United States Census Figures Back to 1630

audiobook

United States Census Figures Back to 1630

by United States. Bureau of the Census

EN·~27 hours·2 chapters

Chapters

2 total
1

A Few Words About These United States Population Statistics.

5:43
2

***BYEAR = BASE YEAR ***AYEAR = A YEAR IN COMPARISON TO THE BASE YEAR - BASE YEAR: 1991 - YEAR BYEAR/AYEAR AYEAR/BYEAR GROWTH%

27:05:09

Description

This volume offers a thorough, year‑by‑year accounting of United States population figures, stretching back to the early colonial era and continuing through contemporary estimates. The author relies on official Census Bureau data for years up to 1992, averaging multiple sources where needed, and then projects growth at a steady 1 % annual rate based on the two‑decade trend from 1972‑1992. Each entry is anchored to the Census’s standard July 1 reporting date, with clear footnotes documenting the raw sources.

Beyond raw numbers, the book explains how to treat these statistics much like price‑index tables, adjusting for demographic change when evaluating education, economic, or social trends. Simple comparison tables let listeners see, for example, how a 1991 figure must be scaled to match 1981 data, revealing the hidden impact of population growth on apparent progress. The guide also warns against taking headline percentages at face value without these adjustments.

Designed for researchers, students, and anyone curious about America’s demographic history, the work’s layout makes it easy to locate a “base year” and pull comparative data across centuries. Practical examples illustrate how to translate raw counts into meaningful, “real‑terms” insights, turning raw census tables into a usable tool for informed analysis.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~27 hours (1565K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

1994-03-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

US

United States. Bureau of the Census

A cornerstone of American public life, this federal agency turns population counts and economic surveys into the data that shape representation, funding, and planning across the country. Its story stretches from the first national census in 1790 to the modern statistical work behind hundreds of surveys each year.

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