CHAPTER IV DISTRIBUTION OF POPULATION STOCKS AND NATIVITY GROUPS BY PROVINCES In Chapter I attention was centred on the proportions of different stocks in the popula- tion of Canada as a whole. Tt was seen that Canada is as yet predominantly British and French, but that in the decades previous to 1921 important changes had taken place which, if continued, would definitely alter the composition of the population in a comparatively short period. The proportion of foreign born in the population was also discussed and attention directed to the newer arrivals of foreign origin. The significance of the wide Auctuations in the numbers and proportions of the foreign born was also emphasized. In the second chapter an examination was made of the distribution of the foreign stocks from the point of view of their length of residence in Canada. First, attention was drawn to the different proportions of our population born in Canada, the United States and other countries. Then a more detailed examination was made of the foreign born portions of the foreign stocks and of their increases from decade to decade. Some conclusions were reached as to the dates of immigration for the vamous groups and also as to the relative magnitude and changing sources of recent immigration. Important as are such considerations, in some ways they ‘are overshadowed by the territorial distribution of the different stocks in Canada. The geographical distribution of the foreign stocks is especially significant. In dealing with this topic several questions are suggested: How are the foreign stocks and the foreign born distributed among the different provinces of Canada? What changes are taking place in those proportions? How are the foreign stocks distributed as between urban and rural districts? What is the signi§- cance of the differences appearing and how are they to be explained? This section attempts to answer the first two of the above questions and certain others incidental to them. DISTRIBUTION OF VARIOUS STOCKS BY PROVINCES Table 42A shows the percentage distribution of the various stocks in Canada at the last three census enumerations. The first column shows the percentage of British origin in the population of each province in 1921. Prince Edward Isiand with 85 p.c. had by far the largest proportion of British stock. Nova Scotia, Ontario and British Columbia were also predominantly British by extraction, with a proportion of well over 70 p.c. in each case. As is to be expected, the proportion of French origin in the province of Quebec is far greater than in any other section of the country. New Brunswick ranks second, with almost a third French. Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia follow in the order named with much smaller percentages. In the West the proportion of French stock in the population is small, ranging from five to seven p.c. in the Prairie Provinces, and dropping as low as two p.c. in British Columbia. Ontario stands midway between the Maritimes and the Prairie Provinces with respect to the proportion of persons of French origin in its population. A comparison of column 2 and ‘column 3 reveals the interesting fact that while the proportions of French stock in the eastern provinces are large as compared with the West. the reverse obtains in the case of other European origins. From Quebec east, the propor- tion of other European origins in the populations of the respective provinces is less than 10 pe. In fact, Nova Scotia with 9.34 p.. is the only province east of Ontario with a significant intermingling of foreign stocks. In Prince Edward Island the proportion is less than one p.c. Passing west, it is seen that Ontario and British Columbia have about the same proportions of other European origins, with between 11 and 12 pe. in each, while the proportions in the three Prairie Provinces range between 30 and 40 pe. It would be RA