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  1. Name index and images of population schedules listing inhabitants of the United States in 1860. This was the eighth census conducted since 1790. Currently, data is ...

  2. Bogislaw X (Illegimate) Duke of Pommerania born 1454 in Slupsk, Koszalin, Poland genealogy record - Ancestry®.

    • Why Was The 1860 Census taken?
    • When Was It taken?
    • Who Was counted?
    • Who Was Involved?
    • What Questions Did The Census ask?
    • What Did The Census Form Look like?
    • What States and Territories Are Included in The Census?
    • Are Some 1860 Census Records missing?
    • Where Can I See The Original 1860 Census Schedules?

    Article I, Section 2, of the U.S. Constitutionestablished that representation in the U.S. House of Representatives was based on population determined by a census taken at 10 year intervals: "The actual Enumeration shall be made within three Years after the first Meeting of the Congress of the United States, and within every subsequent Term of ten Y...

    The census began on Friday, June 1, 1860, and was finished within 5 months, under the rules and directions established in an Act of Congress approved ten years earlier on May 23, 1850 (“An Act providing for the taking of the seventh and subsequent Censuses of the United States....,” 9 Statutes at Large 428).

    The law required "all the inhabitants" of each Federal judicial district or territory be enumerated. The Instructions to Marshals and Assistantsexplained that the the term "usual place of abode" used in column 3 of Schedule 1, Free Inhabitants, meant the "the house or usual lodging place of a person" and that a person "temporarily absent on a journ...

    Secretary of the Interior Jacob Thompson (1857-61), Caleb B. Smith (1861-62), and John P. Usher (1862-65)had general supervision of census operations, tabulation, and reporting the results to the P...
    Superintendent of the Census Joseph C. G. Kennedy submitted The Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, 1860 (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1862) to Secretary Smith, and the final statis...
    The U.S. Marshal for each Federal judicial districtwas responsible for taking the census in his district with the help of assistant marshals whom he appointed. Each took an oath or affirmation that...
    Every person over age 20 was required to cooperate: "That each and every free person more than twenty years of age, belonging to any family ..., and in case of the absence of the heads and other me...
    Schedule 1 - Free Inhabitants
    Schedule 2 - Slave Inhabitants

    The Federal Government provided blank printed forms to the U.S. Marshals. There may be annotations such as certificates of oaths taken, population totals, and handwritten and mechanically-stamped page numbers. On March 3, 1849, Congress delegated decisions about the questions to be asked on the census to the "Census Board" whose members were the Se...

    Surviving population census records for free persons include census schedules for Alabama, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Dakota Territory, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas Territory, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska Territo...

    Yes. There are no schedules for: 1. Florida - Hernando County, where no census was taken 2. Louisiana - Bienville Parish 3. Mississippi - Hancock, Sunflower, Tallahatchie, and Washington Counties 4. Texas - Blanco County It is possible that individual census pages for other locations were lost before they were bound in volumes in the early 1900s.

    Digital images of National Archives Microfilm Publication M653, Eighth Census of the United States, 1860(1,438 rolls), are on popular genealogy websites, including Ancestry.com, FamilySearch.org, and others.

  3. Research genealogy for Bogislaw X (Illegimate) Duke of Pommerania of Slupsk, Koszalin, Poland, as well as other members of the Duke of Pommerania family, on Ancestry®.

  4. About Bogislaw X, Duke of Pomerania. Bogusław X Wielki Bogislaw X Herzog von Pommern-Wolgast (1) M, #114710, b. 3 June 1454, d. 5 October 1523. Last Edited=14 May 2009. Bogislaw X Herzog von Pommern-Wolgast was born on 3 June 1454. He was the son of Eric II Herzog von Pommern-Wolgast.

    • Darlowo, West Pomerania
    • West Pomerania
  5. Bogislaw was born in Rügenwalde (now Darłowo, Poland). His parents were Eric II, Duke of Pomerania -Wolgast, and Sophia of Pomerania, both members of the House of Pomerania . Bogislaw was first married to Margaret of Brandenburg and later to Anna, daughter of the Polish king Casimir IV Jagiellon. With his second wife he had eight children ...

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  7. Research genealogy for Bogislaw X "The Great" Duke of Pomerania-Stolp of Slupsk, Koszalin, Poland, as well as other members of the Pomerania-Stolp family, on Ancestry®.

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