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The U.S. Decennial Census of Population and Housing from an Archival Perspective. Thomas E. Brown U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Archival values . Evidential value
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The U.S. Decennial Census of Population and Housing from an Archival Perspective Thomas E. Brown U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
Archival values • Evidential value • “evidence of the organization, functions, policies, decisions, procedures, operations, or other activities of the Government” • Informational value • “because of the informational value of the data contained therein”
1942: Schedules for 1790-1870 • Background: • 1790-1870 publicly available • Census Bureau moving to a new building • Microfilming completed • Appraisal: established value to historians, sociologists, economists, genealogists, and general public.
1952: Appraisal of Microfilm • Background: • NARS microfilming 1950 Census schedules • Volume of paper schedules growing • Statutory restrictions expires after 50 years • Appraisal: • Microfilm in place of paper • Loss of information on microfilm • Issue: Transfer date because restrictions
Restriction Question • Statutory restrictions expire after 50 years unless the Archivist extends • Archivist offer to extend Census restriction before Congress • Why 72 years? • Longest extension that would open the 1880 Census immediately
Congressional Approval of 72-Year Rule • FOSDIC eliminated post-Census microfilming • 1890 Census in 1962: non-issue • 1900 Census in 1972 • Census objected • Attorney General backed NARS • Congress backed NARS • 1980 Census forms • Statistical Confidentiality Act of 2002
1979: Appraisal of Data Files • Census microdata files • Appraisal: “overall informational value is formidable” • Public Use Microdata Samples (PUMS) & Summary Tape Files (STFs) • Appraisal: “conveniently prepared according to geographic characteristics which . . . enhances the informational value”
2000: Appraisal of ICRF and Images • Replacement of FOSDIC • Digital images • Individual Census Record File • Standard data file in ASCII • First time names in digital Census files • Basic records of the Census • Destroy paper and scanned images
Opposition to Disposal of Images • Congressman Waxman • Historical series 1790-1990 • Marginalia • Inaccurate scanning • Images removed from records schedule • ICRF: “very significant secondary value for future genealogical, historical, statistical, economic and demographic research”
Resubmission of Images for Appraisal • On the Census 2000 Comprehensive Records Schedule • Public Comments • Two Congressmen • Five social scientists • Six genealogists • Echoed Congressman Waxman
NARA Appraisal of Images • ICRF: Basic records from Census 2000 • Practical considerations • 700 million page images • increase Archives holdings by 17.5% • 430 million pages images blank • estimated 60 terabytes ($5.3-$10.5 million annually) • revised estimate: 160 terabytes
Resolution • Withdrew images from the comprehensive records schedule • Reauthorization of NHPRC • Third records schedule: images permanent
Denouement • NARA lacked capability to preserve images • Solution: Computer Output Microfilm (COM) • New schedule: images temporary, COM permanent • In 2072, NARA will digitized microfilm if desired
Conclusion • Most cost effective contemporary formats • 1942: Paper • 1952: Microfilm • 1979: Magnetic computer tapes • Inconsistent standards • 1952: Accepted data loss • 2000: Any data loss unacceptable