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Population report, Scotland, Vol. I, 1881

Table of Contents

  Display:   Sections   Tables    Page Titles    
(Pages i-vi) Contents
(10 pages)Expand subtree I. Report
(16 pages)Expand subtree II. Tables appended to the report
(321 pages)Contract subtree Population tables
(Pages 1-97)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 habitually; the number of rooms with windows; and the number of persons temporarily absent or present in each parish or subdivision thereof on the 4th April 1881. For comparison there is added the number of families, persons of each sex, houses, and rooms with windows in 1871
(Pages 99-126)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 habitually; and the number of rooms with windows
(Pages 127-155)Contract 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 habitually, and the number of rooms with windows in 1881. For comparison, there is added the corresponding number of males, females, and both sexes in 1871
(Pages 128-129) Summary of Scotland, its divisions and counties
(Page 130) Shetland
(Page 130) Orkney
(Page 130) Caithness
(Pages 130-131) Sutherland
(Pages 131-132) Ross and Comarty
(Page 132) Inverness
(Page 132) Nairn
(Page 133) Banff
(Pages 133-134) Aberdeen
(Page 135) Kincardine
(Pages 135-136) Forfar
(Page 139) Kinross
(Pages 139-140) Clackmannan
(Pages 140-141) Stirling
(Pages 141-142) Dumbarton
(Pages 142-143) Argyll
(Page 143) Bute
(Pages 143-144) Renfrew
(Pages 146-150) Lanark
(Page 150) Linlithgow
(Pages 150-152) Edinburgh
(Page 152) Haddington
(Pages 152-153) Berwick
(Page 153) Peebles
(Page 153) Selkirk
(Pages 153-154) Roxburgh
(Page 154) Dumfries
(Pages 154-155) Kirkcudbright
(Page 155) Wigtown
(Pages 157-163) 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 habitually, and the number of rooms with windows in 1881. For comparison, there is added the corresponding number of males, females, and both sexes in 1871
(Pages 165-176) V. The parliamentary, royal, and police burghs. Also the parliamentary districts of burghs and of 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 habitually, and the number of rooms with windows. Also, in addition, for the parliamentary districts of burghs and districts of counties, the number of electors on the roll, and the number of members returned to parliament
(Pages 177-188)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 189-199) VII. Explanation of the difference between the civil and registration counties
(Pages 201-260)Expand subtree VIII. Scotland in registration counties and registration districts, the districts being in alphabetical order under each county, arranged in two subdivisions, viz
(Pages 261-284)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 habitually, and the number of rooms with windows
(Pages 285-321)Expand subtree X. Number of families of different sizes, occupying houses of different sizes, in the registration counties and districts of Scotland
(Page 322) 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
(30 pages)Expand subtree Index to first volume