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Counting Native Americans: Census Terminology, History and Controversy (plus Cher)

WEDNESDAY, NOV 23, 2016

cher_album_coverEnjoy the holiday and a reprise of our 2010 blog post.

On Thanksgiving, Social Explorer is taking a look at the site of the first famous feast—Plymouth County, MA.  Here, as legend has it, pilgrims from England and local Wampanoag tribe first dined together in 1621. In the earlier days of the census up through the 1970s, the government used the terminology of the day to refer to Native Americans, which often included the now derogatory terms “Civilized Indians," "Full-Bloods" and “Half-breeds.“ At other times, the government excluded Native Americans from the count entirely.

Historical demographic data reveal that Native Americans were not counted for the first 60 years of the census.  The constitutional language that mandates the census specifically excludes “Indians not taxed” from the count. Over time, some Native Americans were also living in areas with settlers, and the census rules articulated how to count them:

Indians not in tribal relations, whether full-bloods or half-breeds, who are found mingled with the white population, residing in white families, engaged as servants or laborers, or living in huts or wigwams on the outskirts of towns or settlements are to be regarded as a part of the ordinary population of the country for the constitutional purpose of the apportionment of Representatives among the States, and are to be embraced in the enumeration.

Starting in 1860, the census collected data on Native Americans, but it did not always report it fully or consistently. According to census data from 1860, there were 43,562 of these so-called “Civilized Indians” (plus 459 “Half-breeds”), accounting for 0.1% of the population. (Ten years later, 24 “Civilized Indians” appear in the Plymouth County data.) In 1960, the Census reported “Indians” separately again and found 142 in Plymouth County and 523,591 nationwide. Just ten years later, the “Indian” race data disappeared from common census reports once again.

While hidden in the census, Native American terminology hit the top of the billboard charts with Cher's charged pop song “Half-breed.” By 1970, the Census would have reported a woman struggling with "Half-breed" identity as either "White" or "Other." Did the Census Bureau’s 1970 omission of “Indian” inspire Cher’s “Half-breed”? A few years after the song, the Native American race category returned to the census under the new more detailed option of “American Indian/Eskimo/Aleut.”  Did Cher’s song prompt the Census Bureau to reintroduce Native American race data? With the addition of the ability to specify multiple races starting with the 2000 census, demographic information on Native American populations has become much more complete, with more detailed information on mixed-race individuals and tribe affiliations in the common census reports. Now the "Half-breed" identity Cher sings about could be categorized as "White," "American Indian" and "Cherokee." Social Explorer users can dig deeper into how Native Americans have been counted with the report tools.

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