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In Our Racial Melting Pot, The Most English Of Towns

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  • In Our Racial Melting Pot, The Most English Of Towns

    IN OUR RACIAL MELTING POT, THE MOST ENGLISH OF TOWNS
    By Rebecca Camber

    DAILY MAIL (London)
    September 11, 2006 Monday

    IT merits a brief mention in the Domesday Book, and has a railway
    museum, a pottery centre and one or two tea rooms.

    The town of Ripley in Derbyshire sounds typically English ñ almost
    an anachronism in the multicultural melting pot of modern Britain.

    But it is no longer just its appearance which marks Ripley out as a
    quaint reminder of another era.

    Yesterday a survey named it as the most English place in Britain
    according to its ethnic mix.

    The distinction is revealed in a study of the geographical spread of
    immigration across the UK.

    Using electoral records and profession databases, researchers have
    identified 200 ethnic groups, ranking them by socio-economic success
    based on their jobs.

    According to the report, Armenian immigrants, such as millionaire
    property tycoon Bob Manoukian, are the most financially and socially
    prosperous, while those arriving from Sierra Leone and Syria have fared
    the worst. The English are among the least commerciallyminded races,
    it reveals.

    According to the analysis, 88.6 per cent of those living in Ripley are
    of English origin, followed by the neighbouring village of Heanor and
    Sutton-in-Ashfield just across the county border in Nottinghamshire.

    A number of towns in East Anglia also had a high proportion of ethnic
    English residents. Southall in West London has the lowest concentration
    of English, at 17.8 per cent.

    South Tottenham emerged as the most diverse area of Britain with 113
    ethnic groups living in that section of North London.

    Looking at the surnames and first names of 42.2million registered
    voters in the UK, experts divided residents into 200 ethnic groups.

    Then they compared each group with a marketing database of professions
    to rank their socioeconomic success. It found that the Japanese and
    Russians are the most entrepreneurial, with the highest number of
    company directors per group. Richard Webber, a professor of spatial
    analysis at University College, London, who developed the Origins
    Info report said: 'The patterns that this analysis have uncovered
    are striking.

    'We are hoping it will prove a valuable tool for government and
    business.'

    The research revealed that ethnic clusters had formed decades after
    immigrants first arrived in Britain. For example, Greek Cypriots
    have concentrated in Hoddesdon in Hertfordshire and Margate in Kent,
    while a large Italian population can be found around Bedford and
    Waltham Cross in Hertfordshire.

    The Dutch live in large numbers in Plockton in the Scottish Highlands
    and Llanwrtyd Wells, North Wales.

    When looking at the ethnic composition-of the professions, the report
    found a disproportionately high number of immigrants in business,
    law and medicine.

    Those from northern India are ten times more likely to be doctors
    than the population as a whole.

    Spaniards and Romanians are also significantly 'over-represented'
    as doctors, and those of Russian, Dutch and Nigerian descent as
    barristers. Statisticians also found that one in four restaurants is
    run by a Muslim and one in four chemists by an Indian or Sri Lankan.

    --Boundary_(ID_3puE8owahnDUOlYipLVUqw)--
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