In the early U.S. censuses, slaves were counted as three-fifths of a person for the purposes of representation and taxation, a compromise established in the Constitution. This provision was intended to balance the political power between slaveholding and non-slaveholding states. The counting of slaves varied by census year and was influenced by changing political and social dynamics, but the three-fifths rule remained in effect until the 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868, which granted full counting of all individuals regardless of race.
The invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney in 1793 led to a major increase in the number of slaves in the United States. The first census in 1790 counted 697,897 slaves, but by 1810 that number had grown 1.2 million slaves and increase of about 70%!
The nearest US Census was taken in 1830. In that year the entire United States had a population of 12.8 million, of whom 10.5 million were free white, 0.3 million free black, and 2.0 million slaves. The census recorded slaves in all states except Vermont although the numbers outside the south were very small. In the southern states the total white population was 3.1 million with 1.9 million black slaves. In two states the free white population was outnumbered by black slaves: South Carolina, 258,000 white and 315,000 black slave Louisiana, 89,000 white and 110,000 black slave. The number of slave owners was not counted by the census that year.
5,000 up to 4,500
The state that did not have any slaves in the first U.S. census conducted in 1790 was Vermont. Vermont was admitted to the Union as a free state in 1791, and its constitution, adopted in 1777, prohibited slavery. Therefore, when the census was taken, it recorded no enslaved individuals in Vermont.
The fourth United States Census was conducted in 1820 and determined that there were 9,638,453 people living in the country, of which 1,538,022 were slaves. By 1830 that number had increased to 2,009,043 slaves.
Slaves were not counted in the population census in 1860 or 1870.
92 million people were counted in the 1910 US census.
it helps us to know the inhabitant in a country
The US Census of 1860 numbered the nations population to be 31,443,321. The eleven states that seceded had a population of 9,103,332. These states had 5,449,462 "whites" and 3,521,110 slaves. The seceded states also had a free Black population of 139,760.
About 5 million people were counted by the 1800 Census (August 4, 1800). It showed the estimated population of the US as 5,308,483 people, of which 893,602 were slaves.
In the United States, slaves were counted as three-fifths of a person for the purposes of representation in the House of Representatives according to the Three-Fifths Compromise in the Constitution. This practice was in place from 1787 until the abolition of slavery after the Civil War.
Of the 27 million whites counted in the 1860 census, 8 million lived in the slave owning states of the South. Of these, 385,000 owned slaves. Statistically, 4.8% of all Southern whites owned slaves. When factored by the entire population, 1.4% of all United States whites were slave owners. Read more at Suite101: The 1860 Census and Slavery in the United States: Interpreting Census Data and Research on Pre-Civil War Slavery | Suite101.com
462,198 slaves lived in GA according to the official US census of 1860.
Every 5 slaves woulde counted as three people
1860 A++
slaves were viewed as property not as people
According to the US census of 1790, the number of slaves in the US totaled 698,000. Ninety four percent of the slave population were south of the Mason Dixon Line.