Feb 27, 2026
By the middle of the nineteenth century, the United States had reached a point where a simple decade-by-decade household tally no longer satisfied federal goals. The country was larger, more complex, and more mobile. Economic life was shifting quickly. Immigration and internal movement were reshaping regions. New...
Feb 25, 2026
The first six U.S. federal censuses, from 1790 through 1840, were created primarily for government purposes. They were designed to measure population for representation, to support national administration, and to answer practical questions about the country’s capacity and direction. If you read these early...
Feb 23, 2026
If your genealogy research feels stuck, the problem may not be missing records. It may be that you are asking the right questions in the wrong direction. Some of the most revealing information about your ancestors does not appear in their own records at all, but in the lives of the people who lived beside them. Learning...
Feb 20, 2026
If you use United States census records often, you notice that the questions change when the country changes. The format changes when technology changes. The people being counted change when laws and social structures change. That story does not begin in 1790. It reaches back through colonial recordkeeping and deep into...
Feb 18, 2026
Someone asked me a hard question once, and I think a lot of people have asked it in their own minds, even if they never say it out loud.
They said, “Is genealogy really worth doing? After you die, hardly anybody will remember you anyway. Your friends will be gone. Their friends will be gone. Your family might not even...