Two Nations Celebrate in Dozens of Concurrent
News Conferences
SALT LAKE CITY — In honor of Family History Month, The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints 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.
The online availability of the two censuses was announced by President Gordon
B. Hinckley in the historic Tabernacle on Temple Square in Salt Lake City with
the Mormon Tabernacle Choir singing "O Canada" and "The
Star-Spangled Banner." Dozens of other press conferences were held across
Canada and the United States, from Edmonton to Toronto and from Los Angeles to
Washington, D.C., making this the largest family history announcement in the
history of the Church.
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. Elder D. Todd Christofferson, executive director
of the Family and Church History Department, said: "People used to search
through rolls and rolls of microfilm with varying degrees of success. Now with
just a few keystrokes, they can search through millions of records from anywhere
at anytime."
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 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."
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.