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No other official record or group of records is as historically significant as the 1790 census of the United States. The original 1790 enumerations covered the present states of Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, and Virginia. Unfortunately, not all the schedules have survived, the returns for the states of Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, New Jersey, Tennessee, and Virginia having been lost or destroyed, possibly when the British burned the Capitol at Washington during the War of 1812, though there seems to be no proof for this. For Virginia...
Conrad Hott immigrated from Switzerland to Berks County, Pennsylvania in 1738 (his surname was inscribed as Hatt by the Philadelphia clerk). He "was reported to have been born in Switzerland on 16 Oct. 1715 and died in Cumru Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania ... on 9 Sept. 1789. [His] wife "Anna Margaretha was born on 16 Oct. 1711 and died in Cumru Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania ... on 17 May, 1793"--Page 15. Descendants and relatives lived in Pennsylvania, Virginia, New York, Ohio, Indiana, Montana, Kentucky and elsewhere.
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