Close subtreeCensus   
      Open subtree England
      Open subtree Great Britain
      Open subtree Ireland
      Open subtree Northern Ireland
      Close subtree Scotland
        1831
        1841
        1851
        1861
        1871
        1881
        1891
        1901
        1911
        1921
        1931
      Open subtree Wales

Open subtreeRegistrar General Open subtreeTNA Enumerators' Books Open subtreeTNA Census - Other TNA Registration TNA Maps Open subtreeEssays Open subtreeLegislation Bibliography

Population report, Scotland. Vol. I, 1891

Table of Contents

  Display:   Sections   Tables    Page Titles    
(Pages i-vi) Title and contents
(Pages vii-xvii) I. Report
(15 pages)Contract subtree II. Tables appended to the report
(Page xviii) Table 1. Population of Scotland at decimal periods since 1801
(Page xviii) Table 2. Population in mainland and Islands of Scotland, 1861, 1871, 1881, and 1891
(Page xviii) Table 3. Grouping of population in towns, villages, and rural districts
(Page xix) Table 4. Sexes and their proportions in Scotland, 1801-1891
(Page xix) Table 5. Increase of males and females in decennial periods, 1801-1891, with percentage of increase
(Page xix) Table 6. Males and females in Scotland and the proportion of females to every hundred males in 1891
(Page xix) Table 7. Sexes in the mainland and insular districts of Scotland in 1881, and 1891, their increase or decrease and proportions
(Page xx) Table 8. Number and proportion of the sexes in the towns, villages, and rural districts of Scotland in 1891
(Page xx) Table 9. Families, houses, rooms, and proportion of persons to each in 1881, and 1891
(Page xx) Table 10. Number of families of different sizes, number of persons in each family, and percentage of families of different sizes to the total families in Scotland in 1881 and 1891
(Page xxi) Table 11. Number and proportion of families in houses of different sizes in Scotland in 1861, 1871, 1881, and 1891
(Page xxi) Table 12. Number of persons speaking Gaelic only, and Gaelic and English in Scotland, with their respective percentages to the total population of Scotland in 1891
(Page xxi) Table 13. Public institutions for the healthy, the sick, lunatics, deaf and dumb, and blind, also conventual institutions, military and militia barracks and forts, prisons, reformatories, royal navy, merchant shipping, and vagrants
(Pages xxii-xxiii) Table 14. Population of Scotland enumerated in civil counties in 1831, 1841, 1851, 1861, 1871, 1881, and 1891
(Pages xxiv-xxv) Table 15. Increase of population in the civil divisions and counties of Scotland in decennial periods from 1831 to 1891
(Page xxvi) Table 16. Rates of increase of the population of Scotland in decennial periods from 1831 to 1891
(Page xxvii) Table 17. Area of Scotland in statute acres, and in square miles; with the number of persons to each square mile, the number of acres to each person, and the proximity or calculated average distance in yards between each two persons
(Page xxviii) Table 18. Population, families, houses, and rooms in the civil counties of Scotland in 1891, with their several proportions to each other
(Page xxix) Table 19. Population of Scotland, 1891, in civil divisions and counties, excluding the army, navy, and merchant shipping
(Pages xxx-xxxi) Table 20. Householder's schedule
(342 pages)Contract subtree Population tables
(Pages 1-99)Expand subtree I. Scotland in civil counties and parishes, showing the acreage, the number of families, of houses inhabited, uninhabited, and building; the number of the total population and of persons of each sex; the number of persons speaking Gaelic only, and Gaelic and English; the number of rooms with windows; and the number of persons temporarily absent or present in each parish or sub-division thereof on the 5th April 1891. For comparison there is added the number of families, persons of each sex, houses, and rooms with windows in 1881
(Pages 101-131)Expand subtree II. The civil counties of Scotland in their ecclesiastical sub-divisions, showing in each the number of families, of houses inhabited, uninhabited, and building; the number of the total population and of each sex; the number of persons speaking Gaelic only, and Gaelic and English; and the number of rooms with windows
(Pages 133-161)Expand subtree III. The civil counties of Scotland grouped in town, village, and rural districts, showing the number of families, of houses inhabited, uninhabited, and building; the number of the total population and of each sex; the number of persons speaking Gaelic only, and Gaelic and English, and the number of rooms with windows in 1891. For comparison, there is added the corresponding number of males, females, and both sexes in 1881
(Pages 163-169) IV. The inhabited Islands of Scotland, arranged according to counties, showing the number of families, of houses inhabited, uninhabited, and building; the number of the total population, and of each sex; the number of persons speaking Gaelic only, and Gaelic and English, and the number of rooms with windows in 1891. For comparison, there is added the corresponding number of males, females, and both sexes in 1881
(Pages 171-189) V. The parliamentary, royal, and police burghs, also the parliamentary districts of burghs and of counties, and wards of burghs showing the number of families, of houses inhabited, uninhabited, and building; the number of the total population and of each sex; the number of persons speaking Gaelic only, and Gaelic and English, and the number of rooms with windows
(Pages 191-205)Expand subtree VI. Public institutions, etc., arranged according to counties, showing the number of males, females, and both sexes in each; also the number of male, female, and total benefited inmates, the male, female, and total officials, and the male, female, and total members of the officials' families, the whole being subdivided into nine series of tables, viz.:-
(Pages 207-217) VII. Explanation of the difference between the civil and registration counties
(Pages 219-278)Expand subtree VIII. Scotland in registration counties and registration districts, the districts being in alphabetical order under each county, arranged in two sub-divisions. Viz.:-
(Pages 279-302)Expand subtree IX. Scotland in school board counties and districts, showing the number of families, of houses inhabited, uninhabited, and building; the number of the total population and of each sex; the number of persons speaking Gaelic only, and Gaelic and English, and the number of rooms with windows
(Pages 303-342)Expand subtree X. Number of families of different sizes, occupying houses of different sizes, in the registration counties and districts of Scotland
(Page 343) Constitution of registration districts having different names from the parishes in which they are situated, or composed of more, or parts of more, than one parish
(Pages 345-368) Index to volume I