The History of the Office for National Statistics
Timeline
1086: First census in England and Wales carried out by William the Conqueror and published in the Domesday Book
1500s: Elizabeth I carried out an early census by asking bishops to count the number of families in their dioceses
1600s: James I (James VI of Scotland) asked bishops to provide numbers of families in the diocese to gauge the population.
1801: First regular population census for Great Britain held
1837: General Register Office (GRO) for England and Wales established
1841: First population census conducted by the General Register Office
1855: General Register Office (Scotland) established
1864: General Register Office (Ireland) established
1939: National register created for entire population and identity cards issued
1940: The Government Social Survey, which began as the Wartime Social Survey, created
1941: The only decade in which a census was not held since 1801
Central Statistical Office (CSO) established
1952: National Health Service Central Register formed from National Registration records
1968: Claus Moser, now Lord Moser, established the Government Statistical Service
1969: Business Statistics Office created
1970: General Register Office and Government Social Survey merged to create the Office of Population Censuses and Surveys (OPCS)
1989: Business Statistics Office merged with the Central Statistical Office
1996: Office for National Statistics formed by merging CSO, OPCS and the statistics division of the Department of Employment
1997: Family Record Centre established at Myddelton Street, Islington
2000: Statistics Commission and 'National Statistics' established
2005: Announcement made by the Chancellor of the Exchequer of his intention to legislate for independence in statistics
2007: Bill introduced in Lords and Royal Assent given
2008: UK Statistics Authority established (Statistics Commission abolished)