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    Home / Central Data Catalog / USA_1980_PHC_V01_M_V02_A_IPUMS / variable [F2]
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Census of Population and Housing 1980 - IPUMS Subset

United States, 1980
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Reference ID
USA_1980_PHC_v01_M_v02_A_IPUMS
Producer(s)
U.S. Census Bureau, Minnesota Population Center
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
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Created on
Dec 23, 2014
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
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  • USA1980-H-H
  • USA1980-P-H

Occupation, 1950basis (US1980A_0451)

Data file: USA1980-P-H

Overview

Valid: 0
Invalid: 0
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 0
Start: 261
End: 263
Width: 3
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Literal question
29. Occupation

29a. What kind of work was this person doing?

____
(For example: Registered nurse, personnel manager, supervisor of order department, gasoline engine assembler, grinder operator)


[Print two or more words to describe the kind of work the person does. If the person is a trainee, apprentice, or helper, include that in the description. Some examples of what is needed to make an answer acceptable are shown on the census form and here.


Unacceptable: Clerk
Acceptable: Production clerk
Unacceptable: Helper
Acceptable: Carpenter's helper
Unacceptable: Mechanic
Acceptable: Auto engine mechanic
Unacceptable: Nurse
Acceptable: Registered nurse


29b. What were this person's most important activities or duties?

____
(For example: Patient care, directing hiring policies, supervising order clerks. assembling engines, operating grinding mill)


[Print the most important things that the person does on the job. Some examples are shown on the census form.]
Categories
Value Category
0 Accountants and auditors
2 Airplane pilots and navigators
3 Architects
4 Artists and art teachers
6 Authors
7 Chemists
8 Chiropractors
9 Clergymen
12 Agricultural sciences
13 Biological sciences
14 Chemistry
15 Economics
16 Engineering
18 Mathematics
19 Medical sciences
23 Physics
24 Psychology
26 Natural science (n e c )
27 Social sciences (n e c )
28 Nonscientific subjects
29 Subject not specified
31 Dancers and dancing teachers
32 Dentists
33 Designers
34 Dieticians and nutritionists
35 Draftsmen
36 Editors and reporters
41 Engineers, aeronautical
42 Engineers, chemical
43 Engineers, civil
44 Engineers, electrical
45 Engineers, industrial
46 Engineers, mechanical
47 Engineers, metallurgical, metallurgists
48 Engineers, mining
49 Engineers (n e c )
51 Entertainers (n e c )
53 Foresters and conservationists
54 Funeral directors and embalmers
55 Lawyers and judges
56 Librarians
57 Musicians and music teachers
58 Nurses, professional
61 Agricultural scientists
62 Biological scientists
63 Geologists and geophysicists
67 Mathematicians
68 Physicists
69 Miscellaneous natural scientists
70 Optometrists
72 Personnel and labor relations workers
73 Pharmacists
74 Photographers
75 Physicians and surgeons
76 Radio operators
77 Recreation and group workers
78 Religious workers
79 Social and welfare workers, except group
81 Economists
82 Psychologists
83 Statisticians and actuaries
84 Miscellaneous social scientists
91 Sports instructors and officials
92 Surveyors
93 Teachers (n e c )
94 Technicians, medical and dental
95 Technicians, testing
96 Technicians (n e c )
97 Therapists and healers (n e c )
98 Veterinarians
99 Professional, technical and kindred workers (n.
100 Farmers (owners and tenants)
123 Farm managers
200 Buyers and department heads, store
201 Buyers and shippers, farm products
203 Conductors, railroad
210 Inspectors, public administration
230 Managers and superintendents, building
240 Officers, pilots, pursers and engineers, ship
250 Officials and administrators (n.e.c.), public a
270 Postmasters
280 Purchasing agents and buyers (n e c )
290 Managers, officials, and proprietors (n.e.c.)
301 Attendants and assistants, library
302 Attendants, physician's and dentist's office
305 Bank tellers
310 Bookkeepers
320 Cashiers
321 Collectors, bill and account
322 Dispatchers and starters, vehicle
335 Mail carriers
340 Messengers and office boys
341 Office machine operators
342 Shipping and receiving clerks
350 Stenographers, typists, and secretaries
365 Telegraph operators
370 Telephone operators
380 Ticket, station, and express agents
390 Clerical and kindred workers (n e c )
400 Advertising agents and salesmen
410 Auctioneers
420 Demonstrators
430 Hucksters and peddlers
450 Insurance agents and brokers
460 Newsboys
470 Real estate agents and brokers
480 Stock and bond salesmen
490 Salesmen and sales clerks (n e c )
500 Bakers
502 Bookbinders
503 Boilermakers
504 Brickmasons, stonemasons, and tile setters
505 Cabinetmakers
510 Carpenters
511 Cement and concrete finishers
512 Compositors and typesetters
513 Cranemen, derrickmen, and hoistmen
515 Electricians
521 Engravers, except photoengravers
522 Excavating, grading, and road machinery operato
523 Foremen (n e c )
524 Forgemen and hammermen
525 Furriers
530 Glaziers
531 Heat treaters, annealers, temperers
533 Inspectors (n e c )
534 Jewelers, watchmakers, goldsmiths, and silversm
535 Job setters, metal
540 Linemen and servicemen, telegraph, telephone, a
541 Locomotive engineers
544 Machinists
545 Mechanics and repairmen, airplane
550 Mechanics and repairmen, automobile
551 Mechanics and repairmen, office machine
552 Mechanics and repairmen, radio and television
554 Mechanics and repairmen (n e c )
560 Millwrights
561 Molders, metal
562 Motion picture projectionists
563 Opticians and lens grinders and polishers
564 Painters, construction and maintenance
570 Pattern and model makers, except paper
571 Photoengravers and lithographers
573 Plasterers
574 Plumbers and pipe fitters
575 Pressmen and plate printers, printing
580 Rollers and roll hands, metal
581 Roofers and slaters
582 Shoemakers and repairers, except factory
583 Stationary engineers
585 Structural metal workers
590 Tailors and tailoresses
591 Tinsmiths, coppersmiths, and sheet metal worker
592 Tool makers, and die makers and setters
593 Upholsterers
595 Members of the armed services
600 Apprentice auto mechanics
601 Apprentice bricklayers and masons
602 Apprentice carpenters
603 Apprentice electricians
604 Apprentice machinists and toolmakers
610 Apprentice plumbers and pipe fitters
612 Apprentices, metalworking trades (n.e.c.)
614 Apprentices, other specified trades
620 Asbestos and insulation workers
621 Attendants, auto service and parking
622 Blasters and powdermen
624 Brakemen, railroad
625 Bus drivers
630 Chainmen, rodmen, and axmen, surveying
632 Deliverymen and routemen
633 Dressmakers and seamstresses, except factory
635 Filers, grinders, and polishers, metal
643 Laundry and dry cleaning operatives
644 Meat cutters, except slaughter and packing hous
650 Mine operatives and laborers
662 Oilers and greaser, except auto
670 Painters, except construction or maintenance
671 Photographic process workers
672 Power station operators
673 Sailors and deck hands
674 Sawyers
680 Stationary firemen
681 Switchmen, railroad
682 Taxicab drivers and chauffers
683 Truck and tractor drivers
684 Weavers, textile
685 Welders and flame cutters
690 Operative and kindred workers (n e c )
700 Housekeepers, private household
710 Laundressses, private household
720 Private household workers (n e c )
730 Attendants, hospital and other institution
731 Attendants, professional and personal service (
732 Attendants, recreation and amusement
740 Barbers, beauticians, and manicurists
750 Bartenders
753 Charwomen and cleaners
754 Cooks, except private household
760 Counter and fountain workers
761 Elevator operators
762 Firemen, fire protection
763 Guards, watchmen, and doorkeepers
764 Housekeepers and stewards, except private house
770 Janitors and sextons
773 Policemen and detectives
780 Porters
781 Practical nurses
782 Sheriffs and bailiffs
783 Ushers, recreation and amusement
784 Waiters and waitresses
785 Watchmen (crossing) and bridge tenders
790 Service workers, except private household (n.e.
810 Farm foremen
820 Farm laborers, wage workers
910 Fishermen and oystermen
930 Gardeners, except farm, and groundskeepers
940 Longshoremen and stevedores
950 Lumbermen, raftsmen, and woodchoppers
970 Laborers (n e c )
999 NIU (not in universe)
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.

Description

Definition
This variable indicates the occupation's 1950 Census Bureau occupational classification system, to enhance comparability across years.
Universe
Persons age 16+ who had worked within the previous five years; not new workers

concept

Concept
Name Vocabulary
Work: Occupation Variables -- PERSON IPUMS
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