Monday's release of 1940 Census data sets off frenzy to dig into records on family past, crashing the website. When it comes back online, you'll need to know a few basics.
Do you want to know more about your parents or your grandparents? How much money they made, or maybe what they were doing in 1939, when the nation was still trying to recover from the Great Depression?
Skip to next paragraphAs it turns out, you would not be alone: On Monday, the US Census Bureau released a trove of personal information it had gleaned from its 1940 Census. For 72 years, the information was considered private. Today, anyone with a computer or a laptop can find out whether their great aunt really did live in a house with a flush toilet or great-grandpa Billy really was a doughboy in World War I.
But, don?t try to find out the information on Monday.
The US Census website is so busy that most computer searches are timing out or not returning results.
According to Google.com, 1940 Census was the most searched term on Monday with some 22.5 million hits in three hours. Even when the US Census officials tried to show off the site to reporters in the morning, they had difficulty getting through. One official from Archives.com joked that he hoped people would use the site but ?not all in the next 30 minutes.? He should have said the next 24 hours.
Many of those jumping onto the site were concerned with genealogy.
?I think genealogists have been waiting and drooling over these records being released,? says Stacy Gimbel Vidal, a spokeswoman for the US Census Bureau.
The Census estimates there are still some 21 million people who answered the Census in 1940 who are still alive today.
Initially, those looking for information about their roots will need to know where their relatives lived in 1939. A specific address would help but even a street corner will do. Eventually, some 300,000 volunteers will enter the information into a computer database where it can be searched by individual name.
What those looking up their genealogy will find is such personal information as their relatives' ages, race, marital status, education, and whether they were foreign born. But they will also find whether they had jobs, how much they made, and whether or not they were working for the government. Since 1 in 20 people surveyed were asked supplemental questions, they might also find out where their parents were born, what their mother tongue was, if they were veterans, or if they had a Social Security number. Some were asked if they had been married more than once, the age of their first marriage, and the number of children they had.
All the information was gathered by some 120,000 ?enumerators," who methodically went from door to door asking questions.
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