NameCensus.

UK surname

Dwerryhouse

In the 1881 census there were 101 people recorded with the Dwerryhouse surname, ranking it #19,636 among surnames in the records. By 2016, the modern count was 112, ranked #28,844, down from #19,636 in 1881.

The strongest historical links point to Toxteth Park, Childwall and West Derby. In the modern distribution records, the strongest local clusters include Sefton, Carmarthenshire and Liverpool.

Across the surname records, the highest recorded count for Dwerryhouse is 148 in 2000. Compared with 1881, the name has grown by 10.9%.

1881 census count

101

Ranked #19,636

Modern count

112

2016, ranked #28,844

Peak year

2000

148 bearers

Map years

7

1881 to 2016

Key insights

  • Dwerryhouse had 101 recorded bearers in 1881, making it the #19,636 surname in that year.
  • The latest modern count shown here is 112 in 2016, ranked #28,844.
  • Within the historical census years, the highest count was 141 in 1911.
  • The contemporary neighbourhood profile most associated with the surname is Small Town Suburbia.

Dwerryhouse surname distribution map

The map shows where the Dwerryhouse surname is concentrated in each census or modern distribution year. Darker areas mean a stronger local concentration.

Distribution map

Dwerryhouse surname density by area, 1881 census.

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Lower densityMedium densityHigh density

Timeline

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Dwerryhouse over time

The table below tracks recorded surname counts and rank from the 19th-century census years through the modern adult-register period.

Year Period Count Rank
1851 historical 57 #23,092
1861 historical 80 #23,566
1881 historical 101 #19,636
1891 historical 114 #22,006
1901 historical 130 #19,649
1911 historical 141 #18,571
1997 modern 128 #23,238
1998 modern 140 #22,615
1999 modern 139 #22,884
2000 modern 148 #21,971
2001 modern 142 #22,234
2002 modern 142 #22,687
2003 modern 137 #22,939
2004 modern 142 #22,573
2005 modern 130 #23,848
2006 modern 125 #24,611
2007 modern 123 #25,208
2008 modern 122 #25,638
2009 modern 126 #25,686
2010 modern 122 #26,876
2011 modern 112 #28,117
2012 modern 113 #28,016
2013 modern 117 #27,838
2014 modern 116 #28,253
2015 modern 114 #28,478
2016 modern 112 #28,844

Geography

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Where Dwerryhouses are most common

Historical parish links are strongest around Toxteth Park, Childwall, West Derby, Walton-on-the-Hill and Liverpool. These are the places where the surname stands out most clearly in the older records.

The modern local-area list points to Sefton, Carmarthenshire, Liverpool and Leeds. Treat these as concentration signals, not proof that every family line began there.

Some modern areas include a three-digit suffix, such as Leeds 110. The suffix is a small-area code, so it stays in the table while the prose uses the plain place name.

Top historical parishes

Rank Parish Area
1 Toxteth Park Lancashire
2 Childwall Lancashire
3 West Derby Lancashire
4 Walton-on-the-Hill Lancashire
5 Liverpool Lancashire

Top modern areas

Rank Area District
1 Sefton 017 Sefton
2 Carmarthenshire 004 Carmarthenshire
3 Liverpool 027 Liverpool
4 Leeds 005 Leeds
5 Liverpool 034 Liverpool

Forenames

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First names often paired with Dwerryhouse

These lists show first names that appear often with the Dwerryhouse surname in historical and recent records.

Modern profile

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Neighbourhood profile for Dwerryhouse

Modern surname records can be compared with neighbourhood classifications. For Dwerryhouse, this points to the kinds of places where the surname is most concentrated today.

These neighbourhood labels describe areas, not individual people. They are useful because surnames often cluster through family history, migration, housing patterns and local work. A surname can be strongest in one type of neighbourhood even when people with that name live across the country.

The UK classification gives the national picture. The London classification is more specific to the capital, where housing, age profile, tenure and population mix can look quite different from the rest of the UK.

UK neighbourhood type

UK Output Area Classification

Supergroup

Retired Professionals

Group

Small Town Suburbia

Nationally, the Dwerryhouse surname is most associated with neighbourhoods classed as Small Town Suburbia, within Retired Professionals. This does not mean every Dwerryhouse household fits that profile, but it gives a useful signal about where the modern surname distribution is strongest.

Read profile summary

Group profile

This Group is predominantly comprised of married couples with no resident dependent children, living in areas characterised neither by under-occupancy nor overcrowding throughout the UK in or adjacent to small towns. White ethnic groups and affiliation with Christianity predominates. Housing tends to be predominantly semi-detached or detached and workers are employed principally in managerial and professional occupations, with semi-skilled occupations also in evidence. These areas of the Supergroup are of higher population density.

Wider pattern

Typically married but no longer with resident dependent children, these well-educated households either remain working in their managerial, professional, administrative or other skilled occupations, or are retired from them – the modal individual age is beyond normal retirement age. Underoccupied detached and semi-detached properties predominate, and unpaid care is more prevalent than reported disability. The prevalence of this Supergroup outside most urban conurbations indicates that rural lifestyles prevail, typically sustained by using two or more cars per household.

London neighbourhood type

London Output Area Classification

Supergroup

Professional Employment and Family Lifecycles

Group

Inner London Working Professionals

Within London, Dwerryhouse is most associated with areas classed as Inner London Working Professionals, part of Professional Employment and Family Lifecycles. This gives the surname a London-specific profile rather than forcing the capital into the same pattern as the rest of the country.

Read profile summary

Group profile

These primarily Inner London neighbourhoods are more densely populated than the Supergroup average. Residents have a younger over-all age profile than the Supergroup as a whole, and are less likely to be owner occupiers. Full time employment is more common than elsewhere in the Supergroup and multiple car ownership is uncommon. Chinese and non-EU-born European migrants are less in evidence than elsewhere in the Supergroup.

Wider London pattern

These neighbourhoods house people of all ages, predominantly of White British or European extraction. Resident turnover is low. Religious affiliation is less common than average and tends to be Christian if expressed. Homeownership, typically of terraced houses, is common but use of the social rented sector is not. Employment is typically in professional, managerial and associate professional or technical occupations. There are few full-time students. Level 4 qualifications are common. More households lack dependent children than have them which, considered alongside low levels of crowding and over-all age structure, indicates that many households may be post child-rearing and in late middle age. Incidence of disability is low, as is residence in communal establishments.

Healthy neighbourhoods

Access to healthy assets and hazards

Dwerryhouse is most concentrated in decile 10 for access to healthy assets and hazards. This places the surname towards the healthier end of the index.

Lower deciles point towards weaker access to healthy assets or stronger exposure to local hazards. Higher deciles point towards stronger access and fewer hazards.

10
Lower access Higher access

Neighbourhood deprivation

Index of Multiple Deprivation

Dwerryhouse falls in decile 1 for neighbourhood deprivation. This puts the surname towards the more deprived end of the index.

Decile 1 represents the more deprived end of the scale. Decile 10 represents the less deprived end.

1
More deprived Less deprived

Broadband speed

Fixed broadband download speed

The modern neighbourhood pattern for Dwerryhouse is most associated with a typical fixed broadband download band of 60-70 mbit/s.

The scale below places that band in context, from slower local download bands through to faster ones.

9
Slower band Faster band

Area snapshot

Ethnic group estimate

Most common ethnic group estimate
White - British

This describes the area pattern most associated with Dwerryhouse, not the ethnicity of every person with the surname.

1881 census detail

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Dwerryhouse families in the 1881 census

These tables use 1881 census entries for people recorded with the Dwerryhouse surname. Use the location tables for concentration, then the name and occupation tables for the people behind the surname.

Top counties

Total is the county count. Frequency and index adjust for local population size, so they are better concentration signals. Lancashire leads with 88 Dwerryhouses recorded in 1881 and an index of 7.53x.

County Total Index
Lancashire 88 7.53x
Cheshire 6 2.76x
Middlesex 6 0.61x
Devon 1 0.49x

Top districts and towns

Districts give a more local view than counties. Total shows raw records, while frequency and index show local concentration. Toxteth Park in Lancashire leads with 15 Dwerryhouses recorded in 1881 and an index of 37.90x.

Place Total Index
Toxteth Park 15 37.90x
West Derby 11 32.16x
Kirkdale 10 50.86x
Everton 8 21.47x
Runcorn 6 119.76x
Widnes 6 71.17x
Colne 5 143.68x
Garston 5 144.93x
Halewood 5 793.65x
Hornsey 4 32.10x
Walton On Hill 4 63.19x
Bootle Cum Linacre 3 32.33x
Liverpool 3 4.23x
Much Woolton 3 188.68x
Penketh 3 714.29x
Ditton 2 416.67x
Hale 2 1052.63x
Kensington London 2 3.65x
East Teignmouth 1 119.05x
Warrington 1 7.22x
Whittingham 1 196.08x
Woolston With 1 588.24x

Top female names

These are the female first names most often recorded with the Dwerryhouse surname in 1881. Names are not merged, so initials, variant spellings and transcription quirks can appear as separate rows.

Top male names

These are the male first names most often recorded with the Dwerryhouse surname in 1881. Names are not merged, so initials, variant spellings and transcription quirks can appear as separate rows.

Name Count
John 11
William 6
James 5
Joseph 5
Thomas 4
Arthur 3
Charles 2
Edward 2
Frederick 2
George 2
Henry 2
Samuel 2
Alfred 1
Benjamin 1
Clarance 1
Harry 1
Mary 1
Richard 1
Saml. 1
Wm. 1

FAQ

Dwerryhouse surname: questions and answers

How common was the Dwerryhouse surname in 1881?

In 1881, 101 people were recorded with the Dwerryhouse surname. That placed it at #19,636 in the surname rankings for that year.

How common is the Dwerryhouse surname today?

The latest modern count shown here is 112 in 2016. That gives Dwerryhouse a modern rank of #28,844.

What does the Dwerryhouse map show?

The map shows local surname concentration for the selected year. Darker areas have a stronger concentration of Dwerryhouse bearers relative to the surrounding population.

What records is this surname page based on?

The historical counts come from census surname records. The modern counts and neighbourhood summaries come from later surname distribution records. Counts are recorded bearers in those records, not a live estimate of everyone with the name today.