https://www.familysearch.org/node/1221
Complete 1930 Mexico Census Now Available Online for Free!
May 23, 2011
25 Million New Records and Images for 19 U.S. States and 16 Countries
The FamilySearch volunteers did it! With the completion of the state of
Veracruz, they indexed the entire 1930 Mexico Census—almost 13 million
records. Add the census to the millions of Mexico church records
FamilySearch also has online for free, and FamilySearch patrons now have
a phenomenal, fundamental asset for their Mexico ancestral research.
There were 59 collections updated in this release, comprising 25 million
new images and records for 19 U.S. states and 16 countries. See the
table below for more details. You can search all of these updated
collections now for free at FamilySearch.org.
If you are enjoying the steady stream of free records added weekly,
please consider “giving back” as a FamilySearch volunteer. You can start
and stop volunteering at any time. Find out more at
indexing.familysearch.org.
Not complete
what does "complete" mean? I've looked for Jalpa in the Zacatecas page but isn't listed as a separate municipality, nor is it found in some of the neighboring areas. I didn't find other cities like Tlaltenango as well, which makes me wonder there is still information to be loaded. Or if all that's available has been loaded, then there are places with missing records. I also did a search for Jalpa and didn't find it at all.
It's a shame if this turns out to be the case.
Arturo Gonzalez
Not complete
Remember although complete records are always missing. Due to fire, natural disaster,
war and many records that were never microfilm. The church only microfilmed the
places (for the census) that were in the Archivo General de la Nacion. More than
likely these places are not stored in the AGN in Mexico City.
Daniel Méndez Camino
1930 Census
I did some searching to try to find out how complete the 1930 census is, while there is a book by Lyman Pratt on Latin American census records in general (including Mexico), I found nothing specific.
The microfilms that were indexed and available online are copies of the records in the Archivo General de la Nación in Mexico City.
The 1930 Census is described as the "most complete" census of Mexico, nothing I found has any information on how complete it it.
I looked in the Family History Library catalog for census records. There is no one search that will give you a list of all the microfilm numbers for this specific set of records. You need to search by locality (municipality, not state), which I did for the areas you mentioned, and there apparently are no films.
I took a look at the online films, as they are divided by state, municipality, and then town. I went though all the municipalities and town listed for Zacatecas, Tlaltenango and Jalpa are not there.
From what I can see; the census records for these areas are not in the FHL, and may not exist (perhaps someone could verify this with the AGN).
It is unfortunate when records no longer exist; it is a loss for all of us. A classic case is the 1890 US Census. Virtually all of the census was destroyed in a 1921 fire in the Commerce Department building in Washington, DC. What is left is a very small fragment.
Knowing how fragile paper records are, I continue to be amazed at the wealth of material that is available from the Mexican Catholic Church records.
George Fulton
Pleasanton, CA