1921 Census of England and Wales...

1921 Census Digitised by Max Communications

1921 Census of England and Wales

We're delighted to announce the completion of the digitisation of the 1921 Census of England and Wales. Max Communications was contracted by Find My Past to carry out image capture, processing and quality assurance for this project. To give an idea of the sheer size of this undertaking we've included some statistics below:

  • The census is stored in 28,000 volumes containing between 300 to 600 household schedules.
  • These volumes occupied 1.6km of storage shelving.
  • If every schedule were laid in a line, they would stretch across 4,675 kilometres or nearly 3000 miles, similar to the distance between London and Boston.
  • 7,159 combined working days (53,692 combined hours) were spent on capture and QA.
  • Over 20,000,000 images (28,152 volumes) were captured in total.
  • Average capture speed was 208,204 images per week working out at 41,641 images per working day.
  • Peak capture speeds were 365,100 images captured, processed and QA'd in a week.
  • The final digitised images required approximately 1.4 petabytes of storage.

The work was carried out between February 2019 and September 2021 by a Max Communications team working at the Office for National Statistics at Titchfield in Hampshire and is the latest in a growing list of very large scale digitisation projects which we've successfully completed.

Please use the buttons below to contact Max Communications and find out more about our proven track record in large scale digitisation projects.

If you'd like to get in touch to find out more about our services please use the buttons below or call us on +44 (0)20 8309 5445

Testimonials

Max have been a trusted digitisation and solutions partner with King’s College London Archives for more than a decade. They have always undertaken work to a high standard, and on time, and are a friendly team who are ready to help at short notice.

--Dr Geoff Browell | Head of Archives and Research Collections | King’s College London
1921 Census Digitised by Max Communications