The first Indian census was taken in 1871. They then numbered 102,358, as follows: Eskimo 4028; Tinneh 42,000; Algonquins 46,000; Huron-Iroquois 10,330. Their division according to provinces is: Prince Edward Island 323; Nova Scotia 1666; New Brunswick 1403; Quebec 6988; Ontario 12,978...
Following their arrival to Canada, my grandfather and his brother were sent to different farm families. The1891 Census of Canadarecords my great-uncle, John, age 15, working as a domestic servant for Robert and Mary Parker on a farm near Brockville, Ontario. According to my Aunt Anna, Robe...
Miriam (or Marian) was the eldest child, born in 1898 or thereabouts. In this census, we see reference to a child by the name Annie, or Amia. The year of birth indicates that it is likely this is in reference to Miriam. The name we see here could have been...
Jessie Baetz was a Canadian-American artist, composer, and pianist. Baetz was a native of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, where she studied and taught at the Toronto Conservatory of Music, now known as the Royal Conservatory of Music. She immigrated to New York City, where 1930s census records li...
Immigrant gap 12.9 0 50 100 C$ billions Source: Statistics Canada's Census of Canada, RBC Economics 150 Chart 2 breaks down the totals. The split between the immigrant earnings gap and gender differences is very telling of where the greatest opportunity lies at present. 200 Personal incomes ...
births, Census of Population, components of population growth, deaths, demographic estimates, immigrants, interprovincial migration, mobility and migration, population 1605 to present, population aging, population by age and sex, population by year, population of census metropolitan areas, popul...
Population: 2011-05-10 census. Area: Source [2].Further subdivisions:See the Counties of Canada page.The subdivisions of the Canadian provinces and territories are varied in size, status, and stability. The eastern provinces tend to be divided into counties; the western provinces, sections, divi...
According to the 2006 census [25], there were 1 172 790 Aboriginal people in Canada (including First Nations, Metis and Inuit), representing ca. 4% of the total population. The proportion of Aboriginal people is much higher in the boreal zone [26], reaching more than 30% of the total ...
According to the 2001 census, 42.6% of Canadians are Roman Catholic, 23.3% are Protestant, and 16% claim to have no religion.[9] Alert, in Nunavut territory, is the northernmost permanent settlement in the world.[13] Canada became a country on July 1, 1867, when the British North Americ...
Census returns White papers (issued by the government as statements of policy) and Green papers (official documents sponsored by Ministers of the Crown to invite public comment and discussion on an issue prior to policy formulation) Sessional papers are classified as either “Printed” (i.e., av...