1911 Census of England and Wales, Census Returns of England and Wales, 1911, giving details of Areas, Houses, Families or separate occupiers, and Population:- Registration Areas, Table 5 : " Registration Counties, Districts and Sub-districts with their constituent civil parishes. - Urban or Rural District in which each parish is situated; Area; families or separate occupiers, and population, 1901 and 1911; and population enumerated in Institutions, large establishments, and on vessels, &c., 1911".

List for top level Wales

List for England and Wales Dep

click on unit name for its home page

If Drill-down appears click for more detailed statistics
Area in Statute Acres (Land and Inland Water)
[1]
Families or Separate Occupiers
Population
1901
[2]
1911
[3]
1901
1911
Persons
[4]
Persons
[5]
Monmouthshire AdmC Drill-down 349,552 Show data context 59,670 Show data context 79,273 Show data context 298,076 Show data context 395,719 Show data context
Radnorshire AdmC Drill-down 301,165 Show data context 5,068 Show data context 5,086 Show data context 23,281 Show data context 22,590 Show data context
Montgomeryshire AdmC Drill-down 510,110 Show data context 12,394 Show data context 12,357 Show data context 54,901 Show data context 53,146 Show data context
Denbighshire AdmC Drill-down 426,084 Show data context 28,584 Show data context 31,737 Show data context 131,582 Show data context 144,783 Show data context
Flintshire AdmC Drill-down 163,025 Show data context 18,082 Show data context 20,608 Show data context 81,485 Show data context 92,705 Show data context
Glamorgan AdmC Drill-down 518,865 Show data context 171,096 Show data context 224,556 Show data context 859,931 Show data context 1,120,910 Show data context
Brecknockshire AdmC Drill-down 469,281 Show data context 11,863 Show data context 12,809 Show data context 54,213 Show data context 59,287 Show data context
Carmarthenshire AdmC Drill-down 588,472 Show data context 29,748 Show data context 34,883 Show data context 135,328 Show data context 160,406 Show data context
Pembrokeshire AdmC Drill-down 393,003 Show data context 19,796 Show data context 20,860 Show data context 87,894 Show data context 89,960 Show data context
Cardiganshire AdmC Drill-down 443,189 Show data context 15,584 Show data context 15,570 Show data context 61,078 Show data context 59,879 Show data context
Merionethshire AdmC Drill-down 422,372 Show data context 11,400 Show data context 11,183 Show data context 48,852 Show data context 45,565 Show data context
Caernarvonshire AdmC Drill-down 365,986 Show data context 29,282 Show data context 30,460 Show data context 125,649 Show data context 125,043 Show data context
Anglesey AdmC Drill-down 176,630 Show data context 12,315 Show data context 12,740 Show data context 50,606 Show data context 50,928 Show data context

Notes:

The following notes to the table appeared in the original report.

1 Registration Districts are co-extensive with Poor Law Unions or Parishes of the same names with the exception of the Registration Districts of [details depend on Division].
2 Where the name of the Administrative County in which a parish is situated differs from that of the Registration County, the name of the former is added in italics in Column 1; the differences between Registration Counties and Administrative Counties are shown in Table 7.
3 In all Counties, Districts, Sub-Districts and Civil Parishes marked + changes were made in boundaries between the Census of 1901 and that of 1911.
4 The places named in footnotes as being included in Civil Parishes are localities having no defined boundaries such as hamlets, villages, &c. In many cases names applied to localities serve also as the names of Ecclesiastical Parishes, Wards, &c. In many cases of alterations of boundary between the Census of 1901 and 1911, the figures both for 1901 and 1911 relate to the new areas. Particulars of alterations in Registration Districts are given in Table 6, and of alterations in Civil Parishes in Table 13, Vol. I. For particulars of alterations in Registration Sub-Districts reference should be made to the Registrar-General's Annual Reports.
5 The figures in Column 11 represent the population enumerated:-
  1. In Military and Naval Barracks, Hospitals, Lunatic Asylums, Prisons, and Certified Reformatory and Industrial Schools (see Tables 17 and 20, Vol. I).
  2. In other Establishments, including private households, of which the number of inmates exceeded 15.
  3. On board Vessels (see Table 21, Vol. I).
  4. In Barns, Sheds, Caravans, &c., or in the Open Air (see Table 22, Vol. I).
6 The figures in Columns 4, 5 and 10 correspond to the total number of schedules collected. If the entries in Columns 10 and 11 be deducted from those in Columns 5 and 7 respectively, the resultant figures, relating, as they do, exclusively to families each containing no more than 15 persons may be taken as a rough indication of the number of private families and of persons comprising such families. A closer approximation to the number of private families in the larger areas will be found in the Tables relating to Tenements, to be published in a later volume.
7 In the Report on the Census of 1901, the corresponding Table is numbered 12 in the several County Volumes.

Click on the triangles for all about a particular number.

This website does not try to provide an exact replica of the original printed census tables, which often had thousands of rows and far more columns than will fit on our web pages. Instead, we let you drill down from national totals to the most detailed data available. The column headings are those that appeared in the original printed report. The numbers presented here, which are the same ones we use to create statistical maps and graphs, come from the census table and have usually been carefully checked.

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.