Hi Cheryl, Middlesex Co., NJ was my home for many years and is the focal point of my research. I know it well, and while I'd love to help (I'd done some Hazell lookups for you previously), the task is daunting. In 1910, Middlesex County included not five, but between 20-25 towns/boroughs totaling more than 114,000 people- roughly 2,300 pages of census data. To simplify the task, you might query the RootsWeb Middlesex Co. board to see if anyone has the only 1910 NJ Census index I'm aware of- HeritageQuest CD #5057- or you may be able to get that index through an interlibrary loan: if you can narrow down the search, I'll dig the info out for you. If you've no luck finding anyone w/ the index, there are other possibilities: if you live in the U.S., I might be able to direct you a research facility in your area that has or has access to the census, and of course, you can rent the census films fm any FHL. Regards, Dick in Princeton NJ =========================================== > Hi everyone, > > I'm putting out a plea to the list. I would really like to get some info off > of the 1910 U.S. census for Middlesex County, New Jersey. I don't know which > borough, but there are only 5 listed. I don't have a subscription to the > census and am at my wit's end because I know that just beyond lies the > answers to many of the questions which remain blanks on my Hazell and > Ollivierre family tree. I confess I don't have a credit card with which to > subscribe to Ancestry.com for the census. They don't even take cheques or > money orders!!!!! It's so frustrating....... > > So my plea is: Is there anyone on our list who has the heart and the time to > please look up the names Newton Ollivierre and Jane (Kydd) Ollivierre? They > also had a son named Griffith who may or may not be listed along with them > since I don't know his birthdate. > > Could there also be a way to share the census? I know that people pay money > to get access to it. But could there be a way to have less financially > fortunate list members access this info? Maybe a password protected area of > the internet? Even as I write this, it sounds illegal to me, but is it > really or is it public domain?