1911 Canadian Census

The Canada 1911 Census was a detailed enumeration of the Canadian population. The census was started on June 1, 1911. All reports had been received by February 26, 1912. The total population count of Canada was 7,206,643.[1] This was an increase of 34% over the 1901 Census of 5,371,315.[2]

1911 Canadian Census
General information
CountryCanada
Date takenJune 1, 1911
Total population7,206,643
Percent change 34%

The following census was the 1921 Census.

Census summary

Information was collected on the following subjects, with a separate "schedule" or census data collection form associated with each subject:

  1. Population
  2. Mortality, Disability and Compensation
  3. Houses, Buildings and Fruit
  4. Agriculture: Field Crops - Grain and Other Field Crops for the Harvest Year 1910
  5. Agriculture: Hoed Crops, Tobacco, Hops and Grass Seeds in 1910 and Field Crop Areas in 1911
  6. Agriculture: Animal and Animal Products
  7. Farm and Urban Values
  8. Forest Products
  9. Manufactures
  10. Churches, Schools, etc.
  11. Fisheries
  12. Dairy Factories
  13. Mineral Products

The 1911 Census was the last census to include questions about "infirmities". In 1911, 28,611 people were identified as "infirm":

  • 3,238 people as blind
  • 4,584 people as deaf and unable to speak ("deaf and dumb")
  • 14,702 people as insane ("crazy or lunatic")
  • 5,387 people as "idiotic" or "feeble-minded" ("idiotic or silly")

People who were deaf but able to speak were not classified as infirm.

Population by province

[3]

Province1911 Census1901 Census% Change
Prince Edward Island93,728103,259-9.2
Nova Scotia492,338459,5747.1
New Brunswick351,889331,1206.3
Quebec2,005,7761,648,89821.6
Ontario2,527,2922,182,94715.8
Manitoba461,394255,21180.8
Saskatchewan492,43291,279439
Alberta374,29573,022413
British Columbia392,480178,657119.7
Yukon Territory8,51227,219-68.7
Northwest Territories6,50720,129-67.7
Total7,206,6435,371,31534

Methodology

The census was conducted by the Canadian Ministry of Agriculture under the authority of the Census and Statistics Act of 1905. 9,703 enumerators visited homes across the country, asked the required questions and recorded the responses from each household onto paper forms. For the census, each province or territory was subdivided into districts, usually based on electoral districts, cities or counties, which were in turn divided into sub-districts, which were towns, townships, city wards or parishes. One handwritten line in English or French was entered for each person enumerated. The responses were collected, tabulated and summary statistics were produced. In 1955, the paper records of responses were microfilmed and the original paper forms were destroyed. The microfilm has since been scanned and converted into a series of images which are now available online at the Library and Archives Canada web site.

gollark: I have THREE incompatible different implementations, if not FOUR!
gollark: Even minoteaur is more implemented than your thing!
gollark: I respect my mental model of your schedule, gnobody, which is just that you're available constantly.
gollark: No.
gollark: oh no.

See also

References

  1. "OGSPI 1911 Census Menu". The Ontario Genealogical Society (OGS). 2005. Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  2. "Canadian Immigration – Early 1900s". British immigrants in Montreal. 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-24.
  3. Canada, Canada (6 May 2019). "Census 1911". Canada. Canada. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.