Summary information

Study title

Glasgow Entrepreneurs, 1861-1901

Creator

Acheson, G., University of Strathclyde, Strathclyde Business School
Perriton, L., University of Stirling
Newton, G., University of Strathclyde, Strathclyde Business School

Study number / PID

9293 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-9293-1 (DOI)

Data access

Open

Series

Not available

Abstract

Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.Entrepreneurial micro-businesses once dominated the streetscapes of Britain's towns and cities and were considered central to their success. What businesses existed, where they were situated, and who ran them are key to understanding how and why particular cities 'work', and are an essential part of wider debates about the historical development and transformation of economies. Knowing that entrepreneurship has always been a driver of employment, skills, and innovation, as well as providing an income to diverse, and often marginalized, groups in society (Audretsch et al. 2015; Barker, 2017; Bennet et al., 2018), the understanding of entrepreneurship however lacked a study of the dynamics of business formation in a nineteenth-century city. This data collection originated in a research project entitled 'The entrepreneurs who made Glasgow: the city and its businesses 1861-1901'. It focussed on the space, place and people of Glasgow during a critical period of its expansion, when it became Scotland's principal city and Britain's second city. In the period 1861 to 1901, new professional and commercial activities transformed Glasgow, benefitting from its population’s diversity in gender, age and nationality. The project’s objectives were: 1) Examine the distribution of business within Glasgow and establish the influence of gender, nationality and age of entrepreneurs on business form and location 2) Examine the relationship between property rents and values and entrepreneurial business location 3) Examine the influence of business type and transport infrastructure as drivers of the suburban (re)location of entrepreneurs Large datasets of businesses and rents were cross-referenced to I-CeM census data and the British Business Census of Entrepreneurs (BBCE), providing fine-grained information on demographic characteristics of individual entrepreneurs and the nature of their businesses.Main...
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Methodology

Data collection period

Not available

Country

Scotland

Time dimension

Longitudinal/panel/cohort
Time Series

Analysis unit

Administrative units (geographical/political)
Subnational

Universe

Eventual deposit: 20,000 to 30,000 individual business owners and businesses per sample year (1861, 1881 or 1901) Current deposit: 2,000 individual business owners

Sampling procedure

No sampling (total universe)

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Compilation/Synthesis

Funding information

Grant number

RPG-2020-382

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2024

Terms of data access

  The Data Collection is to be made available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Licence.