Enrollment options
Optional Course Print Material: American: Occupational Records
*Course material will only be sent to students who are registered in the course.
Genealogy and the study of family history are more than just the gathering of names and dates. To understand our ancestor, we must look at all aspects of their life, including what they did for a living. This course will focus on occupational records and what they can reveal about our ancestor’s lives.
To learn more about an individual’s occupation the researcher must utilize more than one record. Once the researcher has searched familiar records like the census, city directories, and newspapers, they must continue on with archival records that may document the ancestor’s specific occupation and activities surrounding that occupation. This requires the researcher to access data from many different sources and then analyzes the data to gain the most complete picture of an individual and their occupation or life’s work.
Course Length: 7 weeksMODULE 1
GENERAL DISCUSSION
Resources and Repositories
FamilySearch and the Family History Library
National Archives and Records Administration & their Regional
Branches
Library of Congress
Terminology
MODULE 2
CENSUS SCHEDULES
United States Federal Census Schedules
Census Schedules 1790-1840
Census Schedule 1850 -1930
Agriculture Schedule 1850-1880
Industry or Manufacturer Schedule 1850-1880
Social Statistics Schedule 1850-1870
Slave Schedules 1850-1860
Schedules by Year: Population and Non-Population Schedules
MODULE 3
RECORDS TYPES
Directories
Business Directories
MODULE 4
BUSINESS RECORDS - EMPLOYER, EMPLOYEE, OWNERS
Corporation and Business Records
Labor Unions
MODULE 5
RAILROADS, PHYSICIANS, LAWYERS AND THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
Railroads
Lawyers and Judges
Physicians
Federal Employees
MODULE 6
BUILDING A PROFILE OF AN INDIVIDUAL’S “WORKING LIFE”
Building a Profile with a Focus on Occupation