U.S. DECENNIAL CENSUS REPORTS
13th. Census (1910)
11 Main Vols. & 2 Suppls. Vols. \1,080,000
13th Decennial Census (13 volumes, incl. suppls.) |
NRP #87 |
\96,000 |
|
Vol. 1. Population, 1910. General report and analysis. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. iii, 1369 p.
(Dubester 296)
Vol. 2. Population, 1910. Reports by States, with statistics for counties, cities and other civil divisions輸labama-Montana. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. 1160 p.
The material for each state is divided into two chapters: 1. Number of inhabitants; and 2. Composition and characteristics of the population. This volume incorporates the two advance series of population bulletins. Data are given under the several headings of topics included in the list of separates to volume 1, except for statistics on inability to speak English and ownership of homes.
(Dubester 313)
Vol. 3. Population, 1910. Reports by States, with statistics for counties, cities and other civil divisions湧ebraska妨yoming, Alaska, Hawaii, and Porto Rico.Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913, 1225 p.
Same description as Volume 2. (Dubester 314)
Vol. 4. Population, 1910. Occupation statistics. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1914. 615 p.
Statistics of occupations are given for the gainfully employed population 10 years of age and over. The volume includes a summary and general analysis of results which describe the number of gainfully employed as compared with the total population and according to sex, age, geographical distribution; and presents detailed tables of the gainfully employed in the United States according to a detailed list of occupations by sex, age, color or race, nativity, and parentage; of the gainfully employed in states according to an abbreviated list of occupations by sex, age, color or race, nativity; and of gainfully employed in states and cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants, and cities of 25,000 to 100,000 inhabitants according to an abbreviated list of occupations and sex.(Dubester 315)
Vol. 5. Agriculture, 1909 and 1910. General report and analysis. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. 927 p. (April 1915 corrected reprint.)(Dubester 320)
Vol. 6. Agriculture, 1909 and 1910. Reports by States, with statistics for counties – Alabama – Montana. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. 977 p.
The material for each state includes an analysis and a series of tables comprising the advance bulletins for agriculture. Statistics on irrigation are included for those states in which irrigation statistics were collected. The data cover number of farms and farm property; number, acreage, and value of farms classified by tenure, color and nativity of farmers, and mortgage debt; livestock products, and domestic animals sold or slaughtered on farms, value of all crops and principal classes thereof, and acreage and production of principal crops; selected farm expenses and receipts; and domestic animals not on farms – all by counties. (Dubester 333)
Vol. 7. Agriculture, 1909 and 1910. Reports by States, with statistics for counties – Nebraska – Wyoming, Alaska, Hawaii, and Porto Rico. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. 1013 p.
Same description as Volume 6. (Dubester 334)
Vol. 8. Manufactures, 1909. General report and analysis. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. 845 p.
Fifteen chapters: 1. Introduction and general explanations; 2. General summary for the United States; 3. Summary, by industries, for the United States as a whole; 4. Summary, by states and geographic divisions; 5. Statistics for individual cities; 6. Distribution of manufacturing industries among communities classified according to size; 7. Local concentration of certain industries; 8. Expenses; 9. Character of ownership; 10. Establishments classified according to size; 11. Persons engaged in manufacturing industries; 12. Prevailing hours of labor; 13. Power used in manufacturing; 14. Consumption of fuel in manufacturing industries; and 15. Description of individual industries with principal statistics for each. Four appendixes: A-Schedules, B-Instructions to special agents, C-Instructions for editing and revising the schedules of manufactures, and D-Classification of industries. Also: Index of industries in text and general tables. (Dubester 335)
Vol. 9. Manufactures, 1909. Reports by States, with statistics for principal cities. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1912. 1404 p.
This volume comprises the series of advance manufactures bulletins for states. The materials for each state include two sections entitled “Industries in general,”and “Supplementary data regarding important industries,” followed by three tables: 1. Comparative summary for 1909, 1904, and 1899; 2. Detailed statement for the state, by industries: 1909; and 3. Detailed statement for cities: 1909. Also “Index of cities.” (Dubester 338)
Vol. 10. Manufactures, 1909. Reports for principal industries. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. iii, 975 p.
This volume comprises the series of advance manufactures bulletins for individual industries. (Dubester 339)
Vol. 11. Mines and quarries, 1909. General report and analysis. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1913. 369 p.
The summary and analysis of results discusses geographic distribution; number of enterprises; number of operators; proprietors, officers and employees; salaries and wages; hours of labor; kind, quantity and value of products; cost of supplies and materials; royalties and rent; miscellaneous expenses; power; capital; form of organization; land tenure and contract work as well as enterprises operated by governmental or eleemosynary institutions. A separate chapter reports similar information for individual states. Chapters on selected industries-coal, iron, petroleum and natural gas-are followed by general tables. Appendix A-Schedules; Appendix B-Instructions to special agents; and Appendix C-Instructions for editing and revising schedules for mines, quarries and wells. (Dubester 343)
thirteenth census supplemental volumes
[Vol. 12] Statistical atlas of the United States. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1914. 99, xii p. and 503 pl.
Includes discussion and maps, charts, diagrams, etc., pertaining to the results of the Thirteenth Census, as well as statistics of cities, religious bodies, marriage and divorce, and insane in hospitals. (Dubester 346)
[Vol. 13] Indian population in the United States and Alaska, 1910. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1915. 285 p.
“The statistics of Indians were gathered in part by means of the general population schedule and in part by means of a special schedule containing, in addition to the questions found on the general schedule, inquiries as to tribe and purity of blood. The special schedules were used in all the districts containing Indians on reservations and throughout counties where as many as 20 Indians were returned at the Census of 1900” (p. 9). Text and tables are devoted to the following subjects: Numbers of population; proportion of mixed-bloods; sex distribution; age distribution; stocks and tribes, by sex, age, and mixture of blood; fecundity and vitality, marital condition, school attendance, illiteracy, inability to speak English, occupations, Indians taxed and not taxed.(Dubester 350)
.