1851
CENSUS PLACES OF WORSHIP
Popularly called the 1851 Religious Census,
this demographic census is actually a census of “accommodation and attendance
at worship." The printed instructions to the clergy stated its purpose,
which was to discover "how far the means of Religious Instruction provided
in
Because of the controversy generated by this
census, the study was never repeated. The leadership of the established church
(Church of England or Presbyterian in
In preparation for the census, each
enumerator was to search out every church, chapel or room in his district
used as a regular place of worship. A printed form was given to the responsible
person (usually the minister) to fill out on the census Sunday. However,
reporting was not compulsory. 34,467 forms for
A very detailed report for
The 1851 religious census figures of
attendance are not accurate. Sometimes the minister (or person reporting)
rounded off the number. Local circumstances such as rain or an epidemic meant
fewer than usual attended church that Sunday. Established ministers accused the
dissenting churches of packing more people in than normally attended to boost
their numbers.
Historians, demographers and others have used
the religious census to study the pattern of country-wide religious worship.
Some interesting conclusions about
Nonconformity
was stronger in the north of
Dissenters
were more populous in industrial areas than in agricultural areas.
Catholism
was strongest in
David M. Thompson did an extensive study of
Leicestershire and made some very interesting observations based on his study.
His conclusions were reported in the chapter he wrote entitled "The
Religious Census of 1851" in The Census and Social Structure.
Nonconformist
chapels are found in villages where there is no single, large landowner
dominating the area.
Catholic
chapels are usually found near the homes of old
Catholic families or in places where there are Irish laborers.
Chapels
of older dissenting groups are often found in villages with a number of
long-established freehold farmers.
Methodist
chapels are more likely found in villages with an 18th century industrial or
mining development or in villages where there are agricultural laborers.
Nonconformist
chapels are likely found in the larger villages where the population had grown.
Church
of England parishes generally do better than average in places of smaller
population, undivided landownership and where the men are employed in agricultural
pursuits. Conversely, attendance at Church of England parishes was lower than
average in places of high population.
For the genealogist, the value of the 1851
religious census is as a locator of churches attended by the people in
Annotated Bibliography of Other Sources
Not Used in the Exercise
The Census and Social Structure, Richard Lawton, editor. FHL 942
X2ce. This book contains excellent chapters on both the 1851 religious
census and the education census. Also, an extensive bibliography of sources is
given. The appendixes include published tables summarizing census data reported
in the Parliamentary Papers.
Land. Church and People, Joan Thirsk, editor. FHL 942 H2lp. Pages
179-185 contain useful background information about the religious census.
The Local Historian, Vol. 11, #7, 1975. FHL 942 B2ah.
Found is this volume is an article by R. W. Ambler entitled “The 1851 Census of
Religious Worship."
PRO Information Leaflet #51 "The
Ecclesiastical Census of 1851." FHL Ref 942.1/Ll A3pa.
1851 Census--Religion
Schedules
Partially printed by the Irish University Press (IUP)
series of British parliamentary papers under the volumes labeled
"Population" vols. 9-11. See JN501 .G836x (FHL Q942
N2bpo). Arranged by County with data also for major
cities and registration districts.
Further details may be
gleaned from the House of Commons Journals, specifically vol. 90 for 1852-53.
See on microfiche under J30l .P39x, vol. xc (not
at FHL)
The returns for individual counties have been microfilmed. Please use “film/fiche number search” for film #2206666 to locate the catalog record. NOTE: This film number was selected from the 72 films simply as a number that less subject to being miscopied, there is nothing special about that particular film. You can also locate the catalog record by doing a keyword search for “1851 religious census”.
Some counties’ returns have also been printed. So far
I’ve identified:
Buckinghamshire,
FHL 942.575 B4ba, vol. 27
Derbyshire,
FHL 942.51 H25de, vol. 23
Devon,
FHL 942.35 K2d
Hampshire,
FHL 942.27 B4hr, vol. 12
Hertfordshire,
FHL 942.58 B4hr, vol. 11
Kent,
942.23 K2r
Lincolnshire,
DA670 .L69 R5, vol. 72 & FHL 942.53 B4l
Norfolk,
FHL 942.61 B4rs, vol. 62
Nottingham,
942.52 H2cL no. 7
Oxfordshire, FHL 942.57 B40, vol. 55
Suffolk,
FHL 942.64 B4s, vol. 39