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Anglo-Celtic Australians

Anglo-Celtic Australians is an ancestral grouping of Australians whose ancestors originate wholly or partially in the British Isles - predominantly in England (including Cornish), Ireland, Scotland and Wales, as well as the Isle of Man and Channel Islands.[5]

Australians
Total population
Regions with significant populations
All parts of Australia including urban, rural and regional Australia
Languages
Predominantly Australian English
Welsh • Irish • Scottish Gaelic • Cornish
Religion
Predominantly Christian
Related ethnic groups
European New Zealanders

While Anglo-Celtic Australians do not form an official ethnic grouping in the Australian Bureau of Statistics' Australian Standard Classification of Cultural and Ethnic Groups, due to the long historical dominance and intermixture of Australians with ancestries from the British Isles, it is commonly used as an informal ethnic identifier.[2]

The term has received criticism for erasing historical distinctions between English and Celtic settlers. In particular, it does not account for the political and social segregation of English and Irish Australians which some scholars have labelled an apartheid[6] or the fact that while many English arrived in Australia as willing immigrants, many Irish were forcibly transported as prisoners or refugees.[7]

At the 2021 census, the number of ancestry responses from the following groups as a proportion of the total Australian population amounted to 51.7%: English Australian, Irish Australian, Scottish Australian, Welsh Australian, Cornish Australians, British Australian (so described), Manx Australian, Channel Islander Australian.[1][C] The precise number of Anglo-Celtic Australians is unknown due to the way in which ancestry data is collected in Australia. For instance, many census recipients nominated two Anglo-Celtic ancestries due to the long history of these ancestries in Australia, tending towards an overcount. Conversely, the Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most people nominating "Australian" ancestry have at least partial Anglo-Celtic European ancestry despite "Australian" ancestry being classified as part of the Oceanian ancestry group,[4] tending towards an undercount.

History edit

Pre-Federation edit

The British Government initiated European settlement of the Australian continent by establishing a penal settlement at Sydney Cove in 1788. Between then and 1852, about 100,000 convicts (mostly tried in England) were transported to eastern Australia. Scotland and Wales contributed relatively few convicts.[citation needed]

Native-born Australians of British and Irish descent were approximately a quarter of the population of the colony of New South Wales in both 1817 and 1828.[8]: 17  There were slightly more native-born than free settlers in 1850.[8] They were nearly half of the population in 1868.[9] Their proportion of the population decreased during the times of the rapid population growth brought on by the goldrushes.[8]: 17  The convicts were augmented by free settlers, including large numbers who arrived during the gold-rush in the 1850s. As late as 1861, people born in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland outnumbered even the Australia-born population. The number of settlers in Australia who were born in the United Kingdom (UK) peaked at 825,000 in 1891, from which point the proportion of British among all immigrants to Australia steadily declined.[clarification needed]

Until 1859, 2.2 million (73%) of the free settlers who immigrated were British.[10]

 
Australian Government poster issued by the Overseas Settlement Office to attract British immigrants (1928).

Post-Federation edit

From the beginning of the colonial era until the mid-20th century, the vast majority of settlers to Australia were from Britain and Ireland, with the English being the dominant group, followed by the Irish and Scottish. Among the leading ancestries, increases in Australian, Irish, and German ancestries and decreases in English, Scottish, and Welsh ancestries appear to reflect such shifts in perception or reporting. These reporting shifts at least partly resulted from changes in the design of the census question, in particular the introduction of a tick box format in 2001.[11]

Those born in the United Kingdom were the largest foreign group throughout the 20th century. Prior to the last quarter of the century, the United Kingdom was strongly favoured as a source country by immigrant selection policies and remained the largest single component of the annual immigration intake until 1995–96, when immigrants from New Zealand surpassed it in number. However, their share of the total immigrant population is in decline. Those from the United Kingdom comprised 58 per cent of the total overseas-born population in 1901, compared to 27 per cent in 1996. An even greater decline has occurred for those born in Ireland. In 1901, those born in Ireland comprised 22 per cent of all immigrants, while in 1996 the Ireland-born represented just 1 per cent of the immigrant population.[12]

While those born in England have formed the largest component of the British immigrant population, Australia has also received significant numbers of immigrants from Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. Up until the First World War the Irish were, in their own right, the second largest immigrant population.[12]

The most dramatic increase in the British immigrant population occurred between 1961 and 1971. The number of British-born people living in Australia exceeded one million at the 1971 Census and has remained above one million to this day. The United Kingdom-born population in Australia reached a peak of 1,107,119 in 1991.[citation needed]

Demographics edit

Anglo-Celtic Australian 1846 - 2021
Year % of total population
1846 57.2 57.2
 
1861 78.1 78.1
 
1891 86.8 86.8
 
1947 89.7 89.7
 
1988 74.6 74.6
 
1996 71.45 71.45
 
1999 69.9 69.9
 
2016 58 58
 
2021 51.7 51.7
 
Source: 1846,[13] 1996,[14] 1999,[15] 2016,[16] 2021[1]

Anglo-Celtic is not an official ancestry category in the Australian census.[2] Census respondents may nominate up to two ancestries. The number of ancestry responses from the following groups as a proportion of the total Australian population amounted to 51.7% at the 2021 census: English Australian, Irish Australian, Scottish Australian, Cornish Australians, Welsh Australian, British Australian (so described), Manx Australian, Channel Islander Australian.[1][D] The precise number of Anglo-Celtic Australians is unknown due to the way in which ancestry data is collected in Australia. For instance, many census recipients nominated two Anglo-Celtic ancestries due to the long history of these ancestries in Australia, tending towards an overcount. Conversely, the Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most people nominating "Australian" ancestry have at least partial Anglo-Celtic European ancestry despite "Australian" ancestry being classified as part of the Oceanian ancestry group,[4] tending towards an undercount.

At the 2021 census, the most commonly nominated Anglo-Celtic ancestries were:[1]

The United Kingdom remains a significant source of immigrants to Australia. In 2005–06, 22,143 persons born in the United Kingdom settled in Australia, representing 21.4% of all migrants. At the 2006 Census (excluding overseas visitors)[17] 1,038,165 persons identified themselves as having been born in the United Kingdom (5.2% of the Australian population), while 50,251 identified themselves as Irish born.

Melbourne and Sydney have the lowest rates of Anglo-Celtic Australians, particularly in certain regions of each city (such as Western Sydney). Tasmania could have the nation's highest proportion of citizens of Anglo-Celtic origin, possibly as high as 85 percent. On the evidence of statistics of ethnic derivation Tasmania could also be considered more British than New Zealand (where the Anglo-Celtic majority has fallen below 75 percent).[18]

Historical demographics edit

British and Irish population per census edit

The following table shows the British and Irish-born population for every national Australian census as a proportion of the total foreign-born population at various points.

UK and Ireland-born population of Australia
% of all overseas born
Year Anglo-Celtic / % United Kingdom
% of overseas-born
Ireland
% of overseas-born
Ref(s)
1881 689,642 - - - - - [19]
1901 679,159 79.2 495 074 57.7 184,085 21.5 [20][21]
1911 590,722 78.0 451,288 59.6 139,434 18.4 [20]
1921 673,403 80.2 568,370 67.7 105,033 12.5 [20][22]
1933 712,458 78.9 633,806 70.2 78,652 8.7 [20]
1947 541,267 72.7 496,454 66.7 44,813 6.0 [20][21]
1954 661,205 51.6 616,532 47.9 44,673 3.5 [20][21]
1961 755,402 42.6 718,345 40.4 37,057 2.1 [20][21]
1966 908,664 - 870,548 38,116 [22]
1971 1,088,210 42.2 1,046,356 40.6 41,854 1.6 [20][23]
1976 1,117,599 - 1,070,233 47,361 [24]
1981 1,132,601 41.1 1,086,625 36.5 [21][25]
1986 1,127,196 34.7 [21][25]
1991 1,174,860 31.17 1,107,119 30.0 51,642 1.17 [21][26][27][28]
1996 ,124,031 - 1,072,562 28.7 51,469 - [23][27][29]
2001 1,086,496 - 1,036,261 25.2 50,235 [30]
2006 1,088,416 - 1,038,162 23.5 50,255 - [30][31][32]
2011 1,168,398 20.8 1,101,082 20.8 67,318 0.0 [20][30][32][33]
2016 1,162,654 - 1,087,759 17.7 74,895 - [34][35]
2021 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA -

Notes: From 1954 onwards people from "Northern Ireland" and "Ulster" were recorded separately from the people of "Ireland".[36] The 1966 census (is Republic of Ireland & Ireland (undefined).

Self-identified census data edit

The following table shows various Anglo-Celtic ancestries since 1986, the first census to include as a question on ancestry. The aim of the question was to measure the ethnic composition of the population as a whole. Very little use was made of the ancestry data from the 1986 Census. As a consequence, ancestry was not included in either the 1991 or 1996 Censuses. Between 1987 and 1999, the Anglo-Celtic component of Australia's population declined from 75 per cent to 70 per cent.[37] In 1999, the Anglo-Celtic share of the Australian population was calculated as 69.9%.[38]

Ancestry 1986 % 2001 % 2006 % 2011 % % Change 2006–2011
  English 6,607,228[39] 42.4 6,358,880 33.9 6,283,647 31.6 7,238,533 36.1%[40] +15.2%
  Irish 902,679 5.8 1,919,727 10.2 1,803,736 9.1 2,087,800 10.4 +15.7%
  Scottish 740,522 4.7 540,046 2.9 1,501,200 7.6[41][42] 1,792,622 8.3 +19.4%
  Welsh no data no data 84,246 no data 113,244 0.6 125,597 0.6 +10.9%
Total 8,250,429 52.9 8,902,899 47.0 9,701,827 48.9 11,244,552 53.0% – 55.4%

Maps edit

Controversy and criticism edit

Some have argued that the term is entirely a product of multiculturalism that ignores the history of sectarianism in Australia. For example, historian John Hirst wrote in 1994: "Mainstream Australian society was reduced to an ethnic group and given an ethnic name: Anglo-Celt."[43]

According to Hirst:

In the eyes of multiculturalists, Australian society of the 1940s, 150 years after first settlement, is adequately described as Anglo-Celtic. At least this acknowledges that the people of Australia were Irish and Scots as well as English, but it has nothing more substantial than a hyphen joining them. In fact a distinct new culture had been formed. English, Scots and Irish had formed a common identity – first of all British and then gradually Australian as well. In the 1930s the historian W. K. Hancock could aptly describe them as Independent Australian Britons.[44]

The Irish-Australian journalist Siobhán McHugh has argued that the term "Anglo-Celtic" is "an insidious distortion of our past and a galling denial of the struggle by an earlier minority group", Irish Australians, "against oppression and demonisation... In what we now cosily term "Anglo-Celtic" Australia, a virtual social apartheid existed at times between [Irish] Catholics and [British] Protestants", which did not end until the 1960s.

The term was also criticised by the historian Patrick O'Farrell as "a grossly misleading, false, and patronising convenience, one crassly present-oriented. Its use removes from consciousness and recognition a major conflict fundamental to any comprehension not only of Australian history but of our present core culture."[6]

Culture edit

Streams of migration from the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland to Australia played a key role in Australia's cultural development, despite the last substantial scheme for preferential migration from Britain to Australia ending in 1972. There is a long history of cultural exchange between the countries and many Australians have used Britain as a stepping-stone to international success, e.g., Nellie Melba, Peter Dawson, Clive James, Robert Hughes. In 1967, British migrants in Australia formed an association to represent their special interests: the United Kingdom Settlers' Association, which subsequently became the .

On 10 July 2017, at a press conference in London, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said:

"Australians feel at home in the United Kingdom and Britons feel at home in Australia. Most Australians have some of their ancestry at least from the United Kingdom and five per cent of Australians were actually born in the United Kingdom. The culture, the laws the traditions of Britain were brought to Australia with the European settlement, British settlement that were brought as part of the heritage of the men and women, including my forebears, that founded what we know today as modern Australia". . . There are no two nations in the world that trust each other more than the United Kingdom and Australia. We are family in a historical sense. We're family in a genetic sense. But we are so close and that trust is getting stronger all the time.[45]

Place names of British origin edit

 
Melbourne – named in honour of William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne and thus indirectly takes its name from the village of Melbourne, England.

There are many places in Australia named after people and places in the United Kingdom as a result of the many British settlers and explorers; in addition, some places were named after the British royal family.[citation needed]

New South Wales edit

New South Wales – Cook first named the land "New Wales", named after Wales. However, in the copy held by the Admiralty, he "revised the wording" to "New South Wales".[46]

Northern Territory edit

Queensland edit

Queensland – The state was named in honour of Queen Victoria,[48][49] who on 6 June 1859 signed Letters Patent separating the colony from New South Wales.[50]

South Australia edit

Tasmania edit

Victoria edit

Victoria – like Queensland, was named after Queen Victoria, who had been on the British throne for 14 years when the colony was established in 1851.[55]

Western Australia edit

External territories edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Number of "English", "Irish", "Scottish", "Welsh", "Cornish", "British", "Channel Islander" and "Manx" ancestry responses as a proportion of the total population.[2] Ancestry figures do not amount to 100% as the Australian Bureau of Statistics allows up to two ancestry responses per person.[3]
  2. ^ Does not include those nominating their ancestry as "Australian", who are categorised within the Oceanian group. The Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most people nominating "Australian" ancestry have at least partial Anglo-Celtic European ancestry.[4]
  3. ^ Ancestry figures do not amount to 100% as the Australian Bureau of Statistics allows up to two ancestry responses per person.[3]
  4. ^ Ancestry figures do not amount to 100% as the Australian Bureau of Statistics allows up to two ancestry responses per person.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Census of Population and Housing: Cultural diversity data summary, 2021" (XLSX). Abs.gov.au. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b c "Australian Standard Classification of Cultural and Ethnic Groups (ASCCEG), 2019 | Australian Bureau of Statistics". 18 December 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "Understanding and using Ancestry data | Australian Bureau of Statistics". 28 June 2022.
  4. ^ a b c "Feature Article – Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Australia (Feature Article)". 1301.0 – Year Book Australia, 1995. Commonwealth of Australia. Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  5. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (January 1995). "Feature Article – Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Australia (Feature Article)". Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  6. ^ a b "How the Irish rose above Australia's social apartheid – The Sydney Morning Herald". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 October 2009.
  7. ^ "Remembering and Commemorating the Great Famine and Emigration to Australia // Articles // breac // University of Notre Dame". breac.nd.edu. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  8. ^ a b c Molony, John Neylon (2000). The Native-born: The First White Australians. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 978-0-522-84903-5.
  9. ^ "NATIVE-BORN AUSTRALIANS". The Empire. No. 5108. New South Wales, Australia. 4 April 1868. p. 5. Retrieved 14 July 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  11. ^ "Chapter - Population characteristics: Ancestry of Australia's population". Abs.gov.au. 3 June 2003. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  12. ^ a b Immigration and Population History of Selected Countries of Birth 'United Kingdom – A Short Immigration History', S3.amazonaws.com
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 June 2017. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  14. ^ The Australian People: An Encyclopedia of the Nation, Its People and Their ... – By James Jupp
  15. ^ The Transformation of Australia's Population: 1970–2030 (Page 166) – edited by Siew-An Khoo, Peter F. McDonald, Siew-Ean Khoo
  16. ^ "Leading for Change ; A blueprint for cultural diversity and inclusive leadership revisited" (PDF). Humanrights.gov.au. April 2018. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  17. ^ . Stat.abs.gov.au. Archived from the original on 25 August 2014.
  18. ^ "Britishness". Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  19. ^ "Year Book Australia, 1989 No. 72". Aust. Bureau of Statistics. 1988.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i Top 10 countries of birth for the overseas‐born population since 1901 Top 10 countries of overseas-born
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Composition: Changing links with Europe, Australian Bureau of Statistics
  22. ^ a b CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING, 30 JUNE 1966 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA BIRTHPLACE (Page: 13)
  23. ^ a b Australia's 15 Largest Birthplace Groups, 1947, 1971, and 1996 Source: Australian censuses of 1947, 1971, and 1996
  24. ^ CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING, 30 JUNE 1976 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Population by Birthplace (Pages: 1–2)
  25. ^ a b MAIN BIRTHPLACES OF OVERSEAS BORN POPULATION, 1986 CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING (Page: 7)
  26. ^ Year Book Australia 1995 abs.gov.au
  27. ^ a b Birthplace by Region, 1996 Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 1996 Census of Population and Housing, Australia
  28. ^ Dimensions of Australian Society By Brian Graetz, Ian McAllister
  29. ^ OVERSEAS-BORN POPULATION: TOP 12 BIRTHPLACE GROUPS, Australian Bureau of Statistics
  30. ^ a b c THE IRELAND-BORN COMMUNITY IN VICTORIA and Australia 2011 Census, Multicultural.vic.gov.au
  31. ^ "The Top Sending Regions of Immigrants in Australia, Canada, and the United States". 20 August 2013. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  32. ^ a b The People of Australia Statistics from the 2011 Census 17 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine Australia: 2011 and 2006 Census
  33. ^ TOP 10 COUNTRIES OF BIRTH FOR THE OVERSEAS-BORN POPULATION, Australian Bureau of Statistics
  34. ^ "United Kingdom-born Community Information Summary" (PDF). Homeaffairs.gov.au. 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
  35. ^ "2016 Census QuickStats, People in Australia who were born in Ireland". Censusdata.abs.gov.au. 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
  36. ^ Alan James (2012). New Britannia: The rise and decline of Anglo-Australia. Renewal Publications, University of Melbourne. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-300-54292-6.
  37. ^ Khoo, Siew-An, Peter McDonald, and Siew-Ean Khoo, eds. The Transformation of Australia's Population: 1970–2030. UNSW Press, 2003, p. 165.
  38. ^ Price, Charles A. (1999). (PDF). People and Place. 7 (4). Monash University: 12–16. ISSN 1039-4788. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  39. ^ The Transformation of Australia's Population: 1970–2030 edited by Siew-An Khoo, Peter F. McDonald, Siew-Ean Khoo (Page: 164)
  40. ^ "2011 Census data shows more than 300 ancestries". Australian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  41. ^ (PDF). Canberra: Department of Immigration and Border Protection. 2014. p. 55. ISBN 978-1-920996-23-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 May 2014.
  42. ^ The People of Australia – Statistics from the 2006 Census 19 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine(Page 50)
  43. ^ . The Australian. 26 September 2007. Archived from the original on 5 September 2008. Retrieved 26 October 2007.
  44. ^ John Hirst, Sense and Nonsense in Australian History, Black Inc. Agenda, Melbourne (ISBN 978-0-9775949-3-1), page 12
  45. ^ "Speech PM press conference with Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull". Gov.uk. 10 July 2017. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
  46. ^ See Captain W. J. L. Wharton's preface to his 1893 transcription of Cook's journal. in the University of Adelaide Library's Electronic Texts Collection.
  47. ^ "History of Sydney, Australia - Tours and Info". int.sydney.com. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 October 2007. Retrieved 13 October 2007.
  49. ^ "Where Did Australia's States Get Their Names? « Manly Bunkhouse". Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  50. ^ "Documenting Democracy". Foundingdocs.gov.au. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  51. ^ "Council history". Brisbane.qld.gov.au. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  52. ^ "How well do you know our Queen?". Adelaidenow.com.au. 3 May 2013. from the original on 7 August 2019. Retrieved 29 December 2019.
  53. ^ Paige, Fiona. "Hobart, TAS". Aussie Towns. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  54. ^ "A Timeline of Launceston | Launceston Historical Society Inc". Launcestonhistory.org. 25 June 2012. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  55. ^ "Colony of Victoria - Concept - Find & Connect - Victoria". Findandconnect.gov.au.
  56. ^ "History of Melbourne". Onlymelbourne.com.au.
  57. ^ Kimberly, W. B. (1897). History of West Australia . Melbourne: F. W. Niven & Co. p. 44.
  58. ^ Uren, Malcolm J. L. (1948). Land Looking West. London: Oxford University Press.
  59. ^ Crowley, Francis K. (1960). Australia's Western Third. London: Macmillan & Co.
  60. ^ Statham, Pamela (1981). "Swan River Colony". In Stannage, Tom (ed.). A New History of Western Australia. Nedlands: University of Western Australia Press. ISBN 0-85564-181-9.
  61. ^ Channers On Norfolk Island Info 3 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine. Channersonnorfolk.com (15 March 2013). Retrieved on 16 July 2013.

anglo, celtic, australians, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Anglo Celtic Australians news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Anglo Celtic Australians is an ancestral grouping of Australians whose ancestors originate wholly or partially in the British Isles predominantly in England including Cornish Ireland Scotland and Wales as well as the Isle of Man and Channel Islands 5 AustraliansTotal populationAt least 51 7 of the Australian population 2021 1 A B English Australians 8 385 928Irish Australians 2 410 833Scottish Australians 2 176 777Cornish Australians 768 100Welsh Australians 683 700Anglo Celtic Australians so described 13 150Manx Australians 2 424Channel Islander Australians 1 273Regions with significant populationsAll parts of Australia including urban rural and regional AustraliaLanguagesPredominantly Australian EnglishWelsh Irish Scottish Gaelic CornishReligionPredominantly ChristianRelated ethnic groupsEuropean New Zealanders While Anglo Celtic Australians do not form an official ethnic grouping in the Australian Bureau of Statistics Australian Standard Classification of Cultural and Ethnic Groups due to the long historical dominance and intermixture of Australians with ancestries from the British Isles it is commonly used as an informal ethnic identifier 2 The term has received criticism for erasing historical distinctions between English and Celtic settlers In particular it does not account for the political and social segregation of English and Irish Australians which some scholars have labelled an apartheid 6 or the fact that while many English arrived in Australia as willing immigrants many Irish were forcibly transported as prisoners or refugees 7 At the 2021 census the number of ancestry responses from the following groups as a proportion of the total Australian population amounted to 51 7 English Australian Irish Australian Scottish Australian Welsh Australian Cornish Australians British Australian so described Manx Australian Channel Islander Australian 1 C The precise number of Anglo Celtic Australians is unknown due to the way in which ancestry data is collected in Australia For instance many census recipients nominated two Anglo Celtic ancestries due to the long history of these ancestries in Australia tending towards an overcount Conversely the Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most people nominating Australian ancestry have at least partial Anglo Celtic European ancestry despite Australian ancestry being classified as part of the Oceanian ancestry group 4 tending towards an undercount Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre Federation 1 2 Post Federation 2 Demographics 3 Historical demographics 3 1 British and Irish population per census 4 Self identified census data 4 1 Maps 5 Controversy and criticism 6 Culture 7 Place names of British origin 7 1 New South Wales 7 2 Northern Territory 7 3 Queensland 7 4 South Australia 7 5 Tasmania 7 6 Victoria 7 7 Western Australia 7 8 External territories 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesHistory editPre Federation edit The British Government initiated European settlement of the Australian continent by establishing a penal settlement at Sydney Cove in 1788 Between then and 1852 about 100 000 convicts mostly tried in England were transported to eastern Australia Scotland and Wales contributed relatively few convicts citation needed Native born Australians of British and Irish descent were approximately a quarter of the population of the colony of New South Wales in both 1817 and 1828 8 17 There were slightly more native born than free settlers in 1850 8 They were nearly half of the population in 1868 9 Their proportion of the population decreased during the times of the rapid population growth brought on by the goldrushes 8 17 The convicts were augmented by free settlers including large numbers who arrived during the gold rush in the 1850s As late as 1861 people born in England Wales Scotland and Ireland outnumbered even the Australia born population The number of settlers in Australia who were born in the United Kingdom UK peaked at 825 000 in 1891 from which point the proportion of British among all immigrants to Australia steadily declined clarification needed Until 1859 2 2 million 73 of the free settlers who immigrated were British 10 nbsp Australian Government poster issued by the Overseas Settlement Office to attract British immigrants 1928 Post Federation edit From the beginning of the colonial era until the mid 20th century the vast majority of settlers to Australia were from Britain and Ireland with the English being the dominant group followed by the Irish and Scottish Among the leading ancestries increases in Australian Irish and German ancestries and decreases in English Scottish and Welsh ancestries appear to reflect such shifts in perception or reporting These reporting shifts at least partly resulted from changes in the design of the census question in particular the introduction of a tick box format in 2001 11 Those born in the United Kingdom were the largest foreign group throughout the 20th century Prior to the last quarter of the century the United Kingdom was strongly favoured as a source country by immigrant selection policies and remained the largest single component of the annual immigration intake until 1995 96 when immigrants from New Zealand surpassed it in number However their share of the total immigrant population is in decline Those from the United Kingdom comprised 58 per cent of the total overseas born population in 1901 compared to 27 per cent in 1996 An even greater decline has occurred for those born in Ireland In 1901 those born in Ireland comprised 22 per cent of all immigrants while in 1996 the Ireland born represented just 1 per cent of the immigrant population 12 While those born in England have formed the largest component of the British immigrant population Australia has also received significant numbers of immigrants from Ireland Scotland and Wales Up until the First World War the Irish were in their own right the second largest immigrant population 12 The most dramatic increase in the British immigrant population occurred between 1961 and 1971 The number of British born people living in Australia exceeded one million at the 1971 Census and has remained above one million to this day The United Kingdom born population in Australia reached a peak of 1 107 119 in 1991 citation needed Demographics editFurther information European Australians Anglo Celtic Australian 1846 2021 Year of total population 1846 57 2 57 2 1861 78 1 78 1 1891 86 8 86 8 1947 89 7 89 7 1988 74 6 74 6 1996 71 45 71 45 1999 69 9 69 9 2016 58 58 2021 51 7 51 7 Source 1846 13 1996 14 1999 15 2016 16 2021 1 Anglo Celtic is not an official ancestry category in the Australian census 2 Census respondents may nominate up to two ancestries The number of ancestry responses from the following groups as a proportion of the total Australian population amounted to 51 7 at the 2021 census English Australian Irish Australian Scottish Australian Cornish Australians Welsh Australian British Australian so described Manx Australian Channel Islander Australian 1 D The precise number of Anglo Celtic Australians is unknown due to the way in which ancestry data is collected in Australia For instance many census recipients nominated two Anglo Celtic ancestries due to the long history of these ancestries in Australia tending towards an overcount Conversely the Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most people nominating Australian ancestry have at least partial Anglo Celtic European ancestry despite Australian ancestry being classified as part of the Oceanian ancestry group 4 tending towards an undercount At the 2021 census the most commonly nominated Anglo Celtic ancestries were 1 English Australian 8 395 928 Irish Australian 2 410 833 Scottish Australian 2 176 777 Cornish Australians 768 100 Welsh Australians 683 700 British Australians so described 13 150 Manx Australians 2 424 Channel Islander Australians 1 273 The United Kingdom remains a significant source of immigrants to Australia In 2005 06 22 143 persons born in the United Kingdom settled in Australia representing 21 4 of all migrants At the 2006 Census excluding overseas visitors 17 1 038 165 persons identified themselves as having been born in the United Kingdom 5 2 of the Australian population while 50 251 identified themselves as Irish born Melbourne and Sydney have the lowest rates of Anglo Celtic Australians particularly in certain regions of each city such as Western Sydney Tasmania could have the nation s highest proportion of citizens of Anglo Celtic origin possibly as high as 85 percent On the evidence of statistics of ethnic derivation Tasmania could also be considered more British than New Zealand where the Anglo Celtic majority has fallen below 75 percent 18 Historical demographics editBritish and Irish population per census edit The following table shows the British and Irish born population for every national Australian census as a proportion of the total foreign born population at various points UK and Ireland born population of Australia of all overseas born Year Anglo Celtic United Kingdom of overseas born Ireland of overseas born Ref s 1881 689 642 19 1901 679 159 79 2 495 074 57 7 184 085 21 5 20 21 1911 590 722 78 0 451 288 59 6 139 434 18 4 20 1921 673 403 80 2 568 370 67 7 105 033 12 5 20 22 1933 712 458 78 9 633 806 70 2 78 652 8 7 20 1947 541 267 72 7 496 454 66 7 44 813 6 0 20 21 1954 661 205 51 6 616 532 47 9 44 673 3 5 20 21 1961 755 402 42 6 718 345 40 4 37 057 2 1 20 21 1966 908 664 870 548 38 116 22 1971 1 088 210 42 2 1 046 356 40 6 41 854 1 6 20 23 1976 1 117 599 1 070 233 47 361 24 1981 1 132 601 41 1 1 086 625 36 5 21 25 1986 1 127 196 34 7 21 25 1991 1 174 860 31 17 1 107 119 30 0 51 642 1 17 21 26 27 28 1996 124 031 1 072 562 28 7 51 469 23 27 29 2001 1 086 496 1 036 261 25 2 50 235 30 2006 1 088 416 1 038 162 23 5 50 255 30 31 32 2011 1 168 398 20 8 1 101 082 20 8 67 318 0 0 20 30 32 33 2016 1 162 654 1 087 759 17 7 74 895 34 35 2021 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA Notes From 1954 onwards people from Northern Ireland and Ulster were recorded separately from the people of Ireland 36 The 1966 census is Republic of Ireland amp Ireland undefined Self identified census data editThe following table shows various Anglo Celtic ancestries since 1986 the first census to include as a question on ancestry The aim of the question was to measure the ethnic composition of the population as a whole Very little use was made of the ancestry data from the 1986 Census As a consequence ancestry was not included in either the 1991 or 1996 Censuses Between 1987 and 1999 the Anglo Celtic component of Australia s population declined from 75 per cent to 70 per cent 37 In 1999 the Anglo Celtic share of the Australian population was calculated as 69 9 38 Ancestry 1986 2001 2006 2011 Change 2006 2011 nbsp English 6 607 228 39 42 4 6 358 880 33 9 6 283 647 31 6 7 238 533 36 1 40 15 2 nbsp Irish 902 679 5 8 1 919 727 10 2 1 803 736 9 1 2 087 800 10 4 15 7 nbsp Scottish 740 522 4 7 540 046 2 9 1 501 200 7 6 41 42 1 792 622 8 3 19 4 nbsp Welsh no data no data 84 246 no data 113 244 0 6 125 597 0 6 10 9 Total 8 250 429 52 9 8 902 899 47 0 9 701 827 48 9 11 244 552 53 0 55 4 Maps edit nbsp English ancestry nbsp Scottish ancestry nbsp Welsh ancestry nbsp Irish nbsp People born in the UK Channel Islands and Isle of ManControversy and criticism editSome have argued that the term is entirely a product of multiculturalism that ignores the history of sectarianism in Australia For example historian John Hirst wrote in 1994 Mainstream Australian society was reduced to an ethnic group and given an ethnic name Anglo Celt 43 According to Hirst In the eyes of multiculturalists Australian society of the 1940s 150 years after first settlement is adequately described as Anglo Celtic At least this acknowledges that the people of Australia were Irish and Scots as well as English but it has nothing more substantial than a hyphen joining them In fact a distinct new culture had been formed English Scots and Irish had formed a common identity first of all British and then gradually Australian as well In the 1930s the historian W K Hancock could aptly describe them as Independent Australian Britons 44 The Irish Australian journalist Siobhan McHugh has argued that the term Anglo Celtic is an insidious distortion of our past and a galling denial of the struggle by an earlier minority group Irish Australians against oppression and demonisation In what we now cosily term Anglo Celtic Australia a virtual social apartheid existed at times between Irish Catholics and British Protestants which did not end until the 1960s The term was also criticised by the historian Patrick O Farrell as a grossly misleading false and patronising convenience one crassly present oriented Its use removes from consciousness and recognition a major conflict fundamental to any comprehension not only of Australian history but of our present core culture 6 Culture editSee also Culture of Australia Streams of migration from the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland to Australia played a key role in Australia s cultural development despite the last substantial scheme for preferential migration from Britain to Australia ending in 1972 There is a long history of cultural exchange between the countries and many Australians have used Britain as a stepping stone to international success e g Nellie Melba Peter Dawson Clive James Robert Hughes In 1967 British migrants in Australia formed an association to represent their special interests the United Kingdom Settlers Association which subsequently became the British Australian Community On 10 July 2017 at a press conference in London Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said Australians feel at home in the United Kingdom and Britons feel at home in Australia Most Australians have some of their ancestry at least from the United Kingdom and five per cent of Australians were actually born in the United Kingdom The culture the laws the traditions of Britain were brought to Australia with the European settlement British settlement that were brought as part of the heritage of the men and women including my forebears that founded what we know today as modern Australia There are no two nations in the world that trust each other more than the United Kingdom and Australia We are family in a historical sense We re family in a genetic sense But we are so close and that trust is getting stronger all the time 45 Place names of British origin edit nbsp Brisbane named after Scotsman Sir Thomas Brisbane the Governor of New South Wales nbsp Melbourne named in honour of William Lamb 2nd Viscount Melbourne and thus indirectly takes its name from the village of Melbourne England There are many places in Australia named after people and places in the United Kingdom as a result of the many British settlers and explorers in addition some places were named after the British royal family citation needed New South Wales edit New South Wales Cook first named the land New Wales named after Wales However in the copy held by the Admiralty he revised the wording to New South Wales 46 Hyde Park was named after the original Hyde Park in London England and is the oldest public parkland in Australia citation needed Newcastle New South Wales is named after Newcastle England citation needed The state capital city of Sydney is named in honour of English politician Thomas Townshend 1st Viscount Sydney 47 Northern Territory edit The state capital city of Darwin A Scottish naval officer named the region Port Darwin in honour of English naturalist Charles Darwin citation needed Queensland edit Queensland The state was named in honour of Queen Victoria 48 49 who on 6 June 1859 signed Letters Patent separating the colony from New South Wales 50 Brisbane is named after Scotsman Thomas Brisbane 51 South Australia edit The state capital city of Adelaide founded in 1836 is named in honour of Adelaide of Saxe Meiningen queen consort to King William IV 52 Tasmania edit Hobart city named after the English politician Robert Hobart 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire who was British Secretary of State for War and the Colonies in 1804 at the time of its settlement 53 Launceston was named in honour of the New South Wales Governor Captain Philip Gidley King who was born in Launceston Cornwall England 54 Victoria edit Victoria like Queensland was named after Queen Victoria who had been on the British throne for 14 years when the colony was established in 1851 55 Melbourne was named in honour of William Lamb 2nd Viscount Melbourne Queen Victoria s first Prime Minister and thus indirectly takes its name from the village of Melbourne Derbyshire England 56 Western Australia edit Perth The city is named after Perth Scotland by influence of Sir George Murray then British Secretary of State for War and the Colonies 57 in Murray s honour 58 59 60 External territories edit Norfolk Island Captain James Cook named it after Mary Howard Duchess of Norfolk c 1712 1773 61 See also edit nbsp Australia portal nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Ireland portal Anglo Celtic Anglo Demographics of Australia European Australians Europeans in Oceania Irish Australians Scottish Australians Cornish Australians English Australians Welsh Australians British diasporaNotes edit Number of English Irish Scottish Welsh Cornish British Channel Islander and Manx ancestry responses as a proportion of the total population 2 Ancestry figures do not amount to 100 as the Australian Bureau of Statistics allows up to two ancestry responses per person 3 Does not include those nominating their ancestry as Australian who are categorised within the Oceanian group The Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most people nominating Australian ancestry have at least partial Anglo Celtic European ancestry 4 Ancestry figures do not amount to 100 as the Australian Bureau of Statistics allows up to two ancestry responses per person 3 Ancestry figures do not amount to 100 as the Australian Bureau of Statistics allows up to two ancestry responses per person 3 References edit a b c d e Census of Population and Housing Cultural diversity data summary 2021 XLSX Abs gov au Retrieved 28 July 2022 a b c Australian Standard Classification of Cultural and Ethnic Groups ASCCEG 2019 Australian Bureau of Statistics 18 December 2019 a b c Understanding and using Ancestry data Australian Bureau of Statistics 28 June 2022 a b c Feature Article Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Australia Feature Article 1301 0 Year Book Australia 1995 Commonwealth of Australia Australian Bureau of Statistics Australian Bureau of Statistics January 1995 Feature Article Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Australia Feature Article Retrieved 11 December 2016 a b How the Irish rose above Australia s social apartheid The Sydney Morning Herald The Sydney Morning Herald 14 October 2009 Remembering and Commemorating the Great Famine and Emigration to Australia Articles breac University of Notre Dame breac nd edu Retrieved 25 November 2022 a b c Molony John Neylon 2000 The Native born The First White Australians Melbourne University Press ISBN 978 0 522 84903 5 NATIVE BORN AUSTRALIANS The Empire No 5108 New South Wales Australia 4 April 1868 p 5 Retrieved 14 July 2020 via National Library of Australia Ancestry Information Operations Unlimited Company Press Releases Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Chapter Population characteristics Ancestry of Australia s population Abs gov au 3 June 2003 Retrieved 28 July 2022 a b Immigration and Population History of Selected Countries of Birth United Kingdom A Short Immigration History S3 amazonaws com Australia today Department of Social Services Australian Government Archived from the original on 20 June 2017 Retrieved 11 December 2016 The Australian People An Encyclopedia of the Nation Its People and Their By James Jupp The Transformation of Australia s Population 1970 2030 Page 166 edited by Siew An Khoo Peter F McDonald Siew Ean Khoo Leading for Change A blueprint for cultural diversity and inclusive leadership revisited PDF Humanrights gov au April 2018 Retrieved 28 July 2022 T08 Country of Birth of Person by Sex 2011 Census Stat abs gov au Archived from the original on 25 August 2014 Britishness Retrieved 11 December 2016 Year Book Australia 1989 No 72 Aust Bureau of Statistics 1988 a b c d e f g h i Top 10 countries of birth for the overseas born population since 1901 Top 10 countries of overseas born a b c d e f g Composition Changing links with Europe Australian Bureau of Statistics a b CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING 30 JUNE 1966 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA BIRTHPLACE Page 13 a b Australia s 15 Largest Birthplace Groups 1947 1971 and 1996 Source Australian censuses of 1947 1971 and 1996 CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING 30 JUNE 1976 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Population by Birthplace Pages 1 2 a b MAIN BIRTHPLACES OF OVERSEAS BORN POPULATION 1986 CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING Page 7 Year Book Australia 1995 abs gov au a b Birthplace by Region 1996 Source Australian Bureau of Statistics 1996 Census of Population and Housing Australia Dimensions of Australian Society By Brian Graetz Ian McAllister OVERSEAS BORN POPULATION TOP 12 BIRTHPLACE GROUPS Australian Bureau of Statistics a b c THE IRELAND BORN COMMUNITY IN VICTORIA and Australia 2011 Census Multicultural vic gov au The Top Sending Regions of Immigrants in Australia Canada and the United States 20 August 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2016 a b The People of Australia Statistics from the 2011 Census Archived 17 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine Australia 2011 and 2006 Census TOP 10 COUNTRIES OF BIRTH FOR THE OVERSEAS BORN POPULATION Australian Bureau of Statistics United Kingdom born Community Information Summary PDF Homeaffairs gov au 2018 Retrieved 6 April 2022 2016 Census QuickStats People in Australia who were born in Ireland Censusdata abs gov au 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2022 Alan James 2012 New Britannia The rise and decline of Anglo Australia Renewal Publications University of Melbourne p 51 ISBN 978 1 300 54292 6 Khoo Siew An Peter McDonald and Siew Ean Khoo eds The Transformation of Australia s Population 1970 2030 UNSW Press 2003 p 165 Price Charles A 1999 Australian Population Ethnic Origins PDF People and Place 7 4 Monash University 12 16 ISSN 1039 4788 Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 11 December 2016 The Transformation of Australia s Population 1970 2030 edited by Siew An Khoo Peter F McDonald Siew Ean Khoo Page 164 2011 Census data shows more than 300 ancestries Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 11 December 2016 The people of Australia Statistics from the 2011 census PDF Canberra Department of Immigration and Border Protection 2014 p 55 ISBN 978 1 920996 23 9 Archived from the original PDF on 29 May 2014 The People of Australia Statistics from the 2006 Census Archived 19 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Page 50 Multiculturalism becomes poison for social capital The Australian 26 September 2007 Archived from the original on 5 September 2008 Retrieved 26 October 2007 John Hirst Sense and Nonsense in Australian History Black Inc Agenda Melbourne ISBN 978 0 9775949 3 1 page 12 Speech PM press conference with Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull Gov uk 10 July 2017 Retrieved 7 November 2023 See Captain W J L Wharton s preface to his 1893 transcription of Cook s journal Available online in the University of Adelaide Library s Electronic Texts Collection History of Sydney Australia Tours and Info int sydney com Retrieved 21 November 2021 Place Names Archived from the original on 13 October 2007 Retrieved 13 October 2007 Where Did Australia s States Get Their Names Manly Bunkhouse Retrieved 21 November 2021 Documenting Democracy Foundingdocs gov au Retrieved 21 November 2021 Council history Brisbane qld gov au Retrieved 21 November 2021 How well do you know our Queen Adelaidenow com au 3 May 2013 Archived from the original on 7 August 2019 Retrieved 29 December 2019 Paige Fiona Hobart TAS Aussie Towns Retrieved 21 November 2021 A Timeline of Launceston Launceston Historical Society Inc Launcestonhistory org 25 June 2012 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Colony of Victoria Concept Find amp Connect Victoria Findandconnect gov au History of Melbourne Onlymelbourne com au Kimberly W B 1897 History of West Australia Melbourne F W Niven amp Co p 44 Uren Malcolm J L 1948 Land Looking West London Oxford University Press Crowley Francis K 1960 Australia s Western Third London Macmillan amp Co Statham Pamela 1981 Swan River Colony In Stannage Tom ed A New History of Western Australia Nedlands University of Western Australia Press ISBN 0 85564 181 9 Channers On Norfolk Island Info Archived 3 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine Channersonnorfolk com 15 March 2013 Retrieved on 16 July 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anglo Celtic Australians amp oldid 1215954513, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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