Introduction

Articles

Burley Census

A Mill Village

Benefactors

Burley Woodhead

Burley Characters

Notable Buildings

Victorian Schools

Burley History – The Census

Every ten years since 1801, a census of the population has been taken in every part of England. Since 1841, the records allow us to learn details of every household and its members, their gender, age, marital status, occupation and birth place.


In Burley Archives, kept in our public library, we have copied, from the Public Record Office in Kew Gardens, details of all households in the village onto a card index, covering the years 1841 to 1901. (There is a 100 year ban on Census details of this kind.)



The Vicar of Burley circa 1880

On the following pages, we show details of one household in Burley, that of the Vicar, the Revd Charles Ingham Black, in each of the census years from 1861 to 1891. (Black came as Curate in 1855 and stayed until he died in 1896.)



The photograph shows the Revd Charles Ingham Black as he was in the 1880s


For further information about the Census of Victorian Burley see the following publication of Burley Local History Group

M. & D. Warwick, “Burley–in–Wharfedale in the Nineteenth Century: A Study of Social Stratification and Social Mobility” in The Journal of Local Population Studies, 1995, Vol. 54



Other information about the village can be gained by visiting Burley Archives in the Library, Grange Road, on Tuesday and Friday afternoons between 2:30pm and 4:30pm