Demography of Slough

This article is intended to give an overview of the demography of Slough. In 2016, Slough had a population of 149,000 people.

Industry sectors of Slough over time

Demographics of Slough
Population pyramid of Slough
Population149,400 (2016 estimate)
Population density in the 2011 census in Slough.

Population

The modern town of Slough grew from the parish of Upton-cum-Chalvey, Buckinghamshire, England. The populations given below are for the successive institutional areas of the principal local government level that could be recognised as Slough, now in Berkshire.

Year Population Notes
18011,018[1]Parish of Upton-cum-Chalvey
18111,083[1]
18211,268[1]
18311,502[1]
18412,296[1]
18513,573[1]
18614,688[1]
18715,940[1]
18817,030[1]
18917,700[1]
190111,453[1]Slough Urban District from 1894; area enlarged in 1900[2]
191114,982[1]
192116,392[1]
193133,612[1]area enlarged in 1930/1931[2]
193950,620[1]estimate (1941 census not taken due to World War II):Municipal Borough from 1938
195166,471[1]
196180,781[1]
197187,075[1]
198196,512[3]Borough of Slough in Berkshire and area enlarged from 1974
1991101,066[3]
2001119,070[4]Area enlarged in 1995: Unitary Authority from 1998
2011140,200[5]Up 16.3% on the 2001 census, and 6.9% higher than the previous mid-2010 population estimate
2016149,400ONS - based on 2012 population trends

Ethnicity

Ethnic makeup of Slough by single year ages in 2021
Population pyramid of Slough by ethnicity in 2021

The following table shows the ethnic group of respondents in the 1991, 2001 and 2011 censuses in Slough. Slough is a majority-minority town, with no ethnic group or broad multi-ethnic group being the majority, having been this way since the late 2000s. The White British make up the largest group at 34.5% of the population, having declined from a majority status of 58.3% in 2001, this decline coincides with the overall decline of White residents in the town from nearly two thirds in 1991 (72.3%) to less the majority (45.7%) in 2011. In conjunction, Asian British people have risen from nearly a quarter of the town's population in 1991 (23.9%) to nearly 40% in 2011, the largest of which is British Pakistanis who surpassed British Indians in 2011 as the largest Asian group. Black British residents have also increased, with the majority of growth coming from Black Africans who have increased from 0.4% in 1991 to 5.4% in 2011, of which surpassed the Black Caribbean group, who was 2.2% of the population, in 2011 as well.

Ethnic Group 1971 estimations[6] 1981 estimations[7] 1991[8] 2001[9] 2011[10] 2021[11]
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 78,367 90% 75,734 79% 73,100 72.32% 75,843 63.70% 64,053 45.69% 57,134 35.9%
White: British 69,44158.32%48,40134.52% 38,101 24.0%
White: Irish 3,241 3.2%2,4892.09%1,6071.15% 1143 0.7%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller[note 1] 2200.16% 237 0.1%
357 0.2%
White: Other 3,9133.29%13,8259.86% 17,296 10.9%
Asian or Asian British: Total 24,160 23.9% 33,621 28.24% 55,697 39.73% 74,093 46.9%
Asian or Asian British: Indian 12,600 12.5%16,71914.04%21,92215.64% 30,209 19.1%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani 9,218 9.1%14,36012.06%24,86917.74% 34,317 21.7%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi 99 1710.14%5490.39% 910 0.6%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese[note 2] 258 3490.29%7970.57% 594 0.4%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 910 2,0221.70%7,5605.39% 8,063 5.1%
Black or Black British: Total 3,806 3.76% 6,026 5.06% 12,115 8.64% 11,992 7.5%
Black or Black British: Caribbean 2,732 2.7%3,4702.91%3,0962.21% 2,771 1.7%
Black or Black British: African 417 0.4%2,2751.91%7,5485.38% 7,815 4.9%
Black or Black British: Other Black 657 2810.24%1,4711.05% 1,406 0.9%
Mixed: Total 2,778 2.33% 4,758 3.39% 6,311 4%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 1,1160.94%1,6671.19% 1,854 1.2%
Mixed: White and Black African 2240.19%6070.43% 824 0.5%
Mixed: White and Asian 8450.71%1,4291.02% 1,945 1.2%
Mixed: Other Mixed 5930.50%1,0550.75% 1,688 1.1%
Other: Total 1,075 1.06% 799 0.67% 3,582 2.55% 8,970 5.7%
Other: Arab[note 3] 9280.66% 1,826 1.2%
Other: Any other ethnic group 1,075 1.06%7990.67%2,6541.89% 7,144 4.5%
Ethnic minority 8,708 10% 20,177 21% 29,041 27.7% 43,224 36.3% 76,152 54.3% 101,366 64.1%
Total 87,075 100% 95,911 100% 101,066 100% 119,067 100% 140,205 100% 158,500 100%

Notes for table above

  1. New category created for the 2011 census
  2. In 2001, listed under the 'Chinese or other ethnic group' heading.
  3. New category created for the 2011 census

Ethnicity of school pupils

Since statistics on the ethnicity of school pupils have been collected, White students, the majority being the native White British, have been in the minority. As such Slough schools were in a majority-minority state in-till 2018 when Asian British pupils became the majority, of which had surpassed White students in the mid-2000s. In the Asian British multi-ethnic group, British Pakistanis are the largest at 25.8% and are the largest group of all groups in the town. Black British school pupils increased in proportional size between 2004 and 2012 peaking at 9.1%, but have declined since then to 7.2% in 2022. Mixed school pupils have also been in proportional increase and now make up a little over 1 in 10 in schools (11.3%) from 5.9% in 2004.

Ethnic group School year[12][13]
2004 2008 2012 2015/16 2019/20 2021/2022
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 7,670 44.3% 7,110 37.9% 6,820 32.4% 7,218 29.5% 8,422 25.8% 7,860 23.3%
White: British 6,940 40% 5,154 27.5% 4,581 21.8% 4,308 17.3% 4,453 13.6% 4,084 12.1%
White: Irish 200 158 148 114 0.5% 110 0.3% 81 0.2%
White: Traveller of Irish heritage 10 25 29 34 0.0% 25 0.1% 22 0.1%
White: Gypsy/Roma 70 54 110 158 0.6% 244 0.7% 240 0.7%
White: Other 470 1,719 1,951 2,762 11.1% 3,610 11.1% 3,433 10.2%
Asian / Asian British: Total 7,040 40.6% 8,360 44.6% 9,785 46.5% 12,108 48.6% 16,769 51.4% 17,725 52.4%
Asian / Asian British: Indian 2,830 16.3% 3,287 17.5% 3,758 20.0% 4,486 18.0% 6,565 20.1% 7,262 21.5%
Asian / Asian British: Pakistani 3,620 20.9% 4,164 22.2% 4,923 23.4% 6,191 24.8% 8,420 25.8% 8,687 25.8%
Asian / Asian British: Bangladeshi 60 92 116 149 0.6% 261 0.8% 256 0.8%
Asian / Asian British: Chinese 60 63 60 46 0.2% 49 0.2% 97 0.1%
Asian / Asian British: Other Asians 470 754 926 1,236 5.0% 1,474 4.5% 1,423 4.2%
Black / Black British: Total 1,100 6.4% 1,580 8.4% 1,925 9.1% 2,150 8.5% 2,454 7.5% 2,417 7.2%
Black: Caribbean 340 362 357 332 1.3% 343 1.1% 339 1.0%
Black: African 660 3.8% 1,133 6.0% 1,454 6.9% 1,658 6.6% 1,899 5.8% 1,847 5.5%
Black: Other Blacks 110 91 116 160 0.6% 212 0.6% 231 0.7%
Mixed / British Mixed 1,030 5.9% 1,190 6.3% 1,690 8% 2,125 8.5% 3,188 9.8% 3,817 11.3%
Other: Total 290 1.7% 391 2.1% 655 3.1% 911 3.7% 1,261 3.9% 1,349 4.0%
Unclassified 190 1.1% 37 - 173 0.8% 270 1.1% 551 1.7% 590 1.7%
Total: 17,320 100% 18,750 100% 21,050 100% 24,941 100% 32,665 100% 33,720 100%

Country of birth

Top Countries of Birth - 2011 and 2021[14][15]
Country of birth 2011 number 2021 number
 England 83,230 87,350
 India 11,544 17,107
 Pakistan 11,244 14,418
 Poland 8,341 8,912
 Romania 467 3,551
 Kenya 2,183 1,940
 Sri Lanka 1,219 1,385
 Somalia 1,247 1,336
 Italy 621 1,125
 Philippines 828 1,064
UK born and foreign born in Slough in 2021. Males and females representing the UK born population while foreign males and females representing the foreign born population.

Languages

Top 10 main languages spoken in Slough according to 2011 census and 2021 census are shown below.[16]

Rank Language 2011 2021
Usual residents aged 3+ Usual residents aged 3+
1English96,508 110,212
2Punjabi8,247 9,527
3Polish8,249 7,724
4Urdu6,568 6,497
5Romanian401 3,275
6Tamil860 1,224
7Hindi825 1,148
8Telugu275 1,066
9Arabic703 983
10Somali938 772

Religion

Religious makeup of Slough by single year age groups in 2021

The following table shows the religion of respondents in the 2001, 2011 and 2021 censuses[17] in Slough. With Slough having one of the highest British Asian communities in Britain, the British Muslim, British Hindus and Sikh communities are all overrepresented compared to the national average.

Religion 2001[18] 2011[19] 2021[20]
Number % Number % Number %
Christian63,99353.75%57,72641.17% 50,664 31.96%
Buddhist2940.25%7430.53% 776 0.5%
Hindu5,3404.48%8,6436.16% 12,343 7.79%
Jewish1390.12%870.06% 85 0.1%
Muslim15,89713.35%32,65523.29% 46,661 29.44%
Sikh10,8209.09%14,88910.62% 17,985 11.35%
Any Other religion3580.30%4820.34% 716 0.5%
No religion13,06110.97%17,02412.14% 20,726 13.08%
Religion not stated9,1657.70%7,9565.67% 8,544 5.39%
Total119,067100.00%140,205100.00% 158,500 100.00%

See also

References

  1. p 153, The History of Slough, Maxwell Fraser, Slough Corporation, 1973
  2. p 151, The History of Slough, Maxwell Fraser, Slough Corporation, 1973
  3. Office for National Statistics, downloaded 31 December 2006
  4. A Vision of Britain (Accessed 31 December 2006)
  5. (Accessed 29 November 2013)
  6. Masom, Grant (2020), Masom, Grant (ed.), "Where We Live Now: A Twentieth-Century Industrial Town", Local Churches in New Urban Britain, 1890-1975: “The Greatest Challenge”?, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 37–71, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-48095-0_2, ISBN 978-3-030-48095-0, S2CID 226649228, retrieved 10 January 2023
  7. Equality, Commission for Racial (1985). "Ethnic minorities in Britain: statistical information on the pattern of settlement". Commission for Racial Equality: Table 2.2.
  8. Data is taken from United Kingdom Casweb Data services of the United Kingdom 1991 Census on Ethnic Data for England, Scotland and Wales (Table 6)
  9. "Office of National Statistics; 2001 Census Key Statistics". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  10. "2011 Census: Ethnic Group, local authorities in England and Wales". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  11. "Ethnic group - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  12. "School and pupil characteristics". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  13. "Schools, pupils and their characteristics, Academic Year 2021/22". explore-education-statistics.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  14. https://www.nomisweb.co.uk/census/2011/QS203EW/view/1946157286?rows=cell&cols=rural_urban
  15. https://www.ons.gov.uk/filters/aa0765dc-7d47-4d84-85f6-bdc7d99b9227/dimensions
  16. "Download:local authorities: county / unitary". NOMIS. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  17. "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  18. "2001 census - theme tables". Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  19. "Download:local authorities: county / unitary". NOMIS. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  20. "Home - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.