Annual Report of the Registrar-General of Births, Deaths, and Marriages in England, Volume 4H.M. Stationery Office, 1842 |
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Page 10
... Total . Spinsters . Widows . Total . 1840-41 Men . Women . Bachelors . Widowers . Total . Spinsters . Widows . Total . 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 15 & under 20 PROVOK 229 25 4,999 25 30 2,397 35 754 229 1,315 47 5,046 5,043 170 ...
... Total . Spinsters . Widows . Total . 1840-41 Men . Women . Bachelors . Widowers . Total . Spinsters . Widows . Total . 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 15 & under 20 PROVOK 229 25 4,999 25 30 2,397 35 754 229 1,315 47 5,046 5,043 170 ...
Page 26
TOTAL MARRIAGES . 1934567∞GO = 1216 4,687 34 1527 417 207 4,023 81 520 5,788 2957363an⌁ : 8,091 456 1323 2627 ... TOTAL . MARRIAGES . Not according to the Rites of the Established Church . In Registered Places of Worship . In ...
TOTAL MARRIAGES . 1934567∞GO = 1216 4,687 34 1527 417 207 4,023 81 520 5,788 2957363an⌁ : 8,091 456 1323 2627 ... TOTAL . MARRIAGES . Not according to the Rites of the Established Church . In Registered Places of Worship . In ...
Page 27
... TOTAL . TOTAL MARRIAGES . Men . 13,410 400 157 1 92 650 14,060 227 986 1576 3,304 4 3,499 106 28 135 3,634 54 266 439 934 382 17 20 402 19 46 52 106 :: ::: .. Women . Berkshire 3. SOUTH MIDLAND COUNTIES . Middlesex ( part of ) 80 476 ...
... TOTAL . TOTAL MARRIAGES . Men . 13,410 400 157 1 92 650 14,060 227 986 1576 3,304 4 3,499 106 28 135 3,634 54 266 439 934 382 17 20 402 19 46 52 106 :: ::: .. Women . Berkshire 3. SOUTH MIDLAND COUNTIES . Middlesex ( part of ) 80 476 ...
Page 32
... TOTAL . TOTAL MARRIAGES . Men . Women . Men . 2 167 23 235 5 289 14 9 288 19 9 379 12 1 314 11 102 : 272 13 79492633 37 61 89 46 65 91 52 29 38 46 No 78 112 60 115 142 70 122 56 89 6 23 27 110 122 24 277 37 72 98 53 783 32 192 329 170 5 ...
... TOTAL . TOTAL MARRIAGES . Men . Women . Men . 2 167 23 235 5 289 14 9 288 19 9 379 12 1 314 11 102 : 272 13 79492633 37 61 89 46 65 91 52 29 38 46 No 78 112 60 115 142 70 122 56 89 6 23 27 110 122 24 277 37 72 98 53 783 32 192 329 170 5 ...
Page 34
... TOTAL . TOTAL MARRIAGES . Men . Women . Men . : : 17 399 32 84 128 186 1 19 313 33 66 145 176 48 16 53 67 116 15 378 29 84 154 215 2 190 14 32 67 81 : : 31 441 37 88 203 209 26 275 34 25 338 46 72 118 168 80 156 202 4 234 14 305 no R2 ...
... TOTAL . TOTAL MARRIAGES . Men . Women . Men . : : 17 399 32 84 128 186 1 19 313 33 66 145 176 48 16 53 67 116 15 378 29 84 154 215 2 190 14 32 67 81 : : 31 441 37 88 203 209 26 275 34 25 338 46 72 118 168 80 156 202 4 234 14 305 no R2 ...
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Common terms and phrases
30th June Abscess Aneurism annual Apoplexy Atrophy Bedfordshire Berkshire births blood bowels brain Bronchitis Buckinghamshire Cambridgeshire Cancer cause of death Cheshire Cholera Contagious Convulsions COUNTIES Croup Cumberland Deaths registered Delirium Tremens Derbyshire Diarrhoea DISTRICTS DIVISION Dorsetshire Dropsy Durham Dysentery East Riding Endemic ending June 30th England England-continued epidemic Erysipelas Essex fatal females Gastritis Hæmorrhage heart Hernia Hertfordshire Hooping Cough Huntingdonshire Hydrocephalus Hydrothorax Ileus increase inflammation intestine Ischuria Jaundice July Kent except Greenwich Lancashire liver lungs MALES March marriages married Measles Metropolis Middlesex Monmouthshire mortality Mortification Norfolk North Midland North Riding nosology Organs Oxfordshire Paralysis Pericarditis Peritonitis Phlegmon Phthisis Pleurisy Pneumonia poison population Quinsey Rheumatism Rutlandshire Scarlatina Scrofula Sept shire small-pox Somersetshire South South-Eastern Sporadic Diseases stomach Stricture Suffolk Surrey Sussex Syphilis Tabes Mesenterica Thrush Total Typhus Ulceration vague Violent Wales wards Welsh West Riding Westmoreland Wiltshire women
Popular passages
Page 143 - Act, it shall be the duty of the nearest relatives of the deceased present at the death, or in attendance during the last illness...
Page 162 - If a person, immediately after swallowing a solution of a crystalline salt, which tasted purely and strongly acid, is attacked with burning in the throat, then with burning in the stomach, vomiting, particularly of bloody matter, imperceptible pulse, and excessive languor, and dies in half an hour, or still more, in 20, 15, or 10 minutes, I do not know any fallacy that can interfere witli the conclusion that oxalic acid was the cause of death.
Page 2 - Abstracts, 1831, (p. 16,) that "there are in England and Wales about 550 parishes which are known to extend into two counties, or into more than one hundred, or other division.
Page 143 - March, or in case of the death, illness, inability, or default of all such persons, the occupier of the house or tenement, or if the occupier be the person who shall have died, some inmate of the house or tenement in which such death shall have happened, shall, within eight days next after the day of such death, give information, upon being requested so to do, to the said registrar, according to the best of his or her knowledge and belief, of the several particulars hereby required to be known and...
Page 139 - Should the time nevertheless come, when the country is sufficiently populous, and it should be desirable to retard or stop the progress of population — the analysis of the marriages, births, and deaths, in connexion with the census returns, will show, as has been already proved, that this may be effected without raising the mortality. The principle of " an increase of the population in geometrical " progression " has nothing in it fatal, irresistible, inexorable ; upon a rigorous analysis of the...
Page 142 - ... exact statement of the causes of death, in the case of every registered death throughout the whole of England and Wales, after the month of June next ensuing. The register-books in which all deaths are to be registered after the last day of June, 1837, contain columns wherein may be inserted the cause of death, in juxta-position with those other important illustrative circumstances, the sex, the age, and the profession, or calling, of the deceased person. Each register-book will also...
Page 140 - I have referred rests on this doctrine : ' the population is increasing in a geometrical progression, the means of subsistence in an arithmetical progression, and unless wars, destructive epidemics, marshes, dense towns, close workshops, and other deadly agents, carry off the excess of the numbers born — unless the outlets of life and blood be left open — the whole people must be exposed to a slow process of starvation.
Page 136 - ... first marriages are calculated, and the complications arising from the increase or decrease of the population by birth, death, immigration, and emigration, I do not advance the preceding numerical statements as absolutely correct or definitive; and I hope to be able to resume the examination of these important subjects at a future time, when more extensive materials have accumulated and have been analyzed. None of these...
Page 134 - The fact, that one-fifth of the people of this country who attain the age of marriage never marry; and that the women, though capable of bearing children at 16, and certainly nubile at 17, do not marry until they attain a mean age of 24.3, the men until they are 25 j, proves that prudence, or ' moral restraint,
Page 142 - ... improved registration cannot fail to lead to a more accurate statistical account of the prevalence of particular diseases from time to time. We pledge ourselves, therefore, to give in every instance which may fall under our care, an authentic name of the fetal disease.