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Differing Responses to an Industrialising Economy - eTheses ...

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Table 7.14 Male occupational structure in Sambourne from Cough<strong>to</strong>n parish baptism<br />

register 1720-1769 (shown as % of fathers with known occupations)<br />

1720-<br />

1729<br />

1730-<br />

1739<br />

1740-<br />

1749<br />

1750-<br />

1759<br />

1760-<br />

1769<br />

Primary (with agricultural labourers) * 15.6 15.8 21.5 25.8 30.3<br />

Primary (without labourers) 10.5 3.8 11.6 10.0 15.5<br />

Secondary (with other labourers) * 83.3 83.8 78.5 74.2 68.7<br />

Secondary (without labourers) 80.0 75.8 71.9 63.6 58.8<br />

Tertiary 1.1 0.4 0.0 0.0 1.0<br />

Needlemakers 47.4 61.2 55.5 47.3 49.5<br />

All labourers 8.4 20.0 16.4 26.4 24.7<br />

Total males with known occupations (n) 95 130 146 110 97<br />

* Labourers allocated <strong>to</strong> primary or secondary according <strong>to</strong> the 1831 census. 34<br />

Tables 7.14 <strong>an</strong>d 7.15 (below) show that Sambourne was <strong>an</strong> industrial colony, with<br />

needlemakers especially strong, while Cough<strong>to</strong>n was much less industrialised. However,<br />

Sambourne’s economic barometer swings back <strong>to</strong>wards agriculture during this period. 35<br />

Table 7.15 Male occupational structure in Cough<strong>to</strong>n (without Sambourne) from baptism<br />

register 1720-1769 (shown as % of fathers with known occupations)<br />

1720-<br />

1729<br />

1730-<br />

1739<br />

1740-<br />

1749<br />

1750-<br />

1759<br />

1760-<br />

1769<br />

Primary (with agricultural labourers) * 61.1 54.5 58.8 54.3 52.2<br />

Primary (without labourers) 27.8 17.2 21.3 10.9 3.2<br />

Secondary (with other labourers) * 26.4 40.3 32.7 37.0 47.8<br />

Secondary (without labourers) 18.1 31.0 23.4 26.1 35.5<br />

Tertiary 12.5 5.2 8.5 8.7 0.0<br />

Needlemakers 0.0 8.6 6.4 15.2 12.9<br />

All labourers 41.7 46.6 46.8 54.3 61.3<br />

Total males with known occupations (n) 36 58 47 46 31<br />

* Labourers allocated <strong>to</strong> primary or secondary according <strong>to</strong> the 1831 census. 36<br />

Table 7.15 shows that the needle industry only achieves a high of 15.2% in<br />

Cough<strong>to</strong>n itself compared with 61.2% in Sambourne.<br />

34 In the 1831 census approximately 40% of labourers were non-agricultural in Sambourne. The same ratio<br />

has been used for this earlier period <strong>to</strong>o.<br />

35 In Tables 7.14 <strong>an</strong>d 7.15 the data refers only <strong>to</strong> known residents of either Sambourne or Cough<strong>to</strong>n village.<br />

36 In the 1831 census approximately one-fifth of labourers were non-agricultural in Cough<strong>to</strong>n itself. The<br />

same ratio has been used for this earlier period <strong>to</strong>o.<br />

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