Oklahoma Census

Additional Information may be found on the United States Census Portal page.

Historical Background
Many special censuses were taken in Oklahoma, especially censuses of Indians. For more information about these, see the Special Censuses section. For information on censuses of specific Indian Tribes, see Indians of Oklahoma.

In 1819 Arkansas Territory (including most of what is now Oklahoma) was created from the southern part of the Missouri Territory.

1820. Some general white settlememt had started in what is now the far southeast corner of Oklahoma.undefined They were counted on the census of Miller County, Arkansas, which included parts of what is now Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. But these population schedules are lost.1

In 1828 the western boundary of Arkansas was established, separating the Indian Territory (to become Oklahoma) from what had been Arkansas Territory and including part of the southern edge of what had been Missouri Territory.2

At first, some white settlers departed when the area was set aside for the Indians. After Indian government proved effective, more whites began to settle in Indian Territory.

1830-1850. No other federal censuses were taken in present-day Oklahoma in 1830, 1840, or 1850.

1860. The non-Indians of what is now Oklahoma were counted in 1860 in what were called the Indian Lands of Arkansas Territory.3 This census does not list Indians, but lists free and slave inhabitants in the Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole nations. The slave schedules provide the names of slave owners, but not the names of slaves.

1870. No census available.

1880. All non-Indian and most Indian schedules are lost. Only the Cherokee Indian schedules survive.4

1890. The population schedules were destroyed. The special census of Civil War Union veterans and widows survives for both the Oklahoma and Indian Territories.5

In addition to the federal censuses, a separate census was taken in 1890 of the Oklahoma Territory. Censuses exist for Logan, Oklahoma, Cleveland, Canadian, Kingfisher, Payne and Beaver counties. This includes information on the entire household but is incomplete for some areas.

1900. Oklahoma was split between Indian Territory to the southeast, and Oklahoma Territory to the northwest on the 1900 census. The following map shows modern county boundaries and the division between Indian and Oklahoma territories.

In 1907 Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory combined to become the state of Oklahoma.

'''1910, 1920, and 1930. ''' Federal censuses of Oklahoma are available, and have been indexed for each of these years.

Internet
1860. To search an index of the Arkansas Territory "Indian Lands" (now Oklahoma) non-Indian population schedules for free at the Family History Library on Ancestry.com, click here. You can also search the same index on a home computer if you click here, but you will be asked to subscribe to see the search results list.

If you find a name in this Internet index you can click "View Image" to see a picture of the actual passenger list page including the home town of each emigrant, and his or her relatives on the same ship.

To browse census images at the Family History Library, click here. To browse at home with a subscription, click here.

1880. 

Microfilm
1860. The "Indian Lands" (Oklahoma) non-Indian population schedules are at the very end of FHL film 803054 (M653 roll 52) after Yell County, Arkansas.3 This census and a published index are available at the National Archives — Southwest Region, the Oklahoma Historical Society, and the Family History Library.

1880. The Cherokee Nation 1880 census covering the Canadian, Cooweescoowee, Delaware, Flint, Going Snake, Illinois, Saline, Sequoyah and Tahlequah districts is for Indians only. Also includes census rolls of various years of Delaware Indians holding citizenship in the Cherokee Nation. FHL film 989204. Indexed on the Internet.4

1890. The Civil War Union veterans and their widows schedules are on FHL film 338235 (M123 roll 76).5

The First Territorial Census of Oklahoma, 1890 is on FHL film 227,282 (M1811, roll 1). A card index is available at the Oklahoma State Historical Society. A helpful source for locating families in this census is Smith's First Directory of Oklahoma Territory: For the Year Commencing August 1st, 1890 (see the “Directories” section of this Oklahoma Wiki article)

1900.  All populiation schedules for Indians and non-Indians are available on FHL films 241335-44 (T623, rolls 1843-54).6

1910. Indian and non-Indian schedules are on FHL films 1375255-90 (T624, rolls 1242-77).7

1920. Indian and non-Indian schedules are on FHL films 1821451-90 (T625, rolls 1451-90).8

1930. Indian and non-Indian schedules are on FHL films 2341626-72 (T626, rolls 1892-1938).9

Many of the federal census records are found at the Family History Library, the National Archives, and other federal and state archives. The "Census" section of the United States Research Outline provides more detailed information regarding these federal records.

Indexes
1880. The Cherokee Nation 1880 Indian census is indexed on the Internet at www.accessgenealogy.com/native/cherokeecensus.php 4

Web Sites
Ancestry: http://www.ancestry.com

Heritage Quest Online: http://www.heritagequestonline.com

Census Online: http://www.census-online.com/links/OK/

Genealogy Today: http://dir.genealogytoday.com/usa/ok/census.html

Access Genealogy: http://www.accessgenealogy.com/census/oklahoma.htm

Endnotes

 * 1) William Thorndale and William Dollarhide, Map Guide to the U.S. Federal Censuses, 1790-1920 (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing, 1987), 275.
 * 2) Ibid., 275-76.
 * 3) Ibid., 276, and The 1790-1890 Federal Population Censuses: Catalog of National Archives Microfilm, rev. ed. (Washington, DC: National Archives Trust Fund Board, 1993), 26.
 * 4) Thorndale and Dollarhide, 277, and Family History Library Catalog entry for the title "Cherokee census rolls, 1880".
 * 5) Anne Bruner Eales, and Robert M. Kvasnicka, Guide to Genealogical Research in the National Archives, 3rd ed. (Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration, 2000), 37, and the Family History Catalog entry for the title "Schedules enumerating Union veterans and widows of Union veterans of the Civil War".
 * 6) Thorndale and Dollarhide, 278, and Thomas Jay Kemp, The American Census Handbook (Wilmington, Del.: Scholarly Resources, 2001), 389, and Family History Library Catalog entry for the title "Oklahoma, 1900 federal census : soundex and population schedules".
 * 7) Eales and Kvasnicka, 38, and Family History Library Catalog entry for the title "Oklahoma, 1910 federal census : soundex and population schedules".
 * 8) Eales and Kvasnicka, 38, and Family History Library Catalog entry for the title "Oklahoma, 1920 federal census : soundex and population schedules".
 * 9) Family History Library Catalog entry for the title "Oklahoma, 1930 federal census : population schedules ; NARA microfilm publication T626".