Social History in Perspective

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Social History in Perspective General Editor: Jeremy Black Social History in Perspective is a new series of in-depth studies of the many topics in social, cultural and religious history for students. They will also give the student clear surveys of the subject and also present the most recent research in an accessible way. PUBLSHED John Belchem Popular Radicalism in Nineteenth Century Britain Hugh McLeod Religion and Society in England, 1850-1914 N. L. Tranter British Population in the Twentieth Century FORTHCOMNG Eric Acheson Late Medieval Economy and Society an Archer Rebellion and Riot in England, 1360-1660 Jonathan Barry Religion and Society in England, 1603-1760 A. L. Beier Early Modern London Sue Bruley Women s Century of Change Andrew Charlesworth Popular Protest in Britain and reland, 1650-1870 Richard Connors The Growth of Welfare in Hanoverian England, 1723-1793 Geoffrey Crossick A History of London from 1800-1939 Alistair Davies Culture and Society, 1900-1995 Simon Dentith Culture and Society in Nineteenth-Century England Martin Durham The Permissive Society C. G. Durston Family and Household in Early Modern England Peter Fleming Medieval Family and Household in England David Fowler Youth Culture in the Twentieth Century Malcolm Gaskill Witchcraft in England, 1560-1760 Peter Gosden Education in the Twentieth Century Harry Goulbourne British Race Relations in Historical Perspective S.]. D. Green Religion and the Decline of Christianity in Modern Britain, 1880-1980 Paul Griffiths English Social Structure and the Social Order; 1500-1750 Anne Hardy Health and Medicine since 1860 Steve Hindle The Poorer Sort of People in Seventeenth-Century England David Hirst Welfare and Society, 1832-1939 Tim Hitchcock Sexuality in Britain, 1690-1800 Sybil Jack Towns in Tudor and Stuart Britain Helen Jewell Education in Early Modern Britain Alan Kidd The State and the Poor, 1834-1914 Arthur J. Mcivor Working in Britain 1880-1950 Christopher Marsh Popular Religion in the Sixteenth Century Michael Mullett Early Modern British Catholics, 1559-1829 Titles continued overleaf

List continued from previous page Christine Peters Women in Early Modern Britain, 1690-1800 Richard Rex Heresy and Dissent in England, 1360-1560 John Rule Labour and the State, 1700-1875 Pamela Sharpe British Population in the Long Eighteenth Century, 1680-1820 Malcolm Smuts Culture and Power in England John Spurr English Puritanism, 1603-1689 W. B. Stephens Education in ndustrial Society: Britain 1780-1902 Heather Swanson Medieval British Towns David Taylor Crime, Policing and Punishment Benjamin Thompson Feudalism or Lordship and Politics in Medieval England R. E. Tyson Population in Pre-ndustrial Britain, 1500-1750 Garthine Walker Crime, Law and Society in Early Modern England an Whyte Scotland's Society and Economy, 1500-1760 Andy Wood The Crowd and Popular Politics in Early Modern England Please note that a sister series, British History in Perspective, is available which covers all the key topics in British political history.

British Population in the Twentieth Century N. L. Tranter

N. L. Tranter 1996 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London WP 9HE. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. First published 1996 by MACMLLAN PRESS LTD Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS and London Companies and representatives throughout the world SBN 978-0-333-59763-7 SBN 978-1-349-24379-2 (ebook) DO 10.1007/978-1-349-24379-2 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. 10 9 8 7 6 OS 04 03 02 01 5 4 3 2 00 99 98 97 96 Published in the United States of America 1996 by ST. MARTN'S PRESS, NC., Scholarly and Reference Division 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010 SBN 978-0-312-12940-8

TO HEATHER, RACHEL, SARAH AND ALAN

CONTENTS List of Tables Map 1 Britain Map 2 Scotland ntroduction 1 Population Growth and Location 2 nternal and Overseas Migration 3 Mortality 4 Fertility Conclusion Notes Bibliography ndex Vlll X xi Xlll 1 19 62 83 126 128 162 170 Vll

TABLES 1.1 The population of England, Wales, Scotland and Britain, 1801-1991 (thousands) 3 1.2 The population of England, Wales, Scotland and Britain. ntercensal increase or decrease (%per annum, 1801-1991) 4 1.3 Percentage share of the population of mainland Britain by region, 1751-1991 6 1.4 ntercensal rates of population growth in Britain by region, 1951-1991 (%) 8 1.5 Average annual rates of population growth by type of district. England and Wales, 1961-1991 (per thousand population) 16 2.1 Net migration as a percentage of natural increase. Great Britain 1871-1991 20 2.2 Net migration as a percentage of natural increase. Scotland, 1861-1990 22 2.3 Number of migrants by sea between the United Kingdom and non-european countries, 1913, 1920-1963 (thousands) 26 2.4 Number of migrants into and out of the United Kingdom by sea and air, 1964-1990 (thousands) 29 2.5 Net gain or loss by migration. England/Wales and Scotland, 1871/81-1981/91 (thousands) 38 Vlll

Tables 3.1 Annual average crude death rates, by sex. England/Wales and Scotland, 1838/50-1981/90 64 3.2 Expectation of life at birth in years, by sex. England/Wales and Scotland, c.1900-1988/90 65 4.1 Annual average crude birth rates. England/Wales and Scotland, 1855-1990 86 4.2 llegitimacy ratios. England/Wales and Scotland, 1855-1990 89 4.3 Average annual crude marriage rates. England/Wales and Scotland, 1855-1990 95 lx

Map 1 Britain. Counties, planning regions and major towns, 1981 Source: Edward Royle, Modern Britain. A Social History 1750-1985 (London, Edward Arnold, 1987), p. xii X

County Boundary Regional ---- Boundary... Orkney -~ ijf ~ d ()~;... \ ~ 1 FAR NORTH )Caithness \ \... -- -- -------- tj \ Morayr~ Banff ; /. NaJrn _,.. 1 -::- -...) '...i,.' NQRTH EAST ).. Aberdeen Map2 Source: Scotland. Civil counties and regions, 1861-1939 Michael Flinn ( ed.), Scottish Population H istory f rom the Seven teenth Century to the 1930s (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1977), p. xxiii Xl

NTRODUCTON At the beginning of the twentieth century the demography of each of the countries of mainland Britain was already an intriguing blend of the old and the new. n common with the experience of the preceding hundred years or so rates of population growth remained relatively high. A substantial proportion of each country's natural excess of births over deaths continued to disappear to overseas destinations. Changes in the internal geography of residence continued to favour England at the expense of Scotland and Wales, northern rather than southern counties of England, urban rather than rural locations, and core rather than more peripheral areas. Average expectations of life and variations in rates of mortality and life expectancy by region and socio-occupational class differed only moderately from those of a century earlier. Ages at marriage and percentages married and single had remained roughly constant for over 50 years. Crude birth rates were still only marginally lower than in the early nineteenth century and regional differentials in fertility were wider than ever. n these and many other respects the demographic structure of Britain around 1900 was little different from that of 1850 or even 1800. At the same time, even before 1900, some of the demographic forms inherited from the past were beginning to xiii

ntroduction change. n the course of the later decades of the nineteenth century the shift of population from south to north, rural to urban, and periphery to core started to slow. Regional, urbanrural and social class differentials in mortality began to narrow and average expectations of life to rise. Crude birth rates and levels of marital fertility began to decline and marital fertility replaced nuptiality as the principal demographic determinant of trends in overall fertility. Compared with what was to happen in the twentieth century, it must be stressed, the changes which occurred in Britain's demographic structures in the decades before 1900 were modest. The late nineteenth century may have been the period in which the transition towards a modern demographic regime was initiated. But it was in the twentieth century that the bulk of the transformation was achieved. Between 1800-9 and 1891-1900 average life expectancy at birth in England rose by about 11 years. Between 1891-1900 and the mid 1980s, chiefly in response to a decline in deaths from infectious disease and the displacement of communicable, infectious disease by non-communicable, degenerative disease as the main cause of death, it rose by over 26 years. n the half century before 1900 crude birth rates fell by just 15 per cent in England and Wales and 5 per cent in Scotland. n the course of the next 50 years they declined by 45 per cent and 39 per cent respectively. From around five among women marrying in the mid 1870s, the average number of births fell to around two among those marrying in the last quarter of the twentieth century. Accompanying this decline in fertility were marked reductions in regional and socio-occupational class fertility differentials and, in the later years of the century, unprecedented increases in the frequency of divorce, levels of extramarital cohabitation and rates of illegitimacy. No less striking have been the changes that have taken place in patterns of migration and population growth. Between the 1930s and 1980s England and Wales together (though not Scotland), in sharp contrast to the experience of previous ages, gained far more people than they lost on balance of international migration. Despite this, rates of population XV

ntroduction growth fell to levels lower than at any time since the late eighteenth century. By the 1970s and 1980s, under the impact of persistently low levels of fertility, rates of population growth were negligible and even negative. The trend to lower rates of population increase was accompanied by major changes in the geography of residence within Britain. Although England has continued to increase its share of Britain's population and although, within England, the ranking of regions according to their share of the total population has remained largely unaltered, in contrast to what had happened in the nineteenth century the twentieth century has seen the re-emergence of a north to south drift in the balance of population location, a movement of people from core to geographically more peripheral regions, and a shift of people away from the largest urban communities towards smaller urban communities and rural areas. n the demography of Britain at the beginning of the twentieth century there was still a great deal that generations born a hundred years or more earlier would have recognised. n the demography of Britain at the end of the twentieth century there is very little that would be familiar to them. What follows is an attempt to chart in more detail the progress of this transformation and to unravel some of the more important causes which underlay it. XV