United States Census 1960

Background
Census day was Friday, 1 April, 1960. The 1960 census was the first to combine questions on population and housing on a single form. Census questionnaires were mailed to households in urban areas to complete themselves and were delivered to an enumerator. Households in rural areas were enumerated during a visit of a census enumerator.

The instructions for who was to be included on the household form were as follows: Please List: Please Be Sure to List: Also List - Persons who usually live here but who are away temporarily on business, on vacation, or in a general hospital. Do Not List - They will be counted there.
 * 1) Everyone who usually lives here, whether related to you or not.
 * 2) All persons staying here who have no other home.
 * All members of your family living with you, including babies.
 * All other relatives living here.
 * Lodgers and boarders living here.
 * Servants, hired hands, others not related to you who are living here.
 * Any one else staying here but who has no other home.
 * College students who are away at college (or who are here only on vacation).
 * Persons stationed away from here in the Armed Forces.
 * Persons away in institutions, such as a sanitarium, nursing home, home for the aged, mental hospital.

Release
According to law, the census is scheduled for public release on Thursday, 1 April 2032.

Forms
The form had two sections, population and housing. The main census form (the standard, or long form, designated form 60PH-17) was sixteen pages long and contained the following sections: The census short form asked five questions: relationship to head of household, age, sex, race, and marital status. Households in cities with populations over 50,000 were sent forms identified as PH-4. Persons living in areas with fewer persons were sent form PH-3.
 * 1) A list of all persons in the household (page 1)
 * 2) Questions on housing (pages 2-3)
 * 3) Questions for the head of household (pages 4-5)
 * 4) Questions for all other persons listed on page 1 (pages 6-7 for the second person, page 8-9 for the third person, etc.)


 * 1960 Enumeration Form, Integrated Public Use Microdata Series

Census Questions

 * IPUMS (Integrated Public Use Microdata Series): 1960 census questions