Thanks.... I actually found the street I was looking for by accident in the 1920 census, I was so excited. I even found some other families with the same last name as my grandfather and my great-grandmothers maiden name a street or 2 over, and I remember when I was a little girl my grandfather telling me that there were cousins who lived across the street. I think I found them! Now I want to look at the 1910 census, my grandfather was born near the end of that year (so he won't be listed) but maybe I can find just my great grand parents before they had kids and maybe more cousins. And yes they changed the districts between censuses, its not the same number for 1910. I looked under the same number and nope not it. Thanks for your help Michelle Roots Webmaster <roots@bfn.org> wrote in message news:GpJrBp.6tC@freenet.buffalo.edu... > > I suspect that there is no way to do this online, unless an individual or > organization has acquired and scanned online the Philadelphia ED maps. If > all else fails, contact the public library in Philadelphia and ask if they > can provide the ED for you. Be sure to indicate which census year because > in my experience, enumeration district boundaries were usually redrawn for > every census. > > Hope this helps! > > On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Trevelyan wrote: > > > I am looking for the Enumeration District in Philadelphia for Brown & 27th > > Streets, and so far I have had no luck finding it... how do I find what ward > > it is in? is there a website which shows the wards or districts? > > > > any help would be absolutely appreciated > > > > Thanks in advance > > > > Michelle > > > > > > > > > > -=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=- > Webmaster: Cynthia Van Ness, MLS -- roots@bfn.org > Roots: The Buffalo NY Genealogy Forum -- http://www.bfn.org/~roots > With obits, vital records, city directories & hundreds of local links > >