South Dakota Non-Population Schedule Indexes: Fiche, Film, or Book

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1885

 * Mortality.

1880

 * Mortality. Ronald Vern Jackson, A.I.S. U.S. Census Indexes (on Microfiche) (Bountiful, Utah: Accelerated Indexing Systems, 1984). Search 8 indexes the 1880 U.S. census mortality schedules. Also in Ancestry.com online. For a resource guide to using the microfiche index, see Accelerated Indexing Systems U.S. Census Indexes (on Microfiche).

1870

 * Lost mortality schedules

1860

 * Mortality. Ronald Vern Jackson, A.I.S. U.S. Census Indexes (on Microfiche) (Bountiful, Utah: Accelerated Indexing Systems, 1984). Search 8 indexes the 1860 U.S. census mortality schedules. Also in Ancestry.com online. For a resource guide to using the microfiche index, see Accelerated Indexing Systems U.S. Census Indexes (on Microfiche).

1850

 * No white residents are believed to have existed in 1850 South Dakota. Residents of what is now South Dakota, theoretically would have been included as part of the 1850 census of Minnesota Territory." See William Thorndale, and William Dollarhide, Map Guide to the U.S. Federal Censuses, 1790-1920 (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing, 1987), pages 114, 170, and 259.

1840

 * No white residents are believed to have existed in 1840 South Dakota. Residents of what is now South Dakota, theoretically would have been included as part of the 1840 census of Iowa Territory in then "Clayton County." Only one resident of Clayton County (the county that theoretically included North and South Dakota) is listed as a veteran pensioner, John Lepper, age 79. He most likely lived in present-day northwestern Iowa, or southern Minnesota. See Thorndale and Dollarhide, pages 114, 170, and 259.