1828 New South Wales census | ||
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General information | ||
Country | Colony of New South Wales, British Empire | |
Topics | Census topics
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Authority | King George IV approval | |
Website | amw.org.au | |
Results | ||
Total population | 36,598 | |
Most populous | Sydney | |
Least populous | Pitt Water |
The 1828 New South Wales census was the first population census held in the Crown Colony of New South Wales, forty years after it was established. The month used for the census, was taken in November 1828. The total population of the colony was counted as 36,598 and recorded all inhabitants, both convict and free.[1] Only the European population were enumerated. Censuses were taken periodically in the colony thereafter.
History
Before 1828, the population count was originally gathered through surveys and musters, however they were largely undercounted. The first survey of the NSW settlement was made in 1795. The general musters were held annually from 1795 to 1825 with separate ones being taken, for example - musters of settlers, livestock, convicts, or ones that included only males, females or children.[2] An act (9 Geo IV No. 4) was passed to allow the census. The incumbent Governor Sir Ralph Darling on 29 July 1828 transferred to the Rt. Hon. William Huskisson for King George IV's approval.[3][4]
Census questions
Information recorded in the census included:[5]
Results
The total population was counted as 36,598, 20,870 were free and 15,728 were convicts. There were 25,248 Protestants and 11,236 Catholics. The Indigenous population were not counted.[6]
A quote from the Sydney Gazette in December 1828 describes life as:
"At the end of 1828, Sydney had 1,409 houses, 176 cottages, 121 skillings and 67 wooden tenements, making a total of 1,773 dwellings. Its urban population was 10,815, and the town occupied a large space of ground; if it had been as well fitted with houses as a town of similar size in England, the population would have been eight or ten times as numerous".[7]
— Sydney Gazette 1828
Religion
The following table is compiled from the actual religion given on the returns and from the Public Record Office.[8]
Religion | Population | % |
---|---|---|
Baptist | 1 | - |
Calvinist | 1 | - |
Catholic | 8,515 | 23.4 |
Church of England | 35 | - |
Deist | 2 | - |
Dissenter | 2 | - |
Episcopalian | 17 | - |
Free Thinker | 1 | - |
Hebrew | 8 | - |
Hindu | 1 | - |
Jew | 86 | 0.23 |
Lutheran | 3 | - |
Malay | 3 | - |
Mohammedan | 10 | - |
Pagan | 2 | - |
Presbyterian | 249 | 0.68% |
Protestant | 21,148 | 58.21 |
Quaker | 6 | - |
Seeker | 1 | - |
Wesleyan | 7 | - |
Not recorded | 6,287 | 17.27 |
New South Wales | 36,385 | 100 |
Land and livestock
Showing the numbers of land and livestock.[9]
County / District | Num. of acres located |
Acres cleared |
Acres cultivated |
Horses | Horned cattle |
Sheep |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Argyle & St Vincent | 295,921 | 33,311 | 2,836 | 2,087 | 66,697 | 116,021 |
Bathurst & Wellington Valley | 250,796 | 39,037 | 3,497 | 1,216 | 45,447 | 172,953 |
Camden incl. Illawarra | 97,113 | 7,723 | 3,278 | 452 | 8,962 | 17,805 |
Cumberland | ||||||
Airds & Appin | 96,719 | 18,168 | 9,172 | 899 | 13,694 | 19,832 |
Bringelly & Cooke | 89,978 | 11,674 | 4,052 | 596 | 10,182 | 19,242 |
Liverpool Town & District | 66,569 | 9,340 | 2,222 | 635 | 3,906 | 6,198 |
Parramatta Town & District | 82,676 | 17,969 | 6,626 | 1,191 | 15,035 | 13,189 |
Penrith | 78,051 | 16,997 | 5,690 | 795 | 7,660 | 12,388 |
Sydney Town & District | 272,513 | 21,639 | 5,065 | 1,643 | 28,598 | 24,086 |
Windsor Town & District | 105,577 | 32,049 | 18,156 | 1,650 | 21,048 | 30,354 |
Northumberland & Durham | ||||||
Hunters River & Port Stephens | 1,465,953 | 21,666 | 10,844 | 1,311 | 41,319 | 104,123 |
Manning River | 4,480 | 2,000 | 85 | 4 | 320 | 200 |
Totals | 2,906,346 | 231,573 | 71,523 | 12,479 | 262,868 | 536,391 |
Copies
Only two copies of the census results were produced, all compiled within two years of the census. One comprising six-volumes was kept in New South Wales (NRS 1272), with a seven-volume draft copy sent to the Public Record Office (PRO) in London. Copies are available on microfilm from the State Archives and Records NSW and from The National Archives (TNA) at Kew.[10] The copy in Sydney was handed over in 1901 to the Registrar General; kept in a locked case and highly guarded for over 60 years.[11] In 2019 the Records of the 1828 Census held by NSW State Archives and Records were inscribed on the UNESCO Australian Memory of the World Register.[12]
See also
Archival Holdings
- NRS 1272, 1828 Census: Alphabetical returns, held by NSW State Archives and Records
References
- ↑ "Sydney Morning Herald: Colonial census a transportation to 1828". Sydney Morning Herald. 17 September 2007. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
- ↑ Census / Musters Guide - NSW State Archives and Records
- ↑ Census / Musters Guide - NSW State Archives and Records
- ↑ Census of New South Wales - November 1828 (Page:10 of 60)
- ↑ "1828 New South Wales Australia Census (Australian Copy)". ancestry.com. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
- ↑ Aplin, Graeme; S.G. Foster; Michael McKernan, eds. (1987). Australians: Events and Places. Broadway, New South Wales, Australia: Fairfax, Syme & Weldon Associates. p. 38. ISBN 0-949288-13-6.
- ↑ Gordon W. Beckett (2013). A Population History of Colonial New South Wales: The Economic Growth of a New Colony. Partridge Publishing Singapore. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-4669-9187-3.
- ↑ "Census of New South Wales - November 1828 Religion" (PDF). Biographical Database of Australia (BDA). Retrieved 7 September 2023.
- ↑ "Census of New South Wales - November 1828 Religion" (PDF). Biographical Database of Australia (BDA). Retrieved 7 September 2023.
- ↑ 1828 New South Wales - Australia Census (Australian Copy)
- ↑ Colonial census - a transportation to 1828; Documentation held by NSW State Archives and Records records the transfer of the case in 1901
- ↑ "Records of the 1828 Census to be inscribed on the UNESCO Australian Memory of the World Register". NSW State Archives Collection. 15 January 2019. Retrieved 31 January 2019.