|
- Common U. S. Surnames - Census. gov
Find the most frequently occurring last names or surnames in the United States as tabulated from some of the last few Censuses of Population and Housing
- Most Popular Surnames in the United States - Census. gov
The country’s 1,000 most common surnames by race and Hispanic origin and those that occurred 100 or more times in the 2010 Census
- New Data on Detailed Languages Spoken - Census. gov
This release provides data on over 500 individual languages and language groups spoken across the country during the five-year period from 2017 to 2021
- August 2023: The Wizard of Oz - Census. gov
One reason The Wizard of Oz has remained so popular among adults and children is the movie's contrast between the black and white segments and color photography in the Land of Oz Theater-goers were awed by the movie's brilliant colors, but when CBS first televised the movie on November 3, 1956, very few households owned a color television
- Homeschooling on the Rise During COVID-19 Pandemic
Homeschooling is a legal instructional option in all 50 states and national homeschooling rates grew rapidly from 1999 to 2012 but had since remained steady at around 3 3% However, the global COVID-19 pandemic has sparked new interest in homeschooling and the appeal of alternative school arrangements has suddenly exploded So, how significantly have homeschooling rates increased during the
- 2020 U. S. Population More Racially, Ethnically Diverse Than in 2010
2020 Census results released today allow us to measure the nation’s racial and ethnic diversity and how it varies at different geographic levels
- Census Surname Data
Census Bureau has embarked on a names list project involving a tabulation of names from the Census of Population
- 1950 Census Records: A Window to History
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is set to release individual records of everyone counted in the 1950 Census April 1, following a mandatory 72-year waiting period The 1950 Census opens a window into one of the most transformative periods in modern American history, revealing a country of roughly 151 million people who had just recently emerged from the hardships and
|
|
|