Page:Transactions of the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association, volume 2.djvu/110

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deserving separate classification, are those employed in fishing, a pretty numerous class, as will appear from what has been stated in a former part of this paper. Including, then, all the individuals residing in the towns and villages who live either by any handicraft trade, or by trade in any form, viz. shopkeepers of all sorts, under the title of handicraft and trade, I would propose the following extension and amendment of the returns of this Hundred as not very distant from the truth:─

Families chiefly employed in Agriculture, 2500
Mining, 5000
Handicraft and Trade, 2500
Flashing 740
All others not comprised in these four classes, 1109
─────
Total, 11,849

Another means for forming an approximative estimate of the number of individuals employed in mining, &c. is afforded by the militia returns. In Cornwall there are two classes of militia; the one continued to the persons employed in mining, the other to all the remaining male population liable to serve, the former being called the Miners' Militia, the latter the Cornwall militia. These two corps include all the male population between the ages of eighteen and forty-five, except fishermen, and a few other individuals who are exempt by law. In 1822, the respective numbers of these two classes of individuals in the district, as shown by the militia returns, were as follows:─

No. liable to
serve.
Exempt. Total Males from
18 to 45.
Cornwall Militia, 2642 1395 4019
Miners' Militia, 1638 1557 3195