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The
Church's Gift to the World: It's Not About Records; It's About People
by
Scot & Maurine Proctor
Editor's
note: click on photos to enlarge

In the largest
press conference in the history of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, with a simultaneous broadcast to 27 locations
in the United States and Canada, President Gordon B. Hinckley announced
that the Church is making invaluable indexes of American and Canadian
heritage available free to the public at the touch of a button.
The 1880
United States Census and the 1881 Canadian Census, searchable
databases of more than 55 million people, are now on the Internet,
signifying another great leap forward in online family
history research.

President
Gordon B. Hinckley announces the release of the
1880 Census to the world---for free.
These indexed
censuses, searchable by name, birthdate, or birthplace are available
at www.familysearch.org
and represent a treasure trove of easily accessible information.
The work, a
joint effort of the Church and the University of Minnesota took
17 years and over 11.5 million hours to complete.

The 1880 American
census was chosen because it was the first to list the relationship
of the head of the household to family members, as well as the birthplace
of parents. It also contains marital status, birthplace, gender,
race and occupation. It was also the first online census database
to include former slaves and the second U.S. census to record African
Americans as individuals rather than property. The 1890 census was
burned and is unavailable.
Elder D. Todd
Christofferson of the Seventy, said, “It's a searchable Internet
database. People used to search through rolls and rolls of microfilm
- like searching for a needle in a haystack. Now, with just a few
keystrokes they can search millions of records instantly.”

Elder D. Todd Christofferson explains to the press
the features
of the 1880 Census available online.
President Hinckley
said the Church was pleased to offer this tremendous resource free
of charge to people, adding that “an amazing thing happens
when people begin to trace their roots. They discover they are not
alone in this world, that they have a heritage, a legacy and a sense
of responsibility to carry on where the ancestors left off.”
The chances
of today’s Canadians and Americans finding ancestors in the
online databases are extraordinary. If a person’s family lived
in one of these two nations during the 1880s and was counted in
the census, becoming connected to the past is quick and easy.

Snapshot of the entry screen showing Alexander G.
Bell's census entry
Elder Henry
B. Eyring demonstrated just how easy it was to access information
by using Alexander Graham Bell, the father of modern communication,
as an example. He walked through the search, noting that just by
listing his name, suddenly a wealth of information was available
including everyone who lived in his household and his birthplace.
With another click of the key, searchers can find out who lived
next door, a valuable help since during that time period many families
lived close to each other.

Elder Eyring
walks the press through a search of the name
Alexander Graham Bell from the new online 1880 Census.
These records
open up new possibilities for family searches. Elder Christofferson
said, “In the past, people lived near their families and felt
a connection through geography. In our mobile society, they find
it through family. You may change where you come from but you don't
change who you come from.”
“I think
what is important about these records is that they are democratic,
and I mean that in the small "d" sense of democratic.
They can include anyone and I like that idea. It's not famous people
or infamous people or powerful people - it's just everyday people,”
said Constance Potter, an archivist with the National Archives and
Records Administration.
Elder Eyring
said “this is not about records but about people.”

Genealogist
David Rencher, who has spent years researching his family tree,
knows what a valuable tool the indexes can be in finding ancestors
who were once lost. "You can learn about their lives, who they
were and what they did. It’s like taking a trip in a time
machine," Rencher said. "I used to think that I was looking
for other people, someone from the past. Now I realize that through
all of the searching for others, what I found was myself."
The censuses
paint a portrait of two nations, capturing Canada as a burgeoning
nation in its infancy and America embarking on its second 100 years
at the beginning of the industrial revolution.
Robert Bothwell,
professor of history at the University of Toronto said, "The
1880s are a period in which Canada consolidates itself as a transcontinental
political entity and in which a group of scattered and disparate
settlements are unified into a single, quite successful political
constitutional system."

The Tabernacle Choir sang, "Climb Every Mountain"
as the
concluding number of the press conference.
The census makes
legendary figures come alive for today’s Canadians including
the nation’s first prime minister, John A. Macdonald; Ojibwa
Chief Jacob Berens; painter Robert Harris; Anne of Green Gables
author Lucy Maud Montgomery; poet and entertainer Pauline Johnson;
composer Antoine Gerin-Lajoie; soldier and educator Arthur William
Currie; Victoria Cross recipient William Hall; suffragist Emily
Howard Stow; and the creator of basketball, James Naismith.
From Wild West
legends and influential artists to ambitious industrialists and
ingenious inventors, many of the personalities listed in the 1880
United States census are representative of the expansion, innovation
and development of the nation. Author Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens),
entertainer William "Buffalo Bill" Cody, inventor Thomas
Edison, Uncle Tom’s Cabin author Harriet Beecher Stowe, African-American
leader Booker T. Washington, inventor Alexander Graham Bell, the
Wright brothers, composer John Philip Sousa, Little Women author
Louisa May Alcott, human rights advocate Frederick Douglass, and
businessmen John D. Rockefeller, Henry Ford and George Westinghouse
are just a few of the notable names found in the census.
Columbia University
historian Richard Bushman said, "All those people piled together,
working their way upward and outward, trying to find a toehold —
that’s what history is and the history of one ancestor is
a microcosm of the whole country."

Brother Darius Gray can now search for his African
American ancestors in the
1880 Census as people rather than property.
In addition
to personal family searches, historians will find this record invaluable.
Dr. Eric Foner of Columbia University said , It’s a treasure
trove, really, of information which historians are going to using
for many years to ask new questions about the past and to flush
out the information we have about old questions. 1880 is at a critical
moment in our history both in terms of the politics and the social
history economic history.
Members of The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and others volunteered
to do the indexing for the1880 U.S. Census, which took 17 years,
and the 1881 Canadian Census, which took four years. The Minnesota
Population Center at the University of Minnesota and the Institute
of Canadian Studies at the University of Ottawa were partners with
the Church to help "clean" the data — a process
of standardizing names and localities, and organizing the data for
easy retrieval. The data also is available on CD.
For those with
British roots, a searchable index of the 1881
British Census is also online, bringing the total number of
census names available for family history enthusiasts to 85 million.
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© 2002Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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