transportation routes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_C._G._Kennedy



The first slave schedules were completed in 1850, with the second (and last) in 1860.

Most notable in the opening pages I provided is the discussion of the state of slavery; including projections on slave populations in the future, discussion of and accounting of Indian tribes which held slaves, and general history of slavery as these officials understood it. There's also an interesting look at population totals overall, broken down by states and new territories.

(Do let me know if it's readable enough from these scans . . .)



























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Preliminary Report on 1860 Census (Original Post) bigtree Feb 2012 OP
thank you for sharing this! Viva_La_Revolution Feb 2012 #1
I can read it, Thanks. NOLALady Feb 2012 #2
a bit more on this subject on the next page bigtree Feb 2012 #3
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