Occupation |
Persons
[1]
|
MALES: Total Population. |
60,459
|
Total Occupied Population aged 15 and over. |
47,914
|
Total occupied (orders I-XXVII). |
37,186
|
Retired. |
10,728
|
Employers. |
1,655
|
Managers. |
2,705
|
Operatives. |
27,498
|
Self-employed. |
3,972
|
Unemployed. |
1,356
|
I. Fishermen. |
13
|
II. Agricultural, etc. occupations. |
1,076
|
III. Mining and quarring occupations. |
70
|
IV. Workers in ceramics, glass, cement, etc. |
109
|
V. Coal gas, etc. makers, workers in chemicals. |
36
|
VI. Workers in metal manufacture, engineering. |
4,428
|
VII. Textile workers. |
27
|
VIII. Leather workers, fur dressers. |
200
|
IX. Makers of textile goods and articles of dress. |
339
|
X. Makers of foods, drinks and tobacco. |
501
|
XI. Workers wood, cane and cork. |
1,154
|
XII. Makers of, workers in, paper; printers. |
374
|
XIII. Makers of products (n.e.s.). |
172
|
XIV. Workers in building and contracting. |
2,275
|
XV. Painters and decorators. |
1,373
|
XVI. Administrators, directors, managers (n.e.s.). |
1,311
|
XVII. Persons employed in transport, etc. |
4,053
|
XVIII. Commercial, finance, etc. (exc. Clerical). |
6,455
|
XIX. Professional and technical (exc. Clerical). |
2,631
|
XX. Persons employed in defence services. |
845
|
XXI. Persons engaged in entertainments and sport. |
543
|
XXII. Persons engaged in personal service. |
4,047
|
XXIII. Clerks, typists, etc. |
2,487
|
XXIV. Warehousemen, storekeepers, packers, etc. |
704
|
XXV. Stationary engine drivers, stokers, etc. |
222
|
XXVI. Workers in unskilled occupations (n.e.s.). |
1,301
|
XXVII. Other and undefined workers. |
440
|
XXVIII. Retired and not gainfully occupied. |
10,728
|
FEMALES: Total Population. |
84,386
|
Total Occupied Population aged 15 and over. |
71,979
|
Total occupied (orders I-XXVII). |
22,024
|
Retired. |
49,955
|
Employers. |
474
|
Managers. |
810
|
Operatives. |
18,394
|
Self-employed. |
1,539
|
Unemployed. |
807
|
II. Agricultural, etc. occupations. |
81
|
VI. Workers in metal manufacture, engineering. |
94
|
VII. Textile workers. |
98
|
VIII. Leather workers, fur dressers. |
23
|
IX. Makers of textile goods and articles of dress. |
704
|
X. Makers of foods, drinks and tobacco. |
118
|
XII. Makers of, workers in, paper; printers. |
86
|
XVI. Administrators, directors, mangeresses. |
205
|
XVII. Persons employed in transport, etc. |
599
|
XVIII. Commercial, finance, etc.(exc. Clerical). |
3,505
|
XIX. Professional and technical (exc. clerical). |
2,594
|
XXII. Persons engaged in personal service. |
8,869
|
XXIII. Clerks, typists, etc. |
4,098
|
XXIV. Warehousewomen, storekeepers, packers, etc. |
171
|
XXVI. Workers in unskilled occupations (n.e.s.). |
353
|
I,III-V,XI,XIII-XV,XX,XXI,XXV,XXVII Others. |
426
|
Click on the triangles for all about a particular number.
The system can only hold statistics for units listed in our administrative gazetteer, so some
rows from the original table may be missing. Sometimes big low-level units, like urban
parishes, were divided between more than one higher-level units, like Registration
sub-Districts. This is why some pages will give a higher figure for a lower-level
unit: it covers the whole of the lower-level unit, not just the part within the current
higher-level unit.