This article reports on the partnership between the British National Archives and web service provider ScotlandOnline to make the 1911 census for England and Wales available online. The 1911 census includes names and addresses of 35 million individuals and high-resolution images available for ...
In this paper data from the 1911 Census of the Fertility of Marriage of England and Wales are used to study patterns of mortality decline by socio-economic characteristics, principally the occupation of husband. That census reported data on number of wives, children ever born, and children dead...
1911 censusDebates concerning the origins and development of the late nineteenth- to early twentieth-century declines in marital fertility and infant mortality in England and Wales have been centred largely on the material provided by answers to the 'special' questions in the 1911 Census. In their...
This article reports on the partnership between the British National Archives and web service provider ScotlandOnline to make the 1911 census for England and Wales available online. The 1911 census inc...
The British Business Census of Entrepreneurs provides data on all employers and self-employed sole proprietors between 1851 and 1911. This chapter uses those data to provide the first whole-population study of female entrepreneurship in England and Wales during that period. It gives the aggregate ...
1911 censusDebates concerning the origins and development of the late nineteenth- to early twentieth-century declines in marital fertility and infant mortality in England and Wales have been centred largely on the material provided by answers to the ‘special’ questions in the 1911 Census. In ...
doi:10.1080/03071028808567709Ellen JordanRoutledgeSocial HistoryJordan, E., `Female unemployment in England and Wales 1851-1911: An examination of the census figures for 15-19 year olds', Social History 13 (1988), pp. 175-90.
Censusfamily firmssole proprietorsprofessionsThis article uses population censuses to provide the first consistent counts of the population of business proprietors for 1891鈥 1911. After appropriate adjustments for imperfect Census design the article confirms the persistence of own account self-employed as...
"Fertility Decline in Scotland, England and Wales, and Ireland: Comparisons from the 1911 Census of Fertility." Population Studies 52(1): 1-20.Anderson, M. (1998). Fertility decline in Scotland, England and Wales, and Ireland: Comparisons from the 1911 census of fertility. Population Studies...
This article uses the British Business Census of Entrepreneurs (BBCE) to examine the relationship between the household and entrepreneurship in England and Wales between 1851 and 1911. The BBCE allows three kinds of entrepreneurial households to be identified: those where an entrepreneur employs co-...