US Census >> 1790 >> Census Data
Census data included the name of the head of the family and categorized inhabitants as follows: free white males at least 16 years of age (to assess the country’s industrial and military potential), free white males under 16 years of age, free white females, all other free persons (reported by sex and color), and slaves. Under the direction of the current Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, marshals collected data from all thirteen states (Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Virginia), from the districts and territories that would become the states of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Maine, and from the state of Vermont, which, although it had already been functioning as a state since 1777, was not admitted to the union until March 1791.
Although the Census was proved statistically factual, based on data collected, the records for many states (including: Delaware, Georgia, New Jersey, and Virginia) were lost sometime between 1790 and 1830. Almost one third of the original census data has been lost or destroyed since its original documentation. This includes the data from: Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Vermont; however, the validity and existence of most of this data can be confirmed in many secondary sources pertaining to the first census.
| District | Free white males of 16 years and upward, including heads of families. | Free white males under 16 years. | Free white females, including heads of families. | All other free persons. | Slaves. | Total. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vermont | 22,435 | 22,328 | 40,505 | 255 | 16a | 85,539b |
| New Hampshire | 36,086 | 34,851 | 70,160 | 630 | 158 | 141,885 |
| Maine | 24,384 | 24,748 | 46,870 | 538 | 0 | 96,540 |
| Massachusetts | 95,453 | 87,289 | 190,582 | 5,463 | 0 | 378,787 |
| Rhode Island | 16,019 | 15,799 | 32,652 | 3,407 | 948 | 68,825 |
| Connecticut | 60,523 | 54,403 | 117,448 | 2,808 | 2,764 | 237,946 |
| New York | 83,700 | 78,122 | 152,320 | 4,654 | 21,324 | 340,120 |
| New Jersey | 45,251 | 41,416 | 83,287 | 2,762 | 11,423 | 184,139 |
| Pennsylvania | 110,788 | 106,948 | 206,363 | 6,537 | 3,737 | 434,373 |
| Delaware | 11,783 | 12,143 | 22,384 | 3,899 | 8,887 | 59,094c |
| Maryland | 55,915 | 51,339 | 101,395 | 8,043 | 103,036 | 319,728 |
| Virginia | 110,936 | 116,135 | 215,046 | 12,866 | 292,627 | 747,610 |
| Kentucky | 15,154 | 17,057 | 28,922 | 114 | 12,430 | 73,677 |
| North Carolina | 69,988 | 77,506 | 140,710 | 4,975 | 100,572 | 393,751 |
| South Carolina | 35,576 | 37,722 | 66,880 | 1,801 | 107,094 | 249,073 |
| Georgia | 13,103 | 14,044 | 25,739 | 398 | 29,264 | 82,548 |
| Total | 807,094 | 791,850 | 1,541,263 | 59,150 | 694,280 | 3,893,635 |
a: The census of 1790, published in 1791,
reports 16 slaves in Vermont. Subsequently, and up to 1860, the number
is given as 17. An examination of the original manuscript shows that
there never were any slaves in Vermont. The original error occurred in
preparing the results for publication, when 16 persons, returned as
"Free colored," were classified as "Slave."
b: Corrected figures are 85,425, or 114 less
than the figures published in 1790, due to an error of addition in the
returns for each of the towns of Fairfield, Milton, Shelburne, and
Williston, in the county of Chittenden; Brookfield, Newbury, Randolph,
and Strafford, in the county of Orange; Castleton, Clarendon, Hubbardton,
Poultney, Rutland, Shrewsburg, and Wallingford, in the county of
Rutland; Dummerston, Guilford, Halifax, and Westminster, in the county
of Windham; and Woodstock, in the county of Windsor.
c: Corrected figures are 59,096, or 2 more than
figures published in 1790, due to error in addition
...