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1891 New Zealand census

The 1891 New Zealand census was a population census of the non-Māori population taken on 5 April 1891. A separate census of Māori was taken in February 1891. The population (excluding Māori but including Chinese and "half-castes" living as Europeans) was 626,658, an 8.33% increase since the previous census in 1886. The Māori population was estimated to be 41,993, which included 2681 part-Māori living in tribes and 40 Moriori at the Chatham Islands. Another 2,184 part-Māori were living as Europeans and counted in the main census.

Process

The 1891 New Zealand census took place on 5 April 1891, the same day as the censuses in the United Kingdom, other colonies and India. This was the first time that a census had been taken at the same time "over the whole of the British world".

An Act of Parliament authorised the taking of a census in New Zealand, and the government divided the whole country into 23 districts of approximately equal size. Enumerators in each district divided their district into sub-districts and appointed around 660 sub-enumerators who were familiar with their local areas. The questions on the census form had been approved at a conference of statisticians in Hobart, Australia in 1890. Separate summaries and tables were created to show the operations of churches, land, institutions and industries. Electric tabulators had been used in a recent census in the United States, but the New Zealand government chose not to use the new invention until it had been extensively tested. Instead, a system of cards was used to compile and sort census data.

The completed census for both Māori and non-Māori was submitted to Parliament on 5 December 1892.

Non-Māori population

Birthplaces of the non-Māori population

'British allegiance' included everyone born in British possessions, naturalized British subjects and British subjects born abroad. Those who were born at sea or who had not specified a birthplace were deemed British if they had a British-sounding name. Westland had the most foreign subjects (9.57%), and Marlborough had the fewest (0.99%).

There were 4,470 people born in China, of whom only 24 were female. This was a decrease of 1.76% from the 4,550 Chinese-born people counted in 1886. 2,157 (48%) of Chinese people lived in Otago, with smaller populations in Westland (1,008), Nelson (601), Wellington (321), Auckland (170) and Canterbury (144).

Half of the Scottish-born population lived in Otago. 45.2% of Scandinavians (from Denmark, Sweden and Norway) lived in Wellington Province, and another 24.86% lived in Hawke's Bay.

Occupations

The non-Māori census asked what occupations the population followed, with categories changed somewhat from the previous census. The most common occupations for men were those related to farming, market gardening and labouring on farms, fishing and mining (87,860). The most common occupations for women were domestic roles (19,391), and dressmaking and millinery (10,739). 1,402 girls aged between 5 and 15 years old were in paid domestic work. There were 1,644 male teachers and 2,617 female teachers, plus 524 governesses and tutors. Five male and three female phrenologists and a handful of medical electricians and galvanists were working in New Zealand.

Most Chinese were involved in gold mining, with the next most common occupation being market gardening. Sixty percent of the population was described as "dependents". This category included wives and widows without an occupation; children at home or in orphanages or industrial schools; visitors; parents depending on adult children; patients in hospitals and asylums; and prisoners.

Māori census

The Māori census was held during February 1891. The total Māori population, not including part-Māori living as Europeans, was estimated to be 41,993. This was almost the same population as shown by the previous census in 1886. Almost all Māori lived in the North Island.

Māori census information was collected by officials who visited each settlement and spoke to the people there, rather than having them fill in forms. The Māori population was very mobile, which led to difficulties making accurate counts. For example, a large number of the usual residents of Rotorua were away from home working on a railway contract at census time, and in Northland there were about 150 people from other areas who had arrived to dig gum for a short time. In some locations, Māori refused to give information to the enumerator. From Otorohanga, Native Agent George Wilkinson wrote:<blockquote>[...] the work of taking the Maori census through parts of my district has again been a difficult one, principally caused, as usual, by the King Natives or supporters of Tawhiao, wherever they were situated—with here and there an exception—refusing to give any particulars or information whatsoever to the sub-enumerators either as regards themselves, their cultivations, or their live stock. The returns so far as they are concerned have been obtained with great difficulty, and in some few cases are conjectural; but, in the case of Kingite settlements, I took the precaution to select as subenumerators either Natives, half-castes, or Europeans who were best qualified to get all the information obtainable.</blockquote>As enumerators filed their reports with the government, they commented on the living conditions, local epidemics, housing and farming in Māori communities. In some areas, it was stated that poor living conditions in swampy localities were causing respiratory diseases. There was difficulty counting livestock as many animals were held communally with no clear ownership.

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