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General => The Common Room => Topic started by: toby webb on Saturday 25 June 22 13:51 BST (UK)

Title: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: toby webb on Saturday 25 June 22 13:51 BST (UK)
This page seems to always be shown minus the right hand side. Is anyone able to tell me where to find what is missing. Thanks. Toby.
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: MaureeninNY on Saturday 25 June 22 14:17 BST (UK)
Herbert Harry Farmilo   23
Emily Farmilo   26
William Henry Cyril Farmilo   1

Maureen
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Dundee on Saturday 25 June 22 14:37 BST (UK)
It is just instructions for the householder/enumerator (they were supposed to read this as well as the instructions in the column headings). There might be a better picture elsewhere.

https://media.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php/preparing-the-1911-census-for-digitisation/

Debra  :)
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Guy Etchells on Saturday 25 June 22 16:44 BST (UK)
I have not copied the for the 1911 but did for census from 1841 to 1901 see
https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~framland/history/census/directions.htm
Cheers
Guy
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: toby webb on Sunday 26 June 22 14:51 BST (UK)
Thank you all for your efforts. The material supplied by Guy Etchells is exactly what I want but unfortunately 1911 is not included. T.
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Tickettyboo on Sunday 26 June 22 15:54 BST (UK)
Huge link, but RC shrink a link not working for me

Is this what you are looking for?

http://www.histpop.org/ohpr/servlet/PageBrowser2?ResourceType=Census&ResourceType=Legislation&ResourceType=Essays&ResourceType=Registrar%20General&ResourceType=TNA&SearchTerms=private%20means&simple=yes&path=Results/TNA%20Census%20-%20Other&active=yes&treestate=expandnew&titlepos=0&mno=3190&tocstate=expandnew&display=sections&display=tables&display=pagetitles&pageseq=2

ADDED
Sorry meant to say, once that image comes up (link is big but seems to work here) if you click on 'Table of contents' in the left hand column of the page you can look through and see whatever else is available.

Boo
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Mean_genie on Sunday 26 June 22 19:51 BST (UK)
The image appears to come from Ancestry, who have cropped these pages to show only the address panel, but if you have access to Findmypast you can see the complete pages - from the household schedule image click on 'Extra materials' on the filmstrip at the bottom of the page.
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Tickettyboo on Sunday 26 June 22 23:46 BST (UK)
The image appears to come from Ancestry, who have cropped these pages to show only the address panel, but if you have access to Findmypast you can see the complete pages - from the household schedule image click on 'Extra materials' on the filmstrip at the bottom of the page.

Though that is correct for the 1921 on FindMyPast,  which does give the entire page with the address panel and the instructions.

 I've just looked on the 1911 on FindMyPast and the extra materials  shows 'just' the cropped view -  the address panel  - as per the image toby webb posted.


Boo


Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Guy Etchells on Monday 27 June 22 05:30 BST (UK)
Downloads of the various pages of all available census are here https://tinyurl.com/2p8udurp

To see the full page click one of the pages from the list of contents and click on the download High resolution TIFF image. This is a zip file and has to be unzipped
Cheers
Guy
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Andy J2022 on Monday 27 June 22 09:42 BST (UK)
As a bit of trivia, while we are constantly reminded that census information is subject to Crown Copyright,  the actual blank census forms for the 1911 and 1921 census are in fact no longer in copyright. This is because the duration for Crown Copyright (https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1988/48/section/163) is 125 years from the date the work was made, or 75 years from the date the work concerned was first published. By definition since these forms were sent to every household shortly before the census date, they were published more than 75 years ago, and so the blank forms are now out of copyright. The same does not apply to the filled-in forms since they have only been published more recently (ie 2012 and 2022 respectively) so the 75 year period has some way to go.

That having been said, the rules here are that all census information should be treated as being in copyright and so this should be respected.
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: KGarrad on Monday 27 June 22 10:04 BST (UK)
I was always given to understand that it was the IMAGES that were copyright?
To Ancestry and Bright Solid (owners of FindMyPast) depending on where you see these images.
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: toby webb on Monday 27 June 22 10:22 BST (UK)
Thank you all and particularly to you, Guy Etchells, for I now have everything I wanted. Good Old Roots Chat.  T
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Andy J2022 on Monday 27 June 22 10:32 BST (UK)
The basic census information is Crown Copyright. The fact that FindMyPast have made digital copies of the pages is a separate issue. It is questionable whether these images attract a separate copyright since they were made by an entirely mechanical process (there are videos showing how this was done on Youtube), and therefore there is insufficient human creativity involved to bring about a new copyright in the images. The reason this is debatable is that FindMyPast would no doubt argue that the human element comes from the preparatory steps of preparing the pages (conservation etc) and the transcription afterwards. However neither of these activities actually impact on the making of the digital images, and thus according to guidance issued by the Government's Intellectual Property Office, the images are unlikely to attract copyright ( see the fifth paragraph of this guidance notice (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/copyright-notice-digital-images-photographs-and-the-internet/copyright-notice-digital-images-photographs-and-the-internet)). The fact that FindMyPast (or BrightSolid) claim copyright doesn't make any difference as it's not illegal to claim it even when it doesn't actually exist. A court would have to decide the issue.

The transcriptions themselves are probably subject to copyright since the individuals doing the work have to use skill and experience to decide what the handwriting says, and this is evidence of their creative decisions. This similar to the work of a translator who most definitely is entitled to copyright in their work.

Because of the overall uncertainty, the rules that RootsChat have adopted rightly err on the side of caution.
 
Title: Re: 1911 Census Sheet
Post by: Guy Etchells on Monday 27 June 22 19:05 BST (UK)
The basic census information is Crown Copyright. The fact that FindMyPast have made digital copies of the pages is a separate issue. It is questionable whether these images attract a separate copyright since they were made by an entirely mechanical process (there are videos showing how this was done on Youtube), and therefore there is insufficient human creativity involved to bring about a new copyright in the images. The reason this is debatable is that FindMyPast would no doubt argue that the human element comes from the preparatory steps of preparing the pages (conservation etc) and the transcription afterwards. However neither of these activities actually impact on the making of the digital images, and thus according to guidance issued by the Government's Intellectual Property Office, the images are unlikely to attract copyright ( see the fifth paragraph of this guidance notice (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/copyright-notice-digital-images-photographs-and-the-internet/copyright-notice-digital-images-photographs-and-the-internet)). The fact that FindMyPast (or BrightSolid) claim copyright doesn't make any difference as it's not illegal to claim it even when it doesn't actually exist. A court would have to decide the issue.

The transcriptions themselves are probably subject to copyright since the individuals doing the work have to use skill and experience to decide what the handwriting says, and this is evidence of their creative decisions. This similar to the work of a translator who most definitely is entitled to copyright in their work.

Because of the overall uncertainty, the rules that RootsChat have adopted rightly err on the side of caution.
 

The images are not copyright as Crown copyright was waived by the government in 2000 on such forms.

Incidentally if any copyright ever existed on the information supplied by the householder on census images and indeed other forms such as certificates the information would not be held under Crown Copyright but would be the copyright of the individual who supplied the information and not the Crown.

I would also add that companies such as Findmypast, Ancestry, etc., etc. have terms and conditions that prohibit copying & publication of images they produce
Cheers
Guy