Origin of the Population 1911 British Columbia and Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan

Contained within the 2nd Edition (1915) of the Atlas of Canada is a plate map that shows 2 maps. The first map shows the origin of the population in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, circa 1911. The second map shows the origin of the population in British Columbia and Alberta, circa 1911A varying number of ethnic groups are shown, but always included are: English, Scotch [Scottish], Irish, French and German. People of British origin predominate in all provinces, except Quebec, where the French predominate. There is a cosmopolitan population due to immigration from Great Britain and Europe, but British are the predominating people in British Columbia and Alberta. Major railway systems are displayed, which extend into the U.S. The map presents the rectangular survey system, which records the land that is available to the public. This grid like system is divided into sections, townships, range, and meridian from mid-Manitoba to Alberta.

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Champ Valeur
Dernière modification janvier 16, 2026, 21:11 (TU)
Créé le janvier 16, 2026, 21:11 (TU)
contains_pii non
crisis_categories Sécurité publique
criticality_level Moyen
data_formats JPG; PDF
fair_openness Level 2 - Machine-readable
geographic_scope Québec
sensitivity_level Faible
source_inventaire Inventaire_W
source_url https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/ac64127a-d2c9-501f-93b4-0f4ba63b6b88
subject society_and_culture
update_frequency as_needed
year_most_recent 2022-03-14 19:52:25.228000
year_start 2016-09-25 05:31:27.164000