Stoke Newington Metropolitan (London) Borough (MetB) : Manufacturing

R_IND_MAN = (IND_SECTOR_5WAY:manuf * 100.0) / INDUSTRY_TOT:total

Data Role Period Covered Authority Source Details Method
IND_SECTOR_5WAY:manuf 1931 SRC GBH Source Documentation System 1931 Census of England and Wales, Industry, Table 2 , 'Industries of Males and Females (exclusive of persons out of work)' Exact count provided by a government statistical office for this area
IND_SECTOR_5WAY:manuf 1951 SRC GBH Source Documentation System 1951 Census of England and Wales, Industry, Table 2 , 'Industries (Minimum List) and Status Aggregates. Occupied Males and Females aged 15 and over', for 'Con, AC, CB, MetB, Urban Areas with population of 50,000 or more' Exact count provided by a government statistical office for this area

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Despite Britain's reputation as the 'workshop of the world', manufacturing employed only slightly more people than services in 1841, and by 1881 it employed significantly less. Our 19th century data tend to overstate the size of manufacturing, because many goods counted as 'manufacturing' were made not in factories but in small workshops behind shops run by the people making the goods.

In 1841 this meant most districts had 20-30% of the workforce in manufacturing. A small group of districts had over 50% of their workforces in manufacturing, mostly in a single dominant industry, like textiles, pottery or shoe-making. Excepting London, manufacturing was concentrated mainly in the north and midlands. Single industry communities were clearly unable to provide their populations with a full range of services. As they matured, both the overall proportion in manufacturing and the numbers in their dominant industries declined. The concentration of manufacturing into the north continued up to 1931, but new industrial centres based on consumer goods were growing in the south.

In modern Britain, the most prosperous areas contain few factories. Instead, they have become centres of management, marketing and research for goods which are physically manufactured somewhere else, including outside Britain altogether.


How to reference this page:

GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth, Stoke Newington Metropolitan (London) Borough (MetB) through time | Historical Statistics on Industry | Rate: Manufacturing, A Vision of Britain through Time.

URL: https://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/unit/10001821/cube/IND_MAN

Date accessed: 08th April 2026