Search This Title: | |
---|---|
Record Creator: | King County Government, Auditor |
Description: | These records contain an index and images of the King County census recorded in 1877. Information collected in this census includes the names of each member of the household and the following categories: Age at last birthday; Sex – Males, Females; Color – White, Black, Mulatto, Chinese, Taxable Halfbreed Indian, Kanakas; Occupation; Married; Unmarried; Place of birth; Father of foreign birth; Mother of foreign birth; If born within the year state month; If married within the year state month; Attended school within the year; Cannot read; Cannot write; Whether deaf and dumb, blind, insane, or idiotic; Male citizens of U. S. of 21 years of age and upwards. According to An Act to Establish the Territorial Government of Washington passed in 1853 by the Thirty-Second Congress of the United States, a census must be performed prior to holding an election for non-appointed members of the territorial legislature. Per An Act to Authorize the Assessors of Each County to Take the Census in the Statutes of the Territory of Washington enacted in 1854, each county’s assessor must take a census of their respective county’s inhabitants on or before the first Monday in December each year. The assessor was required to create a complete list of all white male inhabitants, with their ages, occupations, the state or county they are from, whether married or single, and also, whether citizens or aliens. Also, all white female inhabitants with their ages, whether married or single, and the county or state they are from. A separate list of all taxable “half-breed Indians”, “negroes”, “kanakas”, “mulattoes”, and “chinamen” was also required. Enacted in 1869, An Act Relating to County Assessors required the assessors were to collect that same information with the census completed and returned to the county auditor by the first Monday of May. By 1871, An Act to Amend an Act Relating to County Assessors required the census be taken biennially. The 1871 census was the last annual census with the next census to be recorded in 1873. A final act relating to censuses was passed in 1877. An Act to Provide for Taking the Census of the Territory of Washington required assessors to take a full complete and correct census of the inhabitants, comprising a full and complete list. The required information to be collected was the same as An Act to Authorize the Assessors of Each County to Take the Census passed in 1854, with the addition of a section to collect a count of all persons “deaf, dumb and blind.” |
Related Records: | For more information or to learn about related records, contact the Washington State Archives, Puget Sound Regional Branch at (425) 564-3940 or email psbrancharchives@sos.wa.gov. |
Access Restriction Notes: | These records are open for research. |
Sources of Transfer | Museum of History & Industry |
Notes | Microfilm census material held by Washington State Archives, Olympia.
Digitized by the Washington State Archives Imaging and Preservation Services through a grant with the National Historical Records and Preservation Commission (NHPRC). Indexed by volunteers through the Washington State Historical Records Project. |
Agency History: | King County was created in 1852 from Thurston County by the Oregon Territorial Legislature. Originally named after Vice President Rufus King, the county was renamed by the Washington State Legislature in 2005 in honor of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The county seat is Seattle. |
Preferred Citation: | [Identification of item], 1877, King County Census, King County Territorial Auditor, Washington State Archives, Digital Archives, http://digitalarchives.wa.gov, [date accessed]. |
Record Count: | 3,739 |