I have used US Census reports
many, many times. I have also used Irish census reports. Both taught me a
wealth of information about my family’s branches. For the first time I have information
form the Hungarian Census.
The
Census.
According to Ancestry: The 1869 Census is a “people” census, attempting to enumerate all individuals of all religions, regardless of property ownership. The Census was created by the Hungarian Government. The broad scope of the census makes it particularly valuable for genealogical research. The census was mainly recorded in the Magyar (Hungarian) language, though census records from some areas may also include other languages such as Slovak.
The census is available in the LDS' Family History Library Catalog catalog as Place (Hungary), Topic (Hungary-1869 Census). The microfilms present the towns in alphabetical order of their current Slovak name, with the Hungarian name (under which the records were created) in parenthesis.
My
Family.
My maternal
grandfather was Nathaniel Gardner, son of Leopold Gartner and grandson of
Markusz Gartner. My 2x grandfather and family are in the 1869 census in Tokaj,
Hungary. The census gives me birthdates for the family and the names of his
children.
Census Notes
Mark Gertner b
1826 Markusz
Gartner b Dukla, Poland
Devorah Horn
Gertner b 1838 married
in Dukla, Poland
Children: Oldest
children born in Dukla, Poland
Leib b 1853 Leopold;
birthdate varies in other records
Hani b 1860
Hirsch b 1861
Laban b 1862 Solomon
Herm b 1862 Hermina
Izrael b 1864, Tokaj
born
Tokaj, Hungary
Jakob b 1868 born
Tokaj, Hungary
With
Thanks.
Thanks to Robert J. Friedmanfrom Steps to the Past LLC. Robert is a professional genealogist who has been
researching my Gartner roots for me. He is a member of the Association ofProfessional Genealogists. The census report is just a tiny portion of the
information he has uncovered for me.
Source:
Népszámlálás,
1869 (1869 Census) of Zemplén megye (Zemplén County), Tokaj, Tokaj district,
house no. 423, p. 184-185, Mark Gärtner and family; Magyar Országos Levéltár
(Hungarian National Archives), Budapest,Hungary; FHL microfilm 720008.
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My family has been in this country so long that I have not been able to trace them back to Europe. I have never had to try to figure out census records or other records for another country.
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