RAS-1996 — Page 88

RASHKB Journal 皇家亞洲學會香港分會學刊 All AI Reviewed

Table 26

Female Sellers of Foodstuffs and Allied Trades, 1911 and 1921

Occupation Northern District: 1911 Northern District: 1921 Southern District: 1911* Grocers 4 19.0% 21 34.4% Vegetable dealers 7 15% Fruit sellers 16 26.2% Rice dealers 4 6.6% 1 5.0% Fishmongers 1 4.8% 6 9.8% 1 5.0% Oil sellers 1 4.8% Rice ginders 2 3.3% Wine sellers 7 33.3% 1 1.6% Tea sellers 2 9.5% 3 4.9% General food hawkers 5 23.8% 3 4.9% 1 5.0% Bean curd sellers etc 3 14.2% 5 8.2% 1 5.0% Fish curers 1 1.6% Congee seller 1 1.6% Meat hawkers 3 4.9% TOTAL 21 100% 61 100% 2 100%

*Includes New Kowloon

59

The 1921 figures for the occupation of women in the Northern District are easier to use than those for men. Women seem only to have been recorded in 1921 if the enumerators felt they were in full-time employment other than as housewives. In 1921 the enumerators were less inclined to class women as agricultural labourers because of their part-time help in the fields, and more inclined to accept fisherwomen as being in full-time employment, even if they worked from a boat that was also their home, but, in both cases, the same biases still appear as in 1911, even if less strongly. More significantly, the 1921 enumerators were more willing to accept as being in full-time employment women who worked at handicrafts from their home, or who helped their husbands in shops or workshops. Even so, the figures are without doubt flawed, and still doubtless under-represent the contribution women made to the traditional economy. The 1921 Census records the occupations of 12,320 women in the Northern District, 35.3% of all women recorded there; the 1911 Census recorded the occupations of 14,386 women, 41.4% of all women recorded.

Since the 1911 Census seems to ignore those women who worked from home, or assisted in their husband's shop, those women in the 1911

Edit History

2026-05-13 08:31:10 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
Table 26 Female Sellers of Foodstuffs and Allied Trades, 1911 and 1921 Occupation Northern District: 1911 Northern District: 1921 Southern District: 1911* Grocers 4 19.0% 21 34.4% Vegetable dealers 7 15% Fruit sellers 16 26.2% Rice dealers 4 6.6% 1 5.0% Fishmongers 1 4.8% 6 9.8% 1 5.0% Oil sellers 1 4.8% Rice ginders 2 3.3% Wine sellers 7 33.3% 1 1.6% Tea sellers 2 9.5% 3 4.9% General food hawkers 5 23.8% 3 4.9% 1 5.0% Bean curd sellers etc 3 14.2% 5 8.2% 1 5.0% Fish curers 1 1.6% Congee seller 1 1.6% Meat hawkers 3 4.9% TOTAL 21 100% 61 100% 2 100% *Includes New Kowloon 59 The 1921 figures for the occupation of women in the Northern District are easier to use than those for men. Women seem only to have been recorded in 1921 if the enumerators felt they were in full-time employment other than as housewives. In 1921 the enumerators were less inclined to class women as agricultural labourers because of their part-time help in the fields, and more inclined to accept fisherwomen as being in full-time employment, even if they worked from a boat that was also their home, but, in both cases, the same biases still appear as in 1911, even if less strongly. More significantly, the 1921 enumerators were more willing to accept as being in full-time employment women who worked at handicrafts from their home, or who helped their husbands in shops or workshops. Even so, the figures are without doubt flawed, and still doubtless under-represent the contribution women made to the traditional economy. The 1921 Census records the occupations of 12,320 women in the Northern District, 35.3% of all women recorded there; the 1911 Census recorded the occupations of 14,386 women, 41.4% of all women recorded. Since the 1911 Census seems to ignore those women who worked from home, or assisted in their husband's shop, those women in the 1911
Baseline (Original)
Table 26 Female Sellers of Foodstuffs and Allied Trades, 1911 and 1921 Occupation Northern Northern Southern District: District: District: 1911 1921 1911* Grocers 4 19.0% 21 34.4% Vegetable dealers 7 15% Fruit sellers. Rice dealers Fishmongers Oil sellers Rice ginders 4 66% T 4 6.6% 16 800% 1 6 98% 1 50% 2 3.3% - - 1 5.0% Wine sellers 7 33.3% 1 1 6% Tea sellers 2 9.5% 3 4.9% General food hawkers 5 23.8% 3 49% 1 50% Bean curd sellers etc 3 14.2% 5 8.2% 5.0% Fish curets 16% Congee seller 16% Meat hawkers 3 49% TOTAL 21 100% 61 100% 20 100% *Includes New Kowloon 59 The 1921 figures for the occupation of women in the Northern District are easier to use than those for men. Women seem only to have been recorded in 1921 if the enumerators felt they were in full-time employment other than as housewives. In 1921 the enumerators were less inclined to class women as agricultural labourers because of their part-time help in the fields, and more inclined to accept fisherwomen as being in full-time employment, even if they worked from a boat that was also their home, but, in both cases, the same biases still appear as in 1911, even if less strongly More significantly, the 1921 enumerators were more willing to accept as being in full-time employment women who worked at handicrafts from then home, or who helped their husbands in shops or workshops Even so, the figures are without doubt flawed, and still doubtless under-represent the contribution women made to the traditional economy. The 1921 Census records the occupations of 12,320 women in the Northern District, 35 3% of all women recorded there, the 1911 Census recorded the occupations of 14,386 women, 41.4% of all women recorded. Since the 1911 Census seems to ignore those women who worked from home, or assisted in their husband's shop, those women the 1911
2026-05-13 08:31:10 · Baseline
View content

Table 26

Female Sellers of Foodstuffs and Allied Trades, 1911 and 1921

Occupation

Northern

Northern

Southern

District:

District:

District:

1911

1921

1911*

Grocers

4

19.0%

21 34.4%

Vegetable dealers

7

15%

Fruit sellers.

Rice dealers Fishmongers Oil sellers Rice ginders

4

66%

T

4

6.6%

16 800%

1 │

6

98%

1

50%

2

3.3%

-

-

1

5.0%

Wine sellers

7

33.3%

1

1 6%

Tea sellers

2

9.5%

3

4.9%

General food hawkers

5

23.8% 3

49%

1

50%

Bean curd sellers etc

3

14.2% 5

8.2%

5.0%

Fish curets

16%

Congee seller

16%

Meat hawkers

3

49%

TOTAL

21

100%

61

100% 20

100%

*Includes New Kowloon

59

The 1921 figures for the occupation of women in the Northern District are easier to use than those for men. Women seem only to have been recorded in 1921 if the enumerators felt they were in full-time employment other than as housewives. In 1921 the enumerators were less inclined to class women as agricultural labourers because of their part-time help in the fields, and more inclined to accept fisherwomen as being in full-time employment, even if they worked from a boat that was also their home, but, in both cases, the same biases still appear as in 1911, even if less strongly More significantly, the 1921 enumerators were more willing to accept as being in full-time employment women who worked at handicrafts from then home, or who helped their husbands in shops or workshops Even so, the figures are without doubt flawed, and still doubtless under-represent the contribution women made to the traditional economy. The 1921 Census records the occupations of 12,320 women in the Northern District, 35 3% of all women recorded there, the 1911 Census recorded the occupations of 14,386 women, 41.4% of all women recorded.

Since the 1911 Census seems to ignore those women who worked from home, or assisted in their husband's shop, those women the 1911

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.