Posts Tagged ‘census of UK’

Q & A on the Census of the UK

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

I have found a great article called “Q & A on the census” in a back edition of the Family Tree Magazine for January 2008.

It gives some back ground as to why, how and where the census were taken. E.g: Did you know that the first one was in 1801? Most people are aware that we can use the 1841 to 1901 census for genealogical research, but census have, it seems, been taken since 1801 to the present day with the exception of 1941 which fell in the World War II period. But only the returns from 1841 onwards have details that are of any good to family historians. The earlier ones didn’t ask for names of all those in the households.

A useful box on the page gives the dates for the returns that we as family historians use. In 1841 it was the 6th June, while in 1851 the census was taken on the 30th March, then the 7th April for 1861, the 2nd April in 1871, the 3rd April in 1881, 5th April for 1891 and the 31st March in 1901.

How were the census details obtained? This question is answered with the following:

“Registration districts were too large to be covered by a single person so were subdivided into sub-districts and these were again dividedĀ  into enumeration districts. In rural areas an enumeration district was the area that could be walked in a day by the person (the enumerator) collecting the schedules. In many instances this would be just one village, whereas a large town would be made up of many enumeration and sub-districts.”

It would seem, from the article, that in the week before the census the enumerator would have delivered to the household the form or schedule and everyone that slept under the roof that particular night would have been included in the return even if it was not their regular home. What was interesting for me was the clarification of the instructions to the enumerators.

No person present was to be left out and those not present were not to be included; which I knew. But what if someone was working over night? Well they were to be included on the census return for the house that they would return to the next morning. This does seem obvious now, but it is good to have it confirmed.

Once the schedules were collected and any not filled out were completed by the enumerator asking questions to gather the correct information, the schedules were copied into the enumerator’s book and these are the documents that we can obtain images of on sites such as ancestry.co.uk or findmypast.com etc. today.