Skip to content
  • Start free trial
An original census record

Start a free trial to view

Get access to the original record, as well as a map showing the local area at the time

Household of Charles Wallshaw (born 1852, Yorkshire)

1881 England, Wales & Scotland Census in Oldham, Lancashire, England

More informationkeyboard_arrow_down

The 1881 Census reveals a detailed snapshot of households in England, Wales and Scotland. The census was taken on April 3rd and the total population was recorded as 29,707,207.

Charles Wallshaw and one other person are on this record

More informationkeyboard_arrow_down

In the 1881 Census, the household of Charles Wallshaw, born in 1852 in Melksham, Yorkshire, consisted of 2 members. Charles was the head of the household, married to Elizabeth Wallshaw, born in 1857 in Mossley, Lancashire, England.


Get access to the original record, as well as a map showing the local area at the time

Charles Wallshaw's household

Male

Charles

Wallshaw

Head
Female

Elizabeth

Wallshaw

Wife
First name(s) Charles
Last name Wallshaw
Relationship Head
Marital status Married
Age 29
Birth year 1852
Birth place Melksham, Yorkshire, England

Household members (2 people)

First name(s)

Last name

Relationship

Marital status

Age

Birth year

Birth place

Full record

Charles

Wallshaw

Head

Married

29

1852

Melksham, Yorkshire, England

Elizabeth

Wallshaw

Wife

Married

24

1857

Mossley, Lancashire, England

Explore Findmypast's newspaper collections

Explore the 1881 Census and millions of historical records for free with Findmypast. Find out more about the household of Charles Wallshaw in Oldham in 1881, and follow the Wallshaw family through time in other national records, newspapers and more.

We've found family trees for Charles Wallshaw

We’ve found Charles Wallshaw in 82 family trees. Find out more about Charles Wallshaw's household and view the Wallshaw family in family trees created by Findmypast members.

Not who you're looking for?

Other households on nearby pages of the 1881 Census