Yes they are because hey are in the files.
In the 1950 U.S. Census, 1,325,089 residents were counted in Colorado. That is 26.35% of the quantity counted in the 2010 Census.
Populations are always changing, so usually when a population is given it shows when the given population was counted or estimated. If a population is from a census, that means that the people were actually counted, not estimated.
California's population in 1950 was approximately 10.5 million.
Slaves were not counted in the population census in 1860 or 1870.
In the 2010 U.S. Census, 9483 people were counted in Independence.
The 2010 U. S. Census counted 9444 people in Monmouth.
The 2010 U. S. Census counted 12,702,379 people in Pennsylvania, making it the 6th-largest U. S. state by population.
The 2010 U. S. Census counted 220 people living in Piffard.
The 2010 U. S. Census counted 22,322 people living in Alliance.
The 1990 U.S. Census counted 3,665,228 residents of Arizona.
California's population was counted by the US Census Bureau at 37,253,956 for the 2010 census.
The 2000 census counted the population at 1394 total. The primary population demographics consisting of White, Non-Latino/Hispanic, Female, and Persons 18-64 years of age.