ABSTRACT

This landmark research volume provides the first detailed history of entrepreneurship in Britain from the nineteenth century to the present. Using a remarkable new database of more than nine million entrepreneurs, it gives new understanding to the development of Britain as the world’s ‘first industrial nation’.

Based on the first long-term whole-population analysis of British small business, it uses novel methods to identify from the 10-yearly population census the two to four million people per year who operated businesses in the period 1851–1911. Using big data analytics, it reveals how British businesses evolved over time, supplementing the census-derived data on individuals with other sources on companies and business histories. By comparing to modern data, it reveals how the late-Victorian period was a ‘golden age’ for smaller and medium-sized business, driven by family firms, the accelerating participation of women and the increasing use of incorporation as significant vehicles for development.

A unique resource and citation for future research on entrepreneurship, of crucial significance to economic development policies for small business around the world, and above all the key entry point for researchers to the database which is deposited at the UK Data Archive, this major publication will change our understanding of the scale and economic significance of small businesses in the nineteenth century.

part 1|81 pages

New methods to interpret historical trends

chapter 1|22 pages

Entrepreneurship over time

chapter 3|26 pages

New insights from historical big data

part 2|53 pages

Overview of trends

part 3|177 pages

Understanding entrepreneurship at the individual level

chapter 6|22 pages

Explaining entrepreneurship

Correlates and decision choices

chapter 8|26 pages

Gender

chapter 9|35 pages

The geography of entrepreneurship

chapter 10|26 pages

Migration

chapter 11|27 pages

Portfolio businesses

chapter 12|8 pages

Conclusion

Re-positioning the entrepreneur in history and the present day