The 1851 Census for England was taken on the
night of 30 March 1851. The following information was
requested:
Name of street, place, road,
etc.
House number or
name
Name of each person that had
spent the night in that household
Relationship of person
enumerated to the head of the family
Person's marital
status
Age at last birthday (sex is
indicated by which column the age is recorded in)
Person's rank, profession,
or occupation
Person's place of birth (if
outside of England or Wales, only the country may be
given)
Whether blind, deaf, or
idiot
Enumeration forms were distributed to all
households a couple of days before census night and the complete
forms were collected the next day. All responses were to reflect
the individual's status as of 30 March 1851 for all individuals who
had spent the night in the house. People who were traveling or
living abroad were enumerated at the location where they spent the
night on census night. All of the details from the individual forms
were later sorted and copied into enumerators' books, which are the
records we can view images of today. The original householders
schedules from 1841 to 1901 were destroyed.
The clerks who compiled and reviewed the census
data made a variety of marks on the returns. Unfortunately, many of
these tally marks were written over personal information and some
fields, such as ages, can be difficult to read as a result. More
useful marks include a single slash between households within a
building and a double slash separating households in separate
buildings.
Extended Description:
How the census forms are
organized:
Census returns were collected according to
registration district. These returns were divided into
sub-districts and assigned consecutive piece numbers for reference
purposes. The piece numbers begin in London with number one and
work roughly south to north, followed by the Welsh districts and
then the Isle of Man and Channel Islands. You will find the piece
number on a paper strip at the bottom of every image, following the
PRO class number. There may be hundreds of pieces within a
county.
In addition to the piece number, each page of
the returns includes a folio number and/or a page number. The folio
number was stamped onto every other page before microfilming and is
located in the upper right hand corner of the image. Folio
numbering usually starts over at the beginning of each piece. The
page number is part of the printed form and is found on every page
in the upper right hand corner. The page numbers start over at the
beginning of every enumeration district. A full reference number
for a record in the 1851 census includes the PRO class number (HO
107), the piece number, the folio number, and the page number. Keep
in mind that you may have to look at several enumeration districts
to find the page you want within a given folio since the page
numbers start over with every ED.
Known problems with the 1851
Census:
The following parishes and
hamlets are missing from these piece numbers. Some of these
parishes and hamlets represent the entirety of the piece, while
others are just portions of a piece.
1762
|
Cambridgeshire and
Suffolk
|
Ashley-cum-Silverley
Burwell
Exning
Landwade
Newmarket
Reach
Snailwell
St Mary
Swaffham Prior
|
1763
|
Cambridgeshire and
Suffolk
|
Dalham
Dunstall-Green
Gazeley
Higham Green
Kennett
Lidgate
Moulton
Ousden
Southwell Park
|
1785
|
Essex
|
Aythorp-Roothing
Bardfield-Saling
Barnston
Broxted
Chickney
Easton Lodge
Felstead
Great Bardfield
Great Canfield
Great Dunmow
Great Easton
Hatfield-Broad-Oak or Hatfield Regis
High Easter
High Roothing
Leaden-Roothing
Lindsell
Little Bardfield
Little Canfield
Little Easton
Little Dunmow
Margaret Roothing
Morrell-Roothing
Stebbing
Takeley
Thaxted
Tilty
White Roothing
|
1852
|
Dorset
|
Bagbere
Bellchalwell
Child Okeford
Fifehead-Neville
Hammoon
Haselbury-Bryan
Hinton St Mary
Ibberton
Manston
Newton
Okeford-Fitzpaine
Shillingstone or Shilling-Okeford
Stoke-Wake
Sturminster-Newton-Castle
Woolland
|
In addition, the census
returns of the following localities have been damaged by water
during storage. Most of the damaged pieces are in the area of
Manchester.
2332
|
Yorkshire
|
Broadroyd Head
Carlton
Carr Green
Cudworth with High & Low Cudworth
Darton
Darton Lane Head
Darton with Blacker
Mapplewell
Notton
Roystone
Staincross & Swallow Hill
Woolley
|
2219
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Ardwick
Birth in Rusholme
Burnage
Chorlton-dum-Hardy
Didsbury
Gorton
Levenshulme
Openshaw
Rusholme
Withington
|
2220
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Ardwick
Chorlton-upon-Medlock
|
2221
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Moss-side
Hulme
|
2222/1
|
Lancashire
|
Eccles
Pendleton
|
2222/2
|
Lancashire
|
Eccles
Pendlebury
|
2222/3
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Broughton-with Kersall
|
2223
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Salford
|
2224
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Salford
|
2225
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
|
2226
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
|
2227
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
|
2228
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
|
2229
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
|
2230
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
|
2231
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Bradford
Beswick
Newton with Culcheth & Kirkmanshulme
|
2232
|
Lancashire
|
Manchester
Alt
Alt-Edge
Alt-Hill
Ashton-under-Lyne
Blackley
Cheetham
Crumpsall
Failsworth
Great Heaton
Harpurhey
Knott Lanes with Lees
Knott Lanes & Wood Park
Little Heaton
Moston
Prestwich
Taunton
|
2233
|
Lancashire
|
Ashton-under-Lyne
Ashton Town
|
2240
|
Lancashire
|
Prestwich
Oldham (St Mary's, St Peter's, Wernet, and Westwood
Wards)
|
Connecting piece numbers and
localities:
To identify which parishes or townships are
included in a piece, please use The
National Archives online catalogue. Search the catalogue by
entering the series code and the piece number, e.g. HO 107/217, in
the box in the upper left that says "Type reference
here."
Alternatively, you can search the catalogue
vice-versa (identify which piece number a particular parish or
township is part of) by putting a place name in the "Word or
phrase" field and "HO 107" in the "Department or Series code"
field.
Some of the above information was taken from
"Chapter 6: Census Returns," Ancestral Trails: The Complete Guide
to British Genealogy and Family History by Mark D. Herber
(Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1998) and Using
Census Returns, Pocket Guides to Family History by David Annal
(Richmond, Surrey: Public Record Office, 2002).
Source
Information:
Ancestry.co.uk. 1851 England Census
[database online]. Provo, Utah: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2005. Indexed
by MyFamily.com, Inc. from microfilmed schedules of the 1851
Channel Islands Census. Data imaged from the National Archives,
London, England. The National Archives gives no warranty as to the
accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the
information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of
research, private study or education. Applications for any other
use should be made to the National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey
TW9 4DU. Infringement of the above condition may result in legal
action.
|