1931 Census of England and Wales, Industry Tables, Table 3 : " Industries (condensed list) of Males and Females (exclusive of persons out of work)".

Show London AdmC table Islington MetB  
INDUSTRY Males.
[1]
Females.
[2]
Total in Industries (excluding persons out of work). 95,970 Show data context 56,609 Show data context
Out of work (not included below). 13,480 Show data context 4,720 Show data context
I.--Fishing. 1 Show data context 0 Show data context
II.--Agriculture. 205 Show data context 12 Show data context
III.--Mining and Quarrying, and Treatment of Non-Metalliferous Mining and Quarry Products.
     1. Mining and Quarrying.
35 Show data context 13 Show data context
     2. Treatment of Non-Metalliferous Mine and Quarry Products (excluding Gas Works). 71 Show data context 62 Show data context
IV.--Manufacture of Bricks, Pottery, Glass, etc. 373 Show data context 233 Show data context
V.--Manufacture of Chemicals, Dyes, Explosives, Paints, Oils, Grease.
     1, 2. Chemicals and Explosives.
538 Show data context 604 Show data context
     3. White Lead, Paints, and Varnish. 209 Show data context 52 Show data context
     4, 5. Greases, Glue, &c. 274 Show data context 153 Show data context
VI.--Manufacture of Metals, Machines, Implements, Conveyances, Jewellery, Watches.
     1. Smelting Converting, Refining, and Rolling of Iron and Steel.
12 Show data context 5 Show data context
     2. Extracting and Refining of Other Metals and Alloys. 43 Show data context 16 Show data context
     3. Founding and Other Secondary Processes in Metal Working. 484 Show data context 102 Show data context
     4. Engineering (not Marine or Electrical). 2,444 Show data context 394 Show data context
     5. Electrical Installations, Cables, and Apparatus. 2,098 Show data context 1,396 Show data context
     6. Construction and Repair of Vehicles. 1,723 Show data context 135 Show data context
     7. Ship Building and Repairing and Marine Engineering. 15 Show data context 5 Show data context
     8. Cutlery and Small Tools (not Machine Tools). 165 Show data context 51 Show data context
     9. Other Metal Industries (not Precious Metals, Jewellery, or Plate). 2,283 Show data context 667 Show data context
     10. Precious Metals, Jewellery, Plate. 831 Show data context 341 Show data context
VII.--Manufacture of Textiles and Textile Goods (not Dress); Cellulose.
     1. Cotton.
31 Show data context 56 Show data context
     2. Wool, Worsted, and Shoddy. 33 Show data context 20 Show data context
     3. Silk, Natural and Artificial. 49 Show data context 46 Show data context
     4. Flax, Hemp, Jute. 12 Show data context 5 Show data context
     5, 6. Mixed Fibres and Miscellaneous Products. 294 Show data context 647 Show data context
     7. Textile Dyeing, Printing, Bleaching, Calendering, Finishing. 70 Show data context 21 Show data context
VIII.--Preparation of Skins and Leather, and Manufacture of Goods of Leather and Leather Substitute (not Clothing or Footwear).
     1. Furs, Skins, Leather.
561 Show data context 506 Show data context
     2. Saddlery, Harness, Bags, Trunks, and Other Goods of Leather and Leather Substitute (not Clothing or Footwear). 537 Show data context 763 Show data context
IX.--Manufacture of Clothing (not Knitted). 2,944 Show data context 9,395 Show data context
X.--Manufacture of Food, Drink, Tobacco.
     1. Food.
2,186 Show data context 2,090 Show data context
     2. Drink. 735 Show data context 346 Show data context
     3. Tobacco, Cigars, Cigarettes, Snuff. 333 Show data context 963 Show data context
XI.--Wood Working; Manufacture of Cane and Basket Ware, Furniture, Fittings (not elsewhere enumerated).
     1. Wood Working and Basket Ware.
670 Show data context 67 Show data context
     2. Furniture (not Metal or Basket); Fittings. 2,909 Show data context 594 Show data context
XII.--Paper Making; Manufacture of Stationery and Stationery Requisites; Printing, Bookbinding, and Photography. 5,694 Show data context 3,646 Show data context
XIII.-- Building, Decorating, Stone and Slate Gutting and Dressing, and Contracting. 8,217 Show data context 107 Show data context
XIV.--Other Manufacturing Industries.
     1. Rubber.
317 Show data context 139 Show data context
     2. Musical Instruments. 1,029 Show data context 177 Show data context
     3. Other Manufacturing Industries. 2,285 Show data context 2,395 Show data context
XV.--Gas, Water, Electricity.
     510-6. Gas Works Service.
635 Show data context 16 Show data context
     518-21. Water Works Service. 160 Show data context 30 Show data context
     523-9. Electricity Supply Service. 432 Show data context 11 Show data context
XVI.--Transport and Communication.
     1. Railways.
4,928 Show data context 183 Show data context
     2. Road. 6,718 Show data context 151 Show data context
     3-7. Water, Air and Other Transport and Communication. 1,067 Show data context 133 Show data context
XVII.--Commerce and Finance.
     600-670. Distributive Trades.
18,827 Show data context 8,166 Show data context
     680-699. Other Commerce and Finance. 3,136 Show data context 1,900 Show data context
XVIII.--Public Administration and Defence.
     1. Defence.
408 Show data context 39 Show data context
     2. Central Civil Government (British and Imperial). 4,530 Show data context 1,717 Show data context
     3. Local Government. 3,231 Show data context 1,929 Show data context
XIX.--Professions. 2,735 Show data context 2,502 Show data context
XX.--Entertainments and Sport. 1,339 Show data context 764 Show data context
XXI.--Personal Service (including Hotels and Catering, but excluding Government and Local Authority). 6,660 Show data context 12,682 Show data context
XXII.--Other Industries or Industry not stated. 454 Show data context 162 Show data context

Click on the triangles for all about a particular number.

Notes:

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

1 The areal classification is by each person's area of enumeration and not necessarily, therefore, by area of business.

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.