Census of Population and Housing, 1980 [United States]: Summary Tape File 4A : Archival Version

This data collection contains tables from the 1980 Census of Population and Housing, which were tabulated for Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs), tracted portions of states outside SMSAs, and the following SMSA components: counties, places with 10,000 or more inhabitants, and census tra...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: United States Department Of Commerce. Bureau Of The Census
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.3886/icpsr08282
http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/8282
Description
Summary:This data collection contains tables from the 1980 Census of Population and Housing, which were tabulated for Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs), tracted portions of states outside SMSAs, and the following SMSA components: counties, places with 10,000 or more inhabitants, and census tracts. The tables primarily contain sample data inflated to represent the total population, plus 100-percent counts and unweighted sample counts of persons and housing units. Tabulated population items include household relationship, sex, race, age, marital status, Spanish origin, education, nativity, citizenship, language spoken at home, ancestry, children, place of residence in 1975, veteran status, work disability status, labor force status, travel time to work, means of transportation to work, industry, occupation, class of worker, income, and poverty status. Tables of housing variables cover number of units at address, presence of complete plumbing facilities, number of rooms, tenure (whether owned or rented), vacancy status, housing unit value, contract rent, units in structure, stories in structure and presence of a passenger elevator, year structure was built, year householder moved into unit, acreage, source of water, sewage disposal, heating equipment, house heating fuel, water heating fuel, cooking fuel, kitchen facilities, number of bedrooms, number of bathrooms, telephone in housing unit, air conditioning, number of automobiles, vans, and light trucks, and selected monthly owner costs (real estate taxes, property insurance, utilities, and mortgage payments). Two series of population and housing tables, A and B, are shown for each geographic unit. The A tables are tabulated once for the total population, while the B tables are repeated for the total population and up to six different race and Spanish origin groups: (1) white, (2) Black, (3) American Indian, Eskimo and Aleut, (4) Asian and Pacific Islander, (5) other race, and (6) Spanish origin. The data for each state are contained in a separate file. Altogether, 48 states and the District of Columbia are represented in the collection. : Datasets: DS0: Study-Level Files DS1: Alabama DS2: Alaska DS3: Arizona DS4: Arkansas DS5: California DS6: Colorado DS7: Connecticut DS8: Delaware DS9: District of Columbia DS10: Florida DS11: Georgia DS14: Illinois DS15: Indiana DS16: Iowa DS17: Kansas DS18: Kentucky DS19: Louisiana DS20: Maine DS21: Maryland DS22: Massachusetts DS23: Michigan DS24: Minnesota DS25: Mississippi DS26: Missouri DS27: Montana DS28: Nebraska DS29: Nevada DS30: New Hampshire DS31: New Jersey DS32: New Mexico DS33: New York DS34: North Carolina DS35: North Dakota DS36: Ohio DS37: Oklahoma DS38: Oregon DS39: Pennsylvania DS40: Rhode Island DS41: South Carolina DS42: South Dakota DS43: Tennessee DS44: Texas DS45: Utah DS46: Vermont DS47: Virginia DS48: Washington DS49: West Virginia DS50: Wisconsin DS51: Wyoming DS80: Codebook, Volume 1: User Notes to Table Outlines DS81: Codebook, Volume 2: Data Dictionary and Product Review DS82: Codebook, Volume 3: Appendices : Census of Population and Housing, 1980 [United States] Series : All persons and housing units in the United States. : There are two components to the Census: a 100-percent enumeration and a sample of approximately 19 percent of housing units. Basic demographic information, such as age, sex, and race, was collected from all persons and housing units. More detailed information was collected from the sample of housing units.