1860 United States census explained

1860 United States census
Country:United States
Population:31,443,321[1]
Percent Change: 35.6%
Region Type:state
Most Populous:New York
3,880,735
Least Populous:Oregon
52,465
Authority:Census Office
Previous Census:1850 United States census
Previous Year:1850
Next Census:1870 United States census
Next Year:1870

The 1860 United States census was the eighth census conducted in the United States starting June 1, 1860, and lasting five months. It determined the population of the United States to be 31,443,321 in 33 states and 10 organized territories. This was an increase of 35.6 percent over the 23,191,876[2] persons enumerated during the 1850 census. The total population included 3,953,760[3] slaves.

By the time the 1860 census returns were ready for tabulation, the nation was sinking into the American Civil War. As a result, Census Superintendent Joseph C. G. Kennedy and his staff produced only an abbreviated set of public reports, without graphic or cartographic representations. The statistics did allow the census staff to produce a cartographic display, including preparing maps of Southern states, for Union field commanders. These maps displayed militarily vital topics, including the white population, slave population, predominant agricultural products (by county), and rail and post road transportation routes.

This census saw Philadelphia regain its position as a second-most populous American city, which it had lost to Baltimore in 1820, due to the Act of Consolidation, 1854 merging many smaller surrounding townships, such as Spring Garden, Northern Liberties, and Kensington, into the main city of Philadelphia. Philadelphia would lose the second-most populous American city position to Chicago in 1890.

Census questions

The 1860 census Schedule 1 (Free Inhabitants) was one of two schedules that counted the population of the United States; the other was Schedule 2 (Slave Inhabitants).

Schedule 1 collected the following information:[4]

ColumnTitleNotes
1Dwelling-houses – numbered in the order of visitation.
2Families numbered in the order of visitation
3The name of every person whose usual place of abode on the first day of June 1860, was in this family.
4Description: Age.
5Description: Sex.M or F
6Description: Color, (White, black, or mulatto).W, B or M
7Profession, Occupation, or Trade of each person, male and female, over 15 years of age.
8Value of Estate Owned: Value of Real Estate.
9Value of Estate Owned: Value of Personal Estate.
10Place of Birth, Naming the State, Territory, or Country.
11Married within the year.Marked with '/'
12Attended School within the year.Marked with '/'
13Persons over 20 years of age who can not read and write.Marked with '/'
14Whether deaf and dumb, blind, insane, idiotic, pauper, or convict.
Schedule 2 (Slave Inhabitants) collected the following information:[5]
ColumnTitleNotes
1Name of slave owner
2Number of slaves
3Age
4Sex
5Color
6Fugitive from the stateMarked with '/'
7Number Manumitted
8Deaf and dumb, blind, insane, or idiotic
9Number of slave houses

Data availability

Full documentation for the 1860 population census, including microdata, census forms and enumerator instructions, is available from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS). Aggregate data for small areas, together with compatible cartographic boundary files, can be downloaded from the National Historical Geographic Information System.

Common occupations

National data reveals that farmers (owners and tenants) made up nearly 10% of utilized occupations. Farm laborers (wage workers) represent the next highest percent with 3.2%, followed by general laborers at 3.0%.[6]

More localized data shows that other occupations were common. In the town of Essex, Massachusetts, a large section of the women in the labor force were devoted to shoe-binding, while for men the common occupations were farming and shoe-making.[7] This heavy demand of shoe-related labor reinforces the high demand for rigorous physical laborers in the economy, as supported by the data of very large amounts of farm related work as compared to most other labor options.

IPUMS' data also notes that the share of the population that had been enrolled in school or marked as "Student" stood at 0.2%. This demonstrates a small rate of growth, if any, in the proficiency of the human capital of the time—the skill set a worker has to apply to the labor force, which can increase total output through increased efficiency.

The census of 1860 was the last in which much of Southern wealth was held as slaves—still legally considered property.

Population of U.S. states and territories

Population of the US States and Territories[8] [9] [10] [11]

! Rank !! State!! Free Population

Slave Population !Population Percentage Enslaved
01 New York 3,880,735 0 3,880,735 0
02 Pennsylvania 2,906,215 0 2,906,215 0
03 Ohio 2,339,511 0 2,339,511 0
04 Illinois 1,711,951 0 1,711,951 0
05 Virginia 1,105,453 490,865 1,596,318 30.7
06 Indiana 1,350,428 0 1,350,428 0
07 Massachusetts 1,231,066 0 1,231,066 0
08 Missouri 1,067,081 114,931 1,182,012 9.7
09 Kentucky 930,201 225,483 1,155,684 19.5
10 Tennessee 834,082 275,719 1,109,801 24.8
11 Georgia 595,088 462,198 1,057,286 43.7
12 North Carolina 661,563 331,059 992,622 33.4
13 Alabama 529,121 435,080 964,201 45.1
14 Mississippi 354,674 436,631 791,305 55.2
15 Wisconsin 775,881 0 775,881 0
16 Michigan 749,113 0 749,113 0
17 Louisiana 376,276 331,726 708,002 46.9
18 South Carolina 301,302 402,406 703,708 57.2
19 Maryland 599,860 87,189 687,049 12.7
20 Iowa 674,913 0 674,913 0
21 New Jersey 672,017 18 672,035 0.01
22 Maine 628,279 0 628,279 0
23 Texas 421,649 182,566 604,215 30.2
24 Connecticut 460,147 0 460,147 0
25 Arkansas 324,335 111,115 435,450 25.5
26 California 379,994 0 379,994 0
27 New Hampshire 326,073 0 326,073 0
28 Vermont 315,098 0 315,098 0
29 Rhode Island 174,620 0 174,620 0
30 Minnesota 172,023 0 172,023 0
31 Florida 78,679 61,745 140,424 44.0
32 Delaware 110,418 1,798 112,216 1.6
33 Oregon 52,465 0 52,465 0
X Kansas Territory[12] 107,204 2 107,206 0.01
X New Mexico Territory 93,5160 93,5160
X District of Columbia 71,985 3,185 75,080 4.4
X Utah Territory 40,184 29 40,273 0.07
X Colorado Territory 34,277 0 34,277 0
X Nebraska Territory 28,826 15 28,841 0.01
X Washington Territory 11,594 0 11,594 0
X Nevada Territory6,857 0 6,857 0
X Dakota Territory 4,837 0 4,837 0

City rankings

Rank City State Population Region (2016)[13]
01 813,669 Northeast
02 565,529 Northeast
03 266,661 Northeast
04 212,418 South
05 177,840 Northeast
06 168,675 South
07 161,044 Midwest
08 160,773 Midwest
09 112,172 Midwest
10 81,129 Northeast
11 71,941 Northeast
12 68,033 South
13 62,367 Northeast
14 61,122 South
15 56,802 West
16 50,666 Northeast
17 49,221 Northeast
18 48,204 Northeast
19 45,619 Midwest
20 45,246 Midwest
21 43,417 Midwest
22 40,522 South
23 39,267 Northeast
24 39,235 Northeast
25 37,910 South
26 36,827 Northeast
27 29,258 South
28 29,226 Northeast
29 29,152 Northeast
30 28,702 Northeast
31 28,119 Northeast
32 26,341 Northeast
33 26,060 Northeast
34 25,137 Northeast
35 25,065 Northeast
36 24,960 Northeast
37 23,162 Northeast
38 22,623 South
39 22,529 Northeast
40 22,300 Northeast
41 22,292 South
42 22,252 Northeast
43 21,258 South
44 20,107 Northeast
45 20,081 Midwest
46 19,586 Northeast
47 19,083 Northeast
48 18,611 Midwest
49 18,554 Midwest
50 18,266 South
51 17,639 Northeast
52 17,603 Northeast
53 17,228 Northeast
54 16,988 South
55 16,816 Northeast
56 16,640 Northeast
57 16,471 South
58 16,407 Northeast
59 15,376 Northeast
60 15,199 Northeast
61 14,726 Northeast
62 14,620 South
63 14,358 Northeast
64 14,083 South
65 14,048 Northeast
66 14,045 Midwest
67 14,026 Northeast
68 13,785 West
69 13,768 Midwest
70 13,725 Northeast
71 13,718 Midwest
72 13,405 Northeast
73 13,401 Northeast
74 13,395 Northeast
75 13,299 Northeast
76 13,283 Northeast
77 13,000 Midwest
78 12,652 South
79 12,647 Midwest
80 12,578 Northeast
81 12,493 South
82 12,376 Northeast
83 11,848 Northeast
84 11,818 Northeast
85 11,567 Northeast
86 11,484 Midwest
87 11,267 Midwest
88 11,256 Northeast
89 10,986 Northeast
90 10,904 Northeast
91 10,896 Northeast
92 10,871 Northeast
93 10,508 Northeast
94 10,401 Midwest
95 10,188 Northeast
96 10,115 Northeast
97 10,074 Northeast
98 10,065 Northeast
99 10,046 South
100 10,004 Northeast-101 9,995 Northeast -->

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1860 Fast Facts. December 14, 2023. U.S. Census Bureau. April 15, 2024.
  2. Web site: 1850 Fast Facts. December 14, 2023. U.S. Census Bureau. April 15, 2024.
  3. Web site: Recapitulation of the Tables of Population, Nativity, and Occupation. U.S. Census Bureau. April 16, 2024.
  4. Web site: 1860 Census Questionnaire. US Census Bureau. March 28, 2013.
  5. Web site: 1860 Census Records - What Questions did the census ask?. September 13, 2021 . US Census Bureau. November 27, 2021.
  6. Web site: IPUMS 1860 Census Data. IPUMS Data Collection. March 1, 2011.
  7. Web site: Wilhelm. Kurt. Essex, MA Census 1860. 1860 Federal Census. February 27, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110723120353/http://essex.essexcountyma.net/census/1860.html. July 23, 2011. dead. mdy-all.
  8. Data tabulated by Web site: 1860 Census Results . The Civil War Home Page . 7 October 2019.
  9. Population figures checked against Web site: 1860 Census: Population of the United States . Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness . December 20, 2014 . 7 October 2019.
  10. Web site: 1860 Census: Population of the United States . United States Census Bureau . 7 October 2019.
  11. For territories see Jos. C. G. Kennedy, Preliminary Report of the Eighth Census, 1860 (1862) pp 259, 291–294.
  12. Kansas is admitted as a state in 1861, prior to the publication of the 1860 Census in 1864, and therefore listed as a state not a territory in the 1860 Census.
  13. Web site: Regions and Divisions . U.S. Census Bureau . September 9, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161203020637/http://www.census.gov/econ/census/help/geography/regions_and_divisions.html . December 3, 2016 . dead . mdy-all .