Northern Territory Census

Northern Territory Wiki Topics
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Beginning Research
Record Types
Northern Territory Background
Local Research Resources

Online Records

As Part of New South Wales Prior to 1863

As Part of South Australia 1863 to 1911

Substitute Records

As Part of New South Wales Prior to 1863

Electoral Rolls/Voting Registers

Directories

Population Musters

As Part of South Australia 1863-1911

Finding Records

For an excellent analysis of extant records and where they can be found in Australia archives and libraries, see State Library of Victoria: Early Australian census records: Northern Territory.

History

The area now known as the Northern Territory was administered by New South Wales from 1825 to 1863, and by South Australia from 1863 to 1911. The first country-wide census was taken in 1881. National censuses have been regularly taken by the Australian government since 1911. However, to protect individual privacy, all national censuses were destroyed after statistical information was collected. Earlier, in 1882, a fire destroyed the New South Wales census records for 1846, 1851, 1856, 1861, 1871 and 1881, including the household forms from 1861, 1871 and 1881. Therefore, census usage in Australian research is different from census research in other countries.

No records of individuals exist for Northern Territory censuses after 1921.

Contents

Typically a census is a count and description of the population. Where available, census records can provide an ancestor’s name, age, occupation and/or employer, whether free or bond, religion, ship and date of arrival, marital status, birthplace, and family member relationships. Census returns can also provide clues that lead to other records. A census may list selected people or the whole population. The percentage of people listed depends on the purpose of the census and on how careful the enumerator was.

Census Substitutes

In Australian research, other records can be used in place of census records. They are referred to as "census substitutes," and they list individuals who lived in specific places. It is rare, however, to find an entire family listed. Usually these records list only the head of household’s name, date and place of residence, occupation, age, value of property, and sometimes ship of arrival.

  • Electoral rolls
  • Directories and almanacs
  • Emigration and immigration records
  • Depasturing licenses
  • Rate and valuation books
  • Lists of convicts