JewishGen Discussion Group #JewishGen Re: finding a street address in 1910 census #general
Mark Jacobson
Hi
I sent this message privately to Mitchell Fine, but I'm sending it to the group also. http://www.stevemorse.org/census/index.html will help you find the Enumeration District, then you have to search the images in the ED through Ancestry (or the microfilmed census >from a library or the National Archives) until you find the right address. It could take a few minutes or a few hours looking through the pages, but it's the best way on the internet. There is also a good microfiche available at most Family History Libraries (once a branch orders it, they own it so it is easy to find) and the National Archives (as mentioned by Monica Leonards) where you can look up addresses for the 1910 census and find the exact ED. I think it's called the 1910 Census Street and Address Index. There are 50 fiches which alphabetically list streets and addresses and corresponding Enumeration Districts for 39 major US cities including Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, Phildelphia, San Francisco, and New York City (all boroughs except Queens). I have a list of which city is on which fiche. Before the internet this was the only way to find people in the 1910 census (in non miracode indexed states) Mark Jacobson Boca Raton, FL ===== DOGULOV/DOVGALEVSKY - Belaya Tserkov/Kiev Ukraine; COHEN/KANA/KAHAN - Belaya Tserkov, Ukraine; JACOBSON - Polotsk, Belarus; COBLENTZ - Polotsk, Belarus; KAMERMAN - Drohobycz, Galicia; KOPPEL - Stebnik/Drohobycz, Galicia; JACOBI - Stratyn/Rohatyn, Galicia; ROTHLEIN - Stratyn/Rohatyn, Galicia; TUCHFELD - Rzeszow/Stryj/Lvov, Galicia; GOLDSTEIN - Ranizow, Galicia
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