How accurate are the census records? I'm sure this question has arisen for every genealogist at some point in their research. We quickly learn that census records cannot be considered the absolute and final authority. What the census suggests may not be accurate.
Why does someone's age change every census by less (or more!) than the 10 years between censuses? Why is a surname being spelled differently on three different censuses? Why does an ancestor have a different first name in the 1861 census (is it even the right person)? And why does the census give a different place of birth for great grandma each time?Consider
first what question was actually asked by the census taker. For example
with ages - did he ask about how old the person was, or how old they
were on their last birthday or.....? Were the ages of all the adults in
an area rounded up (or down) to the closest multiple of five (yes, it
happened)? People may have lied about their ages, or sometimes simply got
it wrong. My grandmother always insisted she was born on 30 June 1906.
According to her birth registration, however, she was born on 30 June
1905.
Remember spelling was not exact back in the 1800s and earlier. A census taker wrote what he heard, and whether or not he was a good speller or was familiar with the surname dictated what we see recorded on the census page. You get what I will grumpily refer to as 'some semi-literate clerk's best guess". Keep in mind that it was not necessarily your ancestor who filled in the census themselves.
Different
first names? Children were usually given at least two names at birth
and an individual might choose to be known by their middle name, or
perhaps a nickname. My ancestor Elizabeth Green (nee May) was always
known as Betsy - and that is the name recorded in several censuses.
The
next question we need to ask ourselves is - who provided the answers on
that census? Was it a parent? Mothers may have had a better idea of
their children's birth years and ages than the father. Was it an older
child (perhaps the parents were not home), a grandparent or some other person giving the information? Tracing a family through several
censuses may have seen a different respondent each time. All these
factors will affect the quality of the census information.
As with many other genealogical records, the census records can contain inaccurate information, mistakes and even outright lies. What the census suggests is not always the truth.
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