West Sussex AdmC — Current theme: Social Structure

The first census in 1801 simply divided people into those employed in agriculture and those in trade or manufacturing, and the 1841 census, the first to gather detailed occupational data, imposed no real order on it at all. However, the first occupational classification, introduced in 1851, was clearly concerned with social status as well as with what people made: it began with the Queen, followed by government officials and then by 'the learned professions'.

In the twentieth century a separate system of social classes was devised. Originally created to help understand mortality, the Registrar General's Social Classification was tabulated by the census from 1951 onwards. However, the Office for National Statistics no longer officially use the social classification, but instead provide data for an essentially similar set of 'Social Grades' defined by the British Market Research Society. To provide a longer perspective we have re-organised earlier occupational information to the same system. Like the published 1951 data, all our figures are limited to men.

This is only possible where we have very detailed occupational statistics at district-level, so these earlier censuses are limited to 1841, where the replies to the occupational question were tabulated almost raw; 1881, where we can use complete data from the enumerator's books; and 1931, which produced the most detailed of all occupational reports.



We hold these detailed statistics for Sussex, which we graph and tabulate here:

Available datasets Period covered Variables
(number of categories)
Grouped Social Class 1951 to 1971 Registrar General's Social Class, grouped (4)
Social Class 1951 to 1971 Registrar General's Social Class (6)
Socio-Econmic Groups Total (males only) 1961 to 1971 Total of all Socio-Economic Groups (1)
Socio-Economic Group (males only) 1971 Socio-Economic Groups, with sub-groups (39)
Socio-Economic Group (males only) 1961 to 1971 Socio-Economic Groups (17)

Read more about how we hold statistics here.