CHAPTER 1
ORIGINS OF THE POPULATION OF CANADA
Canada is able to determine from time to time, within reasonable limits of accuracy,
the proportions of the various origins which make up her population. A body of material
s now available on the changing composition of the Canadian population which gives
a necessary perspective to a study of its structure. This is particularly desirable at the
present time when Canada is entering upon a new expansion which may bring a heavy
flow of new citizens from various quarters of the earth.
A nation composed of many diverse stocks presents a different problem from that of
one with a small admixture of foreign elements. There is in the first place the biological
aspect. In certain parts of the world, the problem of the half-caste or half-breed has
assumed grave proportions. Canada’s problems in this respect are largely potential. There
are also the various cultural sides of intermingling. Peoples of different stocks have different
educational, moral, economic, religious and political backgrounds. It is with the changing
proportion of the different stocks in Canada since the beginning of the century that this
initial chapter is concerned.
THE PROPORTION OF SPECIFIED ORIGINS IN THE POPULATION OF CANADA
The proportion of the various stocks in Canada, in 1901, 1911 and 1921, is shown by
principal origins in Table 7. Changes in these proportions are due to the joint operation
of three main forces: first, immigration; secondly, emigration; and thirdly, natural increase.
Attention is first drawn to the present composition of our population. Column 1
shows that in 1921 somewhat over half of the population of Canada was of British stock,
and over a quarter of the population, French. The other European origins combined con-
stituted only 14.16 p.c. of the total, and the Asiatics less than 1 p.c. The Indians made
up one and a quarter per cent, while the proportion of Negroes stood at a very low figure
of less than one-quarter of one pe. All coloured peoples totalled slightly over 2 p.c. of the
population. Thus the population of Canada, as a whole, is as yet predominantly of
British and French stock; these two constituted over 83 p.c. of the people domiciled in
Canada at the date of the last census.
TABLE 7.—PROPORTION OF VARIOUS STOCKS IN THE POPULATION OF CANADA. 1921. AS
COMPARED WITH 1011 ANT 1001.
Origins
BIER. sieve retirees
Eagle oon sonia wun sie wainnn ncn
THEI, carvan wvias wi gusnwns vows ren
Bootoh bona on pryeems arsine so
OHDOT vv swine 13 vHEEEEs SF PREED 43 5
PROB. vs in vii ne iis dh mn ns SEnS 5
dther Europeans....... .
Austrian........
Belgian..........ccovuivnnn.
Bulgarian and Roumanian.............
Czech (Bohemian and Moravian). ...
Det cons ay saipes oa wn gos
Tinnish...oeen
FOIMAN. oo ivenreeanns
"reek. .ieiiiiian
Tebrew............ .
Tungarial..................
11
‘Ohishi vua ve sunervnnss sus
USN Ge ede Gs
candinavianl.,.........
‘erbo Croatian.....
wigs
P.c. of total population
1921 1 1911 | 1901
56440
20.96
12-60
13-36
0-48
87-91
1-12
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