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The Hollerith Method Of Statistical Tabulation

Creator: n/a
Date: October 12, 1899
Publication: Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper
Source: Available at selected libraries
Figures From This Artifact: Figure 2  Figure 3  Figure 4  Figure 5  Figure 6

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THE HOLLERITH METHOD OF STATISTICAL TABULATION.

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THE returns of the enumerators at the next census, as we have elsewhere shown, will show for each of the 65,000,000 persons residing in the United States on the 1st of June, 1890, the color or race. the sex, age, relationship which each person bears to the head of the family, the conjugal condition, profession, occupation or trade, number of months unemployed during the census year, whether sick or disabled, whether deaf and dumb, blind, idiotic, insane, maimed: crippled, or bedridden, whether the person attended school during the census year, whether the person could read and could write, the place of birth of the person, and, finally, the place of birth of the father and the place of birth of the mother.

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These records may be considered the raw material from which the Census Office is to manufacture the finished product -- the census reports. Although it will probably cost over $2,500,000 to collect this information, still, in the shape in which the returns are made to the Census Office, they will be of very little if any benefit to the country at large. From these returns, however, are compiled the various census reports, and to do this in the last census for a population of 50,000,000 cost nearly $2,000,000. By the various methods heretofore employed the returns have either been gone over and over, tallying out first one set of facts and then another set of facts by making little tally marks in squares on sheets of paper, and then counting and aggregating these tally fall marks; or else the returns have been transcribed to cards writing, and then these cards first sorted by hand, according to one scheme and counted, and then sorted according to another scheme and counted, and so on until finally all the desired data were obtained. Although at the last census the enumerators' returns contained answers to the above questions, still it was found impossible, within the limits of the appropriation, to compile even such valuable and essential information as the data regarding the civil conditions of our people, so that to-day we have not the (indecipherable)

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A casual consideration of' the problems involved in the compilation of a census will show that unless some improved methods of compilation are adopted it will be found impossible to do much more at the Eleventh Census in 1899, with the $6,400,000 appropriated for that purpose, than was done at the Tenth Census in 1880.

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Another item of very considerable importance in all matters relating to the tabulation of the census is the question of time. The returns of the enumerators are all made to the Census Office within a few weeks after the 1st of June, 1890. Much of the information contained in these returns loses in value each day that its publication is delayed, and it is, therefore, essential that the compilation be made as rapidly as possible. Again, in all statistical work, of course, accuracy of compilation is of prime importance.

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During the compilation of the Tenth Census the attention of Mr. Herman Hollerith, a special agent of the Census Office, was called to the immense labor and enormous expense involved in the compilation of the population statistics, and he addressed himself to the work of devising a machine for the purpose of facilitating this portion of the census work. After several years' consideration of the problems involved he has invented the following method, which is now under consideration by the Superintendent of the Census for adoption in the compilation of the Eleventh Census. This method consists in transcribing the returns to cards by punching holes in such cards, the various combinations of such holes denoting the different characteristics of the given persons. These cards are then automatically counted and sorted in electrical devices, giving the number of persons falling under each characteristic or combination of characteristics, as may be required for publication.

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Such punched transcripts are made by using small manila cards about three by six inches, which are first numbered in a numbering machine, these numbers corresponding with numbers given to the individual returns of the corresponding enumeration district. Across one end of the cards a combination of four or five holes is punched, which combination designates the enumerator's district, the supervisor's district, and the State to which the record relates. This combination is punched in the machine shown on this page. The cards punched with this combination, and having these numbers, are then given to a clerk, who, with a machine (as also shown on this page) transcribes the record for each individual person by punching holes in accordance with the given record. For example, the keyboard of this punch will have two spaces marked "male" and "female" respectively, and accordingly, as the pointer is pressed in one or the other of these holes a corresponding hole is punched in the card which will, in all future operation, either sort or count the card according to the given sex. The color, whether white, black, mulatto, quadroon, octoroon, etc., is in similar manner recorded by punching a hole in the proper position by depressing the pointer in one of the corresponding holes, as marked on the key-board. In this way all the simpler records are made, and where a larger scope of record is required, as, for example, in case of occupations, as many as 500 or 1,000 of which may be required, combinations of two holes are used to record each designation.

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