INDUSTRY |
Males.
[1]
|
Females.
[2]
|
Total in Industries (excluding persons out of work). |
6,667
|
4,637
|
Out of work (not included below). |
1,090
|
471
|
I.--Fishing. |
0
|
0
|
II.--Agriculture. |
261
|
17
|
III.--Mining and Quarrying, and Treatment of Non-Metalliferous Mining and Quarry Products. 1. Mining and Quarrying. |
43
|
0
|
2. Treatment of Non-Metalliferous Mine and Quarry Products (excluding Gas Works). |
0
|
0
|
IV.--Manufacture of Bricks, Pottery, Glass, etc. |
24
|
0
|
V.--Manufacture of Chemicals, Dyes, Explosives, Paints, Oils, Grease. 1, 2. Chemicals and Explosives. |
18
|
2
|
3. White Lead, Paints, and Varnish. |
0
|
0
|
4, 5. Greases, Glue, &c. |
5
|
0
|
VI.--Manufacture of Metals, Machines, Implements, Conveyances, Jewellery, Watches. 1. Smelting Converting, Refining, and Rolling of Iron and Steel. |
0
|
0
|
2. Extracting and Refining of Other Metals and Alloys. |
0
|
0
|
3. Founding and Other Secondary Processes in Metal Working. |
14
|
0
|
4. Engineering (not Marine or Electrical). |
479
|
37
|
5. Electrical Installations, Cables, and Apparatus. |
21
|
1
|
6. Construction and Repair of Vehicles. |
30
|
0
|
7. Ship Building and Repairing and Marine Engineering. |
1
|
0
|
8. Cutlery and Small Tools (not Machine Tools). |
1
|
0
|
9. Other Metal Industries (not Precious Metals, Jewellery, or Plate). |
71
|
2
|
10. Precious Metals, Jewellery, Plate. |
2
|
0
|
VII.--Manufacture of Textiles and Textile Goods (not Dress); Cellulose. 1. Cotton. |
2,612
|
3,354
|
2. Wool, Worsted, and Shoddy. |
3
|
4
|
3. Silk, Natural and Artificial. |
12
|
3
|
4. Flax, Hemp, Jute. |
0
|
0
|
5, 6. Mixed Fibres and Miscellaneous Products. |
7
|
7
|
7. Textile Dyeing, Printing, Bleaching, Calendering, Finishing. |
372
|
71
|
VIII.--Preparation of Skins and Leather, and Manufacture of Goods of Leather and Leather Substitute (not Clothing or Footwear). 1. Furs, Skins, Leather. |
11
|
4
|
2. Saddlery, Harness, Bags, Trunks, and Other Goods of Leather and Leather Substitute (not Clothing or Footwear). |
5
|
1
|
IX.--Manufacture of Clothing (not Knitted). |
159
|
313
|
X.--Manufacture of Food, Drink, Tobacco. 1. Food. |
176
|
54
|
2. Drink. |
11
|
0
|
3. Tobacco, Cigars, Cigarettes, Snuff. |
0
|
0
|
XI.--Wood Working; Manufacture of Cane and Basket Ware, Furniture, Fittings (not elsewhere enumerated). 1. Wood Working and Basket Ware. |
53
|
2
|
2. Furniture (not Metal or Basket); Fittings. |
118
|
1
|
XII.--Paper Making; Manufacture of Stationery and Stationery Requisites; Printing, Bookbinding, and Photography. |
41
|
18
|
XIII.-- Building, Decorating, Stone and Slate Gutting and Dressing, and Contracting. |
225
|
3
|
XIV.--Other Manufacturing Industries. 1. Rubber. |
2
|
0
|
2. Musical Instruments. |
5
|
0
|
3. Other Manufacturing Industries. |
8
|
0
|
XV.--Gas, Water, Electricity. 510-6. Gas Works Service. |
60
|
1
|
518-21. Water Works Service. |
31
|
0
|
523-9. Electricity Supply Service. |
30
|
1
|
XVI.--Transport and Communication. 1. Railways. |
193
|
4
|
2. Road. |
188
|
4
|
3-7. Water, Air and Other Transport and Communication. |
4
|
1
|
XVII.--Commerce and Finance. 600-670. Distributive Trades. |
594
|
221
|
680-699. Other Commerce and Finance. |
89
|
18
|
XVIII.--Public Administration and Defence. 1. Defence. |
4
|
0
|
2. Central Civil Government (British and Imperial). |
56
|
18
|
3. Local Government. |
313
|
127
|
XIX.--Professions. |
92
|
42
|
XX.--Entertainments and Sport. |
32
|
6
|
XXI.--Personal Service (including Hotels and Catering, but excluding Government and Local Authority). |
182
|
299
|
XXII.--Other Industries or Industry not stated. |
9
|
1
|
X.--Industry not stated (included in Order XXII). |
8
|
1
|
The following notes to the table appeared in the original report.
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.