1790 United States Census
The United States Census of 1790 was the first census of the whole United States. It recorded the population of the United States as of Census Day, August 2, 1790, as mandated by Article I, Section 2 of the United States Constitution and applicable laws. In the first census, the population of the United States was enumerated to be 3,929,214.
Congress assigned responsibility for the 1790 census to the marshals of United States judicial districts under an act which, with minor modifications and extensions, governed census taking until the 1840 census. "The law required that every household be visited, that completed census schedules be posted in 'two of the most public places within , there to remain for the inspection of all concerned...' and that 'the aggregate amount of each description of persons' for every district be transmitted to the president."
Contemporary perception
Both Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson and President George Washington expressed skepticism over the results, believing that the true population had been undercounted. If there was indeed an undercount, possible explanations for it include dispersed population, poor transportation links, limitations of contemporary technology, and individual refusal to participate.Loss of data
Although the Census was proved statistically factual, based on data collected, the records for several states were lost sometime between 1790 and 1830. Almost one third of the original census data have been lost or destroyed since their original documentation. These include some 1790 data from: Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Vermont; however, the validity and existence of most of these data can be confirmed in many secondary sources pertaining to the first census.Data availability
No microdata from the 1790 population census are available, but aggregate data for small areas, together with compatible cartographic boundary files, can be downloaded from the National Historical Geographic Information System.Data
Census data included the name of the head of the family and categorized inhabitants as follows: free white males at least 16 years of age, free white males under 16 years of age, free white females, all other free persons, and enslaved people. Under the direction of the current Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, marshals collected data from all thirteen states, and from the Southwest Territory. The census was not conducted in Vermont until 1791, after that state's admission to the Union as the 14th state on March 4 of that year.At 17.8 percent, the 1790 Census's proportion of enslaved to the free population was the highest ever recorded by any census of the United States.
State | Free white males of 16 years and upward, including heads of families | Free white males under 16 years | Free white females, including heads of families | All other free persons | Enslaved persons | Enslaved % of state population | Total | % of US population |
Vermont | 22,435 | 22,328 | 40,505 | 255 | 16 | nil | 85,539 | 2.2% |
New Hampshire | 36,086 | 34,851 | 70,160 | 630 | 158 | 0.1% | 141,885 | 3.6% |
Maine | 24,384 | 24,748 | 46,870 | 538 | 0 | nil | 96,540 | 2.5% |
Massachusetts | 95,453 | 87,289 | 190,582 | 5,463 | 0 | nil | 378,787 | 9.7% |
Rhode Island | 16,019 | 15,799 | 32,652 | 3,407 | 948 | 1.4% | 68,825 | 1.5% |
Connecticut | 60,523 | 54,403 | 117,448 | 2,808 | 2,764 | 1.2% | 237,946 | 6.1% |
New York | 83,700 | 78,122 | 152,320 | 4,654 | 21,324 | 6.3% | 340,120 | 8.7% |
New Jersey | 45,251 | 41,416 | 83,287 | 2,762 | 11,423 | 6.2% | 184,139 | 4.7% |
Pennsylvania | 110,788 | 106,948 | 206,363 | 6,537 | 3,737 | 0.9% | 434,373 | 11.2% |
Delaware | 11,783 | 12,143 | 22,384 | 3,899 | 8,887 | 15.0% | 59,094 | 1.5% |
Maryland | 55,915 | 51,339 | 101,395 | 8,043 | 103,036 | 32.2% | 319,728 | 8.2% |
Virginia | 110,936 | 116,135 | 215,046 | 12,866 | 292,627 | 39.1% | 747,610 | 19.2% |
Kentucky | 15,154 | 17,057 | 28,922 | 114 | 12,430 | 16.9% | 73,677 | 1.9% |
North Carolina | 69,988 | 77,506 | 140,710 | 4,975 | 100,572 | 25.5% | 393,751 | 10.1% |
South Carolina | 35,576 | 37,722 | 66,880 | 1,801 | 107,094 | 43.0% | 249,073 | 6.4% |
Georgia | 13,103 | 14,044 | 25,739 | 398 | 29,264 | 35.5% | 82,548 | 2.1% |
Total | 807,094 | 791,850 | 1,541,263 | 59,150 | 694,280 | 17.8% | 3,893,635 | 99.9% |
City rankings
Rank | City | State | Population | Region | Population |
01 | New York | New York | 33,131 | Northeast | 1,585,873 |
02 | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania | 28,522 | Northeast | 135,872 |
03 | Boston | Massachusetts | 18,320 | Northeast | 617,594 |
04 | Charleston | South Carolina | 16,359 | South | 120,083 |
05 | Baltimore | Maryland | 13,503 | South | 620,961 |
06 | Norwalk | Connecticut | 11,942 | Northeast | 85,603 |
07 | Northern Liberties | Pennsylvania | 9,913 | Northeast | N/A |
08 | Salem | Massachusetts | 7,921 | Northeast | 41,340 |
09 | Newport | Rhode Island | 6,716 | Northeast | 24,672 |
10 | Providence | Rhode Island | 6,380 | Northeast | 178,042 |
11 | Marblehead | Massachusetts | 5,661 | Northeast | 19,808 |
12 | Southwark | Pennsylvania | 5,661 | Northeast | N/A |
13 | Gloucester | Massachusetts | 5,317 | Northeast | 28,789 |
14 | Newburyport | Massachusetts | 4,837 | Northeast | 17,416 |
15 | Portsmouth | New Hampshire | 4,720 | Northeast | 21,233 |
16 | Sherburne | Massachusetts | 4,555 | Northeast | 10,172 |
17 | Middleborough | Massachusetts | 4,526 | Northeast | 23,116 |
18 | New Haven | Connecticut | 4,487 | Northeast | 129,779 |
19 | South Kingstown | Rhode Island | 4,131 | Northeast | 30,639 |
20 | Taunton | Massachusetts | 3,804 | Northeast | 55,874 |
21 | Lancaster | Pennsylvania | 3,762 | Northeast | 59,322 |
22 | Richmond | Virginia | 3,761 | South | 204,214 |
23 | Albany | New York | 3,498 | Northeast | 97,856 |
24 | New Bedford | Massachusetts | 3,313 | Northeast | 95,072 |
25 | Beverly | Massachusetts | 3,290 | Northeast | 39,502 |
26 | Smithfield | Rhode Island | 3,171 | Northeast | 21,430 |
27 | Danbury | Connecticut | 3,031 | Northeast | 80,893 |
28 | Plymouth | Massachusetts | 2,995 | Northeast | 56,468 |
29 | Norfolk | Virginia | 2,959 | South | 242,803 |
30 | North Kingstown | Rhode Island | 2,907 | Northeast | 26,486 |
31 | Andover | Massachusetts | 2,863 | Northeast | 33,201 |
32 | Rochester | New Hampshire | 2,857 | Northeast | 29,752 |
33 | Petersburg | Virginia | 2,828 | South | 32,420 |
34 | Alexandria | Virginia | 2,748 | South | 139,966 |
35 | Farmington | Connecticut | 2,696 | Northeast | 25,340 |
36 | Hartford | Connecticut | 2,683 | Northeast | 124,775 |
37 | Londonderry | New Hampshire | 2,622 | Northeast | 24,129 |
38 | Gilmanton | New Hampshire | 2,613 | Northeast | 3,777 |
39 | Hudson | New York | 2,584 | Northeast | 6,713 |