For anyone trying to figure out which Enumeration District to look in to find your ancestor that may be in the United States census in 1940, use this site: http://stevemorse.org/census/unified.html Once you have the correct number, you only have to browse the images in that set, which usually not that many. Each district was assigned to one enumerator. In cities and towns, they were given 2 weeks to complete the census, in rural areas a month was given. So, that is why each district is fairly small. Dwayne
Thank you very much Dwayne. I used the link this AM and found a very important person, Me. bob gillis On 4/3/2012 9:23 PM, Dwayne Meisner wrote: > For anyone trying to figure out which Enumeration District to look in to > find your ancestor that may be in the United States census in 1940, use this > site: http://stevemorse.org/census/unified.html Once you have the correct > number, you only have to browse the images in that set, which usually not > that many. Each district was assigned to one enumerator. In cities and > towns, they were given 2 weeks to complete the census, in rural areas a > month was given. So, that is why each district is fairly small. >