Census of Population 1961
Transcription
Census of Population 1961
GOVERNMENT OF N O R T H E R N IRELAND Census of Population 1961 COUNTY OF ARMAGH Printed and presented pursuant to 9 Eliz. 2, Chap. 8 BELFAST: HER MAJESTY'S STATIONERY PRICE 1 5 s . Od. NET OFFICE G O V E R N M E N T OF N O R T H E R N I R E L A N D G E N E R A L REGISTER OFFICE Census of Population 1961 COUNTY OF ARMAGH Printed and presented pursuant to 9 Eliz. 2, Chap. 8 BELFAST : HER M A J E S T Y ' S S T A T I O N E R Y 19 64 OFFICE INTRODUCTION In accordance with the Census Act (Northern Ireland), 1960, a Census of the population was taken on the 23rd April, 1961, which was also the date of Censuses in the other parts of the United Kingdom. It was the fourth since the establishment of the Government of Northern Ireland, previous Censuses having been taken in 1926, 1937 and 1951, The 1961 Census was much fuller, as regards the number and scope of the questions, than any of its predecessors. Compared with the 1951 enumeration, the basic questions were much the same but enquiries about nationality, education, occupation and employment were substantially modified. New questions asked for information concerning persons with certain scientific and technological qualifications, the number of children of women who were or had been married, the type of accommodation occupied by private households, whether such accommodation was owned or rented and the extent to which piped water, cooking and toilet facilities were available. In November, 1961, a Preliminary Report was published giving population figures for each county, county borough and administrative area, together with information on the ages and religious denominations of the people by counties and county boroughs, and the numbers of private dwellings and households in each administrative area. A new Topographical Index, replacing the edition issued in the series of Reports on the 1926 Census, was published in January, 1963. This Report is the third of seven county volumes to be published on the 1961 Census. The statistics therein supersede those in the Preliminary Report and may be accepted as final. It is generally consistent in design and scope with the Reports already published for Belfast County Borough and County Antrim, and the remaining county volumes will be in similar form. Although details of population and habitable buildings in respect of townlands in rural districts are not given in the county volumes, the figures, for which a charge may be made depending on the extent of the information required, are available on application to the General Register Office. A General Report will follow the county volumes. It will summarize for the whole country the information in the county volumes and, in some respects, deal with it in greater detail. The General Report will also contain certain additional information, including that on persons with scientific and technological qualifications, which has not been analysed on a county basis. There will be a separate Report on the Fertility of Marriage. :&eneral Register Office, Fermanagh House, Ormeau Avenue, r BELFAST, 2. November, 1-963, P9580A) in CONTENTS PART I - EXPLANATORY NOTES Page Area Population Administrative divisions Buildings for habitation Types of private dwellings Tenure of private dwelling accommodation Households Household arrangements Rooms Valuation Usual address Birthplace Nationality Religion Terminal education age Occupations and industries Social class and socio-economic groups Convention as to dots (.) and dashes (-) Completion and revision of Census information VII vii vii vii viii ix ix ix x x x x xi xi xi xi xii xiv xiv PART I I - STATISTICAL NOTES AREA XV POPULATION XV Natural increase Administrative areas Parliamentary constituencies xv xv i xv i PRIVATE DWELLINGS AND HOUSEHOLDS xv i Total dwellings Inhabited dwellings Type and tenure of inhabited dwellings Private households Rooms and density of occupation Household arrangements Household socio-economic groups xv i xvii xix xx xx i xxii xxiv USUAL ADDRESS xxv i SEX, AGE AND MARITAL CONDITION xxv i Sex distribution Ages Marital condition xxvii xxvii xxvii BIRTHPLACE AND NATIONALITY xxvii RELIGION xxviii xxx TERMINAL EDUCATION AGE xxx i OCCUPATIONS AND INDUSTRIES Occupations Social c l a s s and socio-economic groups Industries |(89680A) V XXXI1 xxxiii xxxiv PART III - TABLES Abbreviations:- Co. = County; A.A. - Administrative Area, i.e. municipal borougji, urban district rural district; C.E.D. * County Electoral Division; D.E.D. * District Electoral Division of a rural district; Town = town, village or housing estate consisting a separate and identifiable cluster of fifty or more dwellings but having no lega defined boundary; towns forming continuous housing development from an administrative urban area are excluded. Table No. Area for which statistics are given SUBJECT OF TABLE Pagj 1 Area, Buildings for Habitation and Population, 1961 Co. 1 2 Population, 1821-1961 Co. i' 3 Population, 1951 and 1961, and Intercensal Changes Co., A.A* 's 1 4 Area, Population, Buildings for Habitation, Private Households and Valuation CO., A.A. 's, D.E.D.'s, Towns 2 \ Co., C.E.D.'s | 6 Inhabited Dwellings by Building Type, Tenure and Rooms i Co., A. A. • s 8 Private Households: Size, Rooms Occupied, and Density af Room Occupation i Co., A.A.'s ! 8 Private Households: Co., A.A. *s Availability of Household Arrangements by Tenure and Type of Accommodation 1 9 Private Households: Households and Persons therein by Tenure of Accommodation, Rooms occupied and Socio-economic Group of Head of Household 5 Area, Population, Buildings for Habitation, Private Households and Valuation 6 Private Dwellings: 7 IS 17 Co. 80 10 inhabited Buildings, etc., other than Private Dwellings: Class, Number, Total Population and (for Institutions) Number of Inmates Co., A.A. • s 21 11 Population, Parliamentary Electors and Members of Parliament Parliamentary Constituencies 25 A.A.'s 12 Adjustment of Enumerated Population to obtain Resident Population 13 Ages by Single Years, Sex and Marital Condition Co.. 24 14 Ages by Quinquennial Groups, Sex and Marital Condition Co., A.A. 's 28 15 Birthplaces CO. 29 16 Birthplaces: Persons born outside Northern Ireland by Religion and Place of Birth CO. 30 17 Nationality: Persons born outside the British Isles by Nationality and Usual Address a year ago Co. 30 18 Religions Co., A.A. *S 31 19 Religions: Population under 22 years by Individual Years and 20 years and over by Quinquennial Groups CO. 32 20 Education: Terminal Education Ages of Persons 15 Years and over by Sex and Age Groups CO. 33 21 Education: Terminal Education Ages of Persons 15 Years and over by Sex, Age Group and Occupation Order CO. 34 22 Occupations: Population aged 15 and over by Occupation and Industrial Status CO. 36 23 Occupations: Occupied Population aged 15 and over by Occupation, Marital Condition and Age Group Co. 42 24 Occupations: Population aged 15 and over by Socio-economic Group, Social Class and Age Group CO. 52 25 Industries: Working Population aged 15 and over by Industry (excluding persons out of work) CO. 1 Co., 23 1—i (89580A) Vl PART I EXPLANATORY NOTES AND DEFINITIONS OF TERMS USED IN THE REPORT AREA The acreages given are as measured by the Ordnance Survey and relate to the County and its administrative and other areas as constituted at the date of the 1961 Census. Foreshore is excluded. Acreages of areas covered by the larger rivers, lakes and tideways are also excluded from the body of Tables 4 and 5, but the total is given in a footnote thereto* POPULATION The 1961, Census population comprises all living persons, irrespective of their usual address or nationality, who spent Census night in the area of enumeration. Members of the Armed Forces (including those of Commonwealth and foreign countries except personnel aboard foreign naval vessels) are included. Persons travelling on Census night were enumerated with the population of the district in which they arrived the next day unless they had already been enumerated elsewhere. Persons on vessels at moorings or anchorage in Northern Ireland waters or aboard ships on coastwise voyage to Northern Ireland ports were counted as part of the population of the district containing the mooring, anchorage or arrival port. Population figures for the 1951 Census are adjusted to relate to areas as constituted at the date of the 1961 Census. Figures for earlier Censuses relate,, generally, to areas as constituted at the respective Census dates. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISIONS The County is divided into nine administrative areas - two municipal boroughs, three urban districts and four rural districts. Armagh Urban District is divided into wards which form the territorial units for local council elections; in each of the boroughs and the two remaining urban districts, the entire borough or district is the unit for municipal elections. In rural districts, the units are the district electoral divisions of which there are 75. The County is also divided into twenty county electoral divisions which are the units for county council election purposes. There are four parliamentary constituencies for elections to the Northern Ireland Parliament, and one constituency for elections to the United Kingdom Parliament. The following change, affecting Census statistics, took place in the constitution or boundaries of administrative areas during the intercensal period:A portion of Lurgan Rural District was transferred to Lurgan Municipal Borough (1st April, 1957). BUILDINGS FOR HABITATION For enumeration record purposes, a building was broadly defined as a structure comprising one or more rooms or other spaces enclosed within external or party walls. A structure detached from but subsidiary to a main building was regarded as part of the main building unless it contained residential accommodation normally occupied by a separate household. Non-permanent structures such as huts, shacks and converted railway carriages and mobile structures such as tents and caravans were treated as buildings only if they were occupied on Census night or were some person's usual residence. Unoccupied structures of wood, asbestos, corrugated iron, etc., used as casual residences, e.g. at week-ends or holiday times, were regarded as buildings if they appeared to be of sound construction and had amenities such as piped water, sewerage facilities and electric lighting. Dilapidated structures which were unoccupied and unlikely to be used again were ignored. Buildings in course of erection were listed only if some part thereof was in use as residential accommodation. (89580A) Vii Buildings for habitation comprise all buildings used wholly or partly as residential accommodation. They are divided into two categories:- | I (i) Private dwellings consisting of structurally separate units of living accommodation occupied or normally occupied by private households. They include houses, flats, non-permanent and mobile structures, and accommodation in buildings which are not wholly residential. Married quarters in Service establishments are also included. A building is regarded as not wholly residential if part of it is used exclusively or primarily for purposes oth^r than living accommodation, for example, a factory or block of offices containing a director1s or caretaker's flat, or a building comprising a shop and dwelling. Buildings such as a doctor's or dentist's house with a room or annexe used as a surgery and a house containing a clergyman's or author's study are, however, treated as wholly residential. (ii) Other buildings such as hotels, hostels, boarding houses, hospitals, welfare centres, religious community premises, boarding schools and other premises which exist for a specific functional purpose in addition to providing residential accommodation. Civilian shipping and establishments under Naval, Army and Air Force discipline are included. The term boarding house covers buildings described as such in the Census returns and any buildings returned as private dwellings but containing five or more boarders. At the 1951 Census, private dwellings in which three or more boarders were enumerated were classified as boarding houses. The term inhabited denotes actual residence of a person or persons on Census night. Uninhabited buildings therefore include not only those which were vacant on Census night but also those from which the usual occupants were temporarily absent. Permanent habitation means normal occupation all the year round* TYPES OF PRIVATE DWELLINGS Inhabited private dwellings are classified on the basis of instructions issued to the Census enumerators and which are summarised as follows:(i) A dwelling house means a dwelling of permanent construction which is not divided into flats and is not a farmhouse. A prefabricated bungalow provided by a local authority is included. (ii) A flat means a completely self-contained dwelling on one or more floors with a separate entrance from the street or from a common landing or staircase. It must be possible to move between its rooms internally, without using a common landing or staircase used by other households. Also, none of the household arrangements (see notes on page ix) must be shared with the occupants of another unit of dwelling accommodation in the building. Where a building has been converted for the use of two or more households, the accommodation of any part is not regarded as a flat unless each part occupied by a householder has a main door giving access to the whole of the accommodation and unless the other conditions specified above are satisfied. (iii) A farmhouse means a dwelling of permanent construction from which the occupier carries on farming as a main occupation. In practice, a dwelling described as a farmhouse on the Census return was classified as such only if at least one member of the household was engaged in farming. (iv) Some other type of dwelling means a tent, caravan or other movable dwelling, or such structure as a barn, out-office, hut or shed of wood, corrugated iron or similar non-traditional material and which, though fixed, . is of such a temporary and insubstantial nature that it cannot be regarded as a permanent dwelling. (89580A) viii TENURE OF PRIVATE DWELLING ACCOMMODATION When completing the Census returns, private householders were required to indicate, under the following headings, how they occupied their accommodation; information is tabulated on the same basis:- the (i) As owner-occupier, including purchase by mortgage. (ii) By renting from a local or public authority, including the Northern Ireland Housing Trust, the Sailors' and Soldiers' Land Trust, Housing Associations and Government Departments, (iii) By renting from another landlord, and whether rented furnished or unfurnished. (iv) In some other way: this category covers accommodation which is neither owned nor rented by the household, for example, a house or flat occupied free of rent by virtue of the particular employment of the head or other member of the household. In Table 6, a dwelling shared by two or more households is classified according to the tenure stated by the main household, the latter being identified on the basis of a graded list of tenures, owner occupied taking precedence over rented and rented/unfurnished taking precedence over rented/furnished. HOUSEHOLDS A household is a person living alone, or a group of persons living together and normally partaking of meals together whether in a dwelling or part thereof or in a hotel, boarding house, hospital, Service establishment or other premises in which some form of residential accommodation is provided. A private household is a household occupying all or part of a dwelling house, flat, farmhouse or other type of dwelling. A person (or persons) living in the same dwelling as, but not boarding with, the household is treated as a separate private household; but if the person usually has at least one meal per day provided by the household he is regarded as part of the household. HOUSEHOLD ARRANGEMENTS The arrangements on which information was collected in respect of each private household are listed below. The householder was required to state whether individual arrangements were used only by the household, shared with another household or were not available. (i) Cold water tap refers to a tap within the building, excluding a tap in an open yard. (ii) Hot water tap means water piped to a boiler, a tank with immersion heater, geyser, sink heater, or any form of heating appliance which will allow hot water to be drawn from a tap within the building. (iii) Fixed bath means a bath permanently installed with a waste pipe leading outside the building. It is immaterial for this purpose whether there is water piped to it or whether the room where it is installed is used only as a bathroom. (iv) Water closet means any water closet, within or attached to the building or in the yard, emptying into a main sewer, septic tank or cesspool. It does not include a chemical closet or earth closet. (v) Kitchen sink means a sink inside the building, whether in a kitchen or not, with a drain pipe leading outside the building, and normally used for washing up. It need not have water piped into it. A wash basin used primarily for personal toilet is excluded. (vi) Cooking stove or range means any cooking stove, kitchen range or other fixed grate using gas, electricity or any other fuel, provided there is an oven. It does not apply where the only method of cooking is by gas-ring, hotplate, portable electric or oil oven or by open fire. 89580A) ix ROOMS ^he rooms counted are those normally used by the household for living, eating or sleeping purposes. A kitchen if so used is included, but not a scullery which is used only for washing, cleaning or cooking. A pantry, cloakroom, landing, lobty; closet or bathroom, or any warehouse, office, shop or other room used for nondomestic purposes is also excluded. In the tables classifying households by rooms occupied, any room shared by two or more households in the same dwelling is allocated wholly to one (usually the main) household, ensuring however that the total number of rooms in the dwelling is not altered. VALUATION The figures shown in Tables 4 and 5 relate to the rating year 1961/62 and have • been supplied by the Commissioner of Valuation. They are the totals of the valuations in the various areas before reduction on account of debating, but exclude in certain cases the valuations of such miscellaneous items as electricity, gas and water undertakings, telegraphs, telephones and fisheries. The total of the excluded valuations is given in a footnote to the tables. Subject to the Local Government (Rating and Finance) Act (Northern Ireland), 1929, as amended by subsequent legislation, agricultural land and buildings are exempt from all ordinary rates, while industrial and freight-transport hereditaments and salmon and eel fisheries are partially derated. The consequent deficiency in the yield of rates is made good by way of General Exchequer contributions. USUAL ADDRESS The persons regarded as having their usual addresses in the area of enumeration include: (i) Persons enumerated in their own homes, and those enumerated in and having a settled residence in private lodgings, boarding houses and hotels. (ii) Resident domestic staff enumerated at their places of work. (iii) Persons enumerated in and who were inmates of homes for old people, homes, for terminal care, homes for handicapped persons and hom^s for persons requiriid special care. (iv) Persons enumerated in chronic sick or psychiatric hospitals and who had been patients or inmates for six months or more. (v) Crews enumerated on vessels and usually living aboard ship, except crews of vessels registered in ports outside the United Kingdom. (vi) Persons with no fixed addresses and persons for whom usual addresses were not stated and which could not be assumed from the Census returns. School children and students living away from home during term time were required to give their home addresses on the Census return. Members of H.M. Forces not enumerated on the special Forces return had to give the addresses of their married quarters or other home addresses. In addition to giving their usual addresses on Census day, persons born outside the British Isles were also required to state their usual addresses a year ago, i.e. at 23rd April, 1960. BIRTHPLACE A person born in a country which at Census day had ceased to have a separate existence is regarded as born in the absorbing country, for example, birthplace stated as Estonia, Latvia or Ukraine is classified as U.S.S.R. If the birthplace of an individual was not stated on the Census return, the county or country of birth was assumed only where this could be done with reasonable certainty from other entries in the return. (89580A) x NATIONALITY A person born outside the British Isles had to state his nationality on the Census return. A person born in a British Colony was instructed to enter "British" on the return, A citizen of one of the following was instructed to write "British" or "Commonwealth citizen";- United Kingdom and Colonies, Canada (including Newfoundland), Australia, New Zealand, The Union of South Africa, India, Pakistan, Ghana, Ceylon, The Federation of Malaya, The Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, The State of Singapore, Nigeria and Cyprus. RELIGION In this classification, religious professions which differ only or mainly in denominational terminology are generally grouped together, and figures for the group as a whole are shown under the name by which the group is officially or commonly known. Thus the heading Presbyterian includes United Presbyterian, Trinitarian and Church of Scotland. Church of Ireland is regarded as embracing both Anglican and Episcopalian except for persons so described who had a usual address in England; such persons are classified as Church of England. In keeping with the practice in tlie 1951 Census Reports, figures for Church of England and Episcopal Church of Scotland are merged with those for Church of Ireland in the body of the tables, but their totals are given in a footnote to Table 18. TERMINAL.EDUCATION AGE At the 1951 Census, information was sought as to whether persons at educational establishments were attending full-time or part-time. In 1961, all persons aged 15 years and over, who at Census day had ceased to receive full-time education at school, college, university, etc., were required to state the age at which their full-time education ended. In this Report, such age is referred to as the terminal education age. OCCUPATIONS AND INDUSTRIES The economic activity information collected at the Census was in respect of persons aged 15 years and over, and related to the activity during the week ended 22nd April, 1961, i.e. the week preceding Census day. For a person in employment, particulars were required of his main gainful employment during the week, irrespective of whether he was following his usual occupation or of the hours actually worked; if not in employment or wholly retired at the end of the week, the reference was to his last full-time employment. A fourfold classification was adopted in analysing the economic activity information, namely, by occupation, industry, employment status and economic position, each being independent of the others and dealing with a different aspect of a person's employment or former employment. The results are tabulated on the basis of the revised occupational and industrial Classifications used for 1961 Census purposes in the rest of the United Kingdom, viz., the Classification of Occupations, 1960 (H.M.S.O. Price £1 7s. 6d. net) and the Standard Industrial Classification, 1958 (H.M.S.O. Price 2s. 6d. net). Compared with previous Classifications, considerable changes have been made in the new Classifications to help make them conform with the current organisation of industry and commerce and to bring them more into line with recommended international standard Classifications. A detailed comparison of the 1961 data with those of earlier Censuses is, therefore, necessarily limited. As at the 1951 Census, the sole criterion for determining a person's occupation is the kind of work he performs. The nature of the factory, business or service in which he is employed has no bearing on his occupational classification except to the extent that it may enable the nature of his duties to be more clearly defined. Thus every joiner, whether employed in shipbuilding, the building industry or on routine maintenance work in a textile factory, is classified to the same occupational group. The only exception to the rule applies to labourers assigned to groups 181-188 where the allocation is on a strictly industrial basis. Similarly, the industry to which a person is classified is largely independent of his occupation and is determined by reference to the business or economic activity in, or for the purposes of, which his occupation is followed, regard being had only to the nature of the service of product to which his labour contributes. For classification purposes, the industrial unit used is the "establishment", which is normally the whole of the premises, such as a factory, transport undertaking or shop, at a particular address. (89580A) xl Brief definitions of certain terms in the Report are given below. Occupied or economically active population: all persons in employment during the week preceding Census day, including those temporarily away from work because of holidays, sickness, strikes, etc.; also included are persons who were out of employment but expecting to work again and young persons who had left school and were seeking their first job. Working population: persons out of work. the occupied or economically active population excluding Large establishments; persons. Small establishments: establishments, other than farms, employing 25 or more other establishments. Economically inactive population: all persons aged 15 and over without paid occupations. Included are the following specified groups:Institution inmates: inmates of institutions who returned a former occupation and were not stated to be retired, but who were known or assumed to be withdrawn from employment for a period in excess of six months. Retired persons: formerly occupied persons who ceased to be employed and did not expect to work again. Students: persons above the age of compulsory education at educational establishments. Housewives: with no other stated occupation, SOCIAL CLASS AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC GROUPS A convenient summary of economic activity information for social and medical purposes is provided by two further classifications, namely Social Class and Socioeconomic Group. Social Class - Under this classification, the many occupational unit groups are arranged into the following five broad categories:* I. II. III. IV* V. Professional, etc. occupations Intermediate occupations Skilled occupations Partly skilled occupations Unskilled occupations To give a somewhat finer classification, social classes II, III and IV are divided into "manual", "non-manual" and "agricultural" sub-groups. Within this framework, social class I is wholly "non-manual", and social class V wholly "manual". Members of the Armed Forces and persons with inadequately described occupations are excluded from the classification. Socio-economic Groups - The 13 socio-economic groups introduced in 1951 are replaced by 16 rather different groups, the allocation of persons to the groups being determined by a cross-classification of occupation an# employment status. The socio-economic groups, with brief definitions, are as follows:(1) Employers and managers in central and local government, industry, commerce, etc. - large establishments (2) Employers and managers in industry, commerce, etc. - small establishments , (3) Professional workers - self employed Self employed persons engaged in work normally requiring qualifications of university degree standard. (89580A) xii (4) Professional workers - employees Employees engaged in work normally requiring qualifications of university degree standard. (5) Intermediate non-manual workers Employees, not exercising general planning or supervisory powers, engaged in non-manual occupations ancillary to the professions but not normally requiring qualifications of university degree standard; persons engaged in artistic work and not employing, others thereat; and persons engaged in occupations otherwise included in Group (6) who have an additional and formal supervisory function. (6) Junior non-manual workers Employees, not exercising general planning or supervisory powers, engaged in clerical, sales and non-manual communications and security occupations, excluding those who have additional and formal supervisory functions. (?) Personal service workers Employees engaged in service occupations caring for food, drink, clothing and other personal needs. (B) Foremen and supervisors - manual Employees (other than managers) who formally and immediately supervise others engaged in manual occupations, whether or not themselves engaged in such occupations. (9) Skilled manual workers Employees engaged in manual occupations which require considerable and specific skills. (10) Semi-skilled manual workers Employees engaged in manual occupations which require slight but specific skills. (11) Unskilled manual workers Other employees engaged in manual occupations. (12) Own account workers (other than professional) Self employed persons engaged in any trade, personal service or manual occupation not normally requiring training of university degree standard and having no employees other than family workers. (13) Farmers - employers and managers Persons who own, rent or manage farms, market gardens or forests, employing people other than family workers in the work of the enterprise. (14) Farmers - own account Persons who own or rent farms, market gardens or forests and having no employees other than family workers. (15) Agricultural workers Employees engaged in tending crops, animals, game or forests, or operating agricultural or forestry machinery. (16) Members of armed f o r c e s . The detailed allocations of/the occupation/employment status groups to the social classes and socio-economi/c groups are given in the Classification of Occupations, 1960. (89580A) CONVENTION AS TO DOTS (.) AND DASHES (-) In the tables, a dot (.) indicates that figures are not available or that the column heading is not relevant to the particular line on which the dot is shown; a dash (-) indicates that the quantity is zero or, in the case of rates, less than half of the final digit, COMPLETION AND REVISION OF CENSUS INFORMATION When collecting the Census returns, the enumerators were required to examine them for obvious omissions and errors, asking such questions from the persons delivering the returns as seemed necessary to complete and correct them. Further scrutiny and revision of the returns took place at various stages of the work in the Census Office. In some cases, notably where ages had been omitted, enquiries were instituted; otherwise, information was inserted or amended only if reasonable assumptions could be made from other particulars on the returns. Prior to compilation, the data extracted from the returns were edited for impossible and unlikely combinations, corrections being made by reference back to the returns* Finally, the tabulations were checked for compatibility of related data. (89 580 A) xiv PART II STATISTICAL NOTES The explanatory notes and definitions in Part I apply equally to the notes which follow and to the tables in Part III. AREA Excluding the larger rivers, lakes and tideways, the area of the County at Census day was 312,733 acres or 489 square miles. This represents 9.3 per cent of the area of Northern Ireland. In 1899, the County lost over half a square mile to County Down (see note to Table 2 ) . POPULATION The total population of the County was 117,594 which is 3,340 persons or 2.9 per cent more th&n at the 1951 Census. Table 2 shows the trends since 1821 when the first complete Census of Ireland was taken. Between that year and 1841, the population rose from 197,427 to 233,024 persons which is the highest yet recorded. Thereafter, there was a decline which continued with varying intensity until the 1937 Census, by which time the population had fallen to 108,815. At 117,594, the 1961 total is only slightly more than half of the 1841 peak. Natural Increase: Figures of the natural increase, actual variation and net outward movement of the population in each intercensal period since 1901 are given in Table I. TABLE I Intercensal period Population at beginning of period Births registered Deaths registered 1901-1911 (10 years) 125, 392 27,893 23,970 3,923 - 5,101 9,024 1911-1926 (15 years) 120,291 36,502 31,150 5,352 -10,221 15, 573* 1926-1937 (11 years) 110,070 23, 589 18,928 4,661 - 1,255 5,916 1937-1951 (14 years) 108,815, 33,836 21,617 12,219 + 5,439 6,780* 1951-1961 (10 years) 114, 254 25,606 13,160 12,446 + 3,340 9,106 Excess of births over deaths Intercensal variation In population Net movement outward •Including the deaths of non-civilians of the County of Armagh vfliich occurred outside Northern Ireland. The natural increase of the population, i.e. the excess of births over deaths, during the last intercensal period averaged 1,245 persons per annum. This was 43 per cent above the corresponding average for the previous period and probably also the highest annual average, in respect of the County as now constituted, for any complete intercensal period since, at least, the introduction of birth and death registration in 1864. From such figures as are available it is evident that, commencing with the famine years, of the eighteen-forties and for several decades into the present century, the movement of persons out of the County more than off-set, sometimes as much as fourfold, the natural increase of the population. This net loss ceased during the period 1937-51; and while the natural increase in 1951-61 again exceeded the outward migration, the latter accounted for some 9,100 persons and was relatively almost as great as for any period since 1901. As is seen from Table 3, all administrative areas except Keady Urban District had a net outward migration. In terms of the 1951 population, this migration was relatively highest in Tandragee Urban District (16.8 per cent), Armagh Rural District (12.4 per cent) and Lurgan Rural District (12.0 per cent). Generally, the rate of outward movement from rural districts was more than double that for urban areas. 89580A) xv Administrative Areas: Table II shows the population by administrative areas since 1901 and the variations during the period 1951-61, TABLE II Population Intercensal variation 1951-1961 County Annagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee Armagh Lurgan Newry No, 2 Tanderagee 1911 1901 Area* 125, 392 U.D. M.B. n U.D. R.D. n It 120,291 1926 110,070 1937 108,815 1951 1961 114,254 ' 117,594 Persons p e r acre i n 1961 Number Per Cent + 3,340 + 2,9 0.38 7.41 7.57 8.83 10,18 1,84 8,825/ 1,466 12,126/ 10,954/ 1,427 8,694/ 1,434 13,017/ 12,773/ 1,409 8,762/ 1,341 12,975/ 13,207/ 1,320 8,669 1,260 14,464/ 14, 803 1,120 9,280 1,462 16, 370 17,202 1,394 10,062 1,637 17,872 18,609 1,281 + 782 + 175 + .1,502 + 1,407 113 + 8,4 +12.0 + 9.2 + 8.2 - 8.1 36, 5 6 5 / 16, 3 7 2 / 32,836 4,821 33, 9 8 1 / 14,251/ 30,391 4,341 30, 2 8 6 / 12,179/ 26,336 3,664 28,765 11,782/ 24, 569 3,383 28,900 11,918 24,527 3,201 27,718 11,654 25, 550 3,211 - + + 1,182 264 + 1,023 + 10 4.1 2.2 4,2 0.3 0.19 0.32 0.24 0.19 *As constituted at the date of the 1961 Census, /Estimated figure. With the exception of Tandragee Urban District and Armagh and Lurgan Rural Districts, all administrative areas returned increased populations compared with the 1951 figures. The largest actual increases were in the boroughs of Lurgan (+ 1,502 persons or 9.2 per cent) and Portadown (+ 1,407 or 8.2 per cent), each of which has had an almost continuous population growth during the past sixty years, Tandragee Urban District was the only urban area with a smaller population than in 1901. Contrary to the general population decline in rural areas, an increase of 1,023 persons occurred between 1951 and 1961 in Newry No.2 Rural District mainly as a result of extensive housing development in those parts of the area bordering on Newry Urban District in County Down. Of the total population of the County, 42.1 per cent were in the municipal boroughs and urban districts, compared with 39.8 per cent at the 1951 Census. Population densities in the administrative urban areas, in terms of persons per acre, averaged 8.08 and ranged from 10.18 in Portadown Municipal Borough to 1.84 in Tandragee Urban District. In the rural areas, the densities varied from 0.32 in Lurgan to 0. 19 in Armagh and Tanderagee Rural Districts. Figures of population together with the numbers of habitable buildings and private households are given in Table 4 in respect of smaller territorial units, viz., wards of administrative urban areas, district electoral divisions of rural districts and towns with no legally defined boundaries. Parliamentary Constituencies: The constituent divisions of the County for the purpose of elections to the Parliaments of both Northern Ireland and the United Kingdom are set out in Table 11 together with population figures, the number of electors and the ratio of electors per 1,000 population in each constituency. PRIVATE DWELLINGS AND HOUSEHOLDS Total Dwellings: In 1961 there were 32,068 private dwellings of which 30,318 were inhabited and 1,750 were uninhabited. This represents an increase of 2,579 dwellings or 8.7 per cent on the corresponding 1951 total of 29^489 (inhabited 28,242; uninhabited 1,247). The intercensal variations are shown by administrative areas in Table IV. (89580A) XVl TABLE IV* Private dwellings 1961 1951 Intercensal variation Area/ County Total Inhabited 29,489 28,242 Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee U.D. n M.B. U.D. 2,145 380 4, 045 4, 377, 403 Armagh Lurgan Newry No. 2 Tanderagee R.D. n n n 7, 359 3, 095 6,761 . 924 « Uninhabited Total Inhabited Uninhabited Total Inhabited Uninhabited 1,247 32,068 30, 318 1,750 + 2,579 + 2,076 + 503 2,082 359 3,950 4,299 394 63 21 95 78 9 2,573 505 4,823 5,307 408 2,457 454 4,668 5,117 388 116 51 155 190 20 + + + + + 428 125 778 930 5 + + + + 375 95 718 818 6 + 53 + 30 + 60 + 112 + 11 6,990 2,967 6,330 871 369 128 431 53 7,324 3,047 7,154 927 6,914 2,913 6,537 870 410 134 617 57 - 35 48 393 3 76 54 207 1 + 41 + 6 + 186 + 4 + i + + *Table III, dealing with the environs of Belfast, appeared only in the Belfast County Borough volume. /As constituted at the date of the 1961 Census* With the exception of Armagh ahd Lurgan Rural Districts, all administrative areas shared in the increased number of private dwellings. In the urban areas there was an aggregate increase of 2,266 dwellings or 20.0 per cent; Portadown Municipal Borough (+ 930 dwellings or 21.2 per cent) and Lurgan Municipal Borough (+ 778 dwellin or 19. 2 per cent) returned the largest actual increases. Keady Urban District, with 125 more dwellings than in 1951, had an increase of almost one-third. The only significant variation in the rural districts was an increase of 393 dwellings or 5.8 per cent in Newry No.2 Rural District. The number of uninhabited dwellings in the County represented 5.5 per cent of the total dwellings compared with 4.2 per cent in 1951. The proportions ranged from 10.1 per cent in Keady Urban District and 8.6 per cent in Newry No.2 Rural District to 3.6 per cent in'Portadown and 3.2 per cent in Lurgan Municipal Boroughs. All area had an increased number of uninhabited dwellings. It should be noted that the total of 1,750 uninhabited dwellings included an unspecified number of homes from which the usual occupants were only temporarily away on Census night. According to statistics furnished by the Ministry of Health and Local Government, approximately 5,200 new units of dwelling accommodation were provided in the County during the intercensal period. When this figure is compared with the Census increase of almost 2,580 in the total inhabited and uninhabited dwellings, it follows that some 2,620 dwellings recorded in 1951 either had ceased to exist in 1961 or were no longer used for private dwelling purposes. Inhabited Dwellings: Table 6 shows, in respect of the County and each administrative area, the numbers of inhabited private dwellings, rooms and persons therein. Excluding information on type and tenure of accommodation which was collected for the first time in 1961 and which is dealt with in later paragraphs, summary figures for the County are given in Table V together with comparable figures at previous Censuses. '(89580A) xvli TABLE V - 1926 1937 1951 1961 25, 200 26, 629 28, 242 30, 318 |^0' 159 0.6 90 0.3 198 0.7 50 0.2 1-3 rooms L°* 10, 380 41.2 9,214 34.6 8,343 29.5 6,568 21.7 4A- 5c rooms (No. ># 10, 663 42.3 13,017 48.9 15, 227 53.9 18, 534 61.1 6 or more rooms L°* 4,157 16.5 4, 398 16.5 4,672 16.6 5,216 17.2 103, 271 112,615 121,459 135, 589 105, 750 105, 125 110,997 114,416 Average no. of rooms p e r d w e l l i n g 4.10 4.23 4.30 4.47 Average no. of p e r s o n s p e r d w e l l i n g 4.20 3.95 3.93 3.77 Average n o . of p e r s o n s p e r room 1.02 0.93 0.91 0.84 Total Inhabited dwellings Shared d w e l l i n g s Dwellings with - T o t a l rooms P o p u l a t i o n in p r i v a t e dwellings During the period 1951-61 the number of inhabited private dwellings increased at a proportionately greater rate than the population therein as follows:- + 2,076 dwellings or 7.4 per cent; + 3,419 persons or 3.1 per cent. As the average number of rooms per dwelling was also greater than in 1951, there was, therefore, a reduction in the average numbers of persons per dwelling and per room, which continued the trend revealed at previous Censuses. At 3.77 persons per dwelling and 0.84 persons per room, the 1961 average densities were 10 per cent and 18 per cent, respectively, below the corresponding averages in 1926. Shared dwellings, i.e. those containing more than one household, accounted for only 0.2 per cent of the total inhabited dwellings, compared with 0.7 per cent in 1951 and 0.6 per cent in 1926. Dwellings with 4-5 rooms increased by 3,307 and formed some 61 per cent of the total as against 54 per cent in 1951 and 42 per cent in 1926; those with six or more rooms increased by 544. The number of dwellings in the 1-3 rooms category decreased by 1,775 and their proportion fell from 29.5 per cent to 21.7 per cent which was little more than half of the 1926 ratio. Table VI shows for each administrative area the percentages of inhabited dwellings by room categories, together with average population densities per dwelling and per room. TABLE VI P e r c e n t a g e of i n h a b i t e d d w e l l i n g s w i t h Area County 25.4 9.7 7,5 32.3 32.8 34.8 45.7 36.4 28.4 25.3 44.2 27.6 29.1 11.6 5.5 7.1 11.1 8.8 31.8 30.9 37.0 31.3 19.2 25.5 15.1 27.7 10.9 11.4 8.1 10.6 4 rooms 5 rooms 6.3 15.4 35.7 13.8 22.3 8.9 6.1 9.0 19.1 18.3 22.4 16,4 U. D. " M. B. U, D. 4.0 7.9 1.2 4.0 5.4 Armagh Lurgan Newry No.2 Tanderagee R. D. " " " 8.1 5.5 11.6 2.3 (89580A) 7 o r mor6 rooms 3 rooms Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee n 6 rooms 1-2 rooms /Average no. of rooms p e r dwelling Average number of p e r s o n s Per dwelling Per room 4.47 3.77 0.84 9.9 6.2 3.8 5.5 11.3 4.72 4.26 4.62 4.59 4.78 3.75 3.54 3.74 3.61 3.29 0.79 0.83 0.81 0.79 0.69 10.9 8.4 5.8 11.7 4.51 4.50 4.08 4.76 3.86 3.96 3.82 3.68 0.86 0.88 0.94 0.77 On the basis of overall averages for each type of area, the number of rooms per dwelling and the numbers of persons per dwelling and per room did not differ greatly as between urban and rural areas. The figures were:™ Average number of Rooms per dwelling Urban areas Rural areas Total County Persons per Dwelling Room 4.62 4.36 4.47 3.67 3.85 3.77 0.79 0.88 0.84 Tandragee Urban District,, with the highest average number of rooms per dwelling, returned the lowest average population densities per dwelling and per room. While Lurgan Rural District had the highest average population density per dwelling, the average numbers of rooms per dwelling and persons per room were least favourable in Newry No. 2 Rural District. Type and Tenure of Inhabited Dwellings: Of the 30,277 inhabited permanent dwellings, 24,221 pr 80*0 per cent were classified as dwelling houses. Of the latter, about 31 per cent were owner occupied, 29 per cent were rented from local or public authorities and 37 per cent were rented unfurnished from other landlords. Those rented furnished from other landlords accounted for less than one per cent; the remainder of just over two per cent were occupied in some other way. At 531, the number of flats inhabited permanent dwellings. authorities and a further 17 per landlords. Farmhouses numbered represented only 1.8 per cent of the total Almost 76 per cent were rented from local or public cent were rented, mostly unfurnished, from other 5,525 or 18.2 per cent of the total dwellings. Table VII shows by administrative areas the percentages of inhabited dwelling houses and flats in each main tenure category, together with the number of farmhouses in each area. TABLE VII 1 Flats D w e l l i n g nouses Oi 53 o o Area •H $O E-> NO. County Armagi Ready Lurgan Partadown Tandragee u.D, » M.B. " u.D. Armagi Lurgan Hewry No.2 Tanderagee R.D. " " " [89580A) ! i U <D o o r-i fe fcg BH & 5 OT3 &£& r-H *H T3-0 U <D3S 4-S A A fl +3 M •d Q> £H -U3 Q) 3 £ CO X3 5> U 3 e s o cd S - H H •a |\ o •o O r~{ a Qi E O W •H 3 TS& <D ft wH OiU a.a Q>+* w o o3 j d8 oG o o •H cd •P O o o u a> hz& bU •a .a u o pp t fol -p •a o 0 -p a> U 2 a? (n +J a> flja CD 4 J cd o <a CC O f-H «H g £H CO •a u s do O'O -H § o CO « «-i 00 •o& CD CO 3 o Q> & *H 3cxu CD o»a o^u O O Es *s 5a fo % % % % NO. % % % 24,221 30.7 29.3 37.9 2.1 531 3.0 75.9 17.0 4.1 j 5,525 2,273 415 4,577 4,946 384 20.3 22.9 18.4 20.8 19.0 30.7 43.4 27.8 27.4 45.6 45.2 32.5 53.2 50.5 32.8 3.8 1.2 0.6 1.3 2.6 180 37 79 171 3.9 10.8 2.5 73.9 04.9 75.9 80.7 17.2 18.9 12.7 18.1 5.0 5.4 8.9 1.2 ! 4,308 42.5 2,188 1 45,7 4,570 1 41.3 560 36.6 26.7 21.9 36.7 19.8 26.9 1 30.2 19.9 40.5 3.9 1 Z.Z 2.1 3.1 xlx 1 _ _ 31 6.4 - - 33 3.0 *~ 74.2 — 75.8 ** 19.4 - 15.1 No. $ *** — - 6.1 1 3 2 10 4 2,562 721 1,915 j 308 The proportion of owner occupied to total dwelling houses ranged from 45.7 per cent in Lurgan Rural District to 18.4 per cent in Lurgan Municipal Borough, the average in rural districts being more than double that in urban areas. More than two out of every five dwelling houses in Keady and Tandragee Urban Districts were rented from local or public authorities compared with about one in five in Lurgan and Tanderagee Rural Districts. In the case of those rented from other • landlords, the percentages varied between 53.2 in Lurgan Municipal Borough and 19.9 in Newry No.2 Rural District. It will be noted that the boroughs of Lurgan and Portadown had fairly similar distributions of dwelling houses by tenure. Two-thirds of the 531 flats in the County were situated in Armagh Urban District and Portadown Municipal Borough; most of them were rented, mainly from local authorities. Of the 5,525 farmhouses, 19 were situated in administrative urban areas. In the rural areas, the proportion of farmhouses to total permanent dwellings ranged from 37.1 per cent in Armagh Rural District to 24.8 per cent in Lurgan Rural District. The corresponding proportion for the combined rural districts of the County was.32 per cent, compared with an average of 25 per cent for all administrative rural areas of Northern Ireland. The number of inhabited dwellings returned as non-permanent was 41, of which 38 were stated to be normally occupied all the year round. Their classification by tenure was:- owner occupied 24; rented from local or public authorities 1; rented unfurnished from other landlords 10; occupied in some other way 6. An analysis'by type and location of dwelling is given below* Caravans, tents and other mobile structures Armagh Lurgan Armagh Lurgan Newry No. 2 Tanderagee U.D. M.B. R.D. tt t! tt Converted railway carriages, omnibuses, etc. Barns, sheds and other types i ii i - 2 2 3 8 2 - 1 2 13 4 19 2 23 41 10 17 Total Private Households: Table-7 details the numbers of private households in the County and each administrative area by household sizes, rooms occupied and densities of room occupation. There were 30,386 private households in 1961 or 1,921 more than at the previous Census. This represents an increase of 6. 7 per cent, which may; be contrasted with increases of 7.4 per cent in the number of inhabited private dwellings, 11.6 per cent in the number of rooms occupied and 3.1 per cent in the private household population. The average size of households was 3.77 persons, compared with 3.90 in 1951 and 4.17 in 1926. Except for households consisting of 6-8 persons and 10 persons in which there were relatively small decreases, the number of households- in each size group was higher than in 1951. The increases were greatest in the two-persons households (+ 913 or 16.2 per cent), the one-person households (+779 or 24.1 per cent) and the] : three-persons households (+ 203 or 3.8 per cent). The number of households : consisting of 11 or more persons rose from 298 to 352, i.e. by 18.1 per cent. Expressed as percentages of the total households, the largest groups were:two-persons 21.5 (1951:- 19.8); three-persons ' 18. 3, (1951: - 18.8) and fourpersons 15.8 (1951:- 16.5). The one-person group, for which the percentage rose from 11.4 to 13,2, was the fourth largest group - a position held in 1951 by households of five persons. The 1961 percentage distribution of private households by sizes is shown for each administrative area in Table VIII. (89580A) xx TABLE VIII Average number of p e r s o n s per household P e r c e n t a g e of p r i v a t e h o u s e h o l d s c o n s i s t i n g of Area 1 person County Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee Armagh Lurgan Newry No. 2 Tanderagee u.D. w M. B, " U.D. R. D. « " w 2 3 persons i persons 4 persons 5 persons 6 persons 7 o r more persons 1951* 1961 13.2 21.5 18.3 15.8 11.6 7.8 11.8 3.90 3.77 12.9 18.7 11.7 11.7 12.6 21,-7 21.1 21.0 22.3 30.9 17.9 14.5 19.8 21.6 17.0 16.3 19.2 17.7 17.7 16.2 12.3 9.5 12.2 12.1 11.9 8.6 7.3 7.9 6.0 4.9 10.3 9.7 9.7 8.6 6.5 3.91 3.93 4.00 3.89 3.53 3.72 3.54 3.73 3.59 3.29 13.9 11.7 15.4 11.9 ' 20.8 22.3 21.1 21.7 17.4 16.7 16.9 19.1 14.7 15.2 13.6 17.1 11.5 11.8 10.9 11.4 7.9 8.8 8.4 10.1 13.8 13.5 13.7 8.7 4.00 3.97 3.75 3.68 3.86 3.94 3.82 3.68 •Figures relate to areas as existing at the 1951 Census. The average size of private households in administrative urban areas was 3.66 persons, compared with 3.85 in rural areas and 3.77 for the County as a whole. In individual areas, the averages ranged from 3.29 in Tandragee Urban District to 3.94 in Lurgan Rural District. Except for Newry No.2 Rural District where the average rose from 3.75 to 3.82 persons and Tanderagee Rural District where there was no change, each area showed a lower average than in 1951. Rooms and Density of Occupation: Intercensal changes in the proportion of households in each room category are indicated by the following summary: - Percentage of households occupying 1 room 1951 1961 0.9 0.4 2 rooms 3 rooms 4 rooms 5 rooms 6 or more rv^mo 9.5 6.1 20.0 15.4 33.7 35.6 19.6 25.3 16.3 17.2 Households occupying four rooms were still the largest group, but households having five rooms replaced those with three rooms as the second largest group. As in 1951, households of two persons occupying four rooms were in the majority, followed by the three-persons households in four rooms and the four-persons households in four rooms. Table IX shows for each administrative area the 1961 relative distribution of households by rooms occupied, together with the percentages of households and population living at a density of over two persons per room. (Such a density has been chosen to provide a convenient comparison with information published at previous Censuses and not as a measure or definition of overcrowding. Data for a limited sub-division of a density of two or less persons per room are given in Table 7; figures for almost any required density can be arrived at from the details in the Table). As only 0.2 per cent of the total households shared accommodation with other households, the distribution of households by rooms occupied was virtually the same as that of private dwellings by rooms therein. Such distribution varied considerably as between one area and another; and it will be seen that, except in Keady Urban District, the proportion of households occupying less than four rooms was much lower in urban than in rural areas, ranging from about ten per cent in Lurgan and Portadown Municipal Boroughs to 34 per cent in Newry No.2 Rural District. (89580A) xxi TABLE IX - 8 or more rooms Percentage of private households at density of over 2 persons per room 13.4 3.8 4.0 11.8 9.6 Percentage of private households occupying Area County w3 Percentage of private household population at density of over 2 persons per room 1-2 rooms 3 rooms 4 rooms 5 rooms 6-7 rooms 6.5 15.4 35.6 25.3 1951* . 1961 Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee u.D. » M. B. " U.D. 4.6 7.9 1.3 4.3 5.4 13.9 22.3 8.9 6.2 9.0 32.2 32.8 34.7 45.5 36.4 28.3 25.3 44.1 27.5 29.1 15.8 7.7 9.3 13.8 12.9 5.2 4.0 1.7 2.7 7.2 3.1 2.2 2.2 2.2 0.5 8.1 15.2 10.3 6.0 5.1 7.0 6.5 5.9 5.6 1.3 Armagh Lurgan Newry No.2 Tanderagee R.D. " " " 8.1 6.0 11.6 2.4 19.2 18.1 22.5 16.4 31.7 30.6 37.0 31.2 19.2 25.5 15.1 £7.7 16.3 16.1 10.8 15.6 5.5 3.7 3.0 6.7 5.4 5.1 5.9 2.1 12.7 14.3 16.9 5.7 12.1 11.8 13.6 4.4 * Figures relate to areas as existing at the 1951 Census. Households in the County accommodated at a density of over two persons per room numbered 1,231 or 4.0 per cent of the total households, compared with 5.7 per cent ; in 1951 and 9.3 per cent in 1926. Except in Tanderagee Rural District, the 1961 proportion of households at over two persons per room in each rural district was above the County average and greater than that for any of the urban areas. Households at a density of 1^-2 persons inclusive per room accounted for 10.9 per cent of the total households; those at one and over but under 1^ persons per room represented 26.2 per cent. Households returning an average density of less than one person per room formed 58. 9 per cent of the total, as against 51.6 per cent in 1951. The number of persons residing at over two per room constituted 9.6 per cent of the total private household population, compared with 11.8 per cent in 1951 and 17.3 per cent in 1926. The proportions decreased in all administrative areas and ranged from 13.6 per cent in Newry No.2 Rural District to only 1.3 per cent in Tandragee Urban District. Generally, the percentage of persons living at over two per room in urban areas was less than half the corresponding percentage in rural areas. Persons living at densities of l-g-2 persons and one and over but under li| persons per room represented 18.9 per cent and 32.5 per cent, respectively, of the total private household population. In the under one person per room category, the percentage for the County was 39.0; the corresponding percentages for individual areas ranged from 53. 5 in Tandragee Urban District to 31.7 in Newry No.2 Rural District. The number of households with three or more persons living in a single room decreased during the last intercensal period from 6B to 21; of the latter, 5 were in urban and 16 in rural areas. Household Arrangements: Table 8 shows, in respect of the arrangements on which information was sought in the Census return, the extent to which private households had access to such arrangements in their dwellings and whether they had exclusive use of the arrangements or shared them with other households. The information is analysed according to the number of households per dwelling and the tenure and type of accommodation occupied. In the County as a whole, 10,949 households or 36.0 per cent had sole use of all six arrangements and a further 17 households or 0.1 per cent shared all arrangements with other households. Households without any of the arrangements numbered 2,732 or 9.0 per cent of the total households. Of the households with none of the arrangements, almost 64 per cent were in owner-occupied accommodation and a further 26 per cent rented their accommodation unfurnished from private landlords; approximately 67 per cent occupied dwelling houses and 32 per cent occupied farmhouses. The arrangements available most were a fixed cooking stove (89580A) XXii or range (available to 85.1 per cent of all households), a kitchen sink (69.6 per cent), a cold water tap (66.4 per cent) and a water closet (60.9 per cent). Those possessed by fewest households were a hot water tap and a fixed bath; 17,902 households or 58.9 per cent had no hot water tap and 18,677 or 61.5 per cent lacked a fixed bath. Table X shows the numbers of households, expressed as percentages of the total households, which had use (sole or shared) of the various arrangements according to the tenure and type of accommodation occupied. Households in accommodation provided by local or public authorities had relatively the greatest availability of arrangements; for example, 68.4 per cent of such households had use of all six arrangements compared with 31.0 per cent for households in owner-occupied accommodation and an average of 36.1 per cent for all households. The proportion of households with all or any of the arrangements, particularly hot water taps and fixed baths, was lowest/in the case of households in accommodation rented unfurnished from private landlords. As regards the availability of arrangements according to the type of accommodation occupied, households in flats generally fared better than those in dwelling houses; the latter, in turn, had a much greater availability of arrangements than households occupying farmhouses. TABLE X Percentage of total households with use of Total households Tenure and type of accommodation County Households in accoinmodationOwner-occupied Rented from local or public authorities Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some other way Households occupyingDwelling houses Flats Farmhouses Other types of dwellings All arrangements Cold water tap Hot water tap Fixed bath Water closet Kitchen sink Cooking stove or range 1 30,386 36,1 66.4 41.1 ! 38.5 60.9 69.6 12,805 31,0 50.2 36.4 32.8 41.3 55.4 83.4 7,536 68*4 85.2 72.3 72.1 78.6 90.8 91.2 195 9,240 610 28.2 16,0 51.5 70.8 73.2 69.8 36.4 21.2 56.6 38.5 17.9 55.4 69.7 72.9 68.0 70.8 71.7 76.7 ' 82.6 24, 287 531 5, 525 43 39.3 84,2 17.5 0.0 72.3 99.1 37.7 4.7 43.8 94.5 24.4 2.3 41,8 93.0 19.0 0.0 68.8 98.7 23.0 0.0 75.3 97.6 42.6 9.3 85.9 89.8 81.7 41.9 85.1 82.-6 88.4 ! J I Table XI compares on a percentage basis the extent to which households had sole or shared use of the arrangements in the various administrative areas of the County. (89580A) xxiii TABLE XI Percentage of total households with use of Total households Area County All arrangements Cold water tap Hot water tap Fixed bath Water closet Kitchen sink CooKlng stove or range 30,386 36.1 66.4 41.1 38.5. 60.9 69.6 85.1 Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee u. D. " H, B. *. U. D. 2,480 454 4,672 5,138 388 53.9 57.9 48.2 51.9 61.6 95.4 95.4 97.5 97.8 91.8 58.7 65.6 54.9 57.6 66.0 57.2 63.7 50.9 55.7 64.4 96.9 95.8 98.7 98.5 95.1 89.1 91.4 95.3 93.7 88.7 93.3 91.4 93.7 89.1 89.7 Armagh Lurgan Newry No. 2 Tanderagee R. D. 6,917 2,923 6, 543 871 19.0 20.4 31.5 26.8 40.0 33.2 50.0 49.1 24.2 24.1 35.0 32.8 20.7 22.3 33.1 29.6 25.8 27.6 41.8 33.1 47.9 51.6 54.6 61.3 83.4 64.3 83.7 82.0 N H H The proportion of households with all arrangements varied from 61.6 per cent in Tandragee and 57.9 per cent in Keady Urban Districts to only about 20 per cent in Armagh and Lurgan Rural Districts. In the urban areas, more than 90 per cent of the households had use of a cold water tap or water closet or both; and an average of between five and six out of every ten had a hot water tap and/or a fixed bath. None of the rural districts returned an availability of arrangements comparable with that for any administrative urban area and, taking the rural districts as a whole, the proportions for households with the use of a cold water tap, hot water tap, fixed bath or water closet were less than half of the corresponding proportions in the urban areas. Household Socio-economic Groups: Table 9 analyses, by the socio-economic group of the head of household, the numbers of private households and persons therein according to the tenure of the accommodation and the number of rooms occupied by the household. Except for that relating to rooms, the information is summarised in Table XII to provide a convenient comparison between the main groups. A brief definition of each socio-economic group is given in Part I of the Report. Approximately 94 per cent of the heads of households who were farmers (S.E.G.'s 13 and 14) and 57 per cent of employers and managers (S.E.G.'s 1 and Z) owned their accommodation, compared with about 19 per cent of semi-skilled manual workers (S.E.G. 10), 17 per cent of skilled manual workers (.S.E.G. 9) and 16 per cent of personal service workers (S.E.G. 7). Householders in accommodation rented from local or public authorities were relatively fewest at less than two per cent of those in the farmers' group and 14.5 per cent of professional workers (S.E.G.'s 3 and 4). Excluding S.E.G. 16, the proportion was highest at about 38 per cent in the cases of foremen and supervisors (S.E.G. 8) and skilled manual workers. In the category of householders who rented their accommodation from other landlords, the proportions ranged from 48.7 per cent for personal service workers and 47.3 per cent for semi-skilled manual workers to an average of three per cent for farmers. Households in accommodation occupied in some other way represented only two per cent of the total households. The proportion for each socio-economic group was also comparatively small except in the professional workers' group where it reached 25.6 per cent; a probable reason for the latter is that the group concerned includes clergymen, many of whom occupied rent-free accommodation provided by their church authorities. (89580A) xxlv TABLE XII Proportion of households in each tenure category Socio-economic group 1,2 Employers and managers 3,4 Professional workers 5,6 Intermediate and junior non-manual workers Number of private households Population in private households Average number of persons per household Owneroccupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Occupied in some other way % % % % 1,853 7,259 3.92 57.2 17.6 21.6 3.6 434 1,550 3.57 44.7 14.5 15.2 25.6 2,666 9,326 3.50 28.8 36.4 31.5 3.3 7 Personal service workers 423 1,184 2.80 16.1 32.4 48.7 2.8 8 Foremen and supervisors manual 611 2,544 4.16 23.6 38.4 36.2 1.8 17.0 38.1 43.9 1.0 9 Skilled manual workers 5,479 22,205 4.05 10 Semi-skilled manual workers 3,032 10,972 3.62 18.9 32.7 47.3 1.1 11 unskilled manual workers 3,365 14,938 4.44 22.0 34.3 42.7 1.0 12 Own account workers (other than professional) 1,379 5,089 3.69 49.3 16.0 33.3 1.4 667 2,940 4.41 91.0 1.8 4.3 2.9 13 Farmers - employers and managers 14 Farmers - own account 5,327 20,066 3.77 94.5 1.7 2.8 1.0 15 Agricultural workers 1,181 4,773 4.04 31.7 26.9 37.0 4.4 16 Members of armed forces 56 190 3.39 17.9 42.8 33.9 5.4 3,913 11,380 2.91 41.5 23.1 34.0 1.4 30,386 114,416 3.77 42.1 24.8 31.1 2.0 Indefinite and not applicable Total Table XII also compares the average sizes of households by socio-economic groups. Against an average of 3.77 persons for all households, the highest averages were 4.44 for households of which the heads were unskilled manual workers and 4.41 for those in the group consisting of farmers who were employers and managers (S.E.G. 13). Households of which the heads were foremen and supervisors, skilled manual workers and agricultural workers (S.E.G. 15) had also average sizes in excess of four persons. The lowest averages amongst the significant groups were 2.80 for households in the personal service workers' group and 3.50 for those in the intermediate and junior non-manual workers' group (S.E.G.fs 5 and 6). With regard to households in the residual category of "Indefinite and not applicable", it is pointed out that such households include those of which the heads had no occupation other than that of housewife and who were accordingly excluded from the socioeconomic classification; in many cases the household heads were either widows or married women whose husbands were away on Census night. Calculations based on the data in Table 9 enable a general comparison to be made of the average sizes of households by tenure of the accommodation occupied as follows:Tenure Average size of household Owner-occupied Rented from local or public authorities Rented from other landlords Occupied in some other way 3. 74 persons 4.18 " 3.49 " 3.40 " It will be seen that the average size of households in accommodation rented from local or public authorities was appreciably greater than that of households in the other main tenure categories. (89580A) XXV USUAL ADDRESS Table 12 discloses that 99.0 per cent of the. enumerated population had usual addresses in the County. Of the remainder, 775 persons or 0.7 per cent of the total enumerated population normally lived elsewhere in Northern Ireland and 368 persons or 0.3 per cent were usually resident outside Northern Ireland. SEX, AGE AND MARITAL CONDITION The population of the County was distributed by sex, age and marital condition as shown in Table 13. Summaries for each administrative area are given in Table 14. Table XIII below compares the position, on an age group basis, with that at the 1951 Census. TABLE XIII Males Percentage intercensal variation 1961 1951 i Age group Total Single Married Widowed and divorced Widowed Widowed Total Single. Married and and divorced divorced Total -Single Married + 8.0 + 8.0 0-4 6,002 6,002 6,485 6,485 5-9 5,587 5,587 5,837 5,837 10-14 5,040 5,040 6,023 6,023 15-19 4,702 4,692 10 5,007 4,975 32 20~24 4,004 3,574 429 1 3,599 2,941 658 25-34 7,505 3,930 3,551 24 6,792 2,915 3,870 35-44 7,172 2,037 5,042 93 6,906 1,754 5,097 45-54 6,111 1,408 4,506 197 6,563 1,400 5,020 143 + 7.4 - 0.6 + 11.4 - 27.4 55-64 4,611 1,045 3,211 355 5,242 1,105 3,807 330 + 13.7 + 5.7 + 18.6 - 65-74 3,708 897 2,179 632 3,494 798 2,185 511 - 5.8 - 11.0 + 0.3 - 19.1 1,984 377 866 741 1,909 367 893 649 - 3.8 - 2.7 + 3*1 - 12.4 + 2.5 + 0.0 + 8.9 - 17.0 7S and over + • 4.5 + 4.5 + 19.5 + 19.5 + 6.5 + 6.0 + 220.0 - 10.1 - 17.7 + 53.4 - 100.0 9.5 - 25.8 + 9.0 - 70.8 55 - 3.7 - 13.9 + 1.1 - 40.9 7 - 7.0 S Total 56,426 34,589 19,794 2,043 57,857 34,600 21,562 1,695 Females Age group 0-4 5-9 10-14 Total Single Married 5,764 5,286 4,914 5,764 5,286 4,914 Percentage intercensal variation 1961 1951 • * . Widowed Widowed Widowed Total Single Married and Total Single Married and and divorced divorced divorced . . 6,018 • • 5,614 5,625 6,018 5,614 5,625 f • ? * . . + 4.4 + 4.4 • • • + 6.2 + 6.2 • • * + 14.5 + 14.5 • • + 8.5 + 8.0 | + 28.1 123 | 15-19 4,503 4,407 96 - 4,884 4,761 20-24 4,089 3,000 1,085 4 3,772 2,449 1,319 4 - 25-34 7,748 2,907 4,752 89 7,222 2,116 5,077 29 - 35-44 7,624 1,770 5,622 232 7,173 1,401 5,589 183 - 45-54 6,562 1,532 4,423 607 6,942 1,388 4,980 574 + 5.8 - 55-64 5,122 1,201 2,831 1,090 5,917 1,375 3,289 1,253 + 15.5 + 14.5 + 16.2 + 15.0 65-74 4,021 946 1,508 1,567 4,139 959 1,585 1,595 + 2.9 + 1.4 + 5.1 + 1.8 2,195 541 444 1,210 2,431 580 385 1,466 + 10.8 + 7.2 - 13.3 + 21.2 4,799 59,737 32,286 22,347 5,104 + 75 and over Tota3 (89580A) 57,828 32,268 20,761 XXVl - 7.8 - 18.4 + 21.6 6.8 - 27.2 •. 6.8 - 67.4. 5.9 - 20.8 - 3.5 + 0.6 - 21.1 9.4 + 12.6 - 0.1 + 7.6 5.4 + 6.4 Sex Distribution: In 1961 there were 1,032 females to every 1,000 males; this compares with 1,025 in 1951 and only 1,005 per 1,000 in 1937, the latter being the lowest proportion yet recorded at a Census. Except at 15 years of age, males exceeded females throughout the range 0-20 years, although at some ages the differences were very small. Females were in the majority at each age from 21 to 41 years, and continued to predominate at most ages thereafter, the disparity being relatively greatest at the higher ages. In the combined groups 70 and over, there were approximately six women to every five men. Ages: Compared with the figures at the previous Census, increases occurred in the numbers of males and females in the combined age groups 0-19 years, particularly in the group 10-14 years where males increased by 19.5 per cent and females by 14.5 per cent. The overall increase at ages under 20 was actually 3,695 persons, i.e. 355 more than the intercensal increase of 3,340 in the total population of the County. From 20 to 44 years the numbers of males and females fell by 7.4 and 6.6 per cent, respectively, while at ages 45-64 each sex showed a net increase of 10.1 per cent. In the broad category aged 65 years and upwards, a decrease of 5.1 per cent in males was accompanied by a 5. 7 per cent increase in the number of females. One widow was returned in 1961 as aged 100 years and over as against one widower in 1951. The changed pattern of the percentage distribution of the population by four broad age groups since 1901 is indicated below. 0-14 years 15-44 " 45-64 " 65 and "over 1901 1911 1926 1937 1951 1961 30.8 43.7 18.3 7.2 30.1 42.7 16.7 •10. 5 29.0 42.1 19.0 9.9 27.5 43.1 19.1 10.3 28.5 41.5 19.6 10.4 30.3 38.5 21.0 10.2 Marital Condition: Although the total persons aged 16 years (the statutory minimum age of marriage) and over showed a small increase of 129 (- 330 males; +459 females), the number of single persons of marriageable age was fewer by 3,183 (1,750 males; 1,433 females) or almost 10 per cent. The number of married persons rose by 3,355 or 8.3 per cent, 1,768 being males and 1,587 females. Widowers decreased by 362 or some 18 per cent whilst the number of widows increased by 286 or 6 per cent. Of divorced persons who had not remarried, males increased from 15 to 29 and females from 38 to 57. The following statement shows the percentage distribution of the population aged 16 and over by sex „and marital condition at the last three Censuses. 1937 Males Females Single Married Widowed Divorced 48.7 45.0 6.3 0.0 42.4 45.3 12.3 0.0 1951 Males Females 43. 7 51.1 5.2 0.0 37.6 50.7 11.6 0.1 1961 Males Females 39.5 56.1 4.3 0.1 33.7 54.0 12.2 0.1 BIRTHPLACE AND NATIONALITY Table 15 shows the population of the County by sex and place of birth. Of the total with stated place of birth, 77.7 per cent were born in the County, 7.5 per cent were born in the adjoining County of Down and a further 7.4 per cent in the rest of Northern Ireland., The percentages for persons born in the Irish Republic and Great Britain (including the Isle of Man and Channel Islands) were 3.9 and 2.9 respectively. Persons born outside the British Isles accounted for only 0.6 per cent. If allowance is made for an increase from 5.5 to 7.5 in the percentage of persons born in County Down, the other 1961 proportions are very Similar to those in 1951. Changes in the general pattern at each Census since 1861 are outlined in Table XIV. (89580A) xxvii TABLE XIV P e r c e n t a g e s born i n Census Total year Northern Ireland 1861 1871 1881 1891 1901 1911 1926 1937 1951 1961 Irish Republic England and Wales* Scotland 3.20 3.15 3.41 4.03 3.93 4.24 4.83 4.35 4.52 3.95 _—r 0.41 0.65 0.79 0.90 0.75 1.04 1.18 1.17 1.90 1.94 0.24 0.31 0.40 0.56 0.72 1.07 1.35 1.24 1.18 1.01 96.02 95.64 95.14 94.19 94.17 93.15 92.13 92.56 91.84 92.55 Born a t sea Born abroad 0.01 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.01 0.00 0.00 0.13 0.24 0.26 0.32 0.43 0.50 0.51 0.67 0.56 0.55 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 •persons horn in the isle ol wan (6 In 1961) and the Channel islands (8) are included under this heading. Table 16 gives the number of persons born outside Northern Ireland by sex, place.of b i r t h and main r e l i g i o u s groups. The figures are summarised and shown on a percentage basis in Table XV. TABLE XV Roman Catholic Birthplace Presbyterian Church ot Ireland Methodist Other and not s t a t e d denominations Total (NO. ( (% 1,493 451 1,044 164 290 3,442 43.4 13.1 30.3 4.8 8.4 100.0 I r i s h Republic [S°* 2,698 58.6 622 13.5 967 21.0 121 2.6 196 4.3 4,604 100.0 Other countries (Including a t sea) (No. {% 222 34.3 98 15.2 208 32.2 36 5.6 82 12.7 646 100.0 Total born outside Northern Ireland (No. (% 4,413 50.8 1,171 13.5 2,219 25.5 321 3.7 568 6.5 8,692 100.0 Total population j*0* 55,617 47.3 17,873 15.2 32,171 27.4 5,928 5.0 6,005 5.1 117,594 100.0 Great B r i t a i n (including I s l e of Man and Channel islands) On the whole, the number of persons born outside Northern Ireland has not had an appreciable effect on the religious distribution of the total population of the County. Table 17 analyses the number of persons born outside the British Isles by sex and usual address on 23rd April, 1960, distinguishing between British or Commonwealth citizens and persons of alien nationality. Of the 646 persons with birthplaces outside the British Isles, 77.7 per cent were British or Commonwealth citizens, 18.7 per cent were aliens and the remaining 3.6 per cent omitted to answer the nationality question. RELIGION Table 18 shows the population by sex for each administrative area under four main religious headings, viz., Roman Catholic, Presbyterian, Church of Ireland and Methodist, and a fifth group embracing all other and not stated denominations. Totals for each denomination in the last-named category with 10 or more adherents are given in a footnote to the Table. Changes in the position in the County as a whole since 1861 are set out in Table XVI. (89580A) xxviii TABLE XVI Roman Catholic Church of Ireland* Presbyterian Methodist Other and not stated denominations Census year Total population 1861 190,086 92,760 48.8 30,746 16.2 58,735 30.9 6,086 3.2 1,759 0.9 1871 179,260 85,057 47.5 28,344 15.8 58,343 32.5 4,579 £.6 2,937 1.6 1881 163,177 75,709 46.4 26,077 16.0 53,390 32.7 4,884 3.0 3,117 1.9 1891 143,289 66,004 46.1 22,919 16.0 46,135 32.2 5,339 3.7 2,892 2.0 1901 125,392 56,652 45.2 20,097 16.0 40,922 32.6 5,098 4.1 2,623 2.1 1911 120,291 54,526 ; 45.3 18,969 15.8 39,037 32.5 5,056 4.2 2,703 2.2 1926 110,070 49,990 45.4 16,917 15.4 35,290 32.1 4,878 4.4 2,995 2.7 1937 108,815 49,475 45.5 16,221 14.9 34,511 31.7 5,106 4.7 3,502 3.2 1951 114,254 53,013 46.4 17,166 15.0 34,082 29.8 5,597 4.9 4,396 3.9 5,928 5.0 6,005 5.1 1961 117,594 Percentage Number of t o t a l Number population 55,617 47.3 17,873 Percentage of t o t a l Number population 15.2 32,171 Percentage of t o t a l Number population 27.4 PerPercentage centage of t o t a l » Number of t o t a l populapopulation tion •Including Church of England and Episcopal Church of Scotland numbering 510 and 1, respectively, in 1961. During the intercensal period, relatively minor increases took place in the proportions of Roman Catholics, Presbyterians and Methodists, the percentage of persons in these denominations to total population being 47.3 ( + 0 . 9 ) , 15.2 (+ 0.2) and 5.0 (+ 0.1), respectively, in 1961. In the category of other and not stated denominations, the proportion increased from 3.9 per cent to 5.1 per cent. These increases were offset by a reduction in the Church of Ireland percentage from 29.8 to 27.4, the latter being the lowest' ratio at any Census for at least 100 years. However, with most if not all denominations, comparison with earlier years tends to be slightly vitiated by the increase from 324 to 1,561 in the number of persons who did not state a religious profession - an increase which probably reflects a greater awareness in 1961 that it was not obligatory to answer the Census question on religion. Table 19 shows the numbers of males and females in each of the main denominations by individual years of age to 21 and by quinquennial groups from 20 years onwards. Between 1951 and 1961, the number of persons returned as Roman Catholics under 10 years of age increased by 15.6 per cent while that for all others in the same "age group decreased by 4.4 per cent; in the range 10 to 21 years, respective increases of 10.7 per cent and 7.5 per cent were recorded. At ages over 21, the number of Roman Catholics decreased by 1.3 per cent compared with an increase of 1.0 per cent for all others. The percentages of persons by religions in certain age groups to the total population in those groups, with comparable figures for 1951, are given in Table XVTI. TABLE XVII Roman C a t h o l i c Presbyterian Age group Church of Ireland Methodist Other and not stated 1951 1961 1951 1961 1951 1961 1951 1961 1951 1961 All a g e s 46.4 47.3 15.0 15.2 29.8 27.4 4.9 5.0 3.9 5.1 Under 1 y e a r 53.4 55.7 14.0 12.7 25.6 22.1 3.7 4.1 3.3 5.4 Under 10 y e a r s 51.2 56.0 13.9 13.2 27.1 21.8 4.3 4.4 3.5 4.6 Under 25 y e a r s 50.0 52.3 13.8 14.0 28.2 24.4 4.5 4.5 3.5 4.8 25-49 y e a r s 43.6 44.2 15.9 16.3 31.0 28.7 5.3 5.6 4.2 5.2 50 y e a r s and o v e r 43.5 42.0 16.1 16., 1 Si.3 31.1 . 5.0 5.4 4.1 5.4 (89580A) xxlx While the number of Roman Catholics at all ages averaged 47.3 per cent of the total population, the proportions in the age groups under 25 were above the average and those in the groups from 25 years onwards were below the average. The position was reversed in each of the other main religious categories. Generally, the Roman Catholic population is not only the most youthful but tends to have an increasing proportion of young persons in relation to the other denominations. TERMINAL EDUCATION AGE Table. 20 shows the distribution of the population aged 15 years and over by terminal education age. Figures are given by sexes and by individual years of age from 15 to 24 and age groups thereafter. As an indication of the relationship between education and occupation, the information is also analysed by Occupation Orders in Table 21. The figures in the "Not applicable" column of Table 20 relate mainly to students (1,275 males and 1,330 females); the balance (9 males and 15 females) represents persons who, through infirmity or for other reasons, never had any full-time education. A broad comparison by sex and age groups is afforded by Table XVIII which shows the numbers of males and females at various terminal education ages expressed as percentages of the respective totals with stated terminal education ages in each age group. For all age groups except 15-19, relatively more males than females finished their full-time education at 14 years of age. TABLE XVIII Age l a s t birthday Terminal education age i Under 14 17-19 20 and over i Total 14 15 18 61.9 19.4 13.1 10.1 10.4 11.9 7.5 6.7 5.3 8.1 7.1 5.9 3.4 2.9 11.0 6.3 5.7 4.4 3.0 1.6 2.4 4.6 3.5 3.1 1.8 1.8 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 2.7 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Males 15-19 20-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65 and over 11.9 24.5 23.7 54.9 67.5 72.9 74.5 73.2 63.9 Total : 15 and over 6.0 64.3 15.3 6.8 4.9 0.1 0.4 0.5 1.0 4.1 55.4 18.4 14.3 11.5 10.1 13.2 14.5 11.6 12.0 10.2 8.6 6.1 9.1 7.3 5.8 4.7 9.4 7.6 5.3 4.6 3.3 4.4 2.7 3.0 2.6 2.4 15.1 9.0 7.8 2.8 0.0 0.4 0.4 0.7 4.6 4.0 Females 15-19 20-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65 and over 10.9 21.9 25.8 51.4 59.0 66.3 67.9 66.8 60.3 Total : 15 and over 5.9 59.4 5.5 In comparing the figures for individual age groups, regard should be had to changes which have taken place in the minimum school leaving age. Although many children previously remained at school until 14 years of age, attendance to that, age became compulsory in the County in 1926. This accounts in some measure for the relatively substantial decrease in the numbers of persons who left school under 14 years of age in the Census age group 45-54 compared with the older age groups. Similarly, the raising of the school leaving age to 15 years in 1957 affected persons in the age group 15-19, thus tending to vitiate comparison between that group and the remaining groups. It should also be noted that the figures in the age groups 15-19 and 20-24 cover only persons whose full-time education had ceased and thus exclude considerable numbers, particularly in the 15-19 age group, still in full-time attendance at educational establishments; 23.9 per cent of the boys and 26.8 per cent of the girls aged 15-19 were in this excluded category. (89580A) XXX Table X I X compares, in respect of selected Occupation Orders, the distribution of males and females by terminal education ages expressed as percentages of the respective totals with stated terminal education ages in each Order. The Orders shown are those in which the number of males or females, as appropriate, with stated terminal education ages w a s 500 or more. TABLE XIX , Occupation Order Total with stated terminal education age Percentage with terminal education age Under 15 15 16 17-19 20 and over Males I. VI. VII. VIII. X. XII. XV. XVIII. XIX. XX. XXI. XXII. XXIII. XXV. X. XI. XII. XX. XXI. XXII. XXIII. XXV. Farmers, foresters, fishermen Electrical and electronic workers Engineering and allied trades workers not elsewhere classified Woodworkers Textile workers Food, drink and tobacco workers Construction workers Labourers not elsewhere classified Transport and communications workers Warehousemen, storekeepers, packers, bottlers Clerical workers Sales workers Service, sport and recreation workers Professional, technical workers, artists Females 8,935 527 79.3 40.0 14.0 27.3 4.0 22.8 2.4 9.3 0.3 0.6 1,625 1,088 1,584 1,013 1,083 4,252 57.7 63.0 78.9 72.1 77.4 86.2 25.9 26.9 16.7 19.6 15.5 11.0 12.6 8.0 2.8 5.7 4.0 2.4 3.4 2.1 1.5 2.6 2.9 0.4 0.4 2,331 78.6 14.2 5.6 1.5 0.1 552 1,016 2,770 64.7 26.1 52.8 21.9 15.6 21.4 8.7 19.6 13.9 4.5 36.3 10.9 0.2 2.4 1.0 1,426 61.8 17.9 10.9 8.6 0.8 1,375 10.2 6.4 10.4 . 18.2 54.8 Textile workers Clothing workers Food, drink and tobacco workers Warehousewomen, storekeepers, packers, bottlers Clerical workers Sales workers service, sport and recreation workers Professional, technical workers, artists 2,378 2,796 676 79.0 68.5 78.1 18.0 27.6 16.1 2.6 3.2 4.6 0.4 0.7 1.0 0.2 684 1,846 1,478 72.9 10.8 40.0 21.2 21.6 33.7 4.4 34.1 16.5 1.0 0.9 2,334 65.7 18.9 10.5 1.5 32.5 8.9 4.5 1,512 .7.7 9.6 12.5 27.4 42.8 0.1 0.2 0.4 In the case of males, 86 per cent of labourers (Order XVIII) and almost four out of every five farmers, foresters, fishermen ( I ) , textile workers ( X ) , construction workers (XV) and transport and communications workers (XIX) had left school before 15 years of age. Among the largely non-manual workers, 73.9 per cent of clerical workers (XXI) and 89.8 per cent of professional, technical workers, artists (XXV) continued their full-time education until age 15 or later. More than half of those in Order X X V had terminal education ages of 20 and over. A s regards females, close on four out of every five textile workers (Order X ) and food, drink and tobacco workers (XII) had terminal education ages under 15 years. On the other hand, 89.2 per cent of clerical workers (XXI) and 92,3 per cent of professional, technical workers, artists (XXV) had terminal education ages of 15 or over, with 42,8 per cent 'of those in the latter Order having remained full-time at educational establishments until at least 20 years of age. OCCUPATIONS AND INDUSTRIES In comparing the economic activity information in this Report with that from earlier Censuses, it should be borne in mind that the 1961 information was collected in respect of persons aged 15 years and over, i.e. those who had reached •the minimum school leaving age, whereas the corresponding limits adopted at the 1951 and 1926 Censuses were 14 and 12 years, respectively. Questions on occupations and industries were not asked at the 1937 Census. (89580A) xxx l Occupations: Table 22 gives figures of males and females aged 15 years and over, distinguishing between the occupied or economically active population (including persons temporarily out of work) and the economically inactive. The occupied population figures are analysed by the full list of occupation Orders and groups and by industrial status. In Table 23, the occupied population is further analysed by sex, marital condition and age. Of the 81,992 persons aged 15 and over in the County, 49,524 or 60,4 per cent were occupied, compared with a 1951 ratio of 59.9 per cent for occupied persons aged 14 and over. The percentage for males was 85.5 (1951:- 86.0) and for females 37.0 (1951:- 35.0). TABLE XX Females Males Age 15-19 20-24 25-44 45-64 65 and over Total Total Occupied 5,007 3,599 13,698 11,805 5,403 39, 512 3,793 3,474 13,584 11,497 1,446 33,794 Percentage of occupied to t o t a l Total 4, 884 3,772 14,395 12,859 6,570 42,480 75.8 96.5 99.2 97.4 26.8 85*5 Occupied Percentage of occupied to t o t a l 3,325 2,714 5,285 3,955 451 68.1 72.0 36.7 30.8 6.9 15, 730 37.0 Table XX shows the numbers of occupied males and females by broad age groups together with the proportion of occupied to total in each group. Approximately three-quarters of the boys and two-thirds of the girls in the group 15-19 years were occupied. The proportion for males increased to a peak of 99.2 per cent in the group 25-44 years, whereas that for females rose to 72.0 per cent at ages 20-24 and then fell to 36.7 per cen,t in the group 25-44 years. At ages 65 and over, more than one in every four men was occupied as against less than one in every fourteen women. Comparable 1951 and 1926 ratios are not available, as information on the occupied population was analysed by ages only for Belfast County Borough and Northern Ireland as a whole. In relation to the total persons (including children under the minimum school leaving age), the occupied population represented 42.1 per cent compared with 43.8 per cent in 1951. The proportion for males (to total persons) decreased from 30.7 to 28.7 per cent, while that for females increased from 13.1 to 13.4 per cent. Among occupied males, 41.1 per cent were single, 56.8 per cent were married and 2.1 per cent were widowed and divorced. The corresponding percentages for females were:- single 62.9, married 31.2 and widowed and divorced 5.9. Comparable proportions at earlier Censuses are not available on a County basis. Some 81 per cent of the total occupied married women were classified under six occupation Orders, viz. textile workers (Order X ) , clothing workers (Xl), clerical workers (XXI), sales workers (XXII), service, sport and recreation workers (XXIIl) and professional, technical workers, artists (XXV). In these Orders, the proportion of married women to total females varied from 39 per cent for textile workers and sales workers to 18 per cent for clerical workers. The following statement sets out the percentage distribution of the occupied population by industrial status. Employers and managers Foremen and supervisors Workers on own account (without employees) Apprentices and articled clerks Other employees Out of work (89580A) xxxli Persons Males Females % 1o $ 5.9 2.2 7.6 2.6 2.4 1.4 16.3 2.2 60,6 12.8 21.3 2.7 52.0 13.8 5.5 1.1 78.8 10.8 100.0 100.0 100.0 Table XXI shows the numbers of males and females in the numerically important occupation Orders and the proportions per 1,000 of the total occupied persons of each sex. TABLE XXI Males Females Occupation order Number I. IV. VI. VII. VIII. , X. XI. XII. XIII. XIV. XV. XVI. XVII. XVIII. XIX. XX. XXI. XXII. ran. XXIV. XXV. XXVII. Farmers, foresters, fishermen Glass and ceramics makers Electrical and electronic workers Engineering and allied trades workers n.e.c. Woodworkers Textile workers Clothing workers Food, drink and tobacco workers Paper and printing workers Makers of other products Construction workers Painters and decorators Drivers of stationary engines, cranes, etc. Labourers n.e.c. Transport and communications workers Warehousemen, storekeepers, packers, bottlers Clerical workers Sales workers Service, sport and recreation workers Administrators and managers Professional, technical workers, a r t i s t s inadequately described occupations Proportion per 1,000 occupied 9,199 272 9 16 50 33 48 7 31 5 6 33 11 11 130 72 297 540 1,674 1,115 1,637 246 1,036 186 217 1,115 369 368 4,409 2,432 572 Number Proportion per 1,000 occupied 504 337 32 21 . . 88 6 . 2,474 2,869 » 157 182 44 13 6 698 202 88 668 17 31 85 44 15 42 20 1, 888 1,523 2,428 . 1,554 152 99 10 Total Orders above 33, 389 988 15, 504 985 Total occupied population 33,794 1,000 15,730 1,000 1,049 2,873 1,471 511 1,405 699 44 120 97 154 . Note:- Figures are given only for orders showing proportions of 5 or more per 1,000 occupied males or females. Almost 56 per cent of the occupied males were to be found in four Orders, as follows:*- I (Farmers, foresters, fishermen) 27,2 per cent, XVIII (Labourers n.e.c.) 13.0 per cent, XIX (Transport and communications workers) 7,2 per cent and XXII (Sales workers) 8.5 per cent. In the case of occupied females, a total of 80.9 per cent was classified to Orders X (Textile workers) 15.7 per cent, XI (Clothing workers) 18.2 per cent, XXI (Clerical workers) 12.0 per cent, XXII (Sales workers) 9.7 per cent, XXIII (Service, sport and recreation workers) 15.4 per cent and UN (Professional, technical workers, artists) 9.9 per cent. Social Classes and Socio-economic Groups; Table 24 analyses the population aged 15 years and over by social class, socio-economic group and age group. The social class analysis applies only to occupied and retired persons excluding members of the armed forces and persons with inadequately described occupations. In the socio-economic group section of the Table, the heading "Indefinite" relates to persons with inadequately described occupations. The "Not applicable" heading covers students and persons economically inactive other than institution inmates and retired persons, those in the two last named categories being classified as appropriate to the socio-economic groups. The percentage distribution of the persons allocated to the social classes was as shown below. Males 1o I. II. III. IV. V. I89580A) Professional, etc. occupations Intermediate occupations Skilled occupations Partly skilled occupations Unskilled occupations xxxlll 1.6 jfemales % 29.4 35.1 19.9 14.0 0.9 18.0 37.6 41.4 2.1 100.0 100.0 Within the framework of the classification, 51.1 per cent of the males were manual workers, 20.1 per cent were non-manual and 28. 8 per cent were agricultural workers. The percentages for females were:- manual 55.4, non-manual 40.7 and agricultural 3. 9. Industries: Table 25 shows the distribution of the working population aged 15 years and over (excluding persons out of work) by sex, industry Order and Minimum List Heading. Separate figures are given for unskilled males and for married females. The numbers of males and females in the numerically important Orders and their proportions per 1,000 of the total working persons of each sex are set out in Table XXII. TABLE XXII Males Females I n d u s t r y Order Number I. III. VI. IX. X. XII. XIII. XIV. XV. XVII. XVIII. XIX. XX. XXI. XXII. XXIII. XXIV. Agriculture, forestry, fishing Food, d r i n k and tobacco E n g i n e e r i n g and e l e c t r i c a l goods Metal goods n o t e l s e w h e r e s p e c i f i e d Textiles C l o t h i n g and footwear B r i c k s , p o t t e r y , g l a s s , cement, e t c . Timber, f u r n i t u r e , e t c . Paper, p r i n t i n g and p u b l i s h i n g Construction Gas, e l e c t r i c i t y and w a t e r T r a n s p o r t and communication Distributive trades I n s u r a n c e , banking and f i n a n c e P r o f e s s i o n a l and s c i e n t i f i c s e r v i c e s Miscellaneous services P u b l i c a d m i n i s t r a t i o n and defence 1 8,280 1,625 727 220 2,695 - 167 478 634 168 3,346 368 1,488 3,580 286 1,428 1, 626 1,582 1 Proportion p e r 1,000 working Number 531 726 294 135 4,076 1,405 223 94 174 . . 123 1,922 144 2,029 1,"5<07 352 1 284 56 25 7 92 6 16 22 6 115 13 51 123 10 49 56 54 T o t a l O r d e r s above 28,698 985 T o t a l working p o p u l a t i o n 29,142 1,000 Proportion p e r 1,000 working ! 38 52 21 10 290 100 16 7 12 . . 9 137 10 144 122 25 13, 935 993 14,039 1, 000 Note:™ Figures are given only for orders showing proportions of 5 or more per 1,000 working males or females. Orders III to XVI inclusive form the broad group of manufacturing industries. They accounted for 32.9 per cent of the total working population, the proportions for males and females being 24.2 and 50.9 per cent, respectively, of the number of working persons of each sex. Order I (Agriculture, forestry, fishing) was the largest individual Order, accounting for 20.4 per cent of the total working persons. It was followed by Order X (Textiles) 15, 7 per cent and Order XX (Distributive trades) 12.7 per cent. (89580 A) xxxiv County o i Armagh PART III TABLES TABLE 1 - Area, B u i l d i n g s f o r H a b i t a t i o n P o p u l a t i o n , 1961 and County Hote:~ For definitions, see Part I Area In statute acres Buildings for habitation Private dwellings Water 327,907 Miscellaneous Land Total Tidal Inland: 173 17,857 309,871 Inhabited Other buildings UninInhabited habited 30,318 6* Population 1,750 Persons Males 117,594 57,857 Ffemales Uninhabited 2 80 59,737 ,..,__ *Land on shore of Newry River. TABLE 2 - P o p u l a t i o n , 1821 - 1961 County Notes:(1) The term "population" i s defined in Part I . The figures for 1821 and 1831 exclude members of H.M. Forces. (2) The figures are for the County as constituted at fhe date of each Census. The boundaries of the county were altered by the transfer to County Down of that portion of Newry Urban District formerly situated in County Armagh, pursuant to the Local Government (Ireland) Act, 1898. (3) Since 1911 the censuses were taken at irregular intervals. Intercensal variation Population Date of Census Persons Males Females 197,427 220,134 233,024 196,315 190,086 179,260 163,177 143,289 125,392 120,291 96,075 107,521 114,523 95,948 91,558 86,117 77,683 68,370 59,773 58,578 101,352 112,613 118,501 100,367 98,528 93,143 86,494 74,919 65,619 61,713 110,070 53,609 1937, February 28-March 1 | 108,815 1951, April 7-8 1961, April 23-24 1821 1831 1841, 1851, 1861, 1871, 1881, 1891, 1901, 1911, June 6-7 March 30-31 April 7-8 April 2-3 April 3-4 April 5-6 March 31-April 1 April 2-3 1926, April 18-19 Persons Females Per cent. + 11.5 + 5.9 - 15.8 - 3,2 - 5.7 - 9,0 - 12.2 - 12.5 - 4.1 1,055 1,047 1,035 1,046 1,076 1,082 1,101 1,096 1,098 1,054 5,252 - 8.5 1,053 - 1,917 - 1.1 1,005 + 2,165 + 3,284 + 5.0 1,025 + 1,431 + 1,909 + 2.9 1,032 22,707 12,890 36,709 6,229 10,826 16,083 19,888 17,897 5,101 + + - 11,446 7,002 18,575 4,390 5,441 8,434 9,313 8,597 1,195 + + - 11,261 5,888 18,134 1,839 5,385 7,649 10,575 9,300 3,906 56,461 - 10,331 - 4,969 - 54,271 54,544 - 1,255 + 662 114,254 56,426 57,828 + 5,439 117,594 57,857 59,737 + 3,340 TABLE 3 - P o p u l a t i o n 1951 and 1 9 6 1 , I n t e r c e n s a l Changes + + - Males Females per 1,000 Males and Administrative Areas Intercensal variation Population County Armagh Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee U.D. " M. B. " U.D. Armagh R*D» Lurgan " n Newry No, 2 Tanderajgee " By excess of births over deaths Total Area 1951 1961 Persons '(Persons (Males (Females 114,254 56,426 57,828 117,594 57,857 59,737 + 3,340 + 1,431 + 1,909 + 2.9 + 2.5 + 3.3 Persons " 9,280 1,462 16,370 17,202 1,394 10,062 1,637 17,872 18,609 1,281 + 782 + 175 + 1,502 + 1,407 113 + + + + - 28,900 11,918 24,527 3,201 27,718 11,654 25,550 3,211 - 1,182 264 + 1,023 + 10 - 4.1 - 2.2 + 4.2 + 0.3 B n n * w " " Per cent. 8.4 12.0 9.2 8.2 8.1 Pers ons By net migration Per cent. Persons 12,446 6,285 6,161 10.9 11.1 10.7 - 9,106 - 4,854 - 4,252 1,067 155 2,037 2,215 121 11.5 10.6 12.4 12.9 8.7 - 2,405 1,166 3,037 243 8.3 9.8 12.4 7.6 - 3,587 - 1,430 - 2,014 233 + 285 20 535 808 234 Per cent. - 8.0 - 8.6 - 7.4 + - 3.1 1.4 3,2 4.7 16.8 ~ 12.4 - 12.0- 8.2 - 7.3 CO TABLE 4 Administrative Areas, District Electoral Divisions and Towns Area, Population, Buildings for Habitation, Private Households and Valuation <o CO Sote:- o For definitions, see Part I |3> Population B u i l d i n g s for h a b i t a t i o n 1961 1951 * County Rural 312,727 0 15* 114,254 6,123 0 14 Districts 306,604 0 District 1,357 Armagh Urban North North South South South East West Ward " « H East West Ready Urban » District Lurgan M u n i c i p a l Borough Portadown Municipal T a n d r a g e e Urban Armagh R u r a l (a) Borough District District Males Females .Inhabited Population in private households Yalua t l o n Rooms occupied 1961 /62 s. 57,857 59,737 . 29,617 32,150 30,318 1,750 80 2 30,386 114,416 135,589 971,980 w 45,708 49,461 23,401 26,060 11,410 13,663 13,084 532 45 2 13,132 48,008 60,443 446,988 2 1 68,546 68,133 34,456 33,677 18,207 18,487 17,234 1,218 35 17,254 66,408 75.146 524,992 8 3 22 9,280 10,062 4,818 * 5,244 2,172 2,593 2,457 116 18 2,480 9,214 11,601 97,369 0 347 345 164 281 218 3 1 2 0 3 3 25 32 36 6 1,866 2,284 1,420 1,528 2,182 1,839 2,469 1,229 2,226 2,299 879 1,215 588 1,029 1,107 960 1,254 641 1,197 1,192 477 470 "362 359 504 531 562 359 582 559 508 534 324 554 537 22 23 29 24 18 l 4 6 3 4 518 534 336 554 538 1,834 2,125 1,114 1,878 2,265 2,585 2,443 1,832 2,584 2,157 26,681 19,289 26,358 11,045 13,994 10 15 0 0 15 216 1 3 1,462 1,637 753 884 385 509 454 51 4 454 1,608 1,936 12,340 10 2,024 2 4 16,370 17,872 3,343 9,529 4,058 4,833 4,668 155 10 4,672 17,447 21,581 138,300 5 1,827 3 10 17,202 18,609 8,874 9,735 4,391 5,319 5,117 190 12 5,138 18,463 23,470 186,757 17 696 2 15 1,394 1,281 613 668 404 409 388 20 1 388 1,276 1,855 12,220 10 2 1 1 145,059 2 6 28,900 27,718 14,076 13,642 7,387 7,340 6,914 , 410 16 6,917 26,705 31,190 251,122 10 4, 557 1 15 952 1,039 543 496 261 281 277 4 277 1,039 1,410 9,816 7 246 255 233 22 233 886 846 6,509 14 223 209 193 16 - 193 754 802 4,723 2 218 15 1 218 878 999 7,954 13 179 15 179 822 813 7,648 5 191 184 7 - 184 779 934 8,587 12 320 303 16 1 304 1,305 1,243 9,386 15 249 219 211 8 211 849 891 6,209 18 .364 207 202 184 18 184 725 702 4,705 0 53 63 31 30 30 - - 30 116 135 1,982 5 384 179 205 132 109 95 13 1 95 333 418 4,411 15 875 477 398 238 238 218 18 2 218 815 1,111 9,366 19 942 806 391 415 240 250 210 40 806 892 4,004 5 368 172 196 122 126 101 25 - 210 a ei 101 368 U18 • 2. Annaghmore 2,922 2 12 911 886 429 457 3. Annaghbrague fl 7,686 3 39 838 754 396 358 4. Ballyards • 4,160 2 31 ' 884 936 516 420 233 234 5. Ballymartrlm " 4,710 1 37 792 822 436 386 179 194 6. Brootally • 6,088 3 18 820 779 403 376 204 7. Charlemont " 4,632 1 2 1,337 1,311 689 622 321 8. Clady • 6,567 3 5 889 849 450 399 9. Clay • 4,443 0 39 836 725 361 10. Corporation East " 667 0 14 123 116 11. Corporation West " 1,608 1 18 939 12. Crossmore " 5,063 2 14 906 13. Darkley » 2,421 Town Uninhabited Uninhabited No. of private households 117,594 Aghory " Other buildings Total 1. Darkley D.E.D. Persons Inhabited R. Armagh 1951 P. Acres A l l M u n i c i p a l B o r o u g h s and Urban D i s t r i c t s All 1961 Private dwellings Area Administrative area, e t c . P r i v a t e households 2 * * 15 o 3 0 W o ft 15. Drum 6,390 1 12 838 846 437 409 230 214 199 15 16. Glenanne it 3,930 1 18 864 791 378 413 250 240 229 11 17. Glenaul it 7,694 0 13 1,237 1,196 634 562 308 300 275 25 - 18. Grange it 4,423 2 19 1,263 1,792 854 938 264 282 270 10 2 14. Derrynoose D.E.D. 6,006 1 28 845 775 400 375 239 219 n . . Drumcarn Town 19. . Hamiltonsbawn D.E.D. 5,214 1 209 10 . 227 155 76 79 52 51 47 4 -, 1 755 807 394 413 213 231 226 5 892 456 436 228 241 226 14 » 957 494 463 237 250 240 10 551 531 302 { 289 275 209 775 962 5,385 4 199 846 966 7,641 4 229 791 1,003 8,482 15 275 1,196 1,202 11,287 4 270 1,124 1,054 14,769 15 47 155 143 - - 'v. - 226 807 961 8,263 10 1 226 826 1,201 8,938 19 - 241 957 1,102 9,108 5 14 275 1,082 991 6,341 5 20. Hockley it 5,374 0 5 968 21. Killeen ii 6,399 0 16 956 22. Killyman H 6,195 i 4 1,206 23. Kilmore it 3,950 1 23 887 914 472 442 242 ' 234 226 7 i 226 907 949 7,605 10 24. Llsnadill n 6,183 3 3 987 925 476 449 240 1 226 215 11 - 215 925 954 13,749 10 25. Loughgall n 5,340 2 29 1,097 1,086 544 542 271 281 271 9 1 271 1,074 1,265 11,438 0 26. Markethill w 3,267 1 10 1,241 1,228 595 633 357 382 372 9 i 372 1,224 1,677 12,647 0 . . . 819 813 387 426 231 559 251 8 - 251 813 3 30 832 782 384 398 205 204 183 19 2 184 717 857 . . . 161 85 76 • 58 51 6 1 51 149 256 . 322 374 244 240 221 18 1 221 690 1,104 5,677 206 248 160 160 152 8 - 152 454 764 > S Markethill 27. Town D. E. D. Middletown Middletown 28. D.E.D. Milford Milford 29. Town Town Rich H i l l Rich Fill 30. Tullyroan 31. Tynan Lurgan Rural D.E.D. Town District 3,962 1,326 • ' 1,082 2 27 831 696 . . . 527 454 — - lt123 • 5,917 3 16 948 999 482 517 257 298 292 5 1 292 995 1,429 10,115 . . . 270 385 183 202 83 128 125 2 I 125 381 621 . 3,006 p 14 10 D.E.D. 3,615 0 12 1,066 863 458 405 268 232 226 6 - 226 863 1,064 6,710 3 it 7,247 2 1 910 805 422 383 268 245 224 20 1 224 799 1,253 11,737 11 36,447 1 3 11,918 11,654 5,776 5,878 3,107 3,053 2,913 134 6 2,923 11,526 13,114 81,710 4 1,140 558 582 291 288 275 13 1,140 1,260 8,606 5 1,495 739 756 344 342 332 10 - 277 332 1,495 1,449 7,730 7 223 9 1 235 776 1,067 9,561 10 (a) 4,755 3 33 1,062 Brownlows Derry n 3,937 1 2 1,537 34. Carrowbrack " 2,228 3 4 754 815 393 422 245 235 35. Cornakinnegar it 3,151 1 7 1,253 1,209 569 640 281 268 261 5 2 261 1,136 1,428 9,759 15 36. Brumeree n 5,843 1 36 1,319 1,222 626 596 386 336 321 15 322 1,222 1,428 8,490 13 37. Kernan n 2,874 3 8 1,206 1,234 619 615 329 350 334 16 341 1,234 1,340 8,659 9 38. Lurgan Rural n 2,200 0 19 965 911 447 464 272 272 252 20 - 252 911 1,208 7,913 5 Breagh 33. ft 1 D.E.D. 32. o o P •Excluding 15,174a. Or. l i p . under the larger r i v e r s , lakes and tideways; and 8a. Or. 29p. land on the shore of Newry River. /Excluding £12,222 5S. the valuation of e l e c t r i c i t y , gas and water undertakings, e t c . (a) A portion of Lurgan Rural D i s t r i c t with a population of 187 in 1951 was transferred to Lurgan Municipal Borough in 1957. CO 03 CO 01 CO o > Administrative Areas, District Eleatoral Divisions and Towns TABLE 4 - Area, Population, Buildings for Habitation, Private Households and Valuation continued 1961 1961 Administrative area, e t c . Acres L u r g a n Rural R. Persons Females Males 1951 Total Inhabited P. Uninhabited £ 1961/62 s* o 1,076 1,005 4,729 1 9 317 1,122 1,537 10,706 19 327 24 3 327 1,414 1,392 5,553 0 7,166 6,537 617 12 6,543 24,972 26,703 161,084 17 o 4 1,191 1,076 539 537 298 272 259 13 Portadown Rural tf 3,585 2 2 1,162 1,122 562 560 322. 326 317 Tartaraghan n 3,554 2 8 1,469 1,430 724 706 361 354 3 37 24,527 25,550 12,978 12,572 6,789 41. Valuation 259 2 40. Uninhabited Rooms occupied - 4,315 Montiaghs Inhabited Population in private households D i s t r i c t — continued D.E.D. 39. No.of private households Other buildings Private dwellings Area 1951 P r i v a t e households Buildings for h a b i t a t i o n Population a> S3 W C CO Newry N o . 2 R u r a l 107,786 District 42. Ballybot D.E.D. 1,742 l 3 1,486 2,061 1,009 1,052 281 426 411 12 3 412 1,600 1,913 12,701 9 2: 43. Ballymyre n 6,835 3 36 764 639 359 280 216 169 160 9 - 160 639 616 4,571 5 o 44. Belleek n 5,576 2 31 881 915 489 426 257 252 216 35 1 216 892 903 6,238 2 45. Bessbrools: North it 211 1 17 1,268 1,410 685 725 322 356 350 6 351 1,410 1,420 4,236 15 1 ,247 1,389 346 1,389 1,396 46. Bessbrook South Bessbrook Bessbrook 47. 715 313 351 345 6 0 19 1,053 803 359 444 268 218 210 6 2 210 743 906 7,679 . . . 928 681 299 382 235 196 188 6 2 186 621 816 . 1 0 1,144 1,166 557 609 303 346 288 57 1 288 1,160 1,250 5,235 1 12 41 37 . 179 688 634 3,147 170 . . Town (a) D.E.D. Town (aJ D.E.D.. Camlough 674 - 357 3,494 . 10 •1 7 . . 41 15 26 13 13 12 D.E.D. 5,266 1 12 709 688 382 306 202 192 179 13 Creggan M 4,665 3 5 663 644 346 298 200 203 170 33 - 644 630 3,746 4 Crossmaglen It 863 3 7 895 1,125 562 563 220 272 255 16 1 256 1,118 1,115 5,491 16 . . - 705 932 463 469 177 232 216 15 1 217 925 968 . 191 738 641 3,687 3 389 1,488 1,679 6,331 5 1,014 48. Camly 49. 50. Town (a) Crossnaglen Town v . 484 911 mo 471 118 251 234 17 234 911 3 812 719 401 318 223 227 209 17 1 209 712 780 2 3 720 667 339 328 218 195 192 3 667 835 7,630 16 22 684 668 310 358 219 208 175 33 " 175 668 591 2,987 10 ' 12 8 4 • 4 4 - 192 1 4 12 15 . Cullaville D.E.D. 3,885 3 26 721 738 398 340 202 224 191 33 52. Derrymore n 1,620 0 36 1,128 1,488 722 766 296 419 389 30 53. Dorsy D.E.D. 4,332 2 54. Drumbanagher « 5,433 55. Drumlntee n 3,009 Bessbroak . . Town (a) JonesSorough Town (b) • a. 10 - 51. • • - - tr . 56 Bessbrook H - . 4,431 13 ON 56. D.E.D. FatHom Corrivenae 57. D. E. D. Formi For hi 11 form 820 859 241 396 361 35 361 1,679 1,561 120 112 • 55 55 - - 55 232 224 . 22 742 742 380 362 209 236 210 25 1 210 738 783 3,830 . . . . 290 141 149 • 79 75 3 I 75 286 345 . - 198 755 717 3,398 16 191 759 691 3,249 2 " 198 716 699 4,160 14 50 206 2i2 • 507 489 2,758 19 259 1,008 1,218 9,096 10 63 252 277 166 607 516 2,532 2 201 652 717 3,844 5 55 552 268 . 191 678 697 5,752 1 236 830 1,063 5,617 15 394 361 201 219 198 21 Xilleen it 3,210 1 35 669 759 399 360 214 227 191 36 Killevy M 781 716 350 366 225 227 198 29 . 206 98 108 • 50 50 - 62. Mountnorrls Moybane 64. Moyra Castle 65. Mulla^ibane 66. Mulla^xglass 67. Newtownhamilton Poyntss Pass 69. Tullyhappy Poyntz 12 652 507 28C 227 200 186 147 39 « 5,467 3 25 1,032 1,008 505 503 286 268 259 9 . . 127 125 63 4 . . 252 • 67 D.E.D. 3,533 2 21 719 607 317 290 198 193 166 27 It 3,477 1 9 738 652 329 323 231 222 201 21 . - - 678 344 334 ; 224 209 191 18 N 2,300 1 15 846 830 422 408 234 238 234 4 173 177 87 90 53 53 - 53 177 235 • 839 853 428 425 269 253. 243 9 1 243 848 1,156 5,785 586 589 285 304 195 ;85 J 75 5 1 i75 584 862 - 836 826 428 398 227 230 221 8 1 222 821 1,058 8,013 229 248 116 i35 63 74 SS 5 1 69 243 356 650 525 270 255 198 164 149 15 - 149 525 705 6,048 10 173 682 720 5,082 11 . . 2,787 2 . * Town D.E.D. 4,141 D.E.D. 5,199 2 . - District 5,969 0 2 17,310 0 Laurelvale 4,014 1,367 3 3 . . Town 75. • 708 n 74. . 1 D.E.D. Mullaghbrack \ 147 0 n 73. - 4,771 Ballysnell haurelvale - 0 D.E.D. Pass Town (cj Tanderagee Rural - • - D.E.D. Tullyvallan • 0 Town (a) Mewtownhanilton 9 . 4,382 Jones borough Town to/ 68. 2 D.E.D. Town 63. Bessbrook 4,087 . . Mountnorris 0 2 3,237 755 Latblrget 15,798 232 760 61. 72. 1,679 8 Heigh Town - * 883 2 59. 71. 9 4,467 Glasdrunrnaia 70. 0 D.E.D. 58. 60. 3,438 . . lone Town * 22 * 39 * 34 36 • 262 123 139 65 53 17 1,585 924 928 870 57 1 871 3,205 237 155 138 133 5 - 133 506 717 5,633 3 1 211 760 884. 5,399 10 - 128 425 530 • 154 576 753 6,173 179 629 851 5,960 2 194 734 934 7,908 10 35 3,201 3,211 1,626 18 556 506 269 813 766 377 389 236 225 211 13 419 425 2t?i 224 138 135 128 7 D.E.D. 4,427 3 15 630 576 £84 292 172 160 154 6 MullsOiead H 3,090 2 27 618 629 314 315 181 188 178 10 Tanderagee tl 4,409 0 3 584 734 382 352 180 217 194 23 (a) Bessbroofc town I s In the D.E.D's of Bessbrook North (45), Bessbrook South (46), Camlough (47), Derrymore (5£) and Mullaghglass (66). (b) Jonesborough town i s in the D.E.D's of Drumlntee (55), and Moyra Castle (64). The entire town contains £74 persons. {c) The remainder of Poyntz Pass town Is In the D.E.D. of Scarva in County Down. The entire town contains 282 persons. 4,139 " 3 & • 18 288 o > 173 394 o 10 191 682 • 68 205 744 12 • 3 31,074 17 12 Ths entire town contains 3,199 persons. C/t c* TABLE 5 - Area, Population, Buildings for Habitation, Private Households and Valuation County electoral Divisions Note:- For definitions, see Part I Population Buildings for habitation 1961 County e l e c t o r a l division* 1961 Area Private dwellings 1951 1951 Persons Males 312,727] Other buildings Total Females Inhabited Acres County Armagh Private households Uninhabited Inhabited Uninhabited No, of private households Population in private households Rooms occupied Valuation 1961/62 o S. s. 135,589 971,980 10f 114,254 117,594 57,857 59,737 ' 29,617 ' 32,150 30,318 1,750 80 2 30,386 114,416 2 2,480 9,214 11,601 97,369 0 1,598 6,071 6,981 36,566 14 Armagh (Armagh U. D.) 1,358 9,280 10,062 4,818 5,244 2,172 2,593 2,457 116 18 Bessbrook (42, 45, 46, 52, 66) 6,231 5,781 6,592 3,197 3,395 1,401 1,657 1,594 58 5 o H ft Breagh (32, 34, 40) 10,570 2,978 3,077 1,513 1,564 ! 836 859 827 31 1 829 3,038 3,864 28,874 14 Crossmaglen (49-51, 53, 58, 63) 21,749 4,570 4,588 2,418 2,170 1,244 1,338 1,189 147 2 1,190 4,574 4,399 23,287 14 Crossmore (4, 6, 12, 28) 16,640 3,441 3,286 1,718 1,568 919 903 841 58 4 841 3,162 4,148 31,586 5 Drumcree (22, 36, 39, 41) 19,909 5,185 4,810 2,440 2,370 1,347 1,251 1,182 66 3 1,183 4,794 4,816 25,113 19 Fbrkill (44, 48, 57, 61, 65) 2St254 3,692 3,530 1,875 1,655 1,092 1,075 943 130 2 943 3,503 3,506 19,726 12 HocKley (10, 11, 20, 23) 11,600 2,917 v 2,306 1,160 1,146 633 614 577 34 3 577 2,182 2,703 22,938 9 Keady (Keady U.D., 9, 14, 15, 27.) 21,019 4,813 4,765 2,335 2,430 1,266 1,348 1,229 113 6 1,230 4,671 5,423 35,989 12 Kernan (33, 35, 37, 38) 12,163 4,961 4,849 2,374 2,475 1,226 1,232 1,179 51 2 1,186 4,776 5,425 34,062 16 Killevy (47, 55, 56, 59, 60, 64) 20,717 4, 899 5,640 2,765 2,875 1,433 1,626 1,414 211 1 1,414 5,634 5,509 35,274 18 Loughgall (2, *7, 25, 30) 16,511 4,411 4,146 2,120 2,026 1,106 1,088 1,033 53 2 1,034 4,128 4,418 34,044 12 1 \ " 3 CD CO cn oc o 8,343 9,529 4,058 4,833 4,668 155 10 4,672 17,447 3,793 1,899 1,894 1,096 1,067 1,027 39 1 1,027 • 3,789 4,525 41,089 3 4,127 3,734 1,968 1,766 1,153 1,072 979 92 1 979 3,729 4,186 24,166 13 1,828 17,202 18,609 8,874 9*735 4,391 5,319 5,117 190 12 5,138 18,463 23,470 186,757 17 Poyntz Pass (54, 62, 68, 69, 71) 24,257 3,794 3,532 1,811 1,721 1,084 995 954 40 1\ 955 3,527 4,533 36,422 16 Rich H i l l (1, 19, 21, 29) 19,178 3,611 3,802 1,913 1,889 968 1,060 1,035 24 1 1,036 3,798 4, 902 37,303 12 Tanderagee (Tandragee U.D., 72-75) 13,992 4,039 3,986 1,970 2,016 1,173 1,199 1,125 72 2 1,126 3,975 5,277 37,662 4 Tynan (5, 17, 18, 31) 24,076 4,202 4,615 2,346 2,269 1,019 1,021 948 70 3 948 3,941 4,322 45,442 15 2,024 16,370 17,872 Marke t h i l l (8, 16, 24, 26) 19,949 3,981 Newtownhamllton (3, 13, 43, 67, 70) 25,702 Lurgan (Lurgan M. B.) Portadown (Portadown M.B.) - 1 - *The information In parenthesis a f t e r the names of the County Electoral Divisions r e l a t e s to the contents of the Divisions, the numbers being those of the D i s t r i c t Electoral Divisions in Table 4. •/Excluding 15,174 acres under the l a r g e r r i v e r s , lakes and tideways; and of 6 acres land on the shore of Newry River. ^Excluding £12,222 5s. the valuation of e l e c t r i c i t y , gas and water undertakings, e t c . 21,581 138,300 5 Census of Northern I r e l a n d 8 TABLE 6 - P r i v a t e Dwellings: 1961 Inhabited Dwellings by Building Type, Tenure and Rooms Sotet- TOT definitions, see Part I Administrative Areas Inhabited dwellings Populatlor Containing 1 3 rooms 5 rooms | rooms 88 21 1,790 7 4,653 9 10,830 2 7,702 109 1,797 - - 4,658 4 10.819 12 1 7,697 5 Total dwellings Percentage 109 0,4 1,797 5.9 4,662 15.4 Households therein 109 1,797 Permanent dwellings 67 30 2 County 6 rooms 9 or . more rooms 7-8 rooms rooms in private dwellings Armagh Permanent d w e l l i n g s Non-permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwellings w i t h 1 Household p e r d w e l l i n g 2 households per dwelling 3 o r more h o u s e h o l d s p e r d w e l l i n g Dwelling housesOwner o c c u p i e d R e n t e d from l o c a l o r p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s FUrnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t h e r way FlatsOwner o c c u p i e d Rented from l o c a l o r p u o l l c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied I n some o t h e r way i. 4 2 rooms 1 room Total n o , of dwellings i Total n o , of farmhouses Armagh U r b a n £.954 2 1,693 567 - - 135,507 82 30,277 41 114,300 116 - 2,949 4 2 1,687 5 2 552 9 6 135,258 236 95 30,268 39 11 114,121 216 79 10,832 35.7 7,702 25.4 2,955 9.7 1,694 5.6 567 1.9 1 3 5 , 589 30, 318 100.0 114,416 4,686 10, 846 7,707 2,965 1,703 593 30,386 • • 1,328 509 184 3,428 1,252 482 9fS0d 1.840 3,327 6,549 1,893 2,630 2,125 979 436 1,031 660 27 388 263 9 107,359 35,065 31,193 24,221 7,426 7,097 90,648 26,267 30,398 2 30 3 16 595 24 26 1,587 81 49 3,995 94 26 1,898 102 13 625 72 10 248 86 3 54 59 614 3 7 , 554 2,933 145 9,032 521 436 31,786 1,763 5 - 97 1 78 182 4 148 165 4 124 62 2 50 13 3 3 4 1 3 1 - - 1,851 75 1,364 531 16 403 1,319 48 973 1 3 1 1 14 3 4 21 5 12 17 8 - 8 2 - 5 Z - - _ 1 1 63 263 86 18 72 22 43 199 56 16 365 1,043 1,360 1,091 815 659 173 26,297 5,525 22,333 3 95 337 793 699 285 167 77 11,598 3 2,456 1 9,207 7 3 95 337 1 791 1 698 1 1 284 163 72 1 4 11,500 41 60 2,443 7 7 9,135 30 49 2,457 100.0 - - . 3 ' - • District Permanent d w e l l i n g s Non-permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwellings w i t h 1 household p e r dwelling 2 households per dwelling 3 o r more h o u s e h o l d s p e r d w e l l i n g Total dwellings Percentage Households therein - - - 1 2 - - 2 3 0.1 95 3.9 338 13.8 793 32.3 699 28.4 285 U.9 167 6.8 77 3.1 11,601 9,214 3 95 339 796 700 286 173 88 2,480 3 1 86 35 297 19 84 697 56 255 671 180 250 279 79 69 164 79 4 76 .-47 1 10,869 2,704 3,045 2,273 461 698 8,667 1,711 3,014 1 45 5 3 177 14 5 384 17 3 220 18 122 7 64 ,14 1 15 12 89 4,525 508 19 1,008 87 56 3,611 275 9 40 2 24 95 1 81 6 2 1 - 712 34 532 180 7 133 £ 8 4 8 3 2 1 24 90 32 7 24 9 19 $0 24 1 1 3 8 | : • Permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwelling h o u s e s Owner o c c u p i e d Rented from local or p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t h e r way FlatsOwner o c c u p i e d Rented from l o c a l o r p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t h e r way Farmhouses (89580A) 1 1 2 1 5 1 4 2 3 27 1 / 2 1 24 2 - 1 1 /l • 1 17 1 i i 532 24 385 County o f TABLE 6 - Private Dwellings: Armagh 9 Inhabited Dwellings by Building Type, Tenure and Rooms continued Administrative Areas Inhabited dwellings Containing 9 or more rooms 6 rooms 101 149 115 - - 36 101 149 - - _ 36 7.9 101 22.3 149 32,8 115 25. 3 25 5.5 17 3.8 11 2.4 1,936 0.0 454 100.0 - 36 101 149 115 25 17 11 454 • _ - 29 2 15 78 13 26 145 27 73 114 16 66 24 16 17 14 8 7 1 44 2 9 522 30 3 132 5 0 396 1 _1 - 1, 514 33 0 752 1 37 1 -1 415 95 180 1 11 7 1,700 499 730 7 1 5 23 2 19 4 124 18 67 37 4 24 _1 - -7 - -2 - 54 413 1,624 54 415 1,623 1 2 rooms 3 rooms 36 '- 6 rooms 7-8 rooms 25 17 11 - - - 25 17 11 Population hi private dwellings Total no. of dwellings 4 rooms 1 room Keady U r b a n Total n o . of rooms District Permanent d w e l l i n g s Non-permanent d w e l l i n g s S e l l i n g s with1 household per dwelling 2 h o u s e h o l d s per d w e l l i n g 3 or more h o u s e h o l d s per d w e l l i n g ' Total d w e l l i n g s Percentage Households therein ~ _ 115 -- ~ 1 936 454 1 1,936 - " 1,608 _ - 454 1,608 - _. 1,60(1 Permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwelling housesOwner occupied Rented from l o c a l or p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some o t h e r way FlatsOwner occupied Rented from l o c a l o r puDllc a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t h e r way Farmhouses Lurgan M u n i c i p a l - 1 _ -4 - - 1 _ - 2,063 333 2,063 332 1 2 1 -1 1 27 12 18 'V;l. 10 l 45 " " z?. 2 1 22 2 vx 145 34 21,575 4,666 17,441 145 33 1 21,561 14 6 4,665 17,427 16 4,668 100,0 17,447 Borough Permanent d w e l l i n g s Non-permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwellings wlth1 household per dwelling 2 h o u s e h o l d s per d w e l l i n g 3 or more h o u s e h o l d s per d w e l l i n g Total dwellings Percentage Households - 31 1 0,0 therein 1 54 l.g 415 8.9 1,624 34.8 2,063 44.2 333 7.1 145 3.1 34 0.7 21,581 54 415 1,625 2,063 335 145 35 4,672 53 1 12 366 25 30 1,597 175 288 2,055 421 863 . 331 108 77 141 88 1 34 25 2 21,243 . 4,431 6,087 4, 577 843 1,273 17,208 2,9fl« 5,B7S 40 - 9 299 3 13 1,118 3 753 10 8 143 3 2 44 6 3 4 133 10,423 169 32 2,400 29 108 8,410 120 47 26 1 17 5 1 - - 79 2 no 188 2 276 9 2.01 - 11 26 29 3 7 7 4 56 1 Oi Permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwelling housesOwner o c c u p i e d Rented from l o c a l or p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some o t h e r way FlatsOwner occupied Rented from l o c a l or p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some o t h e r way Farmhouses |(8958QA) i - 41 - 1 4 1 1 - . - 1 2 2 4 1 2 3 1 1 130 48 Census of Northern 10 TABLE 6 - Private Dwellings: Ireland 1961 Inhabited Dwellings by Building Type, Tenure and Rooms continued Administrative Areas Inhabited dwellings Population Containing 2 3 4 5 6 room rooms rooms rooms rooms rooms 1 Portadown Municipal 9 or more rooms rooms 7-8 Total no, of rooms In Total private no. of dwellings dwellings Borough Permanent dwellings Non-permanent dwellings Dwellings with1 household per dwelling 2 households per dwelling 3 or more households per dwelling Total dwellings Percentage Households therein 74 23,470 5,117 18,463 - - - - 69 3 2 23,379 5,104 18,390 62 29 10 3 47 26 212 4.1 74 1.4 23,470 5,117 100.0 18,463 571 212 84 5,138 * • 564 253 90 212 151 3 74 48 22,963 5,807 5,928 4,946 1,029 1,356 18,096 3,479 5,621 3 2 45 11 1 11 14 4 197 311 2,341 1,412 566 - - - - - - 4 197 311 2,337 1,410 - - 4 2 - - 564 1 1 212 4 0.1 197 3.9 311 6.1 2,341 1,412 45.7 . 27.6 566 11.1 4 197 311 2, 345 1,414 124 2 60 264 24 2,320 1,388 . 47 166 874 385 482 2 59 1 1 191 12 1,460 •1 8 9 498 14 212 _ - • • Permanent dwellings Dwelling housesOwner occupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some other way _ - FlatsOwner occupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some,other way 4 73 47 21 24 2 - 65 39 12 22 - 1 7 5 4 - - - -2 - -1 21 35 21 Farmhouses 1 3 - 205 . 13 - 142 30 83 10,677 2,469 8,692 409 62 221 507 171 367 405 - 138 306 24 70 8 7 24 2 14 44 - - - _. - _ - 141 113 , / 3 4 28 16 1,855 388 1,276 35 141 113 34 28 16 1,855 388 1,276 21 5.4 35 9.0 141 36.4 113 29.1 34 8.8 28 7.2 16 4.1 1,855 388 100.0 1,276 21 35 141 113 34 28 16 388 • • 21 1 12 35 4 4 140 11 74 113 17 76 34 15 7 26 16 15 ,-• 9 1 / 1 1,887 448 770 384 1,263 231 611 8 26 1 55 19 1 10 2 5 / 4 3 2 535 74 126 10 - - - 7 1 1 ~ - 1 3 - Tandragee Urban D i s t r i c t Permanent dwellings Non-permanent dwellings Dwellings with1 household per dwelling 2 households per dwelling 3 or more households per dwelling Total dwellings Percentage Households therein 0.0 Permanent dwellings Dwelling housesOwiier occupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Furnished unfurnished Occupied in some other way FlatsOwner occupied Rented from local or public a u t h o r i t y Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied In some other way Farmhouses (89580A) 1 - - 175 , 399 22 - - g 1 - - 28 4 13 ' County of Armagh H TABLE 6 * Private Dwellings: Inhabited Dwellings by Building Type, Tenure and Rooms - continued Administrative Areas Enhablted dwellings Containing Armagh R u r a l 7-8 rooms 754 2 572 184 - - 1,324 2 756 572 184 - - - 1,324 19.1 2,196 31.8 1,326 19.2 756 10.9 572 8.3 184 2.6 31,190 524 1,324 2,197 1,328 756 572 184 6,917 • 22 5 1 387 151 28 927 406 126 1,574 551 644 804 343 300 311 192 38 199 128 8 84 55 3 18,1.53 8,128 4,830 4,308 1,831 1,148 15,891 6,470 4,652 - 4 193 11 6 354 35 6 341 32 1 137 23 4 53 24 2 35 26 1 7 18 102 4,157 936 24 1,136 169 66 4,115 588 8 10 2 10 -2 106 8 74 31 2 23 - - -1 2 - 1 - _ - IV -6 7 2 4 4 - 24 - -6 - 16 6 125 385 614 518 441 373 100 12,897 2 , 562 : 10,714 10 146 532 900 744 332 198 47 13,110 4 2,909 4 11,505 21 14 146 529 3 895 5 45 13,066 48 2 , 903 10 11,461 65 2,913 100.0 1 1 , 526 1 room 2 rooms 3 rooms 4 rooms 28 4 ' 5 rooms 520 4 1,322 2 2,195 1 1,326 32 524 1,324 - - 2,195 1 32 0.5 524 7.6 32 6 rooms District Permanent d w e l l i n g s Non-permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwellings w i t h 1 household per dwelling 2 households per dwelling 3 o r more h o u s e h o l d s p e r d w e l l i n g .' Total dwellings Percentage Households therein Permanent dwellings Dwelling housesOwner o c c u p i e d Rented from l o c a l o r p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y R e n t e d from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Burnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t h e r way FlatsOwner o c c u p i e d R e n t e d from l o c a l o r p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied I n some o t h e r way Farmhouses Lurgan Population Total lis private no.of ; dwellings: dwellings Total no.of rooms 9 or more rooms Rural 2 • - _. 1 - 6,901 13 26,677 20 31,176 14 6,911 3 26*685 20 * ~ 6,914 100.0 " • 26.70E * 6 50 - District Permanent d w e l l i n g s Non-permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwellings w i t h 1 household per dwelling 2 households per dwelling 3 o r more h o u s e h o l d s p e r d w e l l i n g Total dwellings Percentage Households 16 ~ 31,156 34 therein 744 - 332 - 198 - 2 14 0.5 146 5.0 532 18.3 900 30.9 744 25.5 332 11.4 198 6.8 47 1.6 13,114 14 146 535 905 744 332 198 49 2,923 9 5 1 139 45 8 447 206 35 718 299 190 553 246 184 • 220 123 60 16 14 - 9,363 4,461 2,177 2,188 1,000 480 8,538 3,629 2,189 1 2 3 83 - 194 9 3 208 13 2 - 84 2,421 220 21 640 47 74 2,483 163 - - Permanent d w e l l i n g s Dwelling housesOwner o c c u p i e d Rented from l o c a l o r p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t h e r way 8 5 108 10 86 62 2 2 30 5 14 8 FlatsOwner o c c u p i e d Rented from l o c a l o r p u b l i c a u t h o r i t y Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t h e r way Farmhouses I 89580A) 1 7 85 182 191 112 112 31 3,747 721 2,967 12 Census of N o r t h e r n I r e l a n d TABLE 6 - Private Dwellings; 1961 Inhabited Dwellings by Building Type, Tenure and Rooms continued Administrative Areas Inhabited dwellings Containing 1 rooms 3 rooms 42 11 704 3 53 707 2 room N^wry No, 2 B u r a l 7-8 4 5 6 rooms rooms rooms 1,459 4 2,415 989 532 1 - 530 2 279 Population Total in no. of private dwellings dwellings Total no. of rooms 9 or rooms more rooms District Permanent dwellings Non-permanent dwellings Dwellings witli1 household per dwelling Z households per dwelling 3 or more households per dwelling Total dwellings Percentage Households therein - 1,463 2, 416 989 _ _ - - - 707 96 26,670 8,518 24,921 - 33 19 51 94 2 26,654 6,531 24,939 2 49 6 33 - - - _ - ~ 281 • 53 0.8 1,463 22.4 3,416 37.0 281 4.3 96 1.5 • 6,537 100.0 24, 972 15.1 532 8.1 36,703 10.8 53 707 1,463 2,416 989 534 233 98 6,543 * - 32 19 474 301 14 899 519 125 1,914 687 B35 339 333 175 94 161 106 7 70 52 2 18,675 7,638 7,111 : 4,570 1,889 1,676 17, 506 6,734 7,549 5 • 148 6 3 238 14 3 315 19 - 1 47 16 1 36 11 10 6 ! i 896 95 989 • Permanent dwellings Dwelling housesOwner occupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some other way 1 11 1 FlatsOwner occupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some other way _ -1 Farmhouses 9 . Panderagee R u r a l 483 1,095 91 22 * 2 1 2 15 12 1 _ - 15 10 - 1 -1 -1 - -1 - -2 - 330 545 489 301 197 118 1 2 17 143 272 241 92 74 ' 3 17 143 -- - _ ~ 3 0.3 17 2.0 143 272 241 92 16.4 31.3 27.7 10.6 3 17 143 272 241 1 15 6 115 36 5 200 73 34 71 3 - 1 90 Z 41 3 _ _ - _ - 1 45 - _ - • 3,400 481 14 34 1 2,893 307 126 6 65 33 1 25 85 3 59 4 26 1 4 2 2 16 5 26 7,869 1,915 7,330 28 4,137 868 2 3,202 869 1 3,200 1 i 5 District Permanent dwellings Non-permanent dwellings Dwellings wlth1 household per dwelling £ households per dwelling 3 or more households per dwelling Total dwellings ' Percentage Households therein ~ "" ** 272 ~ _ ~ _ _ 2 241 93 4,131 ~ 73 1 28 - -- 8 74 8.5 28 3.2 4,139 93 75 28 871 164 50 70 39 18 1 25. 18 11 6 2,476 -' 1 - 1 8 -4 -2 1 4 3 _ _ _ _ - _ - ~" 3 5 " 870' 100.0 * 3,205 * • • Permanent dwellings Dwelling housesOwner occupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some other way FlatsOwner occupied Rented from local or public authority Rented from other landlords Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some other way Farmhouses (89580A) -1 _ _ - -8 1 — _ 2 28 72 _ * 77 ; 63 49 17 560 206 111 949 515 10 894 108 _ i ~ j 1,661 1,965 698 .433 2 i i 6 225 17 l - 1 • ~ ~* 308 779 49 « -. "* 1,237 County TABLE 7 - P r i v a t e Households: o f Armagh 13 S i z e , Rooms Occupied, and Density of Room Occupation Administrative Areas Hote:- For definitions, see Part I 1 2 3 82 20 8 3 5 1 809 524 176 126 103 57 21 18 10 3 2 4 6-7 •'6 10 and over 8-9 Population a t successive Total Populaprivate tion households ; in private households NO. Number of private households occupying the following number of rooms Number of persons In household Average number or perp-oriR l|r and 1 and p tiover, over, but Under l ro on over 2 under 1£ (persons per room } Rooms ' occupied Over 2 % County Armagh 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and over Total ) NO. private j households ) % -3 -1 _ - 967 1,256 2,361 7 9 4 • 2,101 612 1,721 1,281 394 531 1,213 1,427 1,517 1,450 1,070 -1 835 525 336 190 112 61 33 26 8 6 279 185 127 66 33 10 13 4 -1 - 315 766 676 436 253 132 88 55 39 21 8 1 687 547 426 239 149 79 53 21 15 4 6 3 143 112 77 58 35 19 10 2 5 1 1 2 4,012 13.2 6,645 21.5 5,568 18,3 4,795 15.8 3,534 11.8 2,379 7.8 1,464 4.8 929 3 . 1 501 1.7 307 1.0 151 0.5 105 0 . 3 58 0.2 24 0.1 14 0 . 1 15 64 54 54 42 28 20 8 5 2 37 170 -1 1 1 123 1,849 4,683 10,832 7,704 4,062 838 295 0.4 6.1 15,4 35.0 25.3 13,4 2.8 1.0 14,727 28,222 25,487 22,350 18,639 11,310 7,030 4,343 2,357 1,447 4,012 13,090 16,704 19,180 17,870 14,274 10,248 7,432 4,509 3,070 1,661 1,260 754 336 i 216 698 499 274 127 79 _ - 82 3,930 12,002 13,770 9,336 3,505 1,336 702 308 169 40 526 500 1,970 6,684 3,675 4,712 1,692 1,270 231 228 26 14 31 1,048 z,mz 9,332 11,855 5,856 4,725 1,376 378 250 22 12 13 14 16 1,231 3,303 7,960 17,892 10,951 21,601 37,161 44,703 24 12 540 348 1,302 1,184 2,394 1,540 1,408 1,020 548 160 45 10 „ 13 _ 0.27 0.46 o.m 0.86 1.06 1,26 .1. „ 46 1.71 1.91 2.12 2..58 2.53 2.7b 2.05 2.73 30,386 . 100.0 Private households at successive densities Population in private households 223 4,188 15,346 41,282 31,760 16,840 3,566 1,211 Rooms occupied 123 3,696 14,049 43,328 38,520 25,482 6,963 3,426 114,416 0.84 t 135,589 Armagh Urban District 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and over Total ) No. private \ households ) % 4 1 3 41 31 15 5 9 6 81 105 50 43 30 15 11 3 - 5 1 - - 97 160 154 136 92 70 37 23 11 11 4 1 3 _ _ - _ 45 135 124 139 105* 76 37 21 9 5 1 1 2 - 1 3 i - 4i 85 75 58 50 36 21 12 8 4 5 8 4 4 5 1 1 - 1 i' - 8 17 15 19 14 10 7 3 2 1 - _ _ 1 _ - - 8 108 346 768 701 391 96 32 0.3 4.3 13.9 32.2 28.3 15.8 3.9 1.3 32i 539 444 404 304 213 118 63 36 22 7 5 2 2 2,480 12.9 21.7 17.9 16.3 12.3 8.6 4.8 2.5 1.4 0.9 0.3 0.2 0.0 0.1 0.1 321 1,078 1,332 1,616 1,520 1,278 826 504 324 220 77 60 28 30 1,314 2,429 1 2,117 1,951 1,473 1,022 621 316 184 100 30 25 9 10 Rooms occupied 15 260 1,029 3,040 6 Z16 1,038 3,192 3,505 2,843 1,507 394 126 2,453 808 381 45 36 77 24 144 140 66 48 2 45 20 150 510 259 352 126 50 11 12 4 62 150 716 985 624 406 120 45 30 - 3.17 1,014 1,128 880 340 108 84 8 9 26 30 ('.44 0.63 0.83 1.03 :\..S6 s . 59 .1.70 i'..20 2.57 >'..40 • 'i „ 1 . 1 . .5.00 . 100.0 Private households at successive densities Population in private households 9 9,214 76 238 647 1,537 - 3 4 20 102 35 112 18 20 11 646 3,142 . 1,520 3,888 ; 0.79 11,601 Keady Urban District 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and over Total ) No. private ) households ) % - - - 2 8 2 8 6 29 1 16 1 17 4 6 1 1 4 17 36 21 31 20 1 5 7 13 18 27 15 1 - 0.0 _ - 1 2 _ 1 7 2 _ 2 1 - 0 1 2 3 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 - 2 1 _ 3 9 6 9 3 1 1 i 2 _ 36 101 149 115 35 12 6 7.9 22.3 32.8 25.3 7.7 2.7 1.3 85 96 66 87 43 33 15 15 4 4 3 2 1 - 18.7 21.1 14.5 19.2 9.5 7,3 5.3 3.3 0.9 0.9 0.7 0.4 0.0 0.2 0.0 85 i 192 198 | 348 215 198 105 120 36 40 33 24 14 279 393 297 387 195 167 74 75 18 19 16 10 6 47 265 647 539 138 49 23 Rooms occupied 72 303 596 575 220 101 69 (89580A) 85 180 147 152' 20 30 7 8 14 0.30 0.49 0.67 0.90 .1.10 1.19 1.42 1.60 2.00 2.11 S.06 2.40 2.33 454 . mo Private households at successive densities Population In private households 7 16 20 22 24 12 48 192 175 66 56 ' 1,608 1,936 10 47 124 273 105 325 549 829 0.83 Census of N o r t h e r n I r e l a n d 1961 14 TABLE 7 - P r i v a t e Households: Size, of Rooms O c c u p i e d , Room O c c u p a t i o n and D e n s i t y - Administrative Total private households Number of private households occupying the following number of rooms Number of persons In household Z 1 3 4 5 141 104 57 54 25 19 8 5 2 1 215 435 330 221 171 116 53 31 21 10 13 4 3 129 336 435 444 288 178 99 64 34 24 14 11 5 Areas continued 6~7 10 and over 8-9 % NO. population at successive population Rooms in 1 private occupied house- i holds J (persons per room ail< 1& ^ 1 and over, over, but j Under l But not under ,1±[ over 2 Over 2 Average number of persons per room Lurgan Municipal Borough 32 16 7 1 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and over Total „ „ _ _ _ _ _ _ a _ ~ „ ) NO. households ) % 0.0 58 1.3 • „ - - 547 983 924 826 568 368 184 113 64 40 28 18 8 1 - - 1 ^ _ 2 1 - 1 2 3 3 4 3 1 7 12 13 U 5 4 2 2 28 81 80 90 68 47 20 9 4 5 1 1 416 1,623 2,063 435 59 17 8.9 34.7 44.1 9.3 1.3 0.4 11.7 21.0 19.8 17,7 12.2 7.9 3.9 2.4 1.4 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0,0 0.0 ~ ~~ | 4,672 _ 5 56 2,188 4,355 4,307 3,966 2,761 1,800 888 534 321 196 128 94 37 6 547 1,966 2 S 772 3,304 2,840 2,208 1,288 904 576 400 308 216 104 14 56 207 110 297 180 104 14 i 110 1,099 5,648 8,496 1,747 274 73 Rooms occupied 118 1,248 6,492 10,315 2,713 486 207 ~ | . 100.0 _ 32 171 1,100 2,295 1,254 833 88 18 30 ~ - 12 0.25 0.45 0.64 0.83 1.03 1.23 1.45 1.69 1.79 2.04 2.41 2.30 2.81 2.33 547 1,934 2,580 2,200 415 144 28 9 " . " * Private households at successive densities Population in private households - 21 4 125 810 371 760 342 260 11 24 17,447 101 383 1,152 3,036 1,029 2,728 5,833 7,857 0.81 595, 2,150 3,114 1,712 570 108 56 16 0.25 0.45 0.65 0.85 1.06 1.25 1.46 1.66 1.94 2,09 2.27 2.26 2.80 1.40 21,581 Portadown MunicipaL Borough 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and over 4 3 2 108 68 15 11 9 2 1 - Total ) No. private ) households ) % 9 0.2 77 89 52 39 29 13 10 3 2 3 . - 214 317 4.1 6.2 252 510 538 433 290 126 85 39 35 14 9 4 4 2,339 45.5 86 305 311 268 181 111 72 40 13 11 11 2 1 64 144 163 127 92 47 25 18 12 4 5 7 1 1,412 7 20 17 21 14 5 6 1 1 1 - 709 27,5 13.6 1 7 9 12 8 4 2 1 1 92 46 1.8 0.9 590 11.7 1,146 22.3 1,107 21.6 911 17,7 623 12.1 308 6.0 200 3.9 103 2.0 63 1.2 33 0.6 25 0.5 13 0.3 6 0.1 1 0.0 ' - 0.0 509 2,292 3,321 3,644 3,115 1,848 1,400 824 ; 567 330 275 156 78 14 2,356 5,114 5,146 4,298 2,952 1,476 956 495 , 292 158 121 69 27 10 6 45 12 70 32 333 170 220 72 78 - Rooms occupied 398 932 8,385 5,481 2*710 341 20D 9 428 951 9,356 7,060 4,398 760 508 7 18 17 43 4 25 4 23 2 16 9 1 5 3 - . i 6 31 22 21 18 6 12 10 8 7 10 1 - 14 412 1,334 . 100.0 113 16 4 136 156 1,888 2,355 894 679 144 9 10 5,138 Private households at successive densities Population In private households 6 45 44 145 834 595 632 225 140 55 84 18,463 1,038 2,805 6,289 3,279 8,331 1 0.79 23,470 Tandragee Urban D i s t r i c t 1 2 3 4 6 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and over Total ) No. private } households } % 1 12 8 1 - 7 6 1 2 1 2 1 1 i ' 1 2 2 2 8 2 5 1 1 1 1 1 - 49 12,.6 1 120 30.9 66 17.0 63 16.2 46 11.9 19 4.9 14 3.6 7 1.8 3 0.8 - 0.0 - 0.0 1 0,3 49 240 198 252 230 114 98 56 27 12 197 548 326 326 236 93 69 38 16 7 9 6 49 1 0.25 0.44 224 0.61 183 0.77 144 0.97 50 1.23 Ifl 1.42 7 1.47 1.69 8 12 2.00 - o.o - o.o 0.0 21 35 141 113 50 19 0 - 0.0 388 5.4 9.0 36,4 . 29.1 12.9 4.9 2.3 .160.0 Private households at successive densities Population in private households 31 86 471 409 183 62 34 Rooms occupied 42 105 564 565 316 169 104 (89580A) 3 10 54 35 32 9 ^ 16 12 108 170 42 49 16 9 1,276 I 1,655 2 23 90 273 16 155 422 683 0.69 County of TABLE 7 - P r i v a t e Households: S i z e , Booms Occupied, of Room O c c u p a t i o n - 15 and Density continued A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Ai a Total private households Number of p r i v a t e h o u s e h o l d s o c c u p y i n g t h e f o l l o w i n g number or rooms number o r persons i n household 2 A 3 .•- 6-7 5 10 and over 8-9 : Population a t successIve densities ( p e r s o n s p e r room; Population In p r i v a t e 1 occupied' households 1 1 /tewagh R u r a l Armagh No. # 13.9 20,8 17.4 14.7 1 11.5 7.9 6.7 | 3.5 2.2 1.1 0,6 I 0.4 0.20.1 0.0 Ave' ni.imf.iperv.' 1 | and i and over, b u t but not under i£ over 2 2 Under 1 voo 936 2,560 2,721 1,800 1,050 426 182 64 18 0,2 0,4 0,0 0,0 1„C l.t: 1.4 1.6 1..B2.0 District 22 1 2 ' 3 4 6 6 7 8 .9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and o v e r 1 1 2 _ 1 _ _ ~ _ 32 Total ) No. private ) households ) % 246 195 0.5 59 42 35 20 9 7 3 1 -1 -,, 234 173, 121'' 89 61 44 28 11 6 6 _ - 182 110 81 40 33 17 17 9 5 2 92 192 193 174 158 129 85 53 29 14 4 2 2 3 - - -1 - -1 958 1,441 1,201 1,019 794 545 397 245 150 73 42 27 14 8 3 6,917 118 243 240 271 394 363 244 165 135 79 47 25 i£ 8 5 Z 2 2zr 9 55 60 37 36 23 20 18 8 5 2 2 6 30 20 12 16 9 6 3 2 1 1 „ 528 1,326 2,195 1,324 1,130 276 106 /T.« 19.2 31.7 19.2 16,3 4,0 1.5 private households at successive densities population i n private households - 958 2,882 3,603 4,076 ! 3,970 3,270 2,779 1 1,960 1,350 730 482 j 324 182 112 47 -3 3,538 6,282 5,592 4,708 3,816 2,618 1,915 1,187 717 t 357 195 124 1 77 45 ! 19 4 185 120 490 416 702 360 396 376 143 98 31 10 177 168 605 1,524 945 952 450 230 44 48 26 14 22 312 702 £,104 2,130 1,200 1,162 528 180 90 22 ~ z . 16 -••• Z.f: 2,/ 2„4 2.4 13 .100,0 ' 374 824 1,828 3,891 3,224 5,243 8,4Q8 9,770 | " 1 Rooms o c c u p i e d 57 1,317 4,672 8,583 6,544 4,871 1,231 430 32 ' 1,056 3,978 8,780 3,620 7,154 2,286 1,284 | 26,705 | J 31,190 0.i: •__ hargm Rural District 7 2 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 & 6 n 1 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1 5 and o v e r 1 .Total ) No. private ) households ) % 66 45 8 11 12 9 2 1 3 2 - 97 155 92 60 47 33 17 16 5 2 1 2 3 - - 17 159 630 0.9 5.4 18.1 91 192 155 169 104 74 45 35 16 10 5 4 3 1 52 139 131 107 112 72 63. 26 16 15 26 86 83 87 57 52 32 21 • 8 9 6 4 - 7 5 2 23 17 17 10 11 1 2 2 1 1 1 7 2 1 1 5 1 2 - 341 651 489 444 346 256 151 104 50 40 16 13 12 5 5 20 2,923 . - 4 1 1 895 30.6 2 1 746 469 26.6 16.1 87 3.0 0.7 341 1,302' 1,467 1>776 1.730 1,536 1,057 832 450 400 176 166 156 70 77 H.7 22.31 16.7 15.2 11.8 8.8 5,2 3.6 1.7 1.4 0.5 0.4 0.4 O.B 0.2 1,237 2,833 1 2,243 2,080 1,600 1,249 721 491 231 189 77 57 52 24 1 30 Rooms o c c u p i e d 55 407 1,742 3,550 3,303 2,036 350 83 17 318 1,590 3,580 3,730 2,950 721 208 43 7 1 318 192 89 53 35 18 10 7 4 1 - 8 31 30 22 21 11 13 6 4 S 1 10 8 15 4 3 5 1 1 - 4 24 44 236 642 315 488 198 230 44 7 90 278 876 1,080 624 505 176 36 20 334 1,206 1,164 848 340 216 14 24 o , .0.. •'.0 . »!• 1 , >:/• 1 . ;.'• i. (7 1, Z 2. 3. v, '• •(' 16 . 300.0 private &«is*tioids a t successive densities -population i n private households 3 8 75 54 133 144 216 150 132 156 156 70 61 | 11,526 i 149 331 796 1,647 1,358 2,240 3,780 4,148 43 384 807 2,072 2,175 918 805 288 72 40 966 2,362 2,298 1,284' 595 246 126 24 9 Q.MB j 13,114 fiewry No. 2 ftiral District 1 % 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 18. 13 14 1 5 and o v e r Total ) Wi, private ) households ) % ! 1 1 - 55 0.8 TOT 10.8 362 368 269 200 122 94 53 50 23 18 3 1 5 1 1 1 1 1.46S 22.5 261 460 429 318 298 242 161 120 66 38 8 2 1 4 8 fc,4#> 37.0 69 103 186 186 137 37 71 43 22 IS 4 6 4 1 - 48 129 114 118 94 93 44 32 13 15 5 - - - - 16.41 21.1 16.9 13.6' ±0.9, 8,4 5.3 4.0 1.9 1*3, 0.4 0,4 0.2 0,1 0.1 6,543 .' - 3 1 1 - 1,008 1,380 1,106 892 711 549 347 260 123 86 30 26 16 6 4 - 1 SB9 707 ISO 48 15.1 10.8 2.3 0.7 1,008 2,760 3,315 3,568 3,555 3,294 2,429 2,080 1,107 860 330 312 208 84 62 3,211 5,427 4,651 3,903 | 3,115 2,429 1,575 1,120 536 377 131 114 67 27 20 74 1,576 5,059 10,155 4,190 3,082 641 195 Booms o c c u p i e d 53 1,414 4,407 9,680 4,946 4,418 1,247 539 ,89580A) 175 114 441 464 747 570 275 264 208 64 47 14 207 212 610 2,016 1,057 1,304 279 S50 55 48 - 16 0. 3.1 0 , 51 0/7.1 0 91 l.K 1 . 3f J 1 .64 1..SW 2 07 2,7 4 3 . 1.0 3. 1.1 3 . T..0 - . * 100.0 Private households a t successive densities .FCpulation I n private households 3 24,972 26,703 388 967 1,773 3,415 3,392 6,067 7,604 7,909 o„y4 | ' Census of N o r t h e r n I r e l a n d 1961 16 TABLE 7 - Private Households; Size, Rooms Occupied, and Density of Room Occupation continued Administrative Areas Total private households Number of p r i v a t e households occupying the following number of rooms Number of persons in household 1 2 3 4 6-7 5 10 and over 8-9 % No. Population in private households Population a t successive densities (persons per room) Rooms occupied Over 2 Average number of persons lb and 1 and per over, over, but Under 1 room but not under l± over 2 Tanderagee Rural Diatri : t 1 2 S 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 .12 13 14 lb and over Total ) Ho. private } households ) % 2 2 " 9 2 1 1 2 2 - 28 39 20 22 14 10 3 6 1 36 72 6b 47 26 22 9 2 1 19 40 51 51 32 24 IJQ 8 2 2 3 - „ - - 1 ~ _ 10 26 28 16 18 19 10 2 4 3 ~ _ 7 10 7 5 9 6 1 1_ _1 _ " -l 1 5 2 2 _ - 4 17 143 272 241 136 47 11 0.5 1.9 16.4 31.2 27.7 15.6 5.4 1.3 104 11.9 189 21.7 166 19.1 149 17.1 99 11.4 88 10.1 38 4,4 19 2.2 9 0.9 9 1.0 - 0.0 - 0.0 2 0.2 ~ 0.0 - O.Oi 104 378 • 498 596 495 528 268 152 72 90 -1 26 ~ 407 841 808 731 491 456 211 87 42 51 10_ - ~ 13 - _ " 14 6 42 462 903 955 566 224 47 Rooms occupied 4 34 429 1,088 1,205 860 393 126 (89580A) _ _ _ _ 4 80 276 290 234 140 16 9 30 13 102 370 435 316 125 90 42 8 _ _ "1 0.26 0.45 0.62 0.82 1.01 1.16 1.26 1,75 1,71 1.76 _ _ 1,86 - 871 . 100.0 Private households at successive d e n s i t i e s Population in p r i v a t e households 12 21 4a 18 20 2 4 3 4 70 192 63 80 45 40 3,205 4,139 16 78 217 558 142 501 1,074 1,488 0.77 County of Armagh 17 [ABLE 8 - P r i v a t e Households : A v a i l a b i l i t y o f Household Arrangements by Tenure and Type of Accommodation * o t e : - For definitions, see Part I Administrative Areas Number of households with All a r r a n g e Total ments | household*! Sole Shared use County No Sole Shared use. ments Fixed oath Hot water tap Cold water tap Sole use None Sole use None Shared Shared . Water c l o s e t Sole use None Shared Cooking stove or range Kitchen sinK None Sole use 11,890 39.1 21,119 69,5 45 0.1 Shared None Sole use 9,222 30.4 25,839 85.0 35 0.1 4,^.2 14.9 9,193 25,777 26 36 b 24 •1,406 m 6 8 9,157 25,116 85 723 32 3 •1,403 2,131 Shared Norn; Armagh All households (No. 1 household p e r dwelling Z households per dwelling 3-or more ftousetiaias per dwelling 30,386 100.0 (* Households in b u i l d i n g s Wtioily r e s i d e n t i a l HOt vtoolly r e s i d e n t i a l Armagh Urban 10,93e £ 40 4 67 O.Z 30,106 6£.2 10,213' 12,450 33.6 41.0 55 0.2 34' 17,902 11,654 0.1 SB,9 38.3 105 0.4 18,620 48 18,370 13 34 40 11,864 25 21,067 26 8 26 26 9 8 31 I m 11 45 10 18,381 296 17,724 667 81 24 11,806 64 20,415 704 39 8 6 5 17,880 11,165 £22 489 2,722 ^0,055 10 . 25 23 30 29 14 16 2,719 1 ' 15 19,397 709 53 14 1,742 6,421 6 6,378 4,657 5 8,143 4,193 9 8,603 5,276 12 7,517 7,086 216 6,417 2 1,117 5,449 - 2,087 5,437 - 2,099 5.924 - 1,612 6,845 124 7,283 265 52 1,637 335 23 20 3 120 7,583 272 109 27 60 6 69 2,507 195 127 6,600 461 13,656 10,110 29 495 4,175 1,051 42 63 1 1 14,124 37 4,473 43 98 8 1 7,586 7 4,264 43 3 9 5 r 10,190 12,421 S3 17 18,677 •18,391 61.5 60.6 9 20 0 7 14 17,840 11,639 47 10 13 12 10,506 441 12,805 3,96: 7,536 5,152 195 9,£40 610 49 1,475 312 6 5 2 21 711 42 126 6,723 419 12 40 7 57 2,477 164 62 1,941 341 9 16 4 24,287 531 5,525 | 43 9,533 447 969 17 1,835 3 870 17,500 522 2,082 f 3 83 4 6,724 10,598 5 601 3,443 1,350 41 1 1 33 1 2,480 100.0 1,334 53.8 2,348 94.7 18 0.7 114 4.6 1,449 59.4 2,443 14 1,332 2,326 7 5 5 112 2 1,442 1 23 2 2 16 8 - 6 6 11 2,312 166 1,234 100 2 1 11 2.187 181 11 7 114 1,328 121 6 1 470 359 1 - 464 1 5 390 831 ' <336 - 1 1 813 - 18 39 1,043 97 14 273 1 .. 52 1 1 1 9 3 14 ~ " 33 944 1 94 3 85 3 2,296 160 3 1 1,178 154 Z 3 9 1 2,167 179 2 18 454 100.0 263 57.9 454 263 409 45 246 IB 4 < ~1 2* 10,181 11,901 52 549 15 " 30 4 ~ ! " 6,673 409 16,603 618 1,270 1 _ 3 IH 49 5,713 10,669 5 691 6,872 _. 11 21 7 57 2,619 142 163 7,611 534 8 17 5 I ,612 18,24E 515 2,351 4 42 3 - 5,996 20,829 13 477 3,174 4,515 39 \ 18 35 3,423 " 664 34 7.1 54 1 ,010 Zli District All households (No, {% 1 household per dwelling 2 households per dwelling 3 or more households per Celling Households in b u i l d i n g s Wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Mot wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Households in accommodationomer occupied Raated from local or public authorities Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied i n some o t n e r way Households occupyingDweliing houses Flats Farmhouses Other types of dwellings Ready U r b a n 2,732 8.Q 17 0.1 29,611 775 Households In accommodatlonowner occupied Rented from l o c a l or • p u b l i c authorities Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied In some o t h e r way Households occupylngDwening houses Fiats Farmhouses OEber types of dwellings 10.949 36.C 30,268 78 11 0,4 3 0.1 _1 - ~ v 11 " - ~ 1 1 _1 1,024 41.3 1,400 56.4 19 0.8 1,061 42.8 2,361 95.2 42 1,7 77 3.1 2,200 88,7 9 0.4 271 10.9 2,309 93.1 6 0.2 166 6.7 1,001 12 1,398 -3 1,046 11 2,357 1 12 10 74 3 2,179 6 -3 264 5 2,281 10 -3 .162 1 2 16 5 3 20 15 6 2 18 2 3 978 46 1,294 106 13 6 1,005 56 2,208 153 29 13 75 2 2,044 156 4 5 264 7 2,149 160 2 3 1.61 h - 2 78 368 2 100 462 2 6 468 1 13 461 1 8 - 160 668 - 163 818 - 15 767 - 64 778 - 53 18 313 2 3 19 727 40 i 16 289 69 11 6 12 748 38 23 964 96 13 27 3 52 1 31 851 95 3 5 5 187 2 35 949 86 .1 3 3 9.1 11 1,011 1.231 11 1 167 1 2 1 19 1,046 13 1 1 2,180 178 3 41 1 76 1 9 -1 267 2 1 1 2,140 166 3 5 - 2,020 178 2 — 0.0 166 36.3 430 94.7 6 1.1 19 4.2 413 91.0 2 0.4 39 8.6 415 91.4 5 19 413 2 39 415 39 5 19 371 42 2 36 3 371 44 38 1 1 9 98 3 -1 _ 1 188 16 1 27 1 2 120 7 19 384 29 2 57 111 1,278 1 169 1 ' 2 1 ~ 7 - 0.0 4 0.9 431 95.0 2 0.4 21 4.6 296 65.2 2 0.4 156 34.4 289 63.7 4 431 2 21 296 2 156 289 105 430 4 386 46 2 21 269 27 2 138 IB 268 21 141 24 385 45 97 -2 ~ 41 54 47 94 3 SOX 3 201 3 107 21 29 3 110 2 i 2 126 155 8 £ - ~ ~ - -1 " ~ 671 - • _ " - 7 0.3 „ ~ - ~ - " . ~ " ~ " "" .1 h i 14 .. .1 District All households (No. {% 1 household p e r dwelling Z households per dwelling 3 or more households per dwelling Households in buildings-? Wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Not Wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Households In accommodationOmer occupied Baited from local or public authorities Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied in some otlier way' Households occupylngDweliing houses Fiats Farmhouses Otiier types of dwellings Lurgan M u n i c i p a l - 101 50 204 185 - 3 139 7 23 - 1 3 1 415 37 2 " , 1 5 243 20 ' &J4 1 4 ~| - 2 121 7 394 36 1 ~ 1 1 ~ 4 60 „ SOI 1 16 - 30 ~ 1 20 1~ • 5 264 31 1 ~ -2 " 1 1 " " ~ 39 8.6 1 8 91 -4 ~ 3 303 1 9 2 111 6 395 34 1 2 3 .18 - 1 379 33 .1 -2 - 36 2 1 2,295 49.1 4,604 9 0.2 69 1.3 4,449 95.2 6 0.1 217 4.7 4,373 93.6 6 0.1 293 6.3 3 £ 2,293 1 4,603 4 4 58 4,44S Z 3 2 216 4,371 2 3 2 291 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 6 2.254 41 4,473 131 8 1 58 1 4,319 130 6 214 3 4,244 129 6 269 1 179 644 1 8 848 5 839 „ 120 1,328 - 6 1,328 6 1,281 27 1,963 6 31 2.367 34 4 4 4 37 30 2,206 36 3 3 8 197 3 32 2,188 33 2,284 5 4 2 4,520 78 6 4,362 78 B 6 213 1 1 3 4,292 73 8 •^ 150 5 1 . ~ O.G -\ 5 260 29 ~ 7 " 1 1 " 31 8 - Borough All households (No. ( % • i household per dwelling Z bousoholds p e r dwelling 3 or more Households per dwelling Households in b u i i d i n g s Wbolly r e s i d e n t i a l Mot ttiolly r e s i d e n t i a l 4,872 100.0 2,254 48.2 1 0.0 10 0.2 4,666 4 2,254 1 10 3 - - " 4,539 133 2,166 88 853 657 1,334 1,180 Households in a c c o m o d a t i o n Owner occupied Rented from l o c a l or p u b l i c authorities Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied m some o t h e r way 39 2,408 38 8 399 30 Households occupylngDweUing houses Fiats Farmhouses .Other types of dwellings 4,581 79 10 2 2,176 70 6 _ " 4,550 97.4 7 0.1 115 : 2,561 2.5 54.8 4 0,1 2,107 45.1 2,-371 50.8 4,546 2 4 2 115: 2,556 3 3 2,106 1 2,369 1 2 1 2 4,418 132 6 1 116 - 6 696 5 1,208 1 10 " - - 1 847 i 1,329 1 ~ 1 _ ~ ~ 1 4 3 32 2,307 36 3 4 7 4,485 78 7 8 1 -1 2 ~ " " ~ " " 2,450 111 _ 1 4 " - 4 97 3 13 812 32 2 2 110 2,479 76 8 4 -3 2 ~ " _- " 1 2,085 ZZ 2,279 92 157 673 126 1,214 24 1,794 6 9 ' 443 32 2,098 2,291 3 74 4j 6 2 ~ 6 0.1 . _ 3 2 ~ 6 ~ gas - ~ ~ 8 1 "_. - 4 53 -4 ^ " ~ ~ " - ~ ~ _ 3 3 6 ~ 4 14 53 4 217 5 283 3 Z Z Census of Northern I r e l a n d 18 TABLE 8 - Private Households 1961 Administrative Areas Availability of Household Arrangements Ay Tenure and* Type of Accommodation - continued Number of households with All a r r a n g e Total ments households Sole Shared use Pc?* t i n i o w n M u n i c i p a l M l households l houaohoiiJ per dwelling Z households per d u e l l i n g 3 or more households per ({welling HQUj;etscl.ds In b u i l d i n g s frilly residential ;jot wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Hou.'-ieholcls In accommodationownsi'1 occupied Rented from l o c a l or public authorities Kented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished occupied In some o t h e r way Households occupylngl'wrelllug houses Hats Farmhouses Other types of dwellings Ta/idrawee Vrban No merits Sole use Shared Sole use None Fixed hath None Sole use 2,181 42.4 2,842 55.3 21 0.4 2,275 44.3 5,027 97.9 2 . 2,168 6 9 2,837 3 3 9 2,264 8 Shared Shared None Households in b u i l d i n g s Wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Not wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Sole use 32 0.6 79 1.5 4,798 93.4 18 0.3 322 6.3 4,568 88.9 13 0.2 659 10.9 5,020 3 5 17 79 4,782 6 3 11 319 3 4,551 7 2 8 551 . 6 Shared 14 0.3 4,996 97.2 28 0.6 114 2.2 2,943 57.3 5,104 20 2,659 3 2 9 4,982 5 9 14 113 1 2,934 5 14 2 3 ~ 9 5 - 4 6 4 Z 9 3 4 10 - 10 4 - 6 3 3 5,002 136 2,576 86 7 9 4,888 130 24 4 112 2 2,838 105 11 3 2,153 28 2,750 92 17 4 2,235 40 4,899 128 26 6 77 2 4,669 129 17 1 316 6 4,441 126 13 £48 11 1,029 822 1 1 1,025 1 3 872 1 156 846 2 181 1,018 2 1 1 1,494 1,281 ~ 2 1,481 1 12 1,375 " 119 1,383 ~ 111 1,484 46 2,502 67 16 492 53 2 3 1 -6 40 2,387 63 4 18 4 2 97 19 622 65 3 24 6 1,872 Z 10 16 543 54 7 10 2 23 1,949 11 37 2,425 63 4,967 171 2,519 145 7 9 4,827 169 26 2 114 2,778 165 2,175 6 2,678 164 20 1 2,269 6 4,857 170 388 100.0 239 61.6 0.0 4 1.0 366 91.8 32 8,2 266 66.0 132 34.0 250 64.4 138 35.6 369 96.1 388 239 4 366 32 256 132 260 138 358 30 221 18 4 326 30 32 236 20 122 10 231 19 127 11 z 14 41 8 987 34 1,363 3 11 3 3 275 2 38 2,116 62 2 8 2 6 378 3 4,631 167 17 1 319 4,417 3 j 149 13 637 28 O.C 0.0 C -0 19 4.9 344 88.7 0. 0 369 19 340 29 18 1 8 55 1 71 8 58 19 56 22 69 - 174 1 156 19 155 20 175 126 10 28 9 3 101 10 25 33 9 93 1 31 9 95 1 116 10 Ho;.uK.i>ol ds ocoupylngIM'eiling houses 384 236 4 352 32 263 131 247 137 4 3 4 - 3 1 3 1 6,917 100.0 1,316 19.0 6,911 6 F-iranoiiass Other typos of dwellings 9 1,020 10 1,480 8 18 4 1 59 40 2,216 62 31 1 79 " ~ 131 " 0 .0 44 11.3 348 89.7 344 44 348 40 314 30 44 318 30 40 0.0 40 10.3 74 3 74 3 174 1 ' 163 12 11 86 10 40 101 10 25 366 18 340 44 344 3 1 4 _ " 4 40 " District Ail households (No. 1 household pei dwelling Z 'uniatiholds per dwelling 3 or more households per dwelling uon;u.'iioids in b u l l d l n g s Wtioi'ly residential Not wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Households In accommodationowner occupied Ranted from l o c a l or p u b l i c authorities filiated from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s P.II'H.1 shed Uii furnished Occupied In some o t h e r way Households occupyingOisKil .Un$?; houses F&rahtmses OiVaor types of dwellings 903 13.1 2,764 40.0 1 0.0 4,152 60.0 1,675 24.2 0.0 6,242 75.8 1,433 20.7 2 0.0 5,462 79.3 1,786 25.8 3 0.0 5,129 74.2 3,316 47.9 0.0 1,315 1 901 2 2,763 1 1 4,147 5 1,674 1 - 5,237 5 1,432 1 2 5,477 5 1,784 1 3 5,124 5 3,316 1 - 6,636 82 807 6 2,706 59 1 4,129 23 1,628 47 - 5,207 35 1,391 42 2 40 5,442 40 1,735 50 2 1 5,098 31 3,253 63 4,301 805 670 1,681 - 2,620 1,075 - 3,226 871 2 S.428 1,108 •2 3,191 1,944 1,189 355 72 764 1 424 407 782 383 806 406 783 947 27 1,207 193 6 69 81 4 244 13 9 205 106 18 1,002 88 7 93 93 20 1,114 100 6 B6 88 : 21 1,122 105 7 163 101 20 1,043 92 11 287 127 - 4,309 31 2,563 14 820 26 470 577 1 320 5 1,869 28 1,066 1 2.639 1 3 1,497 13 972 28 674 1 3,337 3 1,889 13 898 27 508 1 3,410 4 3,054 14 1,152 26 607 3,156 6 1,966 - 14 2,120 27 1,168 1- 1 2,923 •100.0 592 20.3 2 ' 0.1 831 28.4 968 33.1 1,961 66.8 702 24.0 3 2,218 0.1 0.1 76.9 650 22.2 2 0.1 3,271 77.7 804 27.5 3 0.1 2,116 72.4 1,501 61.4 0.2 2,903 20 591 1 _ 824 7 966 3 i 3 1,937 2 M 699 3 -3 2,204 14 649 1 -2 3,254 17 802 2 3 _ 2,101 15 1,497 4 6 2,903 20 586 6 2 829 2 956 12 4 1,943 8 691 11 3 2,209 9 643 7 2 3,258 13 796 9 3 2,105 11 1,485 16 1,699 481 482 +2 23 656 63 3 44 22 2,197 722 4 0.0 . - 1 - - 1 1 2 1 3,601 6,770 6 2 . 1 83.4 0.0 1,147 16.6 3,596 6 6,766 4 - 1,145 2 - 3,582 19 6,699 71 - 1,136 11 - 2,357 3,610 242 1,033 166 16 920 66 23 929 175 4 278 ' 18 2,189 3,548 4 28 1,395 2,185 13 9 761 3 376 5 - ' 691 District (No. {% i hiJiJfKihoM per dwelling • \ tiOLi..:t'fiolds p e r dwelling .•; or more households per riwulliis i;uusel.ioi.de In b u l l d l n g s Wts"i iy r e s i d e n t i a l Hot wholly r e s i d e n t i a l H!ju;>jU!">lds In acoommodatioiiOw/KT occupied Rtfnt.ed from l o c a l or p u b l i c ;tut.h,ij.rltles hen ted from other landlords furnished Unfurnished (KxuitU-d In some other way }?vo--itix>t ils occupylngDwwinuB houses K'u'.nNjusfeR Othisr types of dwellings (89580A) None 9 0.2 147 Rural Shared 7 0.1 77 .MiUJKfitKilcls None 2,664 51.8 176 Luvgofj Shared 5,1.58 100,0 Houseiiolcis In accommodationOwner occupied Rented from l o c a l or public •authorities Kented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Ltn .rural shed occupied In some o t h e r way hU Sole use None Sole use District (No. {% i. .housfihold per dwelling B households per dwelling ,5 or mora households per dwelling A r rn « £• h R u r a l Coofclng stove or range Kitchen sink Water c l o s e t B o r augh (No. All Households Hot water tap Cold water tap - 4 " " .' •' " - a 1,416 48.4 1,874 84.1 7 0.2 1,042 35.7 _ 1,406 10 1,870 4 -7 1,033 9 6 i,4ia 4 1,857 17 7 1,039 3 i,iae " 1 419 716 1 982 672 1 1,126 523 1 1,175 616 1 1,082 955 2 ' 742 ~ .. -1 121 137 346 46 48 79 296 311 20 599 37 3 51 25 20 606 37 6 77 27 18 579 34 6 208 37 _ 4- 187 3 67 24 2- 403 19 571 34 .. -1 434 4 85 26 2- 436 8 268 15 _ _3 17 448 22 14 341 42 394 2 663 649 4 1,544 451 3 1,743 436 2 i.7601 653 3 1,841 1,084 198 _ " 166 3 319 " 403 4 251 -. ~ 471 4 215 " 507 4 261 _ ~ 471 4 416 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ - 6 _- 1,107 1,371 306 3 502 1 2 631 -2 171 3 9 313 18' 7 819 ~ 220 3 County TA2LE 8 - of Private Households : Availability of Household Arrangements by Tenure and Type of Accommodation - Armagh 19 Administrative Areas continued Number o l households irltii All a r r a n g e Total meats households No Sola s&area in en t s use Newry N o . 2 Bural All Households Hot water tap Gold water Cap Sola Shared use Water c l o s e t Fixed battj j Cooking .'itove o r raiiK<3 Kitchen sink Sole Shared use None Sole use Eliared None j Sole use Shared 5 0.1 4,377 66.9 2,725 41.7 9 0.1 3,809 68.2 3,564 54.5 4 0.1 2,107 4 1 4 4,373 4 2,719 8 3 6 3,809 3,568 6 4 5,973 6,462 2 8 2,077 84 5 4,311 66 2,609 116 7 2 3,777 32 3,436 128 4 2,853 22 6,353 137 r .i,otS5 13 649 1 3,138 890 2 3,880 1,369 1 2,412 2,987 ) 7M - 398 1,368 - 347 1,602 2 2 12 791 66 4 403 60 Z 5 10 521 51 e 2 1 2,171 S,9&8 1 32 1,617 642 20 i 2 A None Sole use Shared None Sole use 3,271 50.0 2,282 34.8 4 0.1 4,267 85.0 2,181 35.0 2,278 4 „ 4 4,253 4 4 4,208 49 Shared None Non e Diatri c t (Ho. i* l household p e r dwelling 3 households p e r dwelling 5 or more households per duelling Households in BuildingsWholly r e s i d e n t i a l Hot Wholly r e s i d e n t i a l Households In accommad&tLonowner occupied Rented rrom l o c a l or p u b l i c au t h o r i t l e s Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished l/n f u r n i s h e d Occupied: in some o t h e r way Households occupyingOwalUws houses Flats FansShouses Other types of dwellings 0,643 K»>0 2,054 31.4 4 0.1 863 13.0' 1 6 3,271 3,136 150 5 2 3,265 IB 715 1,243 3 2,626 764 1 3,017 | &1.441 & 6106 116 _ 274 1,319 - 396 2 2 9 417 45 2 1 IS ! 778 1 64 3,060 4 4 - 6,303 ISO 1,974 80 M • - 843 4 3,772 694 1 1,716 1,086 16 2 118 Z 1 9S!& 55£ lit : 4,5?? 33 1,913 20 , '1,611 33 811 / ,663 4 ~ 7 0.1 3,269 6 6,531 12 i 3,265 49.9 - 2,181 101 Z 1E067 8 66 - 47a 1 564 12 2,724 32 7 107 12.3 428 49.1 106 1 427 1 44S ll 286 _ - soa1 1,849 1 1,406 16 1,945 32 305 " - 4 - 1,319 2 136 55 2,628 , 1,800 1 32 229 1,808 20 I - 5 ~ 2,872 2,397 1 • ' 32 296 1,604 20 ~ - ~ 9 " 546 71 2,975 46.4 6,470 83,6 4 0.1. 1 133 i1,885 8 382 40 1,069 16.3 1,0*59 U) 8 713 97 ;l I 0 215 -.14 1,565 ,3,897 1 i 32 i , 37.1 '1,534 16 7 ^ • ft'Tft i 379 13 0, 5 ib7 18.0 Tanderagee Rural District All households fNo. <% 1 household p e r dwelling 3 households per d w e l l i n g 3 or more households per dwelling Households in b u i l d l n g s WSioll? r e s i d e n t i a l Mot m o l l y r e s i d e n t i a l 288 2 - - 681 2 60S 5 280 6 1 1 154 349 175 66 46 67 30 8 - 2 200 16 33 11 258 £80 6 580' 5 226 180 38 66 31 9 - Z 199 16 233 &60 11 2£8 6 108 1 418 10 442' 1 503 138 35 277 112 58 10 74 1 63 13 1 167 11 o 534 61.3 593 ; 2, 8$9 2 ,. 443| 0 583 08.9 250 29.6 333 26.8 0.0 2 0.2 585, 67.21 871 100,0 286 eo,«l 3 2 . 8 - 0.0 613 70.4 286 32.9 811 2 2B2, 6 323 46 - 0,0 Households In accommodationOwner occupied Rented from l o c a l o r p u o l t c authorities Rented from o t h e r l a n d l o r d s Furnished Unfurnished Occupied In some o t h e r vtay 2 230 24 29 8 1 69 2 Households occupyingDwelling houses Flats Farmhouses Other types of dwellings 561 154 86 253 306 176 383 170 391 163 308 2 78 SO 1 176 133 2 108 200 S 86 220 Z 103 (89590A) _ " ': „ " ~ 38.7 714 82.0 533 1 338 1 •713 1 IW 579 4 524 10 338 1 704 10 156 i 1 327 . 339 134 447 as -1 - 45 89 23 90 a2 2 196 13 1 67 18 1 143 6 1 154 22 i 76 2 376 325 238 436 125 205 ; 2 209 277 1 31 1 & ' 3277 0,0 99, 2 TABLE 9 - Private Households: en en o > Xote : - S o c i o - e c o n o m i c group 1-3 rooms 4-5 rooms of :ne s o c i o - e c o n o m i c For d e f i n i t i o n s 6 o r more rooms 1-3 rooms 4-5 rooms Rented from o t h e r landlords 6 o r more rooms 1 Employers and m a n a g e r s large establishments (Households (Persons e 119 394 171 j 689 1 9 16 136 527 20 93 z Employers and m a n a g e r s small establishments (Households (Persons 31 118 335 1,327 395 1 1,673 8 27 138 605 16 68 Professional workerss e l f employed (Households (Persons 4 8 19 58 94 397 Z 3 10 4 31 20 1 4 Professional employees (Households (Persons 1 Z 43 154 33 126 2 5 38 139 7 27 5 I n t e r m e d i a t e non-manual workers (Households (Persons 8 23 186 587 141 472 39 70 206 753 38 182 6 J u n i o r non-manual workers (Households (Persons 43 130 255 921 135 523 64 139 572 2,250 52 245 7 Personal service workers (Households (Persons 27 60 32 78 9 29 33 52 101 345 8 Foremen a n d s u p e r v i s o r s manual (Households (Persons 21 92 81 341 42 190 16 52 9 S k i l l e d manual w o r k e r s (Households (Persons 186 724 611 2,444 135 549 S e m i - s k i l l e d manual w o r k e r s (Households (Persons 161 524 332 1,240 workers- 1-3 rooms I 4-5 rooms Occupied i n some o t h e r way j 6 i o r more rooms 6 17 72 237 79 29S 24 83 136 538 83 309 1 2 14 46 18 58 1 3 6 17 53 13 44 ' 1 37 92 106 335 74 249 j 96 258 409 1,382 3 15 81 175 199 820 20 90 172 506 1,780 8,080 81 364 131 398 1-3 rooms 4-5 rooms Total 6 o r more rooms 1-3 rooms 4-5 rooms 6 o r more rooms 2 5 9 28 41 135 1 ! Z5 60 336 1,186 311 1,213 1 1 5 13 9 38 : 64 229 614 2,483 503 2,088 - 10 29 93 308 j 7 13 53 164 209 783 - 2 10 6 24 6 13 100 356 59 221 4 9 19 72 8 32 88 194 517 1,747 261 935 117 400 11 20 37 148 9 34 214 547 1,273 4,701 313 1,202 115 360 10 44 7 11 4 14 1 1 148 298 252 797 23 89 28 90 173 706 20 108 3 10 5 27 3 18 68 244 458 1,894 85 406 135 746 477 1,533 1,778 6,795 152 650 20 56 27 98 6 24 855 2,819 4,196 17,417 428 1,969 812 3,440 49 262 372 1,074 986 3,258 76 285 13 49 14 58 5 20 677 2,045 2,144 7,996 211 931 1,014 3,780 2,188 10,336 163 822 252 674 811 3,138 316 1,277 54 167 238 1,064 375 1,709 1,559 4,375 2,437 9,733 1,331 ,5,958 1,733 505 624 2,793 52 247 j ts5 O groups , s e e P a r t [ Rented from l o c a l or public authority Owner o c c u p i e d 3 County Households and Persons therein by Tenure of Accommodation, Rooms occupied and Socio-Economic Group of Head of Household j 1 , j o 09 c CO o •+» 10 ' 11 U n s k i l l e d manual w o r k e r s (Households (Persons 330 1,293 364 1,750 45 220 164 555 944 4,800 48 294 505 1,889 865 3,717 67 300 15 43 15 69 3 8 IS Own a c c o u n t w o r k e r s ( o t h e r than p r o f e s s i o n a l ) (Households (Persons 108 289 342 1,314 230 928 19 47 184 841 17 78 117 311 277 949 65 262 8 27 8 34 4 9 13 Farmer s - empl o y e r s and m a n a g e r s (Households (Persons 46 140 208 943 353 1,605 1 2 10 34 1 3 5 21 17 76 7 29 2 4 3 11 14 72 14 Farmers-own a c c o u n t (Households (Persons 1,473 4,162 2,278 9,154 1,282 5,756 14 36 68 252 8 27 56 136 67 226 28 135 16 41 24 101 13 40 15 Agricultural (Households (Persons 193 678 169 773 12 55 55 200 250 1,163 13 72 232 771 184 769 21 92 25 84 21 88 6 28 16 Members of armed (Households (Persons 2 5 4 16 4 15 3 8 18 63 3 14 4 8 12 36 3 17 1 1 1 5 1 2 10 22 35 U30 11 48 9 14 10 39 3 18 3 21 88 1 15 10 19 21 63 2 5 1 1 - •9 22 42 53 191 6 38 (Households (Persons 535 1,286 724 2,139 342 1,056 172 350 663 2,356 44 180 360 832 799 2,391 138 407 1 34 21 40 14 38 1,087 2,502 2,207 6,926 538 1,681 (Households (Persons 3,186 9,570 6,112 23,672 3,507 14,665 907 2,475 6,150 26,587 479 2,431 2,414 7,317 6,048 21,937 973 3,690 1 148 395 226 846 236 831 6,655 19,757 18,536 73,042 5,195 21,617 workers forces (Households (Persons Indefinite Not a p p l i c a b l e Total ! 1 ! 20 • 1 1 2: o •1 ct tr a> *"j 0 (» P avo County of Armagh 21 TABLE 10 - Inhabited Buildings, etc,, other than Private Dwellings: Class, Number, Total Population and (for Institutions) Number of Inmates Administrative Areas Class of building, etc., and area in which situated 1. Boarding houses Armagh Lurgan Portadown Armagh Tanderagee Total population Number of buildings, etc. Persons Females Males Inmates only (classes 3-8) Persons Males Females U. D. M.B. " R.D. " 5 4 6 2 1 42 42 37 19 6 22 21 23 13 2 20 21 14 8 4 Total 18 146 81 65 U.D. " M. B. " R.D. " 4 2 1 1 1 3 18 8 7 15 2 . 7 4 5 6 1 11 4 2 9 1 19 6 13 Total 12 69 29 40 . County welfare institutions Lurgan M. B. Armagh R.D. Lurgan " 2 1 i 69 25 39 19 24 13 50 1 26 67 23 29 19 23 13 48 Total 4 133 56 77 119 55 64 4. Hospitals under control of N.I. Hospitals Authority Armagh U. D. Lurgan M. B. Portadown " Armagh R. D. Newry No. 2 » 3 1 1 5 1 391 254 39 783 214 180 54 7 377 86 211 200 32 406 128 383 170 32 749 180 179 49 7 374 81 204 121 26 375 99 1,661 704 977 1,514 690 824 2. 3. Hotels and hostels Armagh Ready Lurgan Portadown Armagh Lurgan Total 5. Other hospitals and nursing homes 6. Homes or institutions for handicapped or disabled persons (89580A) 9' i. - " - - • • • • • . _ - 16 22 Census of N o r t h e r n I r e l a n d 1961 TABLE 10 - Inhabited Buildings, e t c . , other than Private Dwellings: Class, Number, Total Population and (for I n s t i t u t i o n s ) Number of Inmates - continued Class of building, etc., and area In which situated 7. Voluntary homes Portadown Newry No. 2 8» Places of detention Armagh Total: County Armagh • Persons Males 23 137 6 8 17 129 11 104 6 8 5 96 Total 3 160 14 146 115 14 101 U.D. 1 86 62 24 66 53 13 . . • • * * * • * 1,814 812 U.D. « M.B. " U.D. R.D. " • - • 5 2 2 3 1 9* 2 9 311 21 [ 5 3 32 | 5 184 70 227 226 7 8 10 5 122 4 222 85 14 45 22 33 903 604 299 * - 80 1 3,178 62 66 5 i 1,550 1,628 *0ne building (St. Louis' Convent) also includes a Girls' Training School (89 580 A) Females. 1 2 Total 11. Vagrants Inmates only (classes 3-8) Total population Number of buildings, Persons Males Females etc. M. B. R.D. 9. Slips (seagoing) 10. Other buildings Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee Armagh Lurgan Newry No. 2 Administrative Areas 1,002 C o u n t y o f Armagh TABLE 11 - P o p u l a t i o n , P a r l i a m e n t a r y E l e c t o r s Members o f P a r l i a m e n t 23 and Parliamentary Parliamentary electors* (persons) P o p u l a t i o n , 1961 Constituency Constituencies E l e c t o r s p e r 1,000 population NO. Of Members of 1 Parllarnen t Females All qualifications 117,594 57,857 59,737 74,232 73,350 624 8 4 16,635 13,494 14,603 14,136 17,383 13,654 15,818 13,883 31,663 15,781 19,599 17,189 31,337 15,569 19,346 17,098 637 619 636 610 10 8 8 3 1 1 1 1 117,594 57,857 59,737 73,715 73,351 624 3 1 57,857 59,737 73,715 73,351 624 3 1 Persons Males Residence 1 Residence qualification qualification only Other qualifications FOR NORTHERN IRELAND ELECT IONS/ Total : C o u n t y Armagh C e n t r a l Armagh Mid Armagh N o r t h Armagh South Armagh 34,007 35,148 30,430 38,019 FOR UNITED KINGDOM ELECTIO NS/ Total : County Armagh Armagh 117,594 • R e g i s t e r of e l e c t o r s published 15th February, 1961. -/Fixed by the House of Commons (Method of Voting and Redistribution of Seats) Act ( N . I . ) , 1939. fFlxed by the Representation of the People Act, 1948. TABLE 12 - Adjustment o f Enumerated P o p u l a t i o n to obtain Resident Population Enumerated In t h e a r e a b u t Enumerated usually resident population elsewhere in Northern Ireland Area Armagh Keady Lurgan Portadown Tandragee U.D. " M. B. Armagh Lurgan Newry N o . 3 Tanderagee R-C. • " " Note:- n U.D. Usually resident In t h e a r e a b u t enumerated elsewhere in Northern I r e l a n d Adjustment f o r usual residence (between N o r t h e r n I r e l a n d a r e a s only) Col. (4) - C o l . (3) Areas Enumerated in t h e a r e a b u t usually resident outside Northern Ireland Number P e r 1,000 enumerated (3} (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Persons Males Females 117,594 57,857 59,737 775 453 322 974 382 592 +199 - 71 + 270 +1.7 - 1.2 + 4.5 368 180 188 Persons 10,062 1,637 176 39 218 219 31 - 155 + 31 + 6 1 +147 + 20 -15.4 +18.9 + 3.4 +7.9 +15.6 90 2 48 43 3 301 160 283 31 + 6 2 + 61 - 48 + 3 0 + 2.3 + 5.3 -1.9 +6.2 67 26 83 8 (1) C o u n t y Armagh Administrative * " " 17,872 18,609 1,281 331 8 157 73 11 » * 27,718 11,654 3 5 , 550 3,311 £39 99 331 11 w w * The differences in c o l s . (3). and (4) between the County t o t a l and the t o t a l for the administrative areas represent persons enumerated In an a d m i n i s t r a t i v e area in the County and .usually r e s i d e n t in another administrative area in the County. (89580 A) 24 Census of Northern Ireland 1961 County TABLE 13 - Ages by Single Years, Sex and Marital Condition Females Males Ages P p T»q fjv-i Q 1 C l O KJ110 1 1 Total Single* Married 21,562 Widowed Divorced 1,666 29 Total Single* Married 59,737 32,286 22,347 Widowed Divorced 5,047 57 117,594 57,857 34,600 3 4 z 2,653 2, 588 2,392 2,486 2,384 1,329 1,349 1,245 1,313 1,249 1,329 1,349 1,245 1,313 1,249 1,324 1,239 1,147 1,173 1,135 1,324 1,239 1,147 1,173 1,135 0-4 12,503 6,485 6,485 6,018 6,018 5 6 7 8 9 2,389 2,310 2,306 2,281 2,165 1,220 1,198 1,159 1,159 1,101 1,220 1,198 .1,159 1,159 1,101 1,169 1,112 1,147 1,122 1,064 : 169 1,112 1,147 1,122 1,064 5-9 11,451 5,837 5,837 5,614 5,614 10 11 12 13 14 2,284 2,373 2,345 2,339 2,307 1,184 1,199 1,252 1,198 1,190 1,184 1,199 1,252 1,198 1,190 1,100 1,174 1,093 1,141 1,117 1,100 1,174 1,093 1,141 1,117 10-14 11,648 6,023 6,023 5,625 5,625 15 16 17 18 19 2,164 2,172 2,128 1,910 1,517 1,066 1,108 1,111 1,066 1,108 1,111 - 1,098 1,064 1,017 959 763 952 738 951 754 1,098 1,061 1,008 907 687 3 9 44 67 -. - «. - 15-19 9,891 5,007 20 21 22 23 24 1,465 1,503 1,453 1,450 1,500 _ 20-24 7,371 25 26 28 29 1,448 1,368 1,377 1,370 1,356 25-29 All ages 0 1 : 7 25 _ - _ 4,975 32 - - 4,884 4,761 123 735 749 692 699 724 707 678 565 512 479 28 71 127 187 245 _ - - 730 754 761 751 776 623 546 507 409 364 107 207 254 340 411 2 - - 1 3,599 2,941 658 - 3,772 2,449 1,319 3 1 718 260 280 329 379 366 303 247 259 218 192 426 460 462 473 496 1 1 2 1 3 _ _ - 665 457 380 323 299 299 - 6,919 3,375 1,758 8 30 31 32 33 34 1,480 1,364 1,364 1,444 1,443 707 665 664 683 698 _ - 30-34 7,095 35 36 37 38 39 27 < 35-39 1 1 ! 1 - 1 1 - - 730 708 723 692 691 1,614 2 1 3, 544 1,219 2,317 280 226 220 205 226 427 439 444 477 469 _ _ _ - 186 185 164 180 2 1 1 773 699 700 761 745 584 514 531 576 555 3,417 1,157 2,256 2 2 3, 678 897 2,760 19 2 1,499 1,428 1,453 1,499 1,554 714 700 718 726 772 196 197 189 194 189 518 493 526 528 579 -. - 7 2 3 4 3 1 1 - 785 728 735 773 782 182 148 147 155 139 598 565 578 601 621 4 12 7 15 18 1 3 3 2 4 7,433 3,630 965 2,644 16 5 3, 803 771 2,963 56 13 164 120 129 114 103 632 558 484 439 513 19 14 33 22 1 2 1 1 1 1 660 654 678 j - ,, 182 3 5 4 7 - " • 1 l 40 41 42 43 44 1,602 1,369 1,274 1,173 1,228 786 675 640 586 589 239 151 140 143 116 541 519 493 436 464 6 4 6 7 7 - 2 816 694 634 587 639 40-44 6,646 3,276 789 2,453 30 4 3,370 630 2,626 108 6 113 149 126 144 156 501 571 540 559 541 31 50 46 49 61 5 1 3 4 4 688 2,712 237 17 1 1 - 45 46 47 48 49 1,345 1,426 1,376 1,430 1,435 695 655 661 674 673 173 138 140 133 138 511 502 513 523 523 11 13 6 18 12 - 650 771 715 756 762 45-49 7,012 3,358 722 2,572 60 4 3, 654 2 2 •See footnote at end of table. (89580A) , 20 25 County of Armagh TABLE 13 - Ages by S i n g l e Years, Sex and M a r i t a l Condition continued Coiinty Females Hales, Ages Pe rs ons Single* Total Divorced Total Single* Married Widowed Divorced _ " - 178 122 139 125 136 528 408 459 441 432 2 3 1 770 575 671 633 639 62 1,17 16 16 13 19 11 44 71 64 69 1 2 3 2 3,205 .678 2,448 75 4 3,288 700 2,268 310 10 603 581 575 515 105 135 130 109 109 473 425 415 376 379 24 20 29 30 30 1 1 1 125 132 119 134 149 436 362 357 333 338 94 90 85 104 114 „ - 655 585 562 571 603 2,792 588 2, 068 133 3 2,976 659 1,826 487 4 1,245 1,008 1,062 1,027 1,049 •''584 140 105 100 88 84 401 349 340 330 319 43 27 35 31 55 2 661 527 586 578 589 164 143 129 140 140 355 252 312 283 261 142 131 145 155 187 - 481 476 449 460 5,391 2,450 517 1,739 191 3 2,941 716 1,463 760 2 960 859 860 808 815 448 398 377 352 356 112 91 88 81 72 298 265 243 224 228 37 42 46 46 56 1 - 512 461 483 456 459 117 105 125 107 99 242 201 189 183 188 153 154 169 166 172 - - 4,302 1,931 444 1,258 227 2 2,371 553 1,003 814 1 1,535 1,179 1,290 1,253 1,238 763 604 619 620 599 182 122 127 130 50-54 6,493 55 56 57 58 59 1,258 1,166 1,137 1,086 1,121 55-59 5,768 60 61 62 63 64 60-64 65-69. Widowed 565 466 479 468 470 50 51 52 53 54 65 66 67 68 69 Married i 51 ? 1 - 1 1 1 _ 2 1 1 1 - - 414 333 374 330 317 100 85 83 72 66 157 106 136 85 98 157 142 155 172 153 „ 281 1 1,768 406 582 779 1 134 101 107 110 90 54 73 50 54 46 _ - 316 297 194 237 193 69 71 44 57 30 76 64 37 43 44 171 162 113 137 119 _ - 213 542 277 1,237 271 264 702 184 108 103 103 91 37 22 24 17 12 84 44 48 46 37 63 42 31 40 42 _ _ 220 158 139 135 114 49 42 37 39 31 31 24 16 14 16 140 92 86 82 67 _ - 1,355 589 112 259 218 766 198 101 467 87 88 89 148 139 101 94 72 62 54 42 41 25 6 11 7 5 5 25 17 11 17 9 _ - 86 85 59 53 47 21 26 17 11 11 6 5 1 4 1 59 54 41 38 35 85-89 554 224 34 79 111 330 86 17 227 90 91 92 93 94 47 32 28 18 17 22 9 9 9 8 25 23 19 9 10 1 1 3 1 10 8 7 5 5 10 5 5 7 4 1 1 1 1 - - 14 18 13 9 8 90-94 142 .56 8 13 35 22 2 62 4 2 4 2 1 1 4 2 3 2 _ _ 4 1 2 1 _ 1 2 - _ - - 8 _ - 86 _ _ - 11 3 1 7 _ - - - - 1 - - 1 - 70 71 72 73 74 70-74 75 76 77 78 79 75-79 80 81 82 83 84 80-84 85 86 773 636 688 620 614 359 303 314 290 297 84 75 66 70 59 216 179 185 172 175 59 49 63 47 63 _ - 3,331 1,563 354 927 560 522 394 428 365 244 225 200 191 172 56 51 43 27 36 2,269 1,032 404 266 242 238 205 95 96 97 98 99 8 4 4 3 _ - 95-99 19 8 _ 1 - - 100 and over? ' 1 1 - 31 26 24 19 11 - 1 2 *_ 1 1 - _ _ _ .- - •Including all persons under 16 years of age and persons aged 16 and over Whose marital condition was not stated and was assumed to be single. Persons in the latter category numbered : males 108; females 75. /Comprising one widow aged 100. (89580 A) 26 Census of Northern Ireland 1961 TABLE 14 - Ages by Quinquennial Groups, Sex and M a r i t a l Condition County Marltal condition Armagh Males Total Single Married Widowed Divorced District Males Females 57,857 59,737 4,818 5,244 34,600 21,562 1,666 29 32,286 22,347 5,047 57 2,890 1,794 . 133 1 2,895 1,876 463 10 , M a r r i e d only Males Females 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 6,485 5,837 6,023 5,007 3,599 6,018 5,614 5,625 4,884 3,772 32 658 25~29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 3,375 3,417 3,630 3,276 3,358 3,544 3,678 3,803 3,370 3,654 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 70-74 3,205 2,792 2,450 1,931 1,563 75-79 80-84 85-89 90-94 95 and over* Males M a r r i e d only Total population Females Males Females Males Females 123 1,310 562 485 574 473 270 516 482 494 420 305 i 7 58 114 1,614 2,256 2,644 2,453 2,572 2,317 2,760 2,963 2,626 2,712 305 277 294 260 • 246 330 332 343 320 345 170 198 231 207 191 210 237 240 228 238 3,288 2,976 2,941 2,371 1,768 2,448 2,068 1,739 1,258 927 2,268 1,826 1,463 1,003 582 276 224 186 134 116 295 251 262 188 153 217 177 129 90 69 189 133 131 74 41 1,032 . 589 1,237 766 86 12 264 101 17 2 1 73 38 18 5 2 106 61 33 • 8 41 10 4 1 23 9 2 56 8 542 259 79 13 Keady Marital condition Urban Single Married Widowed Divorced Municipal Borough Females Males Females 753 • 884 8,343 9,529 446 280 27 501 308 75 4,616 3,492 231 4 5,064 3,661 789 15 Total population Males Lurgan District Males Total Age l a s t birthday Armagh U r b a n Females Total Population Age l a s t birthday A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Areas Females M a r r i e d only Males Total population Females Married only Males Females Males Females 919 802 777 844 727 4 141 19 272 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 109 87 73 70 36 92 77 88 72 59 11 21 1,030 / 840 779 7^3 603 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 58 40 36 41 39 58 59 57 47 51 33 30 32 31 32 35 47 35 31 39 546 552 , 512 461 513 640 631 599 504 586 331 423 413 387 445 409 479 470 395 437 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 70-74 35 41 27 26 19 53 41 41 29 33 29 29 18 17 12 36 27 • 15 16 6 465 423 321 201 174 584 498 439 329 278 396 344 252 154 115 393 306 200 132 88 75-79 80-84 85-89 90-94 95 and o v e r * 10 5 18 4 4 1 3 3 1 105 55 22 8 183 111 57 19 2 58 22 5 2 42 16 2 1 1 ,." *See footnote at end or table. (89580 A) 27 County of Armagh TABLE 14 - Ages by Quinquennial Groups, Sex and Marital Condition - continued Portadown Municipal Mari t a l condition Males Total Single Married Widowed Divorced Females Males 613 668 4,688 3,957 223 6 . 4,820 4,105 799 11 305 290 18 316 296 56 Females 473 492 531 477 515 38 40 40 31 42 40 41 46 40 47 28 33 33 27 34 33 34 38 34 35 532 392 374 234 161 -581 525 430 392 250 462 334 316 177 118 409 350 217 176 77 47 27 19 16 19 33 41 41 28 25 43 22 18 11 15 25 26 19 13 7 117 63 21 4 187 111 32 7 .1 65 35 9 2 47 22 16 6 2 15 14 • 1 1 8 2 4 2 1 / 907 855 833 778 694 t Armagh R u r a l Marl t a l condition ! j 63 47 62 43 40 1 15 2 23 Lurgan Rural District Males District Females Males Females 14,076 13,642 5,776 5,878 8,856 4,769 441 10 7,581 4,888 1,161 12 3,450 2,151 172 3 3,277 2,140 457 4 Single Married Widowed Divorced Total population Males Females 1,429 1,268 1,446 1,223 856 1,375 1,274 1,385 1,162 778 768 792 913 812 788 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 70-74 75-79 80-84 85-89 90-94 95 and o v e r * i j I i Married only Males Total population Females Males Females 3 110 23 245 608 547 602 506 370 564 521 593 521 398 748 779 826 748 800 282 429 583 535 551 482 576 634 581 593 344 356 356 308 320 794 687 684 553 465 741 660 757 570 413 540 457 438 314 245 519 384 372 230 150 304 205 73 14 2 318 198 82 26 2 160 96 23 3 69 24 5 1 Married only Males Females 3 58 13 122 298 359 352 354 332 133 224 251 233 240 170 249 268 261 251 303 313 230 215 188 298 274 286 278 188 233 238 160 154 119 215 171 166 132 79 117 57 27 8 1 127 91 34 9 1 63 27 14 1 31 10 2 *See footnote at end of table. (89580A) Females 349 454 501 473 487 7&-79 80-84 85-89 90-94 95 and o v e r * 1 Males Females Males 646 628 639 572 667 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 70-74 1 ! Females Males M a r r i e d only Total population M a r r i e d only 39 280 538 564 594 546 561 Age l a s t birthday Females 17 158 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 Total District 63 58 61 51 37 938 939 908 769 619 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 T a n d r a g e e Urban 9,735 Males 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 Borough 8,874 Total population Age l a s t birthday A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Areas | . j ! 28 Census of N o r t h e r n Ireland 1961 TABLE 14 - Ages by Quinquennial Groups, Sex and M a r i t a l Condition continued Newry No, Marital condition 2 Rural District Tanderagee Rural Males Females 12,978 8,411 4,200 363 4 12,572 | 7,030 4,442 1,097 3 ! i Total population Married only Total Single Married Widowed Divorced Age l a s t birthday Males Females 0-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 1,586 1,453 1,428 1,060 722 1,434 1,407 1,259 924 685 2 92 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 676 687 787 710 746 698 744 842 685 713 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 70-74 655 612 539 494 372 613 595 607 487 380 248 136 53 11 3 245 156 81 "12 5 75-79 80-84 85-89 90-94 95 and over* A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Areas Males 1 : ! Females Males 1,626 1,585 1 802 631 150 2 938 629 58 1 Married only Total population Males Females Males Females 20 203 160 160 152 122 86 148 149 134 120 86 1 15 39 243 394 532 477 517 442 564 667 539 525 102 109 98 107 103 86 105 99 100 i!3 45 71 68 83 75 63 82 80 80 79 455 413 358 308 210 419 377 307 198 123 98 73 70 58 49 90 91 78 70 48 73 54 50 33 24 63 52 36 32 12 123 53 21 2 38 15 5 42 24 8 5 38 20 6 3 1 21 11 3 2 10 2 Females 1 , including one widow aged 100 in Armagh Rural District. (89580 A) District ' i County o f Armagh 29 TABLE 15 - B i r t h p l a c e s Birthplace County Persons Males 117,594 57,857 59,737 Total population 108,050 53,734 54,316 Northern I r e l a n d Antrim County 1/236 579 657 Armagi County 00,707 45,584 45,123 Belfast County Borough 3,470 1,658 1,832 Down County 8,712 4,205 4,507 678 301 377 Fermanagi County Londonderry County and Qdunty Borough Tyrone County Great B r i t a i n England Wales Scotland 734 353 381 2,513 1,074 1,439 1,587 1,843 2,120 1,020 1,100 137 85 52 1,173 482 691 6 Channel I s l a n d s Males Females 388 190 198 Austria 5 2 3 Belgium 3 1 2 Denmark 3 2 1 France 12 5 7 Germany 38 18 20 Hungary 1 3 4 Birthplace Foreign c o u n t r i e s Italy 3,430 6 I s l e of Man Persons Females 3 4,604 Commonwealth c o u n t r i e s , etc. Rhodesia and Nyasaland South Africa 1,835 24 Netherlands 2 Poland 8 Romania 1 Switzerland 5 19 2 4 4 1 _ 3 2 1 United Arab Republic 8 2 6 Other countries in Africa 2 2 - Argentine 3 1 2 258 137 121 : 2 United States of America I r i s h Republic 1 2,769 256 110 146 5 3 2 ! 4 Other countries In America 4 Burma 2 2 China 3 2 1 Iran 1 1 _ Japan 3 2 1 Turkey 1 _ Other countries in Asia 1 - 1 19 6 13 Canada 122 54 '68 Ceylon 2 1 1 India 44 25 19 Malaya 1 - 1 Pakistan 3 2 1 U.S.S.R. Z 1 1 Singapore 1 1 Australia 28 8 20 Born a t s e a 2 1 1 8 3 5 23 7 16 852 393 459 New Zealand Colonies, P r o t e c t o r a t e s , e t c . (89580A) Birthplace not stated • 1 30 Census of Northern Ireland 1961 TABLE 16 - B i r t h p l a c e s : P e r s o n s born o u t s i d e Northern I r e l a n d by R e l i g i o n and P l a c e o f B i r t h Total Birthplace Males England Wales Scotland I s l e of Man and Channel Islands I r i s h Republic Commonwealth countries, e t c . Foreign countries and a t sea Total Roman Catholic i Females Church of Ireland 1 Presbyterian Females ] Males Males County Females Males Females- 1,020 85 482 7 1,835 110 191 1,100 \ 52 691 5 2,769 146 199 417 19 241 4 1,026 18 83 464 I 12 334 2 1,672 26 95 82 13 101 1 271 17 21 111 14 129 351 29 31 362 33 102 1 417 50 48 3,730 4,962 1,808 2,605 506 665 1,013 Males 372 19 j 152 3 550 65 45 1,206 Other and not stated denominations Methodist Females 62 8 14 45 4 31 43 8 10 78 8 10 145 176 Males [ Females 97 12 24 1 78 17 29 108 3 45 258 310 118 18 18 * Including Church of England (Males 149; Females 175) and Episcopal Church of Scotland (Males - ; Females 1) TABLE 17 - Nationality: Persons born outside the British Isles by Nationality and Usual Address a year ago County Nationality Address a year ago in Nortnera I r e l a n d England Wales Scotland Total persons B r i t i s h or Commonwealtli Citizen Males Females 368 141 159 3 3 3 1 1 17 13 8 4 9 9 Alien (including s t a t e l e s s ) Males 31 Females 26- Not s t a t e d Males 4 Females 7 I s l e of Man and Channel Islands I r i s h Republic 1 Commonwealth countries Canada Other Commonwealth countries Foreign countries United States of America Other foreign countries 26 10 Not s t a t e d Total (89580A) 4 2 11 2 10 6 1 208 69 92 21 14 5 5 646 226 276 65 56 10 13 I TABLE 18 - Religions Administrative Areas o Population Roman Catfcollc Other and not s t a t e d denominations ! Methodist Church of Ireland* Presbyterian , Area County Armagh Armagi Keatjy Lurgan Portadown Tandragee Armani Lurgan Newry No.2 Taaderagee U.D. « M.B. n U.D. R.D. n n R persons Males 117,594 10,062 1,637 17,872 18,609 1,281 27,718 11,654 25,550 3,211 Females persons 57,857 59,737 55,617 4,818 5,244 753 884 8,343 8,874 9,529 9,735 5,881 1,343 8,166 4,544 613 668 14,076 5,776 12,978 1,626 13,642 5,878 12,572 1,585 Persons Males Females persons Males Females Persons Males Females 16,346 5,928 2,796 3,132 6,005 2,898 3,107 202 14 ioi 7 462 101 57 183 14 647 640 44 211 8 724 715 49 569 261 394 146 625 256 380 139 Females Persons Males Females 27,523 28,094 17,873 8,815 9,058 598 75 941 685 79 2,302 1,082 1,220 104 47 Males 32,171 15,825 2,854 3,027 1,283 610 733 154 3,805 2,213 4,361 2,331 1 2,028 2,566 1,215 1,087 1,351 5,302 7,617 2,488 3,631 •2,814 3,986 1,005 2,527 1,175 1,352 278 119 159 270 138 132 560 274 286 80 38 42 394 22 k1,371 1,355 93 11,592 4,703 18,712 5,906 2,341 9,468 3,026 3,972 l 2,136 1,114 814 207 8,155 4,246 2,328 1,557 4,183 2,110 1,214 398 5,963 1,175 z9,244 tmz 3,565 191 l' 869 796 761 392 493 79 49 422 520 92 53 1,194 517 774 285 5,686 571 1,823 428 2,937 ! 604 1,742 | 441 1,013 171 102 -..7 543 o o c » O Analysis of column headed 'Other and not stated denominations* Brethren Baptist Society or Friends Salvation Army Reformed Presbyterian Slim Cnurch Pentecostal Apostolic Church Church of God Church of Christ 'Non-Subscribing Presbyterian or Unitarian Christian Church Jehovah's Witness Protestant Persons 1,231 1,056 376 376 345 259 92 90 71 66 57 48 47 43 Males Females 570 495 188 171 187 110 41 48 31 31 31 23 22 26 661 561 188 205 158 149 51 42 40 35 26 25 25 17 > Persons Males 40 39 27 26 23 23 19 16 74 Latter Day Saints Cooneyite Seventh Day Adventist Church of the Nazarene Bible pattern Undenominational or Unsectarian Hindu Jew Other denominations / Not stated Total Females 1,561 19 19 10 13 10 13 10 10 33 787 21 20 17 13 13 10 9 6 41 774 6,005 2,898 3,107 3 P CK) ST * Including Church of England (males 247; females 263) and Episcopal Church of Scotland {males - ; females l) / Tnis heading comprises denominations each of vfolch had less than ten adherents enumerated in the County; 24 different terms were used in describing these denominations on the Census returns. oa 32 Census of Northern I r e l a n d TABLE 19 - Relxgions: 1961 Population under 22 years by Individual Years and 20 years and over by Quinquennial Groups County Religions Age Population Males 57,857 All Ages Females Roman Catholic Presbyterian Males Males Females 8,815 9,058 Females 59,737 27,523 28,094 Church or Ireland Other and not stated denominations Methodist Females Males Females Males Females 15,825 16,346 2,796 3,132 2,898 3,107 Males 0 1 2 3 4 1,329 1,349 1,245 1,313 1,249 1,324 1,239 1,147 1,173 1,135 736 786 712 724 688 742 649 624 632 674 158 175 164 189 166 180 165 156 152 129 309 285 248 292 268 279 306 259 281 232 50 52 48 55 65 58 53 59 58 46 78 51 73 53 62 65 66 49 50 54 ,0-4 6,485 6,018 3,646 3,321 850 782 1,402 1,357 270 274 317 284 1,220 1,198 1,169 1,159 1,101 1,169 1,112 1,147 1,122 1,064 668 667 658 660 618 164 169 155 163 150 158 139 141 157 142 277 251 251 235 246 57 58 40 56 48 48 41 51 52 45 54 53 55 45 39 51 44 53 58 58 5,837 5,614 801 737 1,260 246 264 55 59 58 65 57 66 45 49 40 56 5 1 6 7 1 8 9 ! 5-9 10 11 12 13 14 ' 1,134 1,199 1,262 1,198 1,190 1,100' 1,174 1,093 j 1,141 1,117 10-14 | 6,023 5,625 1 1,066 1,108 1,111 959 703 15-19 5,007 20 21 735 749 20-24 3,' 271 663 1 662 643 | 605 ; 591 3,164 ; 249 1 226 259 250 ! 228 1,212 ; 248 i 253 237 308 289 237 ; 170 195 157 156 153 160 ' 179 152 154 1 160 2,994 831 805 1,426 1,335 265 235 294 256 558 600 536 431 295 560 518 484 451 371 148 138 155 157 134 165 162 163 121 112 292 254 323 280 245 278 284 271 272 S05 26 51 42 46 32 44 53 52 53 24 42 65 55 45 57 51 47 47 54 42 2,420 2,384 732 723 1,394 1,310 197 226 264 241 730 754 336 328 348 322 108 127 107 120 218 231 216 227 34 39 29 44 3,599 3,772 1,573 1,679 572 570 1,084 1,114 ; 190 25-29 3,375 3,544 1,484 1,574 519 543 988 1,047 30-34 3,417 3,678 1,557 1,670 497 603 1,011 35-39 3,630 3,803 1,594 1,718 607 655 40-44 3,276 3,370 1,441 1,532 601 45-49 3,358 3,654 1,434 1,519 50-64 3,205 3,288 1,323 55-59 2,792 2,976 60-64 2,450 2,941 65-69 1,931 2,371 J 70 and over 3,472 4,199 15 16 17 18 19 649 631 657 625 645 588 648 607 588 565 3,207 1,098 1,064 1,017 951 j 754 1 4,884 1 | £80 260 330 297 279 259 50 54 50 55 56 40 ' 49 48 51 l 47 24 30 41 201. 180 208 189 215 195 165 1,001 183 213 169 191 1,041 1,012 200 212 188 206 540 908 921 159 189 167 188 572 569 1,002 1,140 184 230 166 196 1,339 507 535 1,039 1,037 160 198 176 189 1,189 1,207 461 484 841 923 162 183 139 179 1,031 1,265 377 450 777 880 135 170 130 176 824 996 310 383 592 740 100 123 105 129 1,732 578 679 1,060 143 226 162 235 1,529 ! ' 1,327 • • 39. 33 County o f Armagh TABLE 20 - Education: County Terminal Education Ages o f Persons. 15 Years and over by Sex and Age Groups Age at which lull-time education ceased 1 Age l a s t birthday Under 13 13 14 15 16 IB 17 22 21 20 19 23 25 and Not Not over stated applicable 24 Total Males 15 16 17 18 19 15-19 20 81 22 ZZ 24 _ - _ _ - 3 2 1 2 -4 18 52 92 389 342 562 ,'652 . . . . . 654 266 194 86 109 97 100 21 48 40 12 26 3 893 2,328 392 109 38 3 • 357 354 366 418 155 144 133 125 102 91 88 68 83 74 38 41 50 30 38 22 32 26 19 35 18 5 4 4 10 3 4 5 4 2 6 12 12 7 /370 , • » . * , . . » . t » • . . 10 9 . -5 1 .2 . . 10 5 11 15 18 476 313 224 132 40 1,066 1,108 1,111 59 1,185 5,007 15 26 35 19 36 28 20 5 3 735 749 692 699 724 112 92 3,599 6 1 3,375 3,417 17J . 1 -. 20-24 8 5 1,865 659 404 197 134 41 18 37 21 5 1 25-29 30-34 5 7 8 8 2,073 2,325 492 364 301 229 97 100 102 59 25 29 18 26 40 31 35 31 23 21 24 10 15 23 111 153 16 119 285 397 378 33 169 304 292 170 4,808 4,671 3,604 2,187 1,037 667 468 332 179 88 471 369 166 109 40 179 129 72 21 16 150 108 63 10 15 46 37 11 11 6 27 33 14 6 2 26 44 21 16 9 26 34 5 13 4 35 31 7 5 6 40 20 8 4 1 74 36 33 17 7 309 295 317 227 130 1,214 3.1 989 2.5 23,463 69.4 5,577 2,481 6.3 14.1 920 2.3 679 1.7 209 0.5 144 0.4 224 0.6 169 0.4 133 0.3 108 0.3 205 0.5 3.3 2.7 64.3 15.3 2.6 1.8 0.6 0.4 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.5 473 549 629 23S 164 . -2 23 59 85 399 346 102 32 57 53 , . . . 3 912 1,954 466 334 358 364 378 413 148 12C 145 126 122 10E 112 112 -2 2 2 2 3 1 20-24 4 10 1,847 26-29 30-34 13 7 7 12 36-44 45-54 55-64 65-74 75 and over 22 112 36-44 46-54 55-64 65-74 75 and over Total Per cent. Percentage of total with stated terminal education ages 6.8 * 959 763 - 6,906 6,563 5,242 3,494 1,909 1,713 1,264 4.3 3.3 39,512 100.0 7 14 14 14 18 595 361 198 97 38 1,098 1,064 1,017 67 1,289 4,884 25 21 24 29 33 20 22 4 1 3 730 754 761 751 776 132 50 3,772 Females 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Total Per cent. Percentage ol total with stated terminal education ages : (89580A) i _ -1 81 168 . . 21 . 28 . .3 142 49 3 • 91 47 59 45 49 50 36 38 27 20 27 10 7 3 8 4 3 9 13 11 5 5 19 18 14 661 521 250 148 32 41 1,904 2,201 535 458 438 210 207 117 123 19 35 4 f 630 4,492 3,726 2,440 1„201 788 668 481 242 126 616 482 351 250 148 76 ! 35 220 204 123 354 388 46 156 366 344 234 1,151 1,166 2.7 2.8 23,253 54.7 2.9 3.0 59. 4 . 15-19 -2 261 124 9S 368 322 188 91? 6,913 3,502 13.9 8.3 15.1 9.0 . . * • . . -8 . • • . . 951 754 8 1 3 56 16 4 • . . . . .- 42 40 61 39 39 26 15 10 10 8 7 9 123 134 3 1 3,544 3,678 68 76 61 29 19 45 62 42 36 9 22 29 20 20 10 21 9 7 8 3 7 10 8 2 2 24 10 8 4 3 336 330 336 272 261 1 1 36 74 51 28 21 7 7,173 6,942 5,917 4,139 2,431 1,669 ' 1,123 2.6 3.9 270 0.6 376 0.9 360 0.8 182 0.4 77 0.2 47 0.1 85 0.2 1,991 1,345 4.7 3.2 0.7 0.9 0.9 0.5 0.2 0.1 0.2 4*2 103 2.9 t # . ' ~ - * 42,480 100.0 00 CD TABLE 21 - Education 8 g Terminal Education Ages of Persons 15 Years and over by Sex, Age Group and Occupation Order County Age group 15-19 20 - 2 4 Age a t which full-time Not Occupation order Under 15 16 15 education leased Not 20 s t a t e d Under and or not 15 over applicable 1719 45 and over 25-44 15 1719 16 20 and over Not Not stated or not Under applic- 15 able 15 20 s t a t e d and or no t Under over applic-l 15 able 1719 16 16 15 stated or not applicable 20 and over 1719 Males I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII XIII XIV XV XVI XVII XVIII XIX XX XXI XXII XXIII XXIV XXV XXVI XXVII Farmers, f o r e s t e r s , fishermen 209 1 Miners and quarrymen Gas, coke and chemicals makers 4 Glass and ceramics makers Furnace, forge, foundry, 5 r o l l i n g m i l l workers E l e c t r i c a l and e l e c t r o n i c workers 13 Engineering and a l l i e d trades workers not elsewhere classified 51 Woodworkers 47 1 Leather workers 74 Textile workers Clothing workers 17 Food, drink and tobacco workers 56 6 Paper and p r i n t i n g workers 8 Makers of other products 14 Construction workers P a i n t e r s and decorators 10 Drivers of s t a t i o n a r y engines, 7 cranes, e t c . Labourers not elsewhere classified 137 Transport and communications 62 workers Warehousemen, storekeepers, 29 packers, b o t t l e r s 18 C l e r i c a l workers 72 Sales workers Service, sport and r e c r e a t i o n workers i 3° Administrators and managers Professional, technical workers, a r t i s t s 6 Armed Forces Inadequately described occupations 17 persons economically I n a c t i v e Total ' • 486 5 1 15 46 15 - - 6 1 58 31 5 209 149 2 162 43 125 21 20 73 27 51 21 9 9 7 6 2 7 9 1 3 11 1 - 218 ±3 2 125 18 1 65 35 174 16 30 49 45 78 - 5 2 • . 13 '. - . 3 2 - . 5 2 4 . 3 - 2 1 1 6 1 - 2 34 3 11 - 2 10 - - - - 1 - 27 30 19 - 1 112 66 4 162 24 101 18 21 51 32 61 39 i 33 4 23 6 8 16 9 53 14 1 5 5 15 3 5 6 3 21 3 1 11 3 1 1 29 4 1 328 77 125 456 6 1 31 155 - 3 44 1 2 6 3 1 14 - 12 - 5 2 6 1 - 1 2 ( | _ 2,549 33 19 143 331 4 3 20 140 2 1 10 101 12 _ 3 - 22 3 1 2 136 44 46 21 456 326 19 448 57 309 61 69 401 126 114 74 1 53 10 35 14 7 56 > 22 71 38 4 20 3 32 4 4 15 9 17 14 - 6 5 9 3 3 17 2 3,871 276 132 61 14 143 _ - - 4 - _ - - 3 | 44 14 36 - - 1 ! 46 2 1 1 - - 2 7 48 15 13 4 1 5 318 246 37 31 29 14 1 10 4 5 2 3 13 5 9 6 1 3 1 8 1 1 13 2 12 9 1 28 - 2 10 1 - 2 5 - 2 - 97 1 2 23 13 1 | 19 1 14 2 2 19 8 43 565 57 264 34 41 372 101 - 17 6 16 3 3 23 9 1 - - 1 - 6 - 2 4 3 1 - - 1 150 18 5 1 - 7 120 10 - 1 16 3 - 10 1,525 121 51 6 - 61 1,677 52 21 5 - 80 33 25 8 - 10 993 122 59 21 2 45 j 653 51 28 4 1 46 36 12 110 11 25 58 6 39 50 8 93 45 - 3 2 8 125 107 624 29 60 210 14 90 180 14 163 153 _ 9 19 7 13 ! 41 167 2 1 657 16 39 151 12 40 105 3 68 91 1 13 9 8 18 50, 347 49 86 29 62 55 58 54 6 21 15 4 420 82 58 32 42 54 28 76 5 24 27 8 8 59 3 24 1 30 1 57 1 242 1 15 - - 1 1 - 1 - 128 1 1 - 12 . 4 11 2 7 . 1 94 2 34 3 40 3 29 9 1 1 2 1 12 22 17 4 28 1 . . 2 1 7 3 10 6 21 3 58 67 1 - 74 18 42 4 75 3 108 4 444 1 169 33 8 . 16 15 5 5 3 3 21 26 1 1 1 139 25 2 1 2 - 175 9 17 Z 1 . 1,185 1 15 7 Z 1 - 100 70 10 6 1 - 27 3,522 189 117 53 62 3ZZ 893 2,328 392 150 • 1,244 659 404 372 82 204 9,282 1,523 1,001 787 ^25 580 13,613 1,067 684 499 376 969 2 1,878 _, 5 , - Females I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII XIII XIV XV XVI XVII XVIII XIX XX XXI XXII XXIII XXIV XXV XXVI XXVII Farmers, f o r e s t e r s , fisherwomen Miners and quarrywomen Gas, coke and chemicals makers Glass and ceramics makers Furnace, forge, foundry, r o l l i n g m i l l workers E l e c t r i c a l and e l e c t r o n i c workers Engineering and a l l i e d trades workers n o t elsewhere classified Woodworkers Leather workers Textile workers Clothing workers Food, drink and tobacco workers Paper and p r i n t i n g workers Makers of other products Construction workers P a i n t e r s and decorators Drivers of s t a t i o n a r y engines, cranes, e t c . Labourers not elsewhere classified Transport and communications workers Warehousewomen, storekeepers, packers, b o t t l e r s C l e r i c a l workers Sales workers Service, sport and r e c r e a t i o n workers Administrators and manageresses: Professional, technical workers, a r t i s t s Armed Forces Inadequately described occupations Persons economically i n a c t i v e Total -. - 4 - 20 36 - - - _ - 4 - 1 - . 1 . - . - 1 4 3 - - - 78 10 1 1 ' . - 13 - • - 2 2 - 2 — - - - - - 58 - 1 109 - - - 1 8 3 9 1 3 292 41 - - - 1 - - _ - - - - - - - - 3 27 6 - 5 21 1 26 6 19 - - - - _ — - - - - 1 1 - - - - 39 26 6 1 21 ~ — 1 - - - 1 2 - 2 - 1 10 3 1 719 663 133 26 4 - - -' 1 _. - - • - 1 • 5 1 - _ - 4 156 328 52 16 8 8 269 598 67 38 12 1 19 28 1 1 1 - - - . . . 2 2 10 11 2 1 i 8 4 2 1 -4 -' -. - - 277 388 87 49 13 5 54 62 15 10 1 - - 2 - - ~ - 11 26 13 2 1 1 2 ' 5 2 1 40 1 13 727 537 256 49 34 15 16 3 2 1 - 15 1 4 3 - s _ 2 - 2 69 71 20 3 6 19 23 14 1 2 2 - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 6 2 2 - 1 12 13 3 3 6 1 1 - - - - - . - - - - - - - 10 4 - - . 4 1 - - - - 10 1 1 - - 1 8 - - - - 1 - 5 5 2 3 2 1 3 - - 9 9 15 14 1 - 1 1 1 1 - - - 4 11 7 213 93 198 24 117 83 10 194 84 5 229 52 - 8 3 2 158 36 224 8 20 67 6 41 44 1 72 39 - 7 11 3 9 23 12 584 U4 1 83 1 39 2 5 40 731 9 79 1 79 - 40 5 6 1 33 - 58 1 68 78 186 322 12 31 24 28 101 224 17 - - - - - - - - - - 5 1 — - — 45 2 - - ~* ** 14 805 152 383 10,975 1,184 839 493 598 14,053 1 517 - 1 1 120 8 4 36 23 72 99 5 149 214 58 262 9 180 58 3 179 32 89 188 47 5 9 130 - - - - -; - 60 36 20 2 - - - - 12 1 27 38 34 5 15 - - - 26 1 45 - 94 1 101 - 8 53 9 5 4 2 _ - - - 4 74 133 34 13 1,305 557 191 124 81 7 98 915 1,954 465 194 1,356 |1,861 661 521 430 117 182 - 6 1 1 . 92 14 47 113 98 86 - - - . 8 - 1 5,730 1,151 889 : 8,741 1,781 1,426 1,356 • - 37 40 7 1 2 . . 2 - 4 32 20 11 - - 1 - -' - - - 9 - 1 16 I 14 ; - 1 5 — - 787 232 1,006 1.090 1,082 487 1,200 o o c > 5 P (ft en 00 CD O TABLE 22 - Occupations : Population aged 15 and over by Occupation and Industrial Status > County Females Males Employers and managers Large establishments Foremen and supervisors Small establishments Workers on own account (without employees) Apprentices Other and employees articled clerks Employers and manageresses Out of work Total Total Occupation Large establishments . . . . . • • 39,512 T o t a l p e r s o n s aged 15 and o v e r 42,480 . 661 1,897 877 7,188 932 17,587 4,652 33,794 Total occupied 15,730 106 26,750 24 4,180 1,275 239 Total economically i n a c t i v e I n s t i t u t i o n inmates Retired Students Others economically i n a c t i v e I. 5,718 3 639 634 1 4 i 28 5,668 17 10 5,635 6 11 6 5 6 z - 1 11 - 2,107 754 9,199 1,872 20 144 62 1 46 613 6 28 60 11 6,315 2,509 50 184 130 52 29 97 II, 010. i Oil. 012. i 013. 3 014. 92 015* Coal mine - face workers Coal mine - o t h e r underground workers Coal mine - workers above ground Coal miners (so described) Workers below ground n . e . c . Surface workers n . e . c . - mines and q u a r r i e s l l i t i i 4 - - 2 2 - -* 41 - : 4 30 i i 4 1 10 * • - - I • 2 5 40 4 48 III. 24 16 2 2 28 020. 20 021. Furnacemen, coal gas and coke ovens Chemical production process workers n . e . c . 2 242 12 2 12 203 13 6 8 297 1 21 240 14; 9 13 9 40 14 96 26 3 4 18 10 1 4 l 5 4 4 5 28 ! 54j 1 4 i 1 1 i i . 3 7 1 : 26 i i 4 Miners and quarrymen - 3 4 I - Fishermen Farmers, farm managers, market gardeners A g r i c u l t u r a l workers n . e . c . A g r i c u l t u r a l machinery d r i v e r s Gardeners and groundsmen F o r e s t e r s and woodmen 27 I I I 2 f i shermen 2 50 1 2 000. 001. 002. 003. 004. 005. Farmers, f o r e s t e r s , 3 10 IV. 030. 031. 032. 033. 034. G l a s s and ceramics makers Ceramic formers Glass formers, f i n i s h e r s , and decorators Furnacemen, kilnmen, g l a s s and ceramic Ceramics* decorators and f i n i s h e r s Glass and ceramics production process workers n . e . c . V. i i 040. 041. 042. 043. 044. 045. Gas, coke and c h e m i c a l s makers Furnace, f o r g e , workers foundry, r o l l i n g m i l l Furnacemen - metal Rolling, tube m i l l o p e r a t o r s , metal drawers Moulders and coremakers (foundry) Smiths, forgemen Metal making and t r e a t i n g workers n . e . c . F e t t l e r s , metal d r e s s e r s Small establishments Forewomen and supervisors Workers on own account (without employees) Apprentices and articled clerks Other employees Out of work . . . . . 278 226 864 168 12,397 1,691 504 43 1 422 - 28 10 465 38 43 28 l 9 4 1,642 1,330 23,774 421 l _ 1 - • - - - - 337 105 164 9 37 22 - - - - o - - - - - _ - - - - - - - - - - - - 304 25 91 155 9 33 16 12 9 _ _ - 8 - - - tr n 3 *1 CD 2 2 4 CD -58 l - p - - - - - - 2 2 VI. 540 53 113 71 274 7 5 17 050. 051. 052. 053. 054. 055. 056. E l e c t r i c a l and e l e c t r o n i c workers Radio and r a d a r mechanics I n s t a l l e r s and repairmen, telephone Linesmen, cable j o i n t e r s Electricians E l e c t r i c a l and e l e c t r o n i c f i t t e r s Assemblers { e l e c t r i c a l and e l e c t r o n i c ) E l e c t r i c a l engineers (so described) 674 VII, 54 060. 21 061. & 062. 47 063. 54 064. 28 065. 36 066. 020 067. 36 068. - 069. 164 070. 17 071. 18 072. 19 073. 17 074. - 075. 33 076. 19- 077. 078. 83 Sheet metal workers Constructional engineers; r i g g e r s Metal p l a t e workers; r i v e t e r s Gas, e l e c t r i c welders, c u t t e r s ; b r a z i e r s Machine tool s e t t e r s , s e t t e r - o p e r a t o r s Machine tool operators Tool makers, tool room f i t t e r s F i t t e r s , machine e r e c t o r s , e t c . Engineers (so described) E l e c t r o - p l a t e r s , dip p l a t e r s and r e l a t e d workers Plumbers, l e a d b u r n e r s , pipe f i t t e r s Press workers and stampers Metal workers n . e . c . Watch and chronometer makers and r e p a i r e r s P r e c i s i o n Instrument makers and r e p a i r e r s Goldsmiths, s i l v e r s m i t h s , j e w e l l e r y makers Coach, c a r r i a g e , wagon b u i l d e r s and r e p a i r e r s Inspectors (metal and e l e c t r i c a l goods) Other metal making, working; j e w e l l e r y and e l e c t r i c a l production process workers 115 VIII. 670 080. 227 081. 143 082. 6 083. 1 084. 68 085. Carpenters and j o i n e r s Cabinet makers Sawyers and wood working machinists Coopers, hoop makers and benders P a t t e r n makers Woodworkers n . e . c . 80 _ 090. 60 091. 16 092. 4 093. 637 IX. E n g i n e e r i n g and a l l i e d t r a d e s workers n . e . c . Woodworkers Leather workers Tanners; l e a t h e r , fur d r e s s e r s , fellmongers Shoemakers and shoe r e p a i r e r s C u t t e r s , l a s t e r s , sewers, footwear, and r e l a t e d workers Leather products makers n . e . c . X. T e x t i l e workers 100. Fibre p r e p a r e r s 101. (Spinners, doublers (Winders, r e e l e r s 102. Warpers, s i z e r s , drawers-in 103. Weavers 104. K n i t t e r s 105. Bleachers and f i n i s h e r s of t e x t i l e s 106. Dyers of t e x t i l e s (Rope, twine and n e t makers ) 107. (Other t e x t i l e f a b r i c s and r e l a t e d products 83) (• makers and examiners n . e . c . 143 108. Textile f a b r i c s , e t c . production process workers n . e . c . 83 70) 3D 150 803 132 90 51 1) OP 00 TABLE 22 - O c c u p a t i o n s : P o p u l a t i o n a g e d 1 5 a n d o v e r by O c c u p a t i o n a n d I n d u s t r i a l Status - County continued Females Males Employers and managers Large establishments 9 Small establishments 11 Foremen and supervisors 13 8 1 5 3 z 8 Workers. on own account (without employees) Apprentices Other and a r t i c l e d employees clerks Employers and manageresses Out of work Total 7 174 24 7 12 40 12 7 64 58 4 1 2 10 v 31 110. 66 111. 112. 70 79 113. 513 59 19 90 670 137 z Z 41 6 2 18 31 59 94 249 8 18 8 50 1 1 326 1 111 8 1 4 18 - 21 134 11 8 2 .. - l 20 22 71 1 19 4 .141 35 217 5 6 20 110 9 - 3 1 22 14 9 40 154 1,115 1 i 3 --.. 1 10 1 1 6 C l o t h i n g workers T a i l o r s ; d r e s s , l i g h t c l o t h i n g makers Upholsterers and r e l a t e d workers Sewers and embroiderers, t e x t i l e and l i g h t l e a t h e r products Clothing and r e l a t e d products makers n . e . c . XII. 1,036 Food, drink and tobacco workers Total 2,869 2,306 474 645 1 8 186 XIII. 202 l l 6 1 26 38 94 7 20 130. 131. 132. 133, 134. 135. tfakers of paper and paperboard paper products makers Compositors p r i n t i n g p r e s s operators P r i n t e r s (so described) p r i n t i n g workers n . e . c . XIVa 140. 141. 142. 143. 8 13 4 Z 4 109 101 128 80 563 133 3 6 8 86 6 6 1 53 6 18 94 14 15 21 37 41 3 257 25 111 42 128 29 6 22 5 71 362 150. 59 151. 180 152. 171 153. 343 154. 29 1 34 29 226 50 369 1 ' 2 32 1 28 32 194 6 44 41 328 Workers i n rubber Workers in p l a s t i c s Craftsmen n . e . c . Other production process workers XV. C o n s t r u c t i o n workers Bricklayers, t i l e s e t t e r s Masons, stone c u t t e r s , s l a t e workers P l a s t e r e r s , cement f i n i s h e r s , terrazzo workers Builders (so d e s c r i b e d ) ; c l e r k s of works Construction workers n . e . c . XVI, 160. 161. Makers o f o t h e r p r o d u c t s P a i n t e r s and d e c o r a t o r s Aerographers, p a i n t sprayers P a i n t e r s , decorators n . e . c . Small establishments 1 2 63 2 1 3 698 Bakers and p a s t r y cooks Butchers and meat c u t t e r s Brewers, wine makers and r e l a t e d workers Food processors n . e . c . Tobacco p r e p a r e r s and products makers Paper and p r i n t i n g workers Large establishments 67 22 141 120. 389 121. 122. 504 123. 2 124. 3 7 29 - 21 "• XI. 246 107 .5 4• 8 Occupation Forewomen and supervisors Workers Apprenton own ices account and (without a r t i c l e d employ- c l e r k s ees) 4 2,536 239 22 4 34 20 5 2 2,098 384 190 42 CD P CO 481 198 c 47 4 434 193 1 2 o 188 11 ct 106 5 D 76 6 2 15 1 - 1 3 - 15 3 - 113 2 - 83 1 - - - 6 88 l 8 66 13 Out of work 24 16 47 52 Other employees o 6 - - - - - 32 - 32 - - - - - - - - - - 81 7 - 7 63 11 1 1 3 2 - - - - - - - - - 30 2 - - - 30 £ OL 0\ CO <£> en CO o _ - _ - _ - _ - _ - - - - - - _ _ - _ - . 29 - 15 _ - . - 10 7 48 6 _ _ -l _ _ _ _4 _ _ _ - 1 1 _ -6 8 1 _ 38 6 _ _ 2 -1 -4 ^ -2 - 307 60 368 93 19 13 4 106 23 146 1 29 78 14 92 • _ - 2,884 1,496 4,409 64 20 99 180. 86 5 290 25 56 1,120 1,238 3 55 5 79 11 9 672 642 3 141 10 369 36 65 1,798 1,888 181. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187188- 48 1 1,999 319 2,432 _ _ 32 1 _ _ - 17 4 13 11 31 7 73 17 162 77 1,236 42 18 59 18 2 221 8 171 54 14 209 16 - - 66 17 154 35 1,041 9 173 15 -1 55 17 - - 181 7 159 46 9 171 -8 4 2 36 1 12 6 5 38 - 29 - - 438 91 572 12 _ z _ 23 6 52 39 406 166 13 112 _ _ - 317 121 13 _ _ _ - 877 34 1,049 2 856 1 33 - - 3 938 89 _ _ _ - ! 23 89 _ 19 XVIII. 19 210. 211. Transport and communications workers Deck, engineering o f f i c e r s and p i l o t s , ship Deck and engineroora r a t i n g s , barge and boatmen A i r c r a f t p i l o t s , n a v i g a t o r s and f l i g h t engineers Drivers, motormen, firemen, railway engine Railway guards Drivers of buses, coaches, trams Drivers of o t h e r road passenger v e h i c l e s Drivers of road goods v e h i c l e s inspectors, supervisors, transport Shunters, pointsmen Traffic c o n t r o l l e r s and d i s p a t c h e r s , t r a n s p o r t Telephone o p e r a t o r s Telegraph and radio operators postmen, mail s o r t e r s Messengers Bus and tram conductors p o r t e r s , t i c k e t c o l l e c t o r s , railway Stevedores, dock labourers Lorry d r i v e r s ' mates, van guards Workers in t r a n s p o r t and communication occupations n . e . c . Warehousemen, s t o r e k e e p e r s , bottlers etcj Clerical - - — " _ - ~ 41 " — 31 - " _ - 74 ' _ _ _ - 10 -3 65 3 2 , - - 699 103 596 * - 1,888 1 498 1,358 15 _ _- - 33 " • • . ~ - _ - - • - • , _ - -.' • ~ 25 - 3 _ -3 - ~~ - - - _ " ~ " _ - - - -1 — ~ - -- _ ' - 8 67 _ - - _ - 3 58 3 2 1 packers, Warehousemen, storekeepers and a s s i s t a n t s packers, l a b e l l e r s and r e l a t e d workers XXI. 220. 221. 222. 223. Labourers n . e . c . Railway lengthmen Labourers and u n s k i l l e d workers n . e . c * Chemical and a l l i e d t r a d e s Engineering and a l l i e d t r a d e s Foundries i n engineering and a l l i e d t r a d e s T e x t i l e s (not t e x t i l e goods) Coke ovens and gas works Glass and ceramics Building and c o n t r a c t i n g Other XIX. 190. 191. 192. 193194. 195. 196. 197. 198. 199. 200. 201. 202. 203. 204. 205. 206. 207208. 209. Drivers of stationary engines, cranes, Boiler firemen Crane and h o i s t o p e r a t o r s ; s l i n g e r s Operators of e a r t h moving and other construction machinery n . e . c . Boiler s c a l e r s Stationary engine, m a t e r i a l s handling p l a n t o p e r a t o r s n . e . c ; o i l e r s and greasers XX. 2 13 173. 174. 9 12 _ 170. 171. 172. 116 1 9 13 XVII. workers Typists, shorthand w r i t e r s , s e c r e t a r i e s Clerks, c a s h i e r s , office machine operators Civil s e r v i c e executive o f f i c e r s Civil s e r v a n t s , l o c a l a u t h o r i t y o f f i c i a l s (so described) 17 1 ~~ 2 4 605 2 2 96 509 19 1 1,796 1 432 1,297 _ 2 - 4 15 " 17 TABLE 22 - Occupations : Population aged 15 and over by Occupation and Industrial Status - continued County Males Employers and managers Females Employers and manageresses Large establishments Small establishments Foremen and supervisors Workers on own account (without employees) 103 601 30 754 4 1,264 43 48 206 280 -2 240 354 - _ 262 174 96 - Apprentices and articled clerks 1,471 .-l 13 377 116 " 141 l 9 18 4 33 13 138 80 136 2 59 3 -l - 58 1 71 • • — 7 15 11 -2 . 30 . -3 -4 429 68 - ' ~ 2 1 1 11 2 " -8 .- . -" l 436 253 43 - 13 9 21 23 12 18 3 1 10 1 7 8 3 1 10 -3 12 - 19 17 12 7 119 1 26 22 30 3 22 45 23 - 7 - ? 1 15 38 Occupation 2,873 132 1 11 _ ~ ~ 21 31 61 41 6 15 — 117 970 4 3 1 81 6 9 18 -1 - Total 01 -8 3 Small establishments Forewomen and supervisors 1,523 20 135 15 154 296 299 762 2 17 47 87 _ - Total work 502 694 285 463 274 93 145 231 16 170 . 6- 2 6 Other employees Large establishments Out -7 3 2 -2 XXII. 230. 231. 232. 233. 234. 235. 236. 237. 238. 239- Sales workers P r o p r i e t o r s and managers, food s a l e s P r o p r i e t o r s and managers, non-food s a l e s Shop salesmen and a s s i s t a n t s , food Shop salesmen and a s s i s t a n t s , non-food Roundsmen (bread, milk, laundry, s o f t drinks) S t r e e t vendors, havfcers Garage p r o p r i e t o r s Commercial t r a v e l l e r s , manufacturers 1 agents Finance, insurance b r o k e r s , f i n a n c i a l agents Salesmen, s e r v i c e s ; v a l u e r s , a u c t i o n e e r s XXIII. S e r v i c e , s p o r t and r e c r e a t i o n workers 16 250. 451 251. 138 252. 134 253. 185 254. 255. 10 49 256. 25 257. 15 258. 8 259. 129 260. 3 261. 49 262. 74 263. 39 264. 6 265. 24 266. 116 267. F i r e brigade o f f i c e r s and men P o l i c e o f f i c e r s and men Guards and r e l a t e d workers n . e . c . P u b l i c a n s , innkeepers Barmen, barmaids Lodging house, h o t e l keepers, housekeepers, stewards and matrons R e s t a u r a t e u r s , w a i t e r s , counter-hands Cooks Kitchen hands Maids, v a l e t s and r e l a t e d s e r v i c e workers n . e . c . Caretakers, office keepers Chimney sweeps •Charwomen, o f f i c e c l e a n e r s ; window c l e a n e r s Hairdressers, manicurists, beauticians Launderers, dry cleaners and p r e s s e r s A t h l e t e s , sportsmen and r e l a t e d workers Hospital or ward o r d e r l i e s ; ambulance men S e r v i c e , s p o r t and r e c r e a t i o n workers n . e . c . 511 XXIV. A d m i n i s t r a t o r s and managers M i n i s t e r s of the Crown; M.Ps. ( n . e . c . ) ; senior 24 1 government o f f i c i a l s 18 271.' Local a u t h o r i t y senior o f f i c e r s 22 272. Managers i n engineering and a l l i e d t r a d e s 55 273. Managers i n b u i l d i n g and c o n t r a c t i n g 269 , 274. Managers i n mining and production n . e . c . 3l 275. Personnel managers 16 276. Sales managers 1 277. Company d i r e c t o r s 103 278- Managers n . e . c . Workers Apprenton own ices account and {without a r t i c l e d employclerks ees) - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ _ ~ _ _ _ _ _ — 302 105 191 -4 _ _ -1 2,428 30 76 13 72 - _ 1 - _ _ ~ i ~ - _ - - 4 4 2 19 34 Z9 246 405 181 118 658 34 - 170 178 302 _ 27 25 23 9 17 • _ - 1 13 9 19 _ 30 2 _ 15 _ _ '- 3 3 _ _ - l 4 1 ~ .6 - 1. 5 14 9 _ - 20 14 7 _ _ _ _ _ 30 _ _ 1 • _ Other employees Out of work 969 82 _ _ _ 276 689 1 l 23 58 _ _ _ 3 _ _ _ _ - 1,941 296 _ _ _ _ ^ 2 18 25 190 302 167 108 541 32 - 4 23 56 13 10 117 2 _ 159 107 251 11 11 43 27 12 6 - - _ _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ ~ _ _ 270. 24 18 19 40 225 3 12 1 87 2 14 34 3 15 " - - -1 l 4 -1 - -1 ~ -6 i -1 1 - . 3 3 -1 _ 2 9 1 4 1 -7 -6 1 2 5 1 - ~ Pwjr^s^egj^-v?: 53 o 141 _ _ _ 40 -3 -1 22 11 -9 _ - 17 4 - 4 _ 1 1 _ _ _ 3 -1 _ _ _ _ _ - 28 4 _ 14 5 2 2 7 _ -1 _ _ - _1 -3 1 3 1 1 3 1 169 5 _ 24 1 4 63 3 49 3 230 4 _ _ 18 12 -1 6 2 3 3 _ - XXV. 892 22 1,405 35 3 98 18 1 -4 86 18 119 76 SO - - mz 38 -1 6 11 5 34 20 5 9 329 33 5 8. 5 34 13 3 4 38 43 10 2 12 28 39 45 67 2 26 5 1 1 2 1 77 60 179 31 22 37 48 51 67 -1 3 - _ - 8 657 668 8 657 668 84 84 ' 280. 281. 282. 233. 284. 285. 286. 287. 288. 289. 290. 291. 292. 293. 294. 295. ^296. 297. 298. 299. 310. 311. 312. 313. 314. Professional, t e c h n i c a l workers, 84 XXVI. 84 320. 321. Armed forces (U.K.) Armed forces (Commonwealth and foreign) _ • XXVII. 330- artists Medical p r a c t i t i o n e r s ( q u a l i f i e d ) Dental p r a c t i t i o n e r s Nurses Pharmacists, dispensers Radiographers (medical and i n d u s t r i a l ) Medical workers n . e . c . University teachers Teachers n.e.c. C i v i l , s t r u c t u r a l , municipal engineers Mechanical engineers E l e c t r i c a l engineers Technologists n . e . c . Chemists; physical and b i o l o g i c a l s c i e n t i s t s Authors, j o u r n a l i s t s and r e l a t e d workers Stage managers, a c t o r s , e n t e r t a i n e r s , musicians P a i n t e r s , s c u l p t o r s and r e l a t e d c r e a t i v e a r t i s t s Accountants, p r o f e s s i o n a l ; company s e c r e t a r i e s and r e g i s t r a r s Surveyors, a r c h i t e c t s Clergy, m i n i s t e r s , members of r e l i g i o u s orders Judges, b a r r i s t e r s , advocates, s o l i c i t o r s Social welfare and r e l a t e d workers Professional workers n . e . c . Draughtsmen Laboratory a s s i s t a n t s , technicians Technical and r e l a t e d workers n . e . c . Armed f o r c e s ( B r i t i s h and f o r e i g n ) Inadequately d e s c r i b e d o c c u p a t i o n s Inadequately described occupations 1,554 38 152 14 23 ., i" _ - 152 - 22 5 620 14 17 29 -4 651 4 4 2 110 13 10 6 36 2 4 4 - 7 ; -6 - , —, _ -1 - 1 - 44 39 164 44 _— 8 1 158 - " _ - " • 1 1 ' • -3 17 -8 _ _ - 2 2 1 _ ~ 1 "-.. _ - 1,222 14 4 375 4 15 ' 25 -3 603 4 4 1 102 17 10 4 35 2 40 • - 28 1 8 ~ _ -2 1 - _ - 2 150 2 150 4 4 o o c 3 O > •I 3 P> Oq ^ TABLE 23 - Occupations: Occupied Population aged 15 and over by Occupation, Marital Condition and Age Groups jfote: County The number of married women In each occupation Order is analysed by ages and shown in parenthesis under tfte relevant Order figures Age l a s t birthday Marital condition Single Married Occupation Widowed and divorced Total aged 15 and over 15 16 17 ia 19 20 21 33,794 582 789 885 821 716 694 716 9,199 108 168 195 149 149 150 140 703 6 101 14 153 1 8 136 1 3 1 15 130 1 16 174 3 2 2 2 17 125 3 4 1 68 62 2 5 3 - 3 1 2 - - 2 - - 70 and over 25-29 30-34 35-44 45-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 3,474 3,332 3,389 6,863 6,502 2,730 2,265 698 748 703 765 1,762 1,906 868 836 367 520 296 371 12 13 11 447 226 5 9 16 l 518 224 8 7 9 3 1,329 364 11 24 31 i 1,454 354 7 58 32 695 126 3 28 16 4 681 119 l 340 18 1 498 13 21 11 7 1 8 7' 10 10 20 25 9 9 1 - 20-24 Males 709 Total occupied 256 I. 13,888 19,197 4,631 4,312 5 2,779 1,724 26 57 40 6 3,333 747 24 116 86 34 59 l 33 l i 2 55 4 7 40 1 1 6 26 14 1 88 208 1 9 71 4 1 12 168 10 8 3 10 203 38 11 4 000. 001. 002. 003. 004. 005. 4 1 020. 021. 62 l 4 13 11 3 1 15 38 1 4' 5 5 040. 041. 042. 043. 044. 045. 97 Miners and quarrymen l l 3 92 III. 48 Gas, c o k e and c h e m i c a l s m a k e r s Furnacemen, coal gas and coke ovens Chemical production process workers n . e . c . G l a s s and c e r a m i c s m a k e r s Ceramic formers Glass formers, f i n i s h e r s and d e c o r a t o r s Furnacemen, kilnmen, g l a s s and ceramic Ceramics* decorators and f i n i s h e r s Glass and ceramics production process workers n.e.c. V. 29 n 6,315 2,509 50 184 130 Coal mine - o t h e r underground workers Coal mine - workers above ground Workers below ground n . e . c . Surface workers n . e . c . - mines and (juarries IV. 030. 031. 032. 033. 034. fishermen Fishermen Farmers, farm managers, market gardeners A g r i c u l t u r a l workers n . e . c . A g r i c u l t u r a l machinery d r i v e r s Gardeners and groundsmen F o r e s t e r s and woodmen II. Oil. 012. 014. 015. Fai&ers, f o r e s t e r s , Furnace, f o r g e , m i l l workers foundry, rolling Furnaceiaen - metal Boiling, tube m i l l o p e r a t o r s , metal drawers Moulders and coremakers (foundry) Smiths, forgemen Metal making and t r e a t i n g workers n . e . c . F e t t i e r s , metal d r e s s e r s 28 20 - 3 1 2 1 - - - 1 l l 2 7 ' - 6 6 6 13 8 6 1 1 - 1 - l 5 1 5 5 1 9 4 5 3 5 1 1 1 _ 10 i 19 l 24 9 7 1 8 9 16 9 52 51 52 76 32 8 - - - 21 240 14 9 1 1 l l l 4 l 7 9 l 13 1 6 2 5 38 4 1 5 44 l 48 1 4 83 1 2 2 20 6 4 6 i 1 - - - 1 1 4 1 2 6 1 - 5 6 7 16 23 9 15 1 2 1 4 2 7 l 3 11 1 2 4 5 28 54 1 4 1 4 i 2 1 2 2 3 i l l l 2 l 1 - 3 2 3 2 1 3 3 1 4 8 2 1 5 15 1 1 25 O n n ft 5 1 o t-1 3 96 w S3 1 13 CO - 297 1 ft ft 1 9 1 o P VI. Electrical and electronic workers 050. Radio and radar mechanics 051. Installers and repairmen, telephone 052. 053. Linesmen, cable jointers 054. Electricians 055. Electrical and electronic f i t t e r s 056. Assemblers {electrical and electronic) •Electrical engineers (so described) VII. Engineering and allied trades Shoemakers and shoe repairers Cutters, lasters, sewers, footwear and related workers 13 19 12 91 61 66 129 59 19 " 5 6 2 1 14 3 5 l 4 6 z 13 25 5 43 1 4 9 7 38 2 7 9 17 20 2 10 40 £7 49 3 18 8 26 2 1 3 Z 13 2 3 2 — 4 — 1 — 2 Z 1 2 _ - — 1 _ 1 2 _ - 1 - 1 42 64 97 66 54 54 59 259 191 167 328 208 110 71 2 8 6 l 3 - - - 4 1 10 4 1 2 3 i _ 32 _ i i i 3 1 1 1 68 2 10 _ l l - , 1 38 3 6 8 4 4 6 168 6 24 3 3 3 4 5 2 3 2 1 7 7 6 2 116 3 22 2 3 2 3 3 1 5 3 1 6 10 3 4 111 1 10 3 7 1 3 10 3 5 109 8 21 2 2 2 3 1 8 5 1 1 3 2 2 5 60 5 6 5 8 7 6 4 2 12 ±8 8 8 177 8 32 9 4 4 5 6 4 21 2 ^ 1 5 1 1 43 6 1 - _ 20 l 11 8 l _ 42 2 14 1 1 4 41 3 - 36 1 7 1 1 l 1 3 3 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 3 1 100. ^Q^ * 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. (Rope, twine and net makers 107. (Other textile fabrics and related products ( makers and examiners n.e.c. 108. Textile fabrics,' etc. production process workers] n.e.c. — - 3 2 1 1 64 51 39 30 25 24 125 137 130 198 201 19 11 2 45 9 4 28 19 4 24 ~ 20 3 3 16 7 1 iZ 73 29 17 84 27 IB 79 20 19 114 44 31 122 41 23 3 8 5 1 7 4 Z 3 2 2 2 11 2 1 2 44 7 1 2 o o 3 1 0 3 6 1 60 31 K) 36 8 11 1 18 5 4 1 4 3 20 6 : 1 4 1 1 12 1 8 12 4 3 1 - - i 2 - - 1 7 14 16 13 7 4 3 10 15 n 7 4 4 3 1 1 i l i l - ft > Z 3 3 f» 5 3 l 2 Textile workers Fibre preparers (Spinners, doublers (Winders, reelers Warpers, sizers, drawers-in Weavers Kni tters Bleachers and finishers of textiles Eryers of textiles - " 35 093. Leather products makers n . e . c . X. - 1 1 080. Carpenters and joiners 081. Cabinet makers 082. Sawyers and wood working machinists 083. Coopers, hoop makers and benders 084. 085. Pattern makers Woodworkers n . e . c . Leather workers DC 092. 31 1 2 Woodworkers 091. 24 119 Sheet metal workers Constructional engineers; riggers Metal plate workers; riveters Gas, electric welders, cutters; braziers Machine tool setters, setter-operators Machine tool operators Tool makers, tool room f i t t e r s Fitters, machine erectors, etc. Engineers (so described) Plumbers, lead burners, pipe f i t t e r s Press workers and stampers Metal workers n.e.c. Watch and chronometer makers and repairers Precision instrument makers and repairers Coach, carriage, wagon builders and repairers Inspectors (metal and electrical goods) Other metal making, working; jewellery and electrical production process workers VIII. 17 10 workers lue.e. 060. 061. 062. 063. 064. 065. 066. 067. 068. 070. 071. 072. 073. 074. 076. 077. 078. 22 I 24 70 - 3 17 3 4 Z5 1 1 66 53 40 47 59 213 179 152 217 272 164 130 40 17 z 3 5 1 6 20 3 3 3 2 l 4 1 5 32 6 3 1 10 10 5 17 97 26 15 6 5 10 2 11 8 5 1 13 62 29 10 14 11 10 5 32 155 4 15 8 14 7 2 10 103 2 5 2 7 3 1 1 5 25 i 13 10 17 7 21 16 15 12 ~ 1 2 2 2 1 23 5 3 2 6 1 1 - 3 14 11 5 7 3 ~ 2 2 7 25 5 1 2 2 3 4 15 2 4 11 1 ~~ - 4 22 2 69 42 9 5 4 21 94 19 21 16 1 1 3 15 84 5 3 to TABLE 23 - Occupations: County Occupied Population aged 15 and over by Occupation, Marital Condition and Age Groups continued Age l a s t birthday Marital condition Single Married 129 111 14 28 12 38 38 49 32 29 Occupation Widowed and divorced XI. 6 5 1 426 597 13 61 160 205 79 221 295 Z l 8 4 71 112 3 110. 111. 112. 113. 120. 121. 123. 124. Tailors; dress, light clothing makers Upholsterers and related workers Sewers and embroiderers, textile and light leather products Clothing and related products makers n.e.c. XII. Food, drink and tobacco workers Bakers and pastry cooks Butchers and meat cutters Food processors n.e.c. Tobacco preparers and products makers XIII. Paper and printing workers Makers of paper, and paperboard paper products makers Compositors printing press operators printers (so described) printing workers n.e.c. XIV. Makers of other products l 12 22 57 5 15 1 107 109 1 7 6 23 71 7 3 17 82 1 308 787* 20 133 18 226 39 3 2 150. 151. 152. 60 29 68 120 137 265 5 10 153. 154. 134 231 4 Bricklayers, t i l e setters Masons, stone cutters, slate workers plasterers, cement finishers, terrazzo workers Builders (so described); v clerks of works Construction workers n.e.c* XVI. Painters and decorators 4 Aerographers, paint sprayers painters, decorators n.e.c. 28 203 2 130. 131. 132. 133. 134. 135. Clothing workers 14 16 35 2 4 13 121 tf^ ^ 140. 141. 142. 143. 160. 161. Workers in rubber Workers in plastics Craftsmen n.e.c. Other production process workers XV. Construction workers Total aged 15 and over 246 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-44 45-54 55-59 60-64 10 14 15 12 18 8 7 33 30 15 31 35 10 17 5 10 12 5 2 10 2 2 65-69 70 and over 1 31 66 1 4 i 4 l 2 i 2 8 11 5 3 14 70 79 4 5 4 6 7 7 3 5 4 11 3 4 4 1 15 10 10 <9 5 5 4 10 8 5 1 2 3 Z 2 1 1 1,036 35 32 42 52 33 32 31 144 107 104 188 201 61 26 7 4 141 389 504 2 6 11 18 8 9 15 10 15 17 7 20 25 5 13 15 4 11 17 6 10 15 18 65 61 10 41 56 16 38 50 17 76 95 27 69 104 1 n 20 29 1 5 7 14 1 3 3 2 2 186 3 8 6 7 5 5 7 32 20 26 39 17 9 9 4 1 5 10 19 1 4 3 2 10 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 3 5 15 1 2 32 10 9 1 26 38 94 7 20 l l 1 217 3 5 7 13 9 14 9 40 154 2 1 l 3 1 2 5 l 2 3 7 l 8 5 7 1,115 16 21 25 20 15 13 362 59 8 1 14 3 19 2 n 9 9 180 171 343 5 4 3 1 4 4 3 1 2 369 5 8 7 11 8 1 6 1 10 41 328 l 7 l l 4 3 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 4 8 8 1 1 5 12 09 1 3 6 15 3 5 13 7 44 24 20 41 4 2 3 15 l l 6 6 2 9 27 3 16 6 34 5 27 2 2 6 l 7 16 77 115 105 289 282 78 52 8 1 41 3 55 2 31 4 70 16 78 15 18 9 7 2 1 1 2 4 1 2 18 5 10 22 12 24 19 12 39 48 52 103 44 50 95 5 20 26 5 11 27 1 8 6 3 13 7 45 44 41 82 76 22 12 6 2 13 1 6 3 42 5 39 8 33 12 70 8 68 1 21 12 i 5 2 1 l 1 . 3 1 3 l c w o o 1 2 2 1 1 l 2 n *i l 3 1 - - 9 11 1 1 tr I—• P S Ob XVII. Driyers of stationary engines, cranes, etc. 1 170. Boiler firemen 171. Crane and hoist operators; slingers 172. Operators of earth moving and other construction machinery n.e.c. 173. Boiler scalers 174. Stationary engine, materials handling plant operators n.e.c.; oilers and greasers XVIII. 180. U31. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187. 188. Labourers n.e.c. Railway lengthmen Labourers and unskilled workers n.e.c. Chemical and allied trades Engineering and allied trades Foundries In engineering and allied trades Textiles (not textile goods) Coke ovens and gas works Glass and ceramics Building and contracting Other XIX Transport and communications workers 190. Deck, engineering officers and pilots, ship 191. Deck and engineroom ratings, barge and boatmen 193. Drivers, motormen, firemen, railway engine Railway guards 194. 195. Drivers of buses, coaches, trams 196. Drivers of other road passenger vehicles 197. Drivers of road goods vehicles 198. Inspectors, supervisors, transport 199. Shunters, pointsmen 200. Traffic controllers and dispatchers, transport 201. Telephone operators 202. Telegraph and radio operators 203. Postmen, mail sorters 204. Messengers 205. . Bus and tram conductors 206. porters, ticket collectors, railway 207. Stevedores, dock labourers 208. Lorry drivers' mates, van guards 209. Workers in transport and communication occupations n.e.c. XX. 4, 220. 221. 222. 223. Typists, shorthand writers, secretaries Clerks, cashiers, office machine operators Civil service executive officers Civil servants, local authority officials (so described) 5 - - - l - - 2 3 6 5 7 35 3 l l l - 3 1 4 4 - 42 50 89 82 22 24 3 7 7 19 4 41 2 9 - 16 3 2 1 _ - 1 2 6 27 23 24 6 3 — - _ 40 1 17 - - - - 4 11 12 25 22 7 2 _ - 357 50 7 _ - 14 2 _ _ _ _ - i l 4 1 2 1 38 75 77 90 96 94 96 434 413 452 899 960 461 i l - 2 5 14 27 29 13 8 _ - _ ,- _ 3 10 10 26 26 1 21 _ 5 1 14 .._ 4 1 3 1 17 1 5 1 9 - _ ...__ 3 _ - 30 4 10 226 158 44 6 15 410 371 •, 5 8 - 1 28 3 6 204 156 13 10 383 438 41 4 6 150 225 2 31 1 2 106 193 10 3 1 11 23 126 16 8 o _ - o 2 i l 6 _ - _ 16 25 20 3 17 1 13 35 1 18 31 33 35 1 35 48 3 43 34 50 29 2, 40 41 44 48 33 33 31 201 251 324 667 475 158 - - - l - 2 2 2 1 - 2 l 1 1 4 1 5 5 4 16 23, 16 17 - - 3 17 5 70 18 354 8 9 6 7 3 35 22 231 17 3 2 14 4 11 8 52 7 3 12 4 2 7 34 10 1 - _ - - l _ - - - - 16 6 1 52 3 58 12 2 31 16 6 5 14 1 - _ 66 2 25 11 6 15 1 - - - 20 15 16 - - - 1 - - - 2 : 2 1 3 ~ _ - _ 1 2 2 19 23 26 13 i 1, 2 - l, l, it 2 ~ - _ Warehousemen, storekeepers, packers, bottlers Clerical workers 6 2 44 2 12 204 153 210. Warehousemen, storekeepers and assistants 211. Packers, labellers and related workers XXI, 1 1 1 1 12 -1 1 13 ~ 1 - - - - - - 4 4 - - 5 4 120 14 6 168 24 8 180 - - - 1 1 1 7 1 1 4 3 - - 13 25 - - - l l 3 2 _ _ _ _ _ 22 3 9 6 1 12 21 7 1 2 3 2 8 _ - _ _ _ _ - _ _ 8 28 11 - - - 2 1 - 3 2 1 - - 10 - 28 1 5 l 5 26 11 2 13 10 7 1 - - 2 5 - 17 6 - 1 17 29 23 26 17 17 15 64 45 40 104 102 46 45 8 6 8 9 17 12 17 6 n 15 8 9 n 6 5 10 36 £8 35 10 32 8 81 23 81 21 36 10 34 11 6 2 4 2 10 - 8 _ 23 46 32 46 - - 122 - 100 - 220 - 155 - 20 _ 10 8 152 16 108 11 188 ^0 55 6 l 5 9 137 12 19 - 39 3 90 - 43 3 32 - 39 1 l 62 1 61 _ 6 - 173 - 64 l 22 41 _ - - 1 - 4 5 3 1 6 - - 1 - - 2. c > B TABLE 23 - Occupations; Occupied Population aged 15 and over by Occupation, Marital Condition and Age Groups continued County Age l a s t birthday Marital condition Occupation Widowed and divorced Singl e Married 948 1,875 50 86 137 217 304 400 541 67 159 16 16 1 57 25 35 £12 66 105 5 2 5 51 177 3 1 35 15 133 2 476 953 42 4 165 17 25 103 12 284 112 100 80 2 9 9 2 4 20 8 5 3 19 3 6 17 17 1 10 49 6 29 16 9 5 101 54 22 5 13 65 1 2 59 438 14 3 2 3 6 39 21 16 19 47 222 3 15 1 94 XXII. 230. 231. 232. 233. 234. 235. 236. 237. 238. 40 1 1 9 3 3 239. 256. 257. 258. 259. 260. 261. 262. 263. 264. 265. 266. 267. 270. -1 _5 2 8 4 271. 272. 273. 274. 275. 276. 277. 278. 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-44 45-54 55-59 60^64 65-69 2,873 39 51 82 74 65 41 59 272 299 332 596 576 207 158 65 57 502 694 285 463 23 i 1 2 26 48 l 4 28 31 2 1 17 27 3 1 12 19 3 6 15 26 18 37 53 99 40 53 32 51 51 77 25 39 122 157 28 54 132 177 25 48 47 78 4 11 47 48 4 8 21 33 1 1 19 27 6 1 2 1 1 - 33 11 19 37 13 27 77 is 38 55 17 27 15 11 14 15 4 4 -2 -1 ~ . 23 14 6 1 ~ 9 2 3 4 - 1 2 2 1 4 16 42 42 58 . 4-4 11 8 3 2 1 17 1 20 4 42 4 47 1 15 3 17 1 2 -2 102 36 49 _ 14 _ - 15 274 93 145 3 1 " 16 170 - " - - 1,471 15 20 F i r e brigade o f f i c e r s and men Police o f f i c e r s and men Guards and r e l a t e d workers n . e . c . Publicans, innkeepers Barmen Lodging house, h o t e l keepers, housekeepers, stewards "--. R e s t a u r a t e u r s , w a i t e r s , counter hands Cooks Kitchen hands Valets and r e l a t e d s e r v i c e workers n . e . c . Caretakers, o f f i c e keepers Chimney sweeps Office c l e a n e r s ; window c l e a n e r s Hairdressers, manicurists, beauticians Launderers, dry c l e a n e r s and p r e s s e r s At&letes, sportsmen, and r e l a t e d workers Hospital or ward o r d e r l i e s ; ambulance men Service, sport and r e c r e a t i o n workers n . e . c . 16 451 138 134 185 -3 XXIV. Service, workers s p o r t and r e c r e a t i o n A d m i n i s t r a t o r s and managers Ministers of the crown; M.Ps. ( n . e . c . ) ; senior government o f f i c i a l s Local a u t h o r i t y senior o f f i c e r s Managers in engineering an<l a l l i e d t r a d e s Managers in b u i l d i n g and c o n t r a c t i n g Managers in mining and production n . e . c . Personnel managers. Sales managers Company d i r e c t o r s Managers n . e . c . -1 - 19 30 -1 ~ XXIII. 250. 251. 252. 253. 254. 255. S a l e s workers P r o p r i e t o r s and managers, food s a l e s P r o p r i e t o r s and managers, non-food s a l e s Shop salesmen and a s s i s t a n t s , food Shop salesmen and a s s i s t a n t s , non-food Roundsmen (bread, milk, laundry, s o f t drinks) S t r e e t vendors, hawkers Garage p r o p r i e t o r s Commercial t r a v e l l e r s , manufacturers' agents Finance, insurance brokers, f i n a n c i a l agents Salesmen, s e r v i c e s ; v a l u e r s , a u c t i o n e e r s Total aged 15 and over 231 10 49 25 15 8 129 3 49 74 39 6 24 116 -2 -1 -9 511 24 18 22 55 269 3 16 1 103 ' 70 and over -1 5 1 - -2 -1 -1 1 5 32 25 25 32 30 200 157 129 288 247 146 -8 _ -l 19 1 i - - _ - -9 20 1 1 4 17 2 1 5 l 132 7 5 23 - 8 99 4 7 11 2 44 8 11 22 5 100 21 30 28 6 37 29 33 20 25 22 16 11 -5 -. -2 1 1 2 -4 -4 _ -2 3 2 4 2 1 4 4 4 7 2 1 21 1 6 2 2 3 34 1 8 4 3 1 27 -3 -7 15 -' 9 27 6 2 7 17 4 2 1 5 11 13 10 2 5 28 8 -7 6 5 1 4 8 -1 - 10 6 - - 15 1 5 3 1 3 5 1 9 17 -1 _ 15 -1 -2 -2 -5 _1 -1 3 - - 2 1 1 1 4 19 36 45 131 157 54 39 12 14 ~ _ _ -l -l _ _ _1 - -1 - -1 _ ^ -1 -l -2 -3 3 12 4 23 12 7 6 19 68 -3 -7 -1 -5 -6 l 2 4 3 24 1 2 4 2 2 2 20 ~ 7 3 4 15 74 2 5 - 1 38 17 -l 10 ..I _l -2 3 2 6 28 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 -1 l 5 23 12 11 -1 -1 -2 -2 -1 -3 _ -1 1 7 2 1 1 1 1 - 3 -3 7 1 -1 1 1 3 5 - 21 - -9 £0 • 1 -1 -8 -1 5 -1 4 5 8 _1 -2 XXV. 558 834 13 IB 3 44 26 10 160 14 2 4 1 89 14 75 49 16 218 24 4 7 4 1 l ±0 10 3 24 10 2 3 6 -1 -4 -- ~* — 280. 281. 282. 283. 285. 287. 288. 289. 290. 291. 292. 293, 294. 295. 296. 2 35 29 40 31 85 7 2 13 26 36 19 94 23 19 24 18 15 48 50 33 1 50 33 1 -1 1 _ 2 - 297. 298. 299. 310. 311. 312. 313. 314. 50 8 Armed f o r c e s ( B r i t i s h and foreign) Armed forces (U.K.) XXVII. 610 t e c h n i c a l workers, Medical p r a c t l o n e r s ( q u a l i f i e d ) Dental p r a c t i t i o n e r s Nurses Pharmacists, d i s p e n s e r s Medical workers n . e . c . Teachers n . e . c . C i v i l , s t r u c t u r a l , municipal engineers Mechanical engineers E l e c t r i c a l engineers Technologists n . e . c . Chemists; p h y s i c a l and b i o l o g i c a l scientists Authors, j o u r n a l i s t s and r e l a t e d workers Stage managers, a c t o r s , e n t e r t a i n e r s , musicians P a i n t e r s , s c u l p t o r s and r e l a t e d c r e a t i v e artists Accountants, p r o f e s s i o n a l ; company s e c r e t a r i e s and r e g i s t r a r s Surveyors, a r c h i t e c t s Clergy, m i n i s t e r s , members of r e l i g i o u s orders Judges, b a r r i s t e r s , advocates, s o l i c i t o r s Social welfare and r e l a t e d workers P r o f e s s i o n a l workers n . e . c . Draughtsmen Laboratory a s s i s t a n t s , t e c h n i c i a n s Technical and r e l a t e d worfcers n . e . c . XXVI. 320. Professional, artist* Inadequately described occupations 11 1,405 22 22 86 IB 119 76 26 382 38 6 11 5 24 6 1 1 1 29 168 243 190 318 255 65 60 1 3 20 8 3 25 13 3 83 10 1 29 4 29 22 3 84 12 1 4 1 20 2 15 11 3 60 4 1 1 1 6 1 4 4 2 15 2 8 4 3 4 1 19 -2 13 3 15 10 4 67 5 2 3 1 3 3 5 8 49 4 1 3 1 - 4 2 7 4 - - 9 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 77 60 16 9 13 13 8 11 14 4 13 12 3 i _ 2 13 3 16 12 10 14 2 1 3 10 10 14 7 5 4 45 8 10 15 4 4 18 57 10 4 6 1 2 SO 15 4 3 2 1 12 1 2 1 1 "~ _— 1 8 84 1 8 668 1114 72 9 9 31 20 £ 2 1 8 1 1 84 1 - 10 1 2 -4 1 -5 1 4 3 1 -3 1 -1 - - 34 20 5 179 31 22 37 46 51 67 26 -3 ~ _ _ -1 . 21 2 1 2 10 -1 — _ 1 8 3 2 1 _ _ 10 3 4 13 8 13 9 6 1 - - - 10 3 4 13 8 13 9 6 1 ..- - - 15 14 52 28 41 99 50 60 94 oo c6* O > 3 Oft pr- *»> 00 TABLE 23 - Occupations: 'County Occupied Population aged 15 and over by Occupation, Marital Condition and Age Groups continued Age l a s t birthday Marital condition Total Occupation Widowed and divorced aged 15 Single Married 9,886 4,909 935 Total occupied 221 50 233 I. 188 33 45 4 1 232 1 - - -- II. Miners and quarry women III. Gas, coke and chemicals makers 210 119 8 IV. 60 120 4 17 42 40 5 20 3 4 9 12 1 - - 3 1 - 1 - 15 *$ ±7 H 19 20 21 15,730 455 658 (2) 773 (4) 789 (23) 650 (31) 628 (52) 566 (74) 504 1 2 and over 20-24 25-29. 30-34 35-44 45-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 70 and over Females - • • 3 33 l l 20 4 2 1 4 52 l 1 44 3 030. 031. 032. 033. 034. 1 1 l 231 (49) 220 (18) 1 4 11 (1) 10 (2) 13 (1) 59 (9) 108 (19) 80 (9) 78 (4) 54 (3) 85 (2) 6 5 7 3 6 7 52 7 102 5 1 80 75 3 52 2 85 - l z _ z l l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Glass and ceramics makers 337 6 11 11 19 (1) 14 17 (4) 29 (4) 104 (29) 61 (33) 38 (14) 49 (29) 21 (11) 2 (2) 1 ..- Ceramic formers GLass formers, finishers and decorators Furnaceworaen, kiinworaen, glass and ceramic Ceramics* decorators and finishers CJLass and ceramics production process workers n . e . c . 105 164 9 37 4 8 3 7 1 5 13 4 9 w M 40 42 - 15 11 21 1 11 1 1 7 24 1 2 1 1 15 38 2 4 22 1 2 7 2 4 5 Furnace, forge, foundry, rolling mill workers - 1 - - 4 - - Electrical and electronic workers - 2 1 - - l 3 - - 1 - 2 i - 88 - - 3 - 15 (6) 13 (5) Electricians Assemblers (electrical and electronic) VII. 080. 064. 067. 071. 072. 074. 077. 07.8. 1 2 511 (136) 3 1 VI.. 3 - 992 (409) 465 38 1 - 053. 055. fisherwomen Farmers, farm manageresses, market gardeners Agricultural workers n.e.c. Foresters and woodwomen V, • Z 1 001. 002. 005. Farmers, foresters, 2,714 1.652 1,314 2,319 2,452 (489) (616) (595) (1,267) (1,270) Engineering and a l l i e d trades workers n . e . c . Sheet metal workers Machine tool setters, setter-operators Fitters, machine erectors, etc. Press workers and stampers Metal workers n.e.c. precision instrument makers and repairers Inspectors (metal and electrical goods) Other metal making, working; Jewellery and electrical production process workers l 2 1 65 7 3 3 6 1 1 - - - - 1 1 • - 4 (1) 7 3 1 - 6 1 i - 1 1 1 1 - l - 10 2 10 2 2 1 - CO o H Ct D0> - a* _ 1 (1) - - - - - 1 _ - - - 9 (7) 29 (23) 12 (7) 4 (3) - - - 9 i l 22 9 1 1 3 1 1 1 s l _ 2 2 1 09 P 8 8 3 Z _ 1 1 o • • - - 1 3 1 1 30 13 29 1 13 402 972 VIII. Woodworkers 081. Cabinet makers 085. Woodworkers n.e.c. IX. Leather workers Cutters, lasters, sewers, footwear, and related workers 093. Leather products makers n.e.c. X. 26 82 255 50 386 4 17 3 7) 22) 2 46 106 16) 83 46 4 832 925 112 5Q 12 13 470 303 741 159 95 12 426 247 25 36 390 16 230 1 25 68 259 280 54 469 58 22 109 133 ' 63 74 55 4 34 27 2 59 29 l 5 47 6 3 19 7 19 12 19 12 - • - Textile workers 100 Fibre preparers 101 {Spinners, doublers (Winders, reelers 102. Warpers, slzers, drawers-ln 103. Weavers 104. Knitters 105. Bleachers and finishers of textiles (Rope, twine and net makers 107. (Other textile fabrics and related products ( makers and examiners n.e.c. 108. Textile fabrics, etc. production process workers n.e.c. XI. Clothing workers 110. Tailoresses; dress, light clothing makers 111. upholsterers and related workers 112. Sewers and embroiderers, textile and light leather products 113. Clothing and related products makers n . e . c . XII. Food, drink and tobacco workers - 120. 6 123. Food processors n . e . c . 124. Tobacco preparers and products makers XIII. Paper and printing workers 5 1 - Bakers and pastry cooks 131. paper products makers 133. Printing press operators 135. Printing workers n.e.c. XIV. Makers of other products 140. Workers in rubber 141. workers in plastics 142. Craftswomen n.e.c. 143. Other production process workers XV. Construction workers XVI. Painters and decorators 161. Painters, decorators n.e.c. - - 1 (1) - - _ l 1 ." 1 - 1 - - 1 092. 100 - 2 53 20 2 1 20 4 1 81 2 24 8 3 23 10 2 4 1 104 25 13 5 34 6 5 10 (4) 10 (3) 10 10 133 (1) 83 (5) 87 (13) 64 (9) 359 222 (77) (95) 5 32 22 1 38 17 5 24 15 4 18 5 1 8 19 19 1 24 3 1 3 13 8 25 75 52 10 120 13 9 10 41 44 21 4 2 7 (4) 2 (1) 1 (1) 226 (121) 403 (245) 484 (289) 214 (104) 78 (28) 24 (6) 6 32 40 11 93 1 2 17 26 85 28 178 1 7 19 34 184 20 143 7 12 53 8 105 1 2 23 5 33 n 1 8 1 2 6 8 35 15 32 4 7 10 3 20 11 9 162 231 167 (89) 104 57 214 (3) 2 1 6 2 180 48 171 35 208 (9) 182 24 152 (13) 129 (18) l 2 l l 135 14 108 19 106 (19) 99 6 227 497 (132) (104) 4 4 4 1 4 4 438 51 188 34 131 28 17 19 (1) 25 30 (2) 33 (1) 26 (2) 19 (3) 120 (22) 4 13 5 14 4 21 2 28 8 25 2 24 l 18 8 111 1 18 15 13 9 16 (2) 9 (3) 63 (18) 3 10 3 9 7 6 3 6 (1) 9 8 1 1 4 6 56 19 22 22 7 263 (169) 405 (256) 198 (101) 317 72 161 28 111 (57) 30 (10) 3 60 133 3 108 30 20 (7) 13 (8) 22 (15) 20 (12) 4 (1) 32 31 12 7 1 3 9 1 16 5 1 16 3 1 IS (6) 13 (2) 17 (9) 13 (8) 5 (3) 2 14 1 l 10 2 3 (1) 6 (5) 6 (1) 9 (3) 5 (2) 15 1 142 (83) l l 13 3 96 34 (37) (10) £ (2) £ 63 (28) 99 (41) o 14 2 184 60 10 (1) 81 10 22 11 3 (1) i 2 1 (1) O > 3 7 (2) 1 (1) 12 2 en O 00 to 8 o > TABLE 23 - Occupations: Occupied Population aged 15 and over by Occupation, Marital Condition and Age Groups - continued County Age l a s t birthday M a r i t a l condition : Single Married 26 13 21 7 ID 3 Occupation Hi do wed and divorced ~ _ I 184. 188. XVII. Drivers of stationary engines, cranes, e t c . XVIII. Labourers n . e . c . Labourers and u n s k i l l e d workers n . e . c . T e x t i l e {not t e x t i l e goods) Other XIX. 50 21 3 3 44 1 1 1 - - 18 2 1 3 - 1B7. 201. 202. 203. 208. 294 28 65 312 35 259 3 25 1,522 339 27 402 1,090 14 91 248 5 20 1 18 1,047 — 353 210. 211. 1 123 230. 54 86 34 231, WS 2S7 628 - 1 1 103 58 120 3 1 2 67 4 14 1 2 1 232. 233. 235. 238. 239. 16 17 18 19 20 21 20-24 1 2 3 3 5 2 ~ 5 25-29 30-34 35-44 45-54 65-59 60-64 85-69 70 and over 1 (1) *• 5 (1) 7 (4) 5 (3) 2 (2) 2 (2) - 4 1 1 4 1 4 3 3 2 2 l l - 23 (6) _ 14 (7) _ 11 (7) _ 3 - 1 - - _ 21 2 13 - _ 10 l 1 - _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ _ _ „ " 4 (1) _ " 2 (1) 4 2 - CO 31 10 1 74 3 3 65 3 2 1 l l 2 3 2 1 4 1 2 - 1 3 3 3 4 ~ 9 (1) i 8 _ - - - 3 3 3 4 - — _ - _ _ - 699 25 36 (1) 36 (1) 26 (2) 18 (2) 23 (2) 21 (2) 122 (23) 90 (44) 60 (37) 110 •<73) 110 (72) 46 (31) 14 (6) 103 596 l .24 7 29 4 32 4 22 4 14 6 17 3 IS 29 93 16 74 7 53 is 91 10 100 1 45 l 13 1,888 26 78 139 132 (2) 137 <2) 135 (4) 123 (9) 533 (71) 264 (98) 194 (60) 200 (66) 124 (28) 39 (11) 16 6 (1) T y p i s t s , shorthand w r i t e r s , s e c r e t a r i e s Clerks, c a s h i e r s , o f f i c e machine o p e r a t o r s C i v i l s e r v i c e executive o f f i c e r s Civil servants, local authority o f f i c i a l s (so described) 498 1,358 15 3 23 20 58 45 94 39 93 37 97 37 96 42 79 160 368 79 185 -* - 21 101 2 5 31 1 2 4 _ 34 154 9 2 14 - 51 136 3 -. - XXII. 1,523 39 (11) 46 (6) Warehousewomen, storefceepers maA a s s i s t a n t s Packers, l a b e l l e r s and r e l a t e d workers C l e r i c a l workers S a l e s workers P r o p r i e t r e s s e s and manageresses, sales P r o p r i e t r e s s e s and manageresses, sales Shop saleswomen and a s s i s t a n t s , Shop saleswomen and a s s i s t a n t s , S t r e e t vendors, hawkers Garage p r o p r i e t r e s s e s Saleswomen, s e r v i c e s ; v a l u e r s , i - 17 66 83 106 93 (4) — - 3 2 Z 53 (2) 64 (6) & (ID 4 •.-i. — 5 4 - 3 l _ _ - 133 (45) 3 - 2 116 (53) 182 (82) 189 (79) 81 (19) 53 (12) 1 6 6 10 30 42 22 n 10 14 12 30 83 1 1 23 34 47 51 29 71 33 10 15 33 1 4 1 24 2 2 1 32 Z _ 1 - _ 77 21 48 1 2 - - - - food 154 l 296 299 762 4 4 4 - 20 45 1 23 59 ~ _ - non-food food non-food auctioneers ! — - 2 — - - 24 67 - 15 38 1 19 40 1 11 53 7 67 202 _ -„ ~ - - 23 83 _ — - | 1 1 o o rt tr 3 CD 283 (40) i C CO _ Warehousewomen, s t o r e k e e p e r s , packers, b o t t l e r s o D 1 XXI. 220. 221. 222. 223. 41 15 - Drivers of road goods v e h i c l e s Telephone o p e r a t o r s Telegraph and r a d i o o p e r a t o r s Postwomen, mail s o r t e r s Lorry d r i v e r s ' mates, van guards XX, 377 Transport and conmunications workers Total aged 15 and over _ _ ' _ - I— I 212 ."! 1,258 958 2 16 9 24 _ _ 2 9 4 1 16 1 1S2 208 87 19 385 8 22 142 lid 11 33 166 83 87 215 22 112 33 169 14 21 31 11 12 58 4 36 3 14 2 14 13 9 ' 5 XXIII. 251. 252. 253. 254. 255. 256. 257. 258. 259. 260. 262. 263. 264. 366. 267. 2 5 l — 1 l 4 -6 ~ 2 1 -l 3 -1 P o l i c e o f f i c e r s and women Guards and r e l a t e d workers n . e . c . Publicans, innkeepers B*rffiaids Lodging.house, h o t e l keepers, housekeepers and matrons R e s t a u r a t e u r s , w a i t r e s s e s , counterhands Cooks Kitchen hands Maids, and r e l a t e d s e r v i c e workers n . e . c . Caretakers, o f f i c e keepers Charwomen, o f f i c e c l e a n e r s ; window c l e a n e r s Hairdressers, manicurists, beauticians Launderers, dry c l e a n e r s and p r e s s e r s Hospital o r ward o r d e r l i e s ; ambulance women Service, sport and r e c r e a t i o n workers n.e.c. XXEV, 270. z 272. 273. 274. 275. 278. 442 3 1 473 6 16 17 377 1 19 2 142 5 1 10 239 2 3 -4 4 49 _ 2 5 3 - 2 35 1 280. 281. 282. 283. 284. 285. 287. 293. 294. 1 295. 2 106 11 6 6 29 Z -7 4 -7 - ~ ~ 4 - - 4 - - 152 - - 296. 298. 310. 311. 312. 313. 314. Professional, artists technical Armed f o r c e s ( B r i t i s h and foreign) Armed forces (U.K.) XXVII. 44 2,428 2 19 34 29 246 405 181 118 658 34 170 178 302 37 *~ — _ 11 - l 18 25 | — 6 8 1 - 23 1 1 - 3 Inadequately described occupations 70 77 — 72 (2) ~~ -3 _ _ _ - l 12 4 4 23 1 2 10 7 -1 19 31 23 25 1 1 1 „ _ _ - - — 3 17 5 2 27 19 15 6 1 8 75 (5) 15 ID 1 6 _ - - ' 62 (1) 51 (10) ~ -3 _ -l l 7 11 5 2 14 1 _ 13 2 1 18 18 53 19 4 68 i 260 (37) l 9 <&) 1 2 1 4 191 (#) 505 (316) 6 7 2 2 4 1 12 43 20 5 53 14 8 25 3 40 88 48 44 125 8 36 20 68 7 67 87 39 43 150 15 67 17 72 6 36 18 17 13 57 5 21 . 6 3 -5 10 1 10 1 44 5 _ _ 1 4 2 4 _ _ 3 (1) 4 - - - - - (« 5 (2) i 2 - 24 2 3 "(1), 105 (30) 46 (10) _ _ : 8 4 i - - 30 (3) 4 23 10 7 3 31 1 16 1 5 13 3 1 2 13 13 3 -5 3 1 „ _ - _1 - 1 1 3 5 - - 4 -4 o l •i 2 1 2 l 3 2 2 o 2 1 2 1,554 1 4 23 38 50 53 62 (3) 289 (21) 282 (82) 162 (65) 280 (130) 22 5 620 14 17 29 651 4 _ _ :- _ 43 _ _ 160 3 1 106 3 10 5 124 3 1 57 1 2 1 79 1 9 1 111 2 4 - l £ _ 33 -1 - _ 46 -1 . ~ _ 15 -3 - _ 43 4 -1 _ - l 2 2 110 IB 10 6 36 2 203 (91) 7 4 6 -8 -" 36 584 (330) 2 1 3 14 27 13 1 46 1 9 20 21 2 1 2 9 1 7 workers, Medical p r a c t i t i o n e r s {qualified) Dental p r a c t i t i o n e r s Nurses Pharmacists, dispensers Radiographers (medical and i n d u s t r i a l ) Medical workers n . e . c . Teachers n . e . c . Authoresses, J o u r n a l i s t s and r e l a t e d workers Stage manageresses, a c t r e s s e s , e n t e r t a i n e r s , musicians P a i n t e r s , s c u l p t o r s and r e l a t e d c r e a t i v e artists Accountants, p r o f e s s i o n a l ; company s e c r e t a r i e s and r e g i s t r a r s Clergy, m i n i s t e r s , members of r e l i g i o u s o r d e r s Social welfare and r e l a t e d workers P r o f e s s i o n a l workers n . e . c . Draughtswomen Laboratory a s s i s t a n t s , technicians Technical and r e l a t e d workers n . e . c . XXVI. 320. A d m i n i s t r a t o r s and m a n a g e r e s s e s M i n i s t e r s of the Crown; M.Ps. ( n . e . c . ) ; s e n i o r government o f f i c i a l s Manageresses in engineering and a l l i e d trades Manageresses in b u i l d i n g and c o n t r a c t i n g Manageresses i n mining and production n . e . c . Personnel .manageresses Manageresses n . e . c . XXV. 1,063 S e r v i c e , s p o r t and r e c r e a t i o n workers "•" 1 _ -1 2 1 ' - l -l _i -2 -2 1 1 -2 1 4 ~ -1 • — 1 - 11 1 - 2 4 7 99 2 - - 1 1 1 1 2 2 -1 -1 4 9 7 6 2 2 11 - - - 242 (98) • 84 (23) 58 (14) 3 2 1 - 2 1 7 2 77 i - 7 1 - — : 8 108 2 134 2 55 1 37 - - - - 6 2 1 2 5 1 32 2 3 1 3 15 (6) _ -l — 9 1 26 (3) _ -2 -5 - 1 1 1 - - - - 13 2 5 2 3 1 — *~ : _1 - 1 20 -2 - 1 18 4 - - - 1 - - 2 2 - - 1 - - - - - 4 - - - 1 - - 2 2 - - 1 - - - - - 152 44 18 7 7 3 - 2 6 8 13 30 16 - - - - > s 9 XT CO CO O Males Total Socio-economic Total : aged County P o p u l a t i o n aged 15 and over by Socio-economic Group, Social Class and Age Group TABLE 24 - Occupations cn oo at 45-54 20-24 25-29 30-34 39,512 5,007 3,599 3,375 3,417 6,906 6,563 15-19 35-44 Fern a 1 e s ages 60-64 55-59 65-69 70 and over at ages Total 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-44 42,480 4,884 3,772 3,544 3,678 7,173 1 4 5 13 70 and over 55-59 60-64 6,942 2,976 2,941 2,371 4,199 17 42 14 10 11 10 45-54 65-69 Group 15 a n d over 2,792 2,450 1,931 3,472 1 Employers and managersl a r g e establishments 740 8 24 50 73 169 209 73 54 31 49 127 2 Employers and managerssmall establishments 1,280 2 34 83 122 334 324 119 90 58 114 264 2 10 17 17 49 67 18 34 16 34 3 Professional workers - s e l l employed 318 1 5 21 25 81 95 25 21 16 28 20 - 2 1 - 8 3 2 3 - 1 8 7 6 - 12 11 37 24 13 7 4 22 4 P r o f e s s i o n a l workers - employees 5 Intermediate non-manual workers 6 J u n i o r non-manual workers 7 294 18 38 58 49 60 39 10 7 136 998 38 131 178 113 220 146 39 52 30 51 1,531 110 290 266 152 239 208 68 69 51 78 3,014 437 500 355 273 473 371 171 151 119 164 3,144 922 810 406 287 316 212 73 53 32 33 Personal s e r v i c e workers 288 72 35 18 30 42 31 19 17 19 5 1,753 286 191 109 130 298 322 131 110 70 106 8 Foremen and s u p e r v i s o r s - manual 697 4 19 40 72 192 168 74 43 32 53 148 4 12 25 18 47 22 10 3 4 3 9 S k i l l e d manual workers 8,565 1,257 339 222 452 2,824 589 441 255 240 397 350 180 121 107 144 Semi-skilled manual workers 3,418 5,165 10 11 Unskilled manual workers 457 1,621 1,251 299 288 620 621 238 205 162 231 5,765 1,293 911 507 372 663 885 357 284 203 290 429 466 924 975 480 387 Z56 331 364 19 9 11 24 87 116 36 34 17 11 80 115 135 290 343 161 133 118 203 468 7 15 22 25 73 102 54 50 45 75 19 35 52 155 169 71 59 60 122 51 1 - 2 2 11 10 6 5 14 1,294 580 - 5 7 5 50 93 74 92 72 182 962 426 328 473 464 1,598 20 744 2 12 Qm account workers ( o t h e r tnan professional) 13 Farmers - employers and managers 14 Farmers - own account 6,894 58 280 413 470 1,181 636 665 645 1,252 15 A g r i c u l t u r a l workers 3,003 700 391 246 235 402 387 144 141 115 242 41 6 5 3 6 7 6 - 4 2 2 16 Members of armed forces 122 34 14 8 13 10 10 2 7 6 18 7 1 2 - - 1 -• 1 2 - Indefinite 860 243 ^52 28 41 99 95 51 64 48 139 153 79 6 8 13 30 16 - - - 1 35 22 14 7 11 25,104 1,559 1,058 1,890 2,363 4,852 4,463 1,935 2,061 1,730 3,193 1,870 3,304 Not a p p l i c a b l e Social II III 37 23 36,993 3,516 3,409 3,296 3,335 6,762 6,422 17,212 3,245 2,706 1,645 1,301 2,290 2,462 1,039 880 639 1,005 43 79 74 141 134 35 29 23 35 156 6 2 13 11 45 27 15 10 4 23 59 59 212 296 1 326 447 1 555 516 2 715 1,330 3 701 1,457 1 260 705 228 722 163 704 260 1,373 2,466 630 124 318 6 301 7 204 6 373 52 422 104 179 84 184 98 143 77 218 196 1,998 466 6 652 122 402 1,640 339 9 621 139 1 446 115 1 309 82 1 620 118 ! 1 \ 687 909 509 808 315 384 287 276 521 305 437 204 1 210 69 145 54 125 29 174 26 654 122 384 243 85 145 482 220 73 140 388 174 63 115 242 i 80 242 507 104 3 11 373 113 7 24 887 260 5 115 357 89 333 912 137 5 9 663 237 7 236 3,410 3,064 1 5,770 1,311 41 363 285 66 4 34 203 39 2 17 290 65 2 11 1,214 Class T o t a l * : o c c u p i e d and r e t i r e d I 118 33 1,514 P r o f e s s i o n a l , e t c . , occupations 612 19 Intermediate occup a t i ons: manual non-manual agri cul t u r a l 8 3,259 7,609 S k i l l e d occupations: manual non-manual agricultural 10,173 2,780 27 1,273 411 1,129 480 1,062 361 4 1,075 269 4 manual non-manual agricultural 3,547 798 3,003 5,177 427 93 701 474 333 60 394 304 41 243 428 298 59 237 467 IV p a r t l y s k i l l e d occupations: V Unskilled occupations 462 •Excluding Armed Forces and persons with inadequately described occupations. 928 1 979 2,717 2,362 1,293 • 201 6 19 87 36 CO c 10 937 1,067 o S3 55 O ct vo Working P o p u l a t i o n aged 15 and o v e r by I n d u s t r y ( e x c l u d i n g p e r s o n s out o f work) Mote: Figures in the column "Unskilled only" relate to males In Social Class V TAELE 25 - I n d u s t r i e s Females Males Industry All Industries I. 001. 002. 003. 103. 109. 216. 217* 218. 219. 229. 231. 239. 240. fishing _______^^ Married only 29,142 3,107 14,039 4,331 8,280 3 531 60 8,194 7,812 24 3 2 529 501 59 53 - - _ 1 28 2 6 1 - - ~ *" - - - 29 - 22 22 - 7 — tobacco Gr&in milling Bread and flour confectionery Biscuits Bacon curing, meat and fish products Milk products 1. Milk, b u t t e r and cheese 2. ice cream Sugar Cocoa, chocolate and sugar confectionery 1. Cocoa and chocolate 2. Sugar confectionery Fruit and vegetable products 1. jam, marmalade, j e l l i e s , e t c . 2. Other f r u i t and vegetable products Animal and poultry foods Food Industries not elsewhere specified 1. Margarine 2. Starch and miscellaneous foods Brewing and malting Other drink i n d u s t r i e s 1. S p i r i t d i s t i l l i n g and compounding 2. British wines, cider and perry 3. Soft drinks Tobacco Total 10 Mining and quarrying Food, drink and Total | . : — 1,625 334 726 259 114 301 1 456 430 421 9 38 17 12 41 7 9 - 2 209 30 179 42 1 i - - - 176 U7 115 2 71 18 17 i - - - 58 7 51 10 - - 2 350 39 311 19 - 3 63 1 16 _ - - - 5 4 63 3 16 5 IV. 261. 262. 263. 271. 272. 273. 274. 275. 276. 277. 311. 312. 313. 321. 322. 143 10 133 11 ; - 1 1 - • _ - j _ 331. 332. 333. 334. 335. 336. -337. 338. 339. Chemicals and a l l i e d i n d u s t r i e s Metal manufacture Iron and s t e e l (general) Steel tubes Iron castings, e t c . L i g i t metals Copper, brass and other base metals VI, i Total Coke ovens and manufactured fuel Mineral o i l r e f i n i n g Lubricating o i l s and greases Chemicals and dyes i . Eryestuffs 2. F e r t i l i z e r s and chemicals for p e s t control 3. otfter chemicals Pharmaceutical and t o i l e t preparations 1. Pharmaceutical preparations 2. Toilet preparations Explosives and fireworks Paint and p r i n t i n g ink Vegetable and animal o i l s , f a t s , soap and detergents 1. Vegetable and animal o i l s and f a t s 2. Soap, detergents, candles and glycerine Synthetic r e s i n s and p l a s t i e s materials Polishes, g e l a t i n e , adhesives, e t c . 1. Polishes 2. Gelatine, adhesives, e t c . V. - 109 85 84 1 2 Industry - _ 2 J " _ _ - | - Females Males Unskilled only 358 76 10 Coal mining Stone and s l a t e quarrying and mining 1. Stone quarrying and mining 2. Slate quarrying and mining Chalk, clay, sand and gravel extraction Other mining and quarrying i . iron ore mining and quarrying 3. Salt mines, brine p i t s , s a l t works Zt 4, 5. Others III. 211. 212. 213. 214. 215. forestry* Agriculture and h o r t i c u l t u r e 1. Farming (not f r u i t ) and stock-rearing 2. Agricultural contracting 3. Market gardening, f r u i t , flower, and seed growing" Forestry Fishing i . Sea fishing 2. Fishing in inland waters II. 101. 102. Agriculture, County t Engineering and e l e c t r i c a l goods Agricultural machinery {except t r a c t o r s ) Metal-working machine t o o l s Engineers* small tools and gauges I n d u s t r i a l engines 1. i n t e r n a l combustion engines 2. Other prime movers Textile machinery and accessories Contractors 1 plant and quarrying machinery Mechanical handling equipment Office machinery Other machinery 1. Mining machinery 2. P r i n t i n g and bookbinding machinery 3. Refrigerating machinery 4. Space-heating, v e n t i l a t i n g and a i r conditioning equipment 5. Pumps, compressors, e t c . 6. Scales and weighing machinery 7. Portable power tools 8. Other machinery except e l e c t r i c a l machinery 1 unskilled only Married only Total _ _ — _ _ _ _ _ ._ 7 _ - 1 _ - _ .- _ - _ - ^ _ ^ - IS 1 1 - 1 __ _ _ _ 10 _ ^ 4 - 4 - 5 5 -•,. 1 1 _ - 1 1 6 6 _ _ _ -' _ • • • • , - - • • 1 1 17 1 1 - _ _ _ _ ^ ~ - 727 59 294 72 - _ _ _ _ _ ~ ~ ~ ~ _ - _ i 8 _ l 12 ^ _ - ^ _ - ~ 89 1 8 U „ _ l l 29 9 93 - 3 l _ - l 1 _ _ o o p D ft o > B » l 4 4 - ' ~~ en CA3 tn TAtiLE 25 - I n d u s t r i e s Working Population aged 15 and over by Industry (excluding persons out of work) - continued Females Males Industry 341. 342, 349. 351. 352. 361. 362. 363. 364. 365. 369. I n d u s t r i a l p l a n t and steelwork 1. Boilers and boilerhouse p l a n t 2. Other i n d u s t r i a l plant and fabricated steelwork Ordnance and small arms Other mechanical engineering not elsewhere specified 1. Ball and r o l l e r bearings 2 . precision chains 3. Other mechanical engineering S c i e n t i f i c , surgical and photographic instruments, e t c . 1. Photographic equipment 2. Optical instruments 3. Spectacles, e t c . 4. Surgical, dental and veterinary Instruments and appliances 5. Other s c i e n t i f i c instruments and equipment Watches and clocks E l e c t r i c a l machinery Insulated wires and cables Telegraph and telephone apparatus Radio and other electronic apparatus 1. Valves 2. Radio and other electronic equipment and gramophones Domestic e l e c t r i c appliances Otfter e l e c t r i c a l goods 1. E l e c t r i c a l equipment for motor vehicles, cycles and a i r c r a f t 2. primary b a t t e r i e s 3. Secondary b a t t e r i e s (accumulators) 4. E l e c t r i c lamps 5. Miscellaneous e l e c t r i c a l goods VII. 370. 381. 382. 383. 384. 385. 389. 1 Shipbuilding and marine e n g i n e e r i n g 2 1 - - - 96 18 4 1 - - - - 354 15 - - 347 15 7 _ - _ _ 15 119 2 13 - - - - 1 4 7 1 1 66 l 256 1 65 - _ 18 "" - - - - - - 139 ~ 13 - 13 12 1 - 1 -. 1 3 3 i 2 48 — 83 - • 1 - - 1 1 2 - j IX. 391. 392. 393. 394. 395. 396. 399. 1 z&r - 1 131 ! 1 ! 18 139 117 22 Vehicles Motor vehicle manufacturing Motor cycle, tnree-wheel vehicle and pedal cycle manufacturing Aircraft manufacturing and r e p a i r i n g Locomotives and railway track equipment Railway carriages and wagons and trams perambulators, hand-trucks, e t c . - 7 ! Total - 96 i Males Industry Marri ed only - \ Shipbuilding and marine engineering 1. Shipbuilding and snip r e p a i r i n g 2. Marine engineering VIII. Unskilled only Total County - • specified Tools and implements Cutlery Bolts, nuts, screws, r i v e t s , e t c . Wire and wire manufactures Cans and metal boxes jewellery, p l a t e and r e f i n i n g of precious metals Metal i n d u s t r i e s not elsewhere specified 1. Metal furniture 2. Metal windows and door frames 3 . Safes, locks, l a t c h e s and keys 4. Springs 5. Drop forgings, e t c . 6. I n d u s t r i a l and domestic hollow-ware 7. Miscellaneous metal goods and metal finishings X. - - Metal goods n o t e l s e w h e r e Textiles 1 411. Production of man-made f i b r e s Spinning and doubling of cotton, flax and man-made f i b r e s 4 1 3 . Weaving of cotton, linen and man-made fibres 4 1 4 . Woollen and worsted 1. Wool s o r t i n g , cleaning e t c . , and combing and topmaking _ 2. Worsted spinning 3. Worsted weaving 4. Wool recovery 5. Woollen spinning and weaving 6. pressed f e l t 4 1 5 . Jute - ! 4 1 6 . Rope, twine and n e t 4 1 7 . Hosiery and other k n i t t e d goods 4 1 8 . Lace | 419. Carpets 4 2 1 . Narrow fabrics 422. Made-up-textll es 1. Household t e x t i l e s and handkerchiefs 2. Canvas goods and sacks 4 2 3 . Textile finishing 429. Other t e x t i l e i n d u s t r i e s 1. Asbestos 2. Other 412. _ - XI. 1 431. 432. 433. Leather, l e a t h e r goods and fur Leather (tanning and dressing) and fellmongery Leather goods Fur | Total Females Unskilled only Married only Total 220 16 135 78 3 2 136 - - _ - 14 124 76 - - - - - 2 11 2 - - - 3 1 2 - - - - 76 1 9 2 2,695 292 4,076 1,587 - - - - 341 1,294 136 69 139 19 449 1,197 220 131 547 66 9 11 1 4 - - 80 23 - _ _ - 116 14 79 1 250 81 100 1 248 247 1 243 .^ _ 140 43 - - - 14 6 14 237 282 87 33 89 33 _ 1 - - _ 8 8 652 651 1 36 23 1,483 1,482 1 121 _. - - - _' - 3 - - - - _ - - _ _ - 3 - ! _ 1 o ft GO c o s 446. 449. 450. 1,405 313 3 17 14 31 6 - 78 71 126 270 31 8 3 44 79 2 239 808 56 672 80 77 166 6 124 36 ~ ~ _ 25 2 52 13 478 150 223 96 2 153 1 1 1 55 2 202 i 86 - - - - 322 3 94 1 19 1 9 1 319 93 18 8 634 52 94 34 119 458 36 14 13 79 4 29 2 2 _ 2 4 2 2 25 77 12 60 5 - - — ) ) - • • ~ *" XVI. 491. 492493. 494. 495. •496499. 500. Rubber 1. lyres and tubes 2. Other rubber goods Linoleum, leather cloth, etc. Brushes and brooms Toys, games and sports equipment 1. Toys and games 2. Sports equipment Miscellaneous stationers' goods 1. Pens and pencils of a l l kinds, 2. Other stationers' goods Plastics moulding and fabricating Miscellaneous manufacturing Industries i . Musical instruments 2. Dther XVII. Construction Construction XVIII. XIII. 461. 462. 463464. 469. 479- 483. 486. 489. cement, e t c . Timber, furniture, etc. Timber F u r n i t u r e and u p h o l s t e r y Bedding, e t c . Shop and o f f i c e f i t t i n g Wooden c o n t a i n e r s and b a s k e t s 1. Coopering 2. Boxes, c r a t e s , e t c . 3. Baskets M i s c e l l a n e o u s wood and c o r k m a n u f a c t u r e s XV. 481. 482. glass, B r i c k s , f i r e c l a y a n d r e f r a c t o r y goods Pottery Glass 1. Glass {other than c o n t a i n e r s ) 2. Glass containers Cement Abrasives and b u i l d i n g m a t e r i a l s , e t c . , not elsewhere s p e c i f i e d 1. Abrasives 2. Building m a t e r i a l s , e t c . , n o t elsewhere specified XIV. 471. 472473474. 475- Bricks, pottery, Paper, _ 2 17 ) } p r i n t i n g and p u b l i s h i n g P a p e r and b o a r d Cardboard b o x e s , c a r t o n s and f i b r e - b o a r d packing cases M a n u f a c t u r e s of p a p e r a n d b o a r d n o t e l s e w h e r e specified 1. Wallpaper 2. Bags 3 . Manufactured s t a t i o n e r y 4. Other P r i n t i n g , p u b l i s h i n g of n e w s p a p e r s and p e r i o d i c a l s Other p r i n t i n g , p u b l i s h i n g , bookbinding, engraving, e t c . - 1 - -, ~ 16 1 38 1 — - _ " - 1 2 1 168 8 174 _ 43 l l 3 132 36 - _ - _ - - 92 32 4 30 5 12 2 Gas, electricity and water 601. Gas 602. Electricity 603. Water supply XEX. 701. 702. 703. 704. 705. 706. 707. 709. 810. - 43 Other manufacturing industries 820. Transport and communication Railways Road passenger transport 1. Omnibus and tramway service 2. Taxis and p r i v a t e - h i r e cars Road haulage contracting Sea transport Port and inland water transport Air transport Postal services and telecommunications Miscellaneous transport services and storage XX. Distributive trades Wholesale d i s t r i b u t i o n 1. Grocery and provisions, confectionery, drinks 2. Other food 3. Tobacco 4. Clothing, footwear and t e x t i l e s 5. paper, stationery and books 6. Petroleum products 7. Other non-food goods 8. General wholesale merchants Retail d i s t r i b u t i o n 1. Grocery and provisions 2. Other food 3. Confectionery, tobacco, newspapers 4. Clothing and footwear 5. Household goods 6. Other non-food goods 7. General s t o r e s , e t c . 46 16 8 3 1 2 _ - l l - - 5 2 1 1 - - 1 10 l 3 i - 1 445. Weatherproof o u t e r w e a r Men's and boys' t a i l o r e d outerwear Women's a n d g i r l s ' t a i l o r e d o u t e r w e a r O v e r a l l s and m e n ' s s h i r t s , u n d e r w e a r , e t c . 1 . Heavy o v e r a l l s 2 . Men's and boys* s h i r t s , u n d e r w e a r a n d nigjitwear D r e s s e s , l i n g e r i e , i n f a n t s * wear, e t c . 1 . Ligfrt o u t e r w e a r 2. Lingerie 3 . I n f a n t s ' wear . H a t s , caps and m i l l i n e r y 1. Felt hats 2. Other Dress i n d u s t r i e s n o t elsewhere s p e c i f i e d 1. Corsets 2. Gloves 3 . U m b r e l l a s and w a l k i n g s t i c k s 4. Other Footwear 167 1 441* 442. 443, AAA. C l o t h i n g and footwear - Ul 1 XII. 38 3 3& 16 3,346 1,121 55 13 3,346 1,121 55 13 j 16 2 1 368 155 17 4 84 200 84 25 89 41 9 7 1 3 1 - 139 123 30 58 25 25 8 8 8 3 3 3 - - 1,488 365 492 456 36 163 29 16 3 410 10 34 - 9 1 12 1 1 - 24 - 101 4 3,580 230 1,922 434 767 88 178 34 261 322 1 23 7 74 79 36 41 132 25 21 10 - - _. _ 2,229 645 514 89 369 312 268 32 2 9 60 26 21 - 4 2 7 5 - 2 13 1 1,698 377 208 165 585 112 136 115 o o c > 3 - 3 _ 391 106 63 37 119 27 30 9 - Cn en CD CO ss 1 Males Industry o > o o XX. 831. o Q County TABLE 25 - Industries : Working Population aged 15 and over by Industry (excluding persons out of work) continued 832. 875. 879. continued 881. 43 15 11 9 8 96 12 - - 3 1 - - 30 43 4 ~ Insurance, banking and finance i# Insurance 2. Banking and h i l l - d i s c o u n t i n g 3. Finance 4. Property owning and managing, e t c . services Accountancy services Educational services Legal services Medical and dental services l . Hospital and consultant services 2. Local authority h e a l t h services 3 . General medical services 4. Dental services 5. Other medical services Religious organisations Other professional and s c i e n t i f i c services 1. S c i e n t i f i c and technical services 2. Research and development services 3. Professional and s c i e n t i f i c organisations 4. Veterinary surgery 5. Other 70 32 17 12 9 19 Insurance, banking and finance P r o f e s s i o n a l and s c i e n t i f i c 488 164 129 92 103 j 3 1 8 • 1 -— ~ 899. 1 1 11 144 21 286 136 108 17 25 11 2 144 58 58 17 11 21 11 5 3 2 1,428 27 2,029 635 74 514 47 440 313 41 59 22 5 218 135 47 72 14 2 9 - 4 27 801 66 979 778 126 36 22 17 133 23 9 9 2 5 - 6 - 13 12 1 _ 2 6 J 887. 888. 889. 891. _ - 286 - 882. 883. 884. 885. 886. - 1 — 8 2 ' 1 1 4 6 ! 298 ! 14 | 300 224 52 18 1 5' 12 5 3 1 1 Unskilled only Total Married only Total 1,707 598 11 15 26 20 6 1 6 566 141 8 6 2 1 1 263 73 20 2 30 18 696 51 71 72 1 71 134 28 6 16 5 20 84 10 - - - - - 25 18 - - 1,582 388 352 49 584 208 376 998 440 15 543 45 18 27 343 31 10 21 18 343 296 26 270 56 3 2 51 Industry inadequately described 14 2 3 1 P l a c e o f work o u t s i d e the U.K. 54 4 10 Cinemas, t h e a t r e s , r a d i o , e t c . 1. Cinemas 2. Other Sport and other r e c r e a t i o n Betting Catering, h o t e l s , e t c . Laundries Dry cleaning, J oh dyeing, carpet heating. etc. Motor r e p a i r e r s , d i s t r i b u t o r s , garages and filling stations Repair of boots and shoes Hairdressing and manicure private domestic service 1. Resident 2. Non-resident Other services 1. Funeral services 2. Photography 3 . Welfare and charitable services 4, Community service not elsewhere specified 5. Service of Commonwealth and foreign governments 6, Trade associations and business services 7. Head offices of e n t e r p r i s e s operating abroad 8. Head offices of e n t e r p r i s e s I n t e r e s t e d In more than one a c t i v i t y 9, Other XXIV. P u b l i c administration and defence National government service 1-5. Defence 6. Other 906*, Local government service 1. Police 2. Fire service 3. Other 901. - Females 73 _ . - XXIII. Miscellaneous s e r v i c e s Dealing In coal, Guilders m a t e r i a l s , grain and a g r i c u l t u r a l supplies (wholesale or r e t a i l ) 1. Coal merchants 2. Builders* merchants 3. Corn, seed and a g r i c u l t u r a l merchants 4. Dealing in horses and livestock Dealing In other i n d u s t r i a l materials and machinery 1. Ores and metals 2. Timber 3. Hides, skins and l e a t h e r 4. Textile materials and yarns 5. I n d u s t r i a l machinery 6. Scrap and waste materials 7. Other i n d u s t r i a l materials 8. Dealing in i n d u s t r i a l materials generally XXIIo 871. 872. 873. 874. D i s t r i b u t i v e trades - Industry Married only Total 1 XXI, 860. Unskilled ^only Total Males Females 1,626 41 33 8 21 76 379 65 54 25 1 6 167 614 241 373 72 2 8 35 2 31 175 6 169 18 1 4 10 - - 24 _ 3 •Members of the Royal Ulster Constabulary and tiie Northern Ireland Fire Authority, which are not local government services, are included in the figures for M.L.H.906 in keeping with the Standard Industrial Classification. ' CO 0 OB o *+> o •1 ft sift H 3 ft 1 - 3 - 18 © Crown copyright 1964 Printed and published for the Government of Northern Ireland by H E R MAJESTY'S STATIONERY O F F I C E To be purchased from 80 Chichester Street, Belfast 1 York House, Kingsway, London W.C.2 423 Oxford Street, London W.l 13A Castle Street, Edinburgh 2 109 St. Mary Street, Cardiff 39 King Street, Manchester 2 50 Fairfax Street, Bristol 1 35 Smallbrook, Ringway, Birmingham 5 or through any bookseller Printed in England
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