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For related materials, see our Research Guide to Special Federal Census Schedules for Connecticut and State Archives Record Group 029, Military Census of 1917.
1669/1670
"Grain Inventory for Hartford, Wethersfield, and Windsor". This inventory
includes the names of the head of the household and the number of family members,
as well as the number of bushels of wheat and Indian corn held by each family.
It has been published in The Wyllys Papers, Collections of the Connecticut
Historical Society, volume 21 (1924), pp. 190-199 [CSL call number HistRef
F 91 .C7 vol. 21].
A more complete listing of Connecticut's inhabitants ca. 1670 is found in:
Holbrook, Jay Mack. Connecticut 1670 Census. Oxford, Mass.: Holbrook Research Institute, 1977 [CSL call number HistRef F 93 .H73 1977a Mfiche]. This reconstruction, based on tax, land, church, freeman, and probate records for the period 1667-1673, includes the names of about 2,300 individuals.
Other 17th Century Enumerations1756
"An Account of the Number of Inhabitants as returned in 1756." This is the
first census of the colony considered to be fairly reliable and covers all six
of the counties then in existence. It includes the number of "inhabitants" in
each town by race (whites, "Negroes", and "Indians"). The schedule is printed
in the Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut, volume 14, p. 492
[CSL call number HistRef ConnDoc G25 1772/75] and in A Century of Population
Growth, p. 164 [CSL call number HistRef HA 214 .A5].
1762
This census was taken by the selectmen of the colony's sixty-eight towns.
The letter ordering the compilation is found in the Trumbull Papers,
volume 2, document 7, pages "a" and "b". The resolution providing that selectmen
of each town report the number of men in each training company appears in
Connecticut Archives: Militia, Second Series, document 332.
A copy of the actual census is in the Ezra Stiles Miscellaneous Papers, number 299, at the Beinecke Library, Yale University. A contemporary manuscript copy is at the Connecticut Historical Society, 1 Elizabeth St., Hartford, CT 06105.
For an article describing this census and a reproduction of the census tables, see:
This is a statistical census. It shows the total numbers of males under ten years, females under ten years; males between ten and twenty years (and whether married or single); females between ten and twenty years (and whether married or single); males between twenty and seventy (and whether married or single); females between twenty and seventy (and whether married or single); males above seventy; "Negro" males under twenty; "Negro" females under twenty; "Negro" males above twenty; Indian males under twenty; Indian females under twenty; Indian males above twenty; Indian females above twenty; and total number of "whites" and "blacks" (i.e., the combined total of "Negroes" and "Indians").
The schedules have been printed in the Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut, volume 14, pp. 483-491 and A Century of Population Growth, pp. 166-169 [CSL call number HistRef HA 214 .A5].
1776The form of the enumeration schedule is shown in Connecticut Archives: Revolutionary War, First Series, volume IV, document 111, page "a". Ebenezer Watson's bill for printing the resolve is found on document 328, pages "a" and "b" of the same volume. Most of the actual schedules do not appear to have survived, but scattered references to the returns from individual towns include:
The Trumbull Papers, volume IX, document 236, pages "a" - "d" includes "An Account of the Inhabitants in the Several Towns in the State of Connecticut, in years 177[ ] and 1779 with Increase & Decrease". This document lists the total population for 177[ ] by town and county but does not break down the population by age, sex, or race. The population of Westmoreland in 177[ ] is also listed. In Connecticut Sources for Family Historians [CSL call number HistRef Z 1265 .S67 F93], author Kip Sperry does not indicate that the final digit is missing and gives the year of the 177[ ] census as 1776. The totals for the population given for each town in the 177[ ] census do not match the totals for 1774, while the total population figure for Middletown given in the 177[ ] census does match the Middletown total provided in the schedule printed in The History of Middlesex County. This suggests that the figures provided in the Trumbull Papers are, in fact, the population totals for each town from the missing 1776 census.
State Census Enumerations and Substitutes1779
“Return giving an account of the names of the families; number of persons
in each family; number of bushels of wheat, and other grain; weight of flour
and meal, etc., in the East Society in Norwich, Conn., April 29, 1779, made
according to the Act of the General Court of Connecticut in April 1779” [CSL
call number Main Vault 973.3 A28]. This seems to be a surviving fragment of
the 1779 grain census.
For a copy of the act entitled, “AN Act for ascertaining the Quantity of Grain, Flour and Meal in this State and thereof to make provision for an immediate Supply of Bread for the Army and the necessitous inhabitants of the State, and for securing other necessary articles for the Army, see Records of the State of Connecticut, Volume II (1778-1780), pages 224-227 [CSL call number HistRef ConnDoc G 25 1776 v. 2].
See also “An Account of the Inhabitants in the Several Towns in the State of Connecticut, in years 177[ ] and 1779 with Increase & Decrease” in the Trumbull Papers, volume IX, document 236, pages “a” - “d” described under 1776, above, which provides population figures for each town from the 1776 and 1779 censuses.
1782
"A return of the Number of inhabitants in the State of
Connecticut, February 1, 1782; and also of the Indians and Negroes." The
original manuscript, found in the Trumbull Papers, volume XXIV, document
178, includes totals for each town for the number of males above 50 years of
age; males above 16 and under 50; males under 16; females; and "Blacks", i.e.,
the combined total of "Indians" and "Negroes". A
printed summary is in the
State Library's Broadside collection.
1798
1798 Direct Tax of Connecticut. This document is located at the
Connecticut Historical Society.
For further information, please contact that institution.
1821
School Census of Glastonbury, Connecticut. This census is used as an illustration
of a school census on pages 113 and 122 of The Source, edited by Arlene
Eakle and Johni Cerni [CSL call number HistRef CS 49 .S65 1984]. However, the
example is misleading as this document covers only the First School Society
of Glastonbury. The original manuscript is in the State Library's Main Vault
[CSL call number 974.62 G46s], but it has been microfilmed by the Genealogical
Society of Utah and should be available through
LDS Family History Centers.
Prepared by the History and Genealogy Unit, Connecticut State Library, 11-96.