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The United Kingdom Census 1871 was a census of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland carried out on Sunday 2 April 1871. [1] It added the categories of "lunatic" to those recorded as infirm. [2] The total population of England, Wales and Scotland was recorded as 26,072,036. [3]
The census in the United Kingdom is decennial, that is, held every ten years, although there is provision in the Census Act 1920 for a census to take place at intervals of five years or more. There are actually three separate censuses in the United Kingdom – in England and Wales , Scotland , and Northern Ireland – although they are often co ...
No census was taken in 1921 due to the disruption of the Irish War of Independence. The first census taken in the Irish Free State (now the Republic of Ireland) was in April 1926; the first Northern Ireland census occurred at the same time. [22] No census took place in Northern Ireland in 1931, but one took place there in 1937. [23]
1851 United Kingdom census; 1861 United Kingdom census; 1871 United Kingdom census; ... 2021 United Kingdom census; 2022 Scottish census; A. Annual business survey (UK)
Logo of the General Register Office. The General Register Office for Scotland (GROS) (Scottish Gaelic: Oifis Choitcheann a' Chlàraidh na h-Alba) was a non-ministerial directorate of the Scottish Government that administered the registration of births, deaths, marriages, divorces and adoptions in Scotland from 1854 to 2011.
1871 Canadian census; 1871 census of Prince Edward Island; N. 1871 New Zealand census This page was last ...
2 April – census in the United Kingdom, the first to record economic and mental status. 12 April – Durham Miners' Gala first held. [3] 24 April – murder of Jane Clouson, a servant girl, in Eltham; her probable murderer is acquitted. 11 May – the first trial in the Tichborne case begins in the Court of Common Pleas (England).
The Statistical Accounts of Scotland are a series of documentary publications, related in subject matter though published at different times, covering life in Scotland in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The Old (or First) Statistical Account of Scotland was published between 1791 and 1799 by Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster.