The official blog of footnote

1930 Census Free During August

August 5th, 2009 | Written by Peter

The 1930 US Census is one of the most powerful resources available to anyone who wants to learn more about their ancestors.

During the month of August, we’re giving everyone free access to Footnote.com’s one-of-a-kind, interactive 1930 US Census.

With Footnote’s interactive census, viewing, downloading and printing images from the census are just the beginning.  You can also add images and comments, spotlight interesting finds, create pages for your ancestors and tell their stories.Herbert Hoover in the 1930 Census

What you can learn about your ancestors in the 1930 Census:

  • Where they lived
  • Who they lived with
  • When and where they were born
  • What they did for a living
  • And much more…

Try it today!

Note:  To get the free access, you have to go through this page, http://go.footnote.com/1930census/ and if you aren’t signed in, you’ll be asked to register or sign in.

Note #2:  We’ve had a problem on the site so that you are being asked to subscribe to print or download an image.  That wasn’t our intention and we should have it fixed later today.

Update:  You should be able to print and download with the free registered account now.

10 Conversations to “1930 Census Free During August”

Comments

James bruen says:

When I attempted to register for the free trial I was told this email account already was registered.
So I went to sign in under this email and was told this account didn’t exist.
???
James Bruen

August 7th, 2009 at 11:55 am

Peter says:

Since we opened up the 1930 census for free our servers have been overwhelmed which has caused a number of problems on the site.

I wonder if the first message (your email is already taken) was related to these overwhelmed servers.

I would recommend you try registering again and see if it goes through properly. If it’s still not working, you can contact us at support@footnote.com and we’ll see what we can do to help.

August 7th, 2009 at 12:20 pm

Roelink says:

Heb graag de gegevens van de fam.Roelink.

August 14th, 2009 at 6:26 am

kay coooper says:

Cannot access free 1930 census as my email and password are unacceptable, to you. What goes???

August 14th, 2009 at 6:15 pm

Pat says:

I registered last night was given a user name. Went in today and the 1930 (Free Census for the whole of August?) is no longer free??
It seems like it was a ploy to get people to register.
I am so annoyed as I found a member of my family in England living there……Anyone else had this problem.

August 17th, 2009 at 8:41 am

Darlene says:

http://go.footnote.com/1930census/
start here, does requir registration but no fee for the month of Aug

August 18th, 2009 at 11:33 am

gail ward says:

I registered yesterday and today (wed) it won’t let me back in, It didn’t let me view or print the census pages???

August 19th, 2009 at 9:46 am

Peter says:

Gail,

Each time you visit the site, to get the free access you need to go through the 1930 page, http://go.footnote.com/1930census

When you first go to that page you should get small overlay screen with an orange button that says “Get free access now!” Clicking that button gets you on the path to free access. Once you are on the site through that route, you should be able to search, browse or get to the census anyway you like and have it be free, but the first time you come to the site, you need to go through that page.

If you are going through this route and still not getting access, there must be some other problem. Please let us know if this doesn’t help. You can contact us at support@footnote.com.

August 20th, 2009 at 8:31 am

Liz Meggitt says:

How do you get back to the main search page for the 1930 census so you can search for someone else?

August 20th, 2009 at 6:12 pm

Peter says:

There are links to the 1930 Census page on the main homepage of Footnote, so you should be able to get back to it that way. But, once you are in through the 1930 Census page you should be able to use the main site search or browse and still get free access as long as you are on the site.

August 21st, 2009 at 3:51 pm

Leave a Reply

(required)

(will not be published) (required)