Baptist 'Attendances' as Percentage of Total
R_REL1851_bap = (REL1851_ATTEND:bap * 100.0) / REL1851_ATTEND_TOT:total
| Data Role | Period Covered | Authority | Source | Details | Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| REL1851_ATTEND:bap | 1851 | SRC | GBH Source Documentation System | 1851 Census of Great Britain, Religion, Table A , 'Showing the total number of Attendants at Public Worship, in connection with each Religious Body; including Estimates for defective Returns' | Counts for historical Registration Districts redistricted by vector overlay |
- Percentage Asian
- Percentage Black
- Percentage White
- Baptist 'Attendances' as Percentage of Total
- Calvinistic Methodist 'Attendances' as Percentage of Total
- Church of England 'Attendances' as Percentage of Total
- Church of Scotland 'Attendances' as Percentage of Total
- Roman Catholic 'Attendances' as Percentage of Total
- Wesleyan Methodist 'Attendances' as Percentage of Total
- Percentage Buddhist
- Percentage Christian
- Percentage Hindu
- Percentage Jewish
- Percentage Muslim
- Percentage with No Religion
The Baptists originated in London in the early seventeenth century, and by 1851 were divided into five distinct sections, the largest being the Calvinistic Baptists with 1,947 congregations in England and Wales, out of a total of 2,789. The Baptists' main strength was in rural southern England, and in South Wales, including the mining valleys.