1940 US census viewable online after near freeze

NEW YORK (AP) — The newly released 1940 U.S. census is such a digital smash that it took a day for the website to get up to speed after tens of millions of hits almost paralyzed it.

The National Archives said Tuesday that census pages are again available for viewing. The government website got 37 million hits hours after the information was first released to the public Monday morning, all but paralyzing attempts to access details.

“We expected a flood and we got a tsunami,” Archives.com, the private company that’s hosting the website, said in a statement.

The government released the 1940 census records — the largest collection of digital information ever distributed by the National Archives — for the first time since the 72 years of confidentiality expired. The records allow individuals and families to learn details about their past.

Documents obtained by The Associated Press show the National Archives badly underestimated their popularity, saying in the contract with the third-party Web host that it would be able to “handle 25,000 concurrent users and up to 10 million visits per day.” The documents also said the site was expected to “scale on demand.”

In a tweet posted after 5 p.m. Monday on its official Twitter account, the archives said the website had gotten 37 million hits since the information was released at 9 a.m. A spokesman for the company hosting the records said they were receiving even more traffic Tuesday as interest in the 1940 census continued to grow. Joe Godfrey, the senior director of projects for Archives.com, said he didn’t immediately have updated information on how many hits they had received but said it was expected to exceed Monday’s.

Susan Cooper, an archives spokeswoman, said the problems began as soon as the information was released on the website. She termed the problems a “virtual traffic jam.”

“The problem is, we just weren’t expecting the huge volume that we got,” Cooper said.

“We’re adding a lot more servers, a lot more muscle to the website,” she said.

Godfrey said Tuesday that the company’s engineers spent the good part of Monday into the evening working to expand the company’s ability to handle the unexpected crush of traffic. He said the company had tested the site based on receiving 75,000 to 100,000 concurrent users.

He said that in the hours after the records’ release Monday, they were receiving more than 100,000 concurrent users, but he didn’t immediately have an exact number. “It exceeded our most optimistic estimates,” he said.

Bob Timmermann, 46, a librarian from Tujunga, Calif., said the lure of the 1940 census is that “you find out if what your parents told you about their lives was actually true.”

He said he had tried for several hours Monday to access data but was unsuccessful. “People just need to be patient,” he said.

More than 21 million people still alive in the U.S. and Puerto Rico were counted in the 1940 census. The census followed a decade when tens of millions of people in the U.S. experienced mass unemployment and social upheaval as the nation clawed its way out of the Great Depression and rumblings of global war were heard from abroad.

Monday’s release includes digitized records for details on 132 million people. Access to the records is free and open to anyone online, but they are not yet searchable by name.

For now, researchers will need an address to determine a census enumeration district — a way to carve up the map for surveying — to identify where someone lived and then browse the records.

Every decade since 1942, the National Archives has made available records from past censuses. The records, which include names, addresses and income and employment information, are rich with long-veiled personal details.

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Online:

http://1940census.archives.gov

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Associated Press writer Whitney Phillips in Phoenix contributed to this report.

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Follow Randy Herschaft at http://twitter.com/HerschaftAP.

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