1940 Census United States - Using City Directories to Find a Street Address

United States U.S. Census  1940 Census  Using City Directories to Find a Street Address

City directories are basically an alphabetical listing of the residents of a town or city and were designed to help businesses in working with their customer base. The geographic area covered by the publisher may be just those residents living within the boundaries of the city or it may also include a set suburban area. Residences outside the geographic boundaries would not be included. Directories before 1900 may not include the name of the wife, but would list a single adult woman if she was employed. After 1900, most directories would include the name of the wife. They also began to enter the names of adult children, if they were students in a post secondary education facility or working on their own. For further information, see: United States Directories.

Locating City Directories
City directories can usually be found in the local public library or historical society of the city of interest. They may also be found at a state university library or the state library or historical society.

The Library of Congress has a large collection of city directories on microfilm in their Microform Reading Room. See their website at: http://www.loc.gov/rr/microform/uscity/. These directories are no available via interlibrary loan. They do provide a list of free-lance researchers in the greater Washington D.C. area who perform research for a fee.

Ancestry.com, a subscription website, has several 1940 era directories for cities in California, Connecticut, Illinois, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Texas.

City Directories of the United States of America has a clickable map of the United States showing where all known city directories are throughout the country. This is an ongoing project. Their website is: http://www.uscitydirectories.com/index.html.

Using the City Directory
City directories are alphabetical. After locating your ancestors address you will need to determine the Enumeration District that the residence was located in. An online address converter is found on the Steve Morse website. Obtaining E.D.s for the 1940 Census in One Step (Large Cities) Use this page when you have an address for your ancestor.

You may find that you will need to search several Enumeration Districts associated with the address. By using Enumeration District maps you may narrow down your search. For more information about using a city address in the 1940 Census, see the wiki page 1940 Census United States - Finding Your Ancestor in a Big City.

After you access the Enumeration District for your ancestor, you will need to search through several pages to find if they are listed. See the wiki page City Directories for more information about city directories.