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Chicago Street Guides, Paper Trails, and Genealogy

There are times during Census research that a page by page search of an enumeration district in a Chicago Ward is required. A Look At Cook has several maps of each Census year's Wards and enumeration districts. This is a fabulous resource when you need to do a page by page search.

I recently was looking for an address in the 500 block of Gilpin Place in the 1910 Census. I searched the Ward Maps. I then narrowed it down to one Ward and two enumeration districts. Sometimes the odd numbers of a street fall within one enumeration district and the even numbers in another.

I searched page by page by page and came up with nothing. The street was not in either enumeration district.

Next I consulted Tillotson's Pocket Guide for 1925 Chicago. It has a list of streets and tells you which page in the book they are along with a list of street name changes. Gilpin Place was not listed as a name change. Looking at the map there was a small street called Gilpin Place. Super small. Moving across the page onto the next page where Gilpin Place would have been, it was called Ewing.

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Now, I knew some people I was looking for lived on Ewing. But where was Gilpin Place? Did the census taker miss that small section of his enumeration district? A death certificate I had for 1913 said Gilpin Place. An obituary I found said Gilpin Place. A Chicago Tribune article about the Probate Court approving wills in 1913 said Ewing. Same house number, same person, same heirs as the family I was trying to find.

So what happened? I'm guessing at some point the part of Ewing where Gilpin Place was "supposed" to be underwent a name change at some point. Yet nothing I have found tells me that for sure. What I do know is several members of this family and related families used Ewing and Gilpin Place interchangeably. If it had not been for the paper trail I discovered and the Chicago street maps, I never would have put two and two together.

When you search the census and come up empty, consult street guides and make sure your street wasn't something else where it "should" be located. Also look for other documents or news articles to help prove the address. You too may uncover some new information following the paper trail along a Chicago street.

, Chicago Genealogy Examiner

Jennifer Holik-Urban, is a professional genealogical researcher, house historian, and author. She has been researching her family history for more than fifteen years, uncovering the life stories of her ancestors. Jennifer is a member of the Association of Professional Genealogists. She is a...

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