On Friday, April 1, my genealogy friends and I didn’t get much sleep. Like the rare appearance of a celestial object or the reemergence of an old friend, the U.S. census records from 1950 were made ...
If you’re trying to trace your family tree or want to know more about your relatives, the newly-released 1950 U.S. Census data may help. Unlike other historical records that may not exist, census data ...
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. – What was the United States like in 1950? Public data is now available that can help you get those answers. After more than seven decades, raw data from the 1950 decennial Census ...
The 1950 Census has been available for a few weeks and here are a few research tips I have learned. There are plenty of guides and tutorials on every genealogy site, all you need to do is just search ...
A Bellport man wanted information about his biological mother. A Jericho woman found out how much her grandfather earned in 1950. And an Amityville woman added to her knowledge of the lives of people ...
Close to 7 million records from the 1950 US census have been made public. The digital records were released on Friday and are available to the public free of charge at a dedicated website, allowing ...
There is nothing more exciting to a genealogist than the release of information that can enrich a family tree! The 1950 Census release has created this excitement. Names, addresses, ages, birth places ...
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — More and more people are piecing together their family trees and are now getting some much-needed help. The 1950 census was released in April, and if you’ve been channeling your ...
We have a shared curiosity about our past. Maybe not only ours, but that of others as well. We enjoy glimpsing back into history and having our questions answered. This was part of what was running ...
A 3-year-old boy named Japperson W. Blythe was living in Hope in 1950, according to newly released census records. He would grow up to be president of the United States. Don't remember a president ...
The 1950 U.S. Census is out! I’m somebody! Some of you will catch the nod to Steve Martin’s character, Navin Johnson, in the 1979 movie “The Jerk,” who becomes rhapsodic when he first sees his name in ...
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