4 datasets found
  1. c

    Data from: Population of Counties, Towns, and Cities in the United States,...

    • archive.ciser.cornell.edu
    Updated Jan 1, 2020
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    Michael Fishman (2020). Population of Counties, Towns, and Cities in the United States, 1850 and 1860 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6077/gdqb-9f63
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 1, 2020
    Authors
    Michael Fishman
    Variables measured
    GeographicUnit
    Description

    This data collection contains information about the population of each county, town, and city of the United States in 1850 and 1860. Specific variables include tabulations of white, black, and slave males and females, and aggregate population for each town. Foreign-born population, total population of each county, and centroid latitudes and longitudes of each county and state were also compiled. (Source: downloaded from ICPSR 7/13/10)

    Please Note: This dataset is part of the historical CISER Data Archive Collection and is also available at ICPSR -- https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09424.v2. We highly recommend using the ICPSR version as they made this dataset available in multiple data formats.

  2. c

    Data from: Population of Counties, Towns, and Cities in the United States,...

    • archive.ciser.cornell.edu
    • icpsr.umich.edu
    • +1more
    Updated Feb 1, 2001
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    Michael Fishman (2001). Population of Counties, Towns, and Cities in the United States, 1850 and 1860 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6077/gdqb-9f63
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 1, 2001
    Authors
    Michael Fishman
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    GeographicUnit
    Description

    This data collection contains information about the population of each county, town, and city of the United States in 1850 and 1860. Specific variables include tabulations of white, black, and slave males and females, and aggregate population for each town. Foreign-born population, total population of each county, and centroid latitudes and longitudes of each county and state were also compiled. (Source: downloaded from ICPSR 7/13/10)

    Please Note: This dataset is part of the historical CISER Data Archive Collection and is also available at ICPSR -- https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09424.v2. We highly recommend using the ICPSR version as they made this dataset available in multiple data formats.

  3. f

    Supplementary Material for the article manuscript "More Complicated than...

    • figshare.com
    xlsx
    Updated Oct 4, 2024
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    Matthew Greer (2024). Supplementary Material for the article manuscript "More Complicated than Meal, Meat, and Molasses: Historicizing Enslaved Rations in the Southern United States" by Matthew C. Greer. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.27166176.v1
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    xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 4, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    figshare
    Authors
    Matthew Greer
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Southern United States, United States
    Description

    This is a dataset that includes information form 596 quotes about the rations enslaves issued to enslaved people in the Southern United States between the 1720s and the 1860s. These quotes come from 568 accounts by 533 formerly enslaved people, enslavers, travelers, and white abolitionists. Supplementary Table 1 contains data on corn rations, Supplementary Table 2 contains data on meat rations, and Supplementary Table 3 data on all other types of food issued to enslaved people. Four main types of sources were used to create this dataset. The first the 32 volumes of transcripts of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) interviews of formerly enslaved people in the 1930s (Library of Congress 2022). These were queried using a standardized set of keywords (beef, fish, flour, herring, meat, milk, molasses, peas, peck, potato, quart, rice, salt, syrup, and yam) and variations of these words (e.g., ’lasses, taters). Corn was only included in the dataset when a specific amount was discussed, so the most common units of measurement (peck and quart) were searched for rather than corn or cornmeal. Only references to foods that were definitively issued as rations were incorporated into the dataset. References to food that was only issued on special occasions or changes to rations during the Civil War were not included. Two accounts in the South Carolina WPA narratives are attributed to Jessie Sparrow (Quotes 341 and 342 in the dataset). The two accounts are different enough to suggest that they are not from the same woman. Therefore, they are listed as separate people in this dataset. The second set of sources is nineteenth-century accounts by formerly enslaved people and white abolitionists. These accounts were searched for the keywords corn and food as these two terms were ubiquitous in discussions of rations issued to enslaved people. The third set of sources is journals, diaries, published memoirs, personal papers, and agricultural journals (including American Cotton Planter and Soil of the South, The American Farmer, DeBows’s Review, Farmer’s Register, Southern Cultivator, and Southern Planter) written by enslavers and travelers. These were searched for the keywords corn, food, slave, and negro. Finally, references to rationing practices that are discussed in secondary sources but were not independently identified in the sources discussed above were included when available.

  4. A

    Southern Farms Study/ The 1860 Cotton Sample, 1977

    • abacus.library.ubc.ca
    text/x-fixed-field +1
    Updated Nov 19, 2009
    + more versions
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    Abacus Data Network (2009). Southern Farms Study/ The 1860 Cotton Sample, 1977 [Dataset]. https://abacus.library.ubc.ca/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=hdl:11272.1/AB2/UQW78H
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    txt(38381), text/x-fixed-field(6017428)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 19, 2009
    Dataset provided by
    Abacus Data Network
    Area covered
    United States, United States (US)
    Description

    This study presents 1860 data on population and farm production in 5,228 farms located in 405 major cotton-producing counties in the South. The data was compiled from the agriculture, slave, and population schedules of the 1860 United States manuscript Census. For each farm, variables describing farm land, machinery, crops, and livestock are included, as well as production figures for specific crops and types of livestock on the farm. The population variables tabulate the free and slave residents of each farm by sex, race, and age in five- or ten-year categories. This data set contains information of farm production and population residing on farms in the major cotton producing counties of the southern United States. Variables include: county code number; soil type in county; no. farms sampled in county; detailed commodity production of each farm, including acreage, value of farm and machinery, numbers of head of livestock, value of livestock, production of field crops, value of orchard products, wine production, value of market garden products, production of dairy products, production of 'textile' crops, value of home manufactures, value of animals slaughtered; numbers of farm residents by age categories, sex, and status, including free, slave, farm laborer, overseer, non-farm worker.

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Michael Fishman (2020). Population of Counties, Towns, and Cities in the United States, 1850 and 1860 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6077/gdqb-9f63

Data from: Population of Counties, Towns, and Cities in the United States, 1850 and 1860

Related Article
Explore at:
Dataset updated
Jan 1, 2020
Authors
Michael Fishman
Variables measured
GeographicUnit
Description

This data collection contains information about the population of each county, town, and city of the United States in 1850 and 1860. Specific variables include tabulations of white, black, and slave males and females, and aggregate population for each town. Foreign-born population, total population of each county, and centroid latitudes and longitudes of each county and state were also compiled. (Source: downloaded from ICPSR 7/13/10)

Please Note: This dataset is part of the historical CISER Data Archive Collection and is also available at ICPSR -- https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09424.v2. We highly recommend using the ICPSR version as they made this dataset available in multiple data formats.

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