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Ethnic demography of Wales from 1981–2011 Ethnic makeup of Wales in single year age groups in 2021 Population pyramid of Wales by ethnicity in 2021. According to the 2011 census, 2.2 million (73%) of usual residents of Wales were born there, two percent less than in 2001. The change can be attributed to both international and internal migration.
This article is about the significance of the year 1961 to Wales and its people. Incumbents ... 3 July – Albert Jenkin, Wales international rugby player, 88;
United Kingdom Census 1931 - Sunday, 26 April: carried out in England, Wales, and Scotland, but not Northern Ireland. The England and Wales census returns were destroyed in an accidental fire in 1942; the Scottish census returns were stored in Edinburgh, and survived. [8] The scheduled publication date for the Scottish returns is 1 January 2032
The United Kingdom Census 1961 was a census of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland carried out on 23 April 1961. It was the first to ask about qualifications, migration status, and household tenure. It was also the first to use a computer, an IBM 705 at the Royal Army Pay Corps, Worthy Down, Winchester.
In 1961, the state pension age was 65 for men and 60 for women. Working age men and women were counted at 31,107,039, and those over state pension age at 7,566,439.
Estimations of white and non-white population in England and Wales, 1951-1968 [29] Ethnic group (reported as 'Area of origin') 1951 [note 4] 1961 [note 4] 1966 mid-1968 Estimates based solely off of immigrant population [note 4] Total estimated (including estimates of those born in the UK) [note 5] Population % Population % Population ...
1961: 2,644,000 1991: ... 28% of the population of Wales claimed to understand Welsh. The census revealed that the increase was most significant in urban areas, ...
In 2001, the census form was completed by 94 per cent of the population in England and Wales, with a further 4 per cent identified by the census enumerators, though the results still represented 100 per cent of the population through the use of cross-matching with a follow-up survey.