 |
Geraldine Keener (“Jeri”)
Crow and
Judson O. (“Bud”) Crow |
So you'll really appreciate the efforts
of Bud and Jeri Crow, we want to give you an idea of what they went
through to amass the information in First Families of Cliffside.
(See related articles from the Daily Courier here and here.)
To begin, they purchased a reel of microfilm containing Rutherford
County's 1910 Federal Census. On the reel the information is grouped
by township. Within each township the data are grouped by voting precincts.
They focused only on the Cliffside precinct. Each frame for that precinct
contains a page from the original book in which the census taker recorded—in
1910, in her own handwriting—details of Cliffside's 2,118 citizens.
 |
One of the many types
of microfilm readers. |
Microfilm is not much good without a “reader” or projector
to view the 35mm film. So the Crows bought a reader, set it up in
their
home, and over the next decade studied and transcribed the film
frame by frame. Each frame (or page) of film contains the data for
dozens
of people.
 |
| A sample of a frame showing a page from the Cliffside
1910 census. |
As you can tell from the sample, it can be a much more difficult process
than simply copying what you see, for, in many cases, it's hard to tell
what you're seeing. Naturally you have to decipher the handwriting,
which, with Miss Melton's fairly readable hand, wasn't all that difficult.
But a major problem was the condition of the film. They were plagued
by film scratches, focus problems, the aging of the paper itself, etc.
Nonetheless, the Crows spent hundreds of hours, interspersed with their
other research projects and family life, peering at the reader screen—deciphering,
interpreting, confirming. Finally, in 1991 they had it all down, in
a computer spreadsheet where they could sort, analyze, graph and print
the material.
And thus the book.
There is considerably more information in the book about each individual
than is included in this online version. The book includes the following
additional data fields (which may or may not have been filled in by
the enumerator).
- A number representing each house in order of visitation
- A number representing each family in order of visitation
- Number of years of present marriage
- Mother of how many children born
- Number of children living
- Place of birth of a person
- Place of birth of the father of a person
- Place of birth of the mother of a person
- Whether able to speak English; or, if not, the language
spoken
- Whether an employer, employee, or working on own account
- If an employee, whether out of work on April 15, 1910
- If an employee, number of weeks out of work during year
1910
- Attended school any time since September 1, 1909
- Owned or rented
- Owned free or mortgaged
- Farm or house
- Number of farm schedule
- Whether a survivor of the Union or Confederate Army
or Navy
- Whether blind (both eyes)
- Whether deaf and dumb
|

The book cover
|
The book lists the households by visitation order, whereas
this online version is in house number order. With the book,
for those households with missing address elements, you can, with
some degree of accuracy, place them in proximity to known addresses
by following the enumerator's path of visitation. You might, for example,
deduce that you grandpa probably lived in a particular house
on a particular street, even though the enumerator didn't record the
full address.
Are the Crows planning a book on the 1920 census? Not likely, they
say. The handwriting for the Cliffside precinct that year is practically
unreadable.
If you'd like to consult the book, contact your local library; they
may have a copy. If you'd care to own a copy, email the webmaster
for details on how to contact the Crows.