1940 Federal Census Preparation

The release of the 1940 census is three weeks away. It should give us valuable new information for our family, such as their 1935 residence, their highest level of education and many detailed employment questions. However, we will not be able to search the 1940 census by the names of our ancestors because the census pages will not be indexed until later this year.

To help narrow our search, we can use a utility program at Stevemorse.org that identifies the enumeration district that contains the 1940 address where our ancestors lived. An Enumeration District (ED) refers to the area assigned to a single census-taker to count persons and prepare schedules within one census period. Note that the enumerations district number assigned to a specific neighborhood will differ from year to year.

To start preparing for the release, we need to develop our list of 1940 addresses and then use the Stevemorse.com utility to identify the enumeration district. If we do not know where our ancestors lived in 1940, we can search for birth records, marriage records and death records for the family that occurred about that time. Obituaries will also help identify the town where they lived. Another source to identify addresses could be telephone books and city directories. The 1943 WW II draft registration will also give an address for our ancestors.

The National Archives is the agency that will release the 1940 Census on April 2 and we will be able to browse the pages at 1940census.archives.gov starting at 9:00 AM Eastern Time. Other websites such as Ancestry.com and Familysearch.org will obtain the digitized images at that time and the images will be viewable on their websites as soon as their IT people can process and upload the images. This may take a few hours or a few days or a few weeks. Both companies have only commented that they will make the images viewable as soon as possible.

You need to start preparing now and you should have some fantastic new information about your ancestors by the mid- April.

Genealogy Starts at Home

Begin you family history research by looking in the the desk drawers, file cabinets and shoe boxes for old papers, letters and old photos. This is especially important if your parents or grandparents were immigrants. Write down brief notes of the family oral stories and visit the cemeteries where your ancestors are buried to record the grave marker inscriptions and take pictures.

If you are lucky you will find their baptismal certificate, their exit visas and photos of your ancestors who stayed in Poland. These documents will contain more valuable information on your family history than any gold watches or jewels that were inherited.

Treasures may have also been saved by other relatives. Find the descendants of the caretakers of the immigrants. The caretakers may have sorted through the shoe boxes and saved the treasures you need. If you find documents with other relatives, ask for copies and offer to share the results of your research. Also be very careful with the originals since they may be very fragile due to age. Use copies or electronic scans in your research and store the originals in a safe place.

 Remember at this point in your research, you are dealing with documents that you find in the personal papers of your parents, grandparents and other relatives. After you organize this information, you can start your search for information from outside sources.

 Remember these steps to start your genealogy research

  1. Search desk drawers, file cabinets and shoe boxes for birth records, baptismal certificates, exit visas and pictures.
  2. Track down descendants of caretakers of ancestors before they died.
  3. Exchange and share information and documents with other relatives

Finding Grandma’s Ancestors

When I was in grade school, I asked my grandmother where she was born and the names of her parents. However, I did not return to my genealogy research until after my grandmother had died and I had lost my notes.

At that time the only source of information to find my Polish ancestors was in U.S. documents.Using various documents for my grandmother and her brother, I found a number of town names that were clues to locating her birthplace.

  • Andrzejewo – from her marriage certificate & naturalization petition
  • Przezdziecko & Ostrow – from her passenger manifest
  • Pierzchaly & Lomza – from her brother’s passenger manifest

Using gazetteers and maps, I found the locations of eight towns with the name Andrzejewo but only one that was near Ostrow and Lomza. When I found this town on a map I saw that it was near a small village with the name Przezdziecko-Pierzhaly. This led me to documents that listed the names of my ancestors back to 1730.

 

If you want to find your Polish ancestors, you will need to:

1. search U.S. Documents of your immigrant ancestors to find place names that are clues to where they left in Poland

2. search maps and gazetteers for the location of each name.

3. look for an area that shows most of these names close to one another.

Envision a map of the area around the birthplace of your ancestor. Each clue that you find is a piece of the jigsaw puzzle that has a picture of this map on it. Once you fit all of clues together, the picture on the jigsaw puzzle comes together and you will be able to recognize where the area is located and where to look for your ancestors.