This transcription is copyright © 2003 Ian Watson. You are welcome to make extracts from this transcription for research purposes. You are welcome to download, copy, and repost this transcription for personal or non-commercial and non-profit purposes, providing that this introductory notice is included. Reproducing this transcription for for-profit purposes is expressly forbidden without permission from Ian Watson.
The transcription contains all of Warren County except for Glens Falls city, and the last eight pages of Warrensburg (pp. 336-344) where the microfilm was so blurry that transcription was impossible. If a better print of the film is available, it might be possible to complete that section. In total the transcription contains 16,116 names.
The transcription is not perfect and there are certainly errors. If you do not find the person you are looking for, particularly in Warrensburg, try looking under the last name "ILLEGIBLE".
I made the transcription in the mid-1980s when I was doing a lot of genealogical research on the Pasco family in Warren County.
A column-by-column description of the data in the transcription and a list of the relationship codes used follow.
Happy researching -- Ian Watson
1. Town name.
2. Page number. These are the machine stamped numbers, not the enumerator's numbering.
3. Beginning of household. An asterisk (*) in this box indicates the start of a new household. A hyphen (-) indicates the beginning of the continuation of a previous household.
4. Last name. If illegible, "ILLEGIBLE."
5. First name. Middle names and initials are included if present. If illegible, a sequence of four dashes (----).
6. Relationship to head of household. If illegible, a question mark (?). Standard relationship codes from the National Archives publication "The 1910 Federal Population Census" are used. See the list below.
7. Age. For those under 1 year old, age is listed in months plus "m", so "6m" = 6 months old. If illegible, a question mark (?). N/A means they wouldn't tell the enumerator.
8. Birthplace. If nothing is listed, birthplace is New York. Two-letter abbreviations are used for American states. Three-letter abbreviations are used for foreign countries, i.e. SWE for Sweden, CAN for Canada. If illegible, a question mark (?).
9. Comments, if any.
A | Aunt |
AdD | Adopted daughter |
AdS | Adopted son |
B | Brother |
BL | Brother-in-law |
Bo | Boarder |
C | Cousin |
Ck | Cook |
D | Daughter |
DL | Daughter-in-law |
F | Father |
FB | Foster brother |
FF | Foster father |
FL | Father-in-law |
FM | Foster mother |
FSi | Foster sister |
GA | Great aunt |
GD | Granddaughter |
GF | Grandfather |
GGF | Great-grandfather |
GGM | Great-grandmother |
GM | Grandmother |
GN | Grand nephew |
GNi | Grand niece |
GS | Grandson |
GU | Great uncle |
H | Husabnd |
Hh | Hired hand |
Hk | Houskeeper |
Hm | Hired man |
M | Mother |
ML | Mother-in-law |
N | Nephew |
Ni | Niece |
Nu | Nurse |
Pa | Partner |
R | Roomer |
S | Son |
SB | Step-brother |
SBL | Step-brother-in-law |
SD | Step-daughter |
SDL | Step-daughter-in-law |
Se | Servant |
SF | Step-father |
Si | Sister |
SiL | Sister-in-law |
SL | Son-in-law |
SM | Step-mother |
SML | Step-mother-in-law |
SS | Step-son |
SSi | Step-sister |
SSL | Step-son-in-law |
U | Uncle |
W | Wife |
Wd | Ward |