Appleby AP/CP — Current theme: Industry

Even the first census of 1801 divided the population into those 'chiefly employed in agriculture', those 'chiefly employed in trade, manufacturers or handicraft', and others. From 1841 onwards, information was gathered on each person's occupation and this formed the basis for very detailed tables. The 1841 occupational tables, used here, listed over 3,000 different occupational titles. This was partly because no advance plans had been made for dealing with the enormous range of job titles people gave, but by 1881 the more organised classification used in the county level tables covered 414 categories. When providing an overview of how economic activity has changed since 1841, we are blending together very diverse data, so we use a simple seven-way classification.

In general, early census reports applied just one classification to occupations, which led to three separate issues getting mixed up: social status, what the individual worker did ("occupation"), and what their employer's business was ("industry"). Modern censuses have separate tables for each of these, and from 1931 onwards we mainly present data on industry. NB our 1841 data are geographically crude, which results in some districts in the same county having identical figures.



We hold these detailed statistics for Appleby, which we graph and tabulate here:

Available datasets Period covered Variables
(number of categories)
All occupied persons, in 3 Categories 1831 1801 Occupational Categories (3)
Males aged 20 & over, in 9 occupational categories 1831 1831 Occupational Categories (9)
Males aged 20 & over, in four industrial categories 1831 1831 Occupational Categories (simplified) (4)
Occupation data classified into the 24 1881 'Orders', plus sex 1881 Sex (2)
1881 Occupational Orders (25)

Read more about how we hold statistics here.