Jump to content

1971 Canadian census

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1971 Canadian census

← 1966 June 1, 1971 1976 →

General information
CountryCanada
Results
Total population21,568,311 (7.8Increase)
Most populous province/territoryOntario (7,703,106)
Least populous province/territoryYukon (18,388)

The 1971 Canadian census was a detailed enumeration of the Canadian population. Census day was June 1, 1971. On that day, Statistics Canada attempted to count every person in Canada. The total population count was 21,568,311. This was a 7.8% increase over the 1966 Census of 20,014,880.[1]

Canada by the numbers

[edit]

A summary of information about Canada.[2]

Total population 21,568,311
Dwellings 6,034,508
Men 10,795,369
Women 10,772,942

Census summary

[edit]

This census was the first time Statistics Canada organized the event as the Dominion Bureau of Statistics changed its name on August 3, 1971, due to the Statistics Act on May 1, 1970. One of the reasons it did this is because the word Dominion cannot be well translated into French.[3]

Canada experienced one of its biggest census growths with the population increasing by 7.8% from 20,014,880 in 1966 to 21,568,311.

The Northwest Territories and Yukon's populations soared rising above the national average with the Northwest Territories 17.4% and Yukon 21.7%. British Columbia and Alberta's populations also saw substantial growth, both going over the national average for British Columbia to grow 14.2% and Alberta 10.1%.

The census also revealed a rise in the number of immigrants living in the country. 1,347,155 or 6.2% of the population compared to 1,055,818 or 5.2% in 1966. Ontario was the most diverse province with 9.9% of inhabitants reporting citizenship other than Canadian. Newfoundland, as it was called before 2001, was the least diverse province with 99.1% of the population having Canadian citizenship.[4] 60.1% of people claimed English as their mother tongue compared to 58.4% a decade earlier. Canadians who claimed French as their mother tongue, however, shrunk from 28% to 26.8%.[5]

Population by province

[edit]

The population of each province in Canada:[6]

Rank Province or territory Population as of
1971 census
Population as of
1966 census
Change Percent
change
1 Ontario 7,703,106 6,960,870 742,236 Increase 9.6 Increase
2 Quebec 6,027,764 5,780,845 246,919 Increase 4.0 Increase
3 British Columbia 2,184,621 1,873,674 310,947 Increase 14.2 Increase
4 Alberta 1,627,874 1,463,203 164,671 Increase 10.1 Increase
5 Manitoba 988,247 963,066 25,181 Increase 2.5 Increase
6 Saskatchewan 926,242 955,344 -29,102 Decrease -3.0 Decrease
7 Nova Scotia 788,960 756,039 32,921 Increase 4.2 Increase
8 New Brunswick 634,557 616,788 17,769 Increase 2.8 Increase
9 Newfoundland 522,104 493,396 28,708 Increase 5.5 Increase
10 Prince Edward Island 111,641 108,535 3,106 Increase 2.8 Increase
11 Northwest Territories 34,807 28,738 6,069 Increase 17.4 Increase
12 Yukon 18,388 14,382 4,006 Increase 21.7 Increase
Canada 21,568,311 20,014,880 1,553,431 Increase 7.2 Increase

Mother tongue

[edit]

Population by mother tongue:

Mother tongue Population
English 12,973,810
French 5,793,650
German 561,085
Italian 538,360
Ukrainian 309,855
Other 1,391,551

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Canadian tally 21.5 Million". Toledo Blade: 34. April 22, 1972 – via Google News.
  2. ^ "Population and occupied dwelling counts and intercensal growth for Canada, 1971 to 2006". Statistics Canada. 2006. Retrieved August 26, 2024.
  3. ^ Smellie, George (July 31, 1971). "DBS changes name". The Star Phoenix (238): 58 – via Google News.
  4. ^ "Census reveals increase in non-Canadians". Edmonton Journal. October 27, 1973. p. 26. Retrieved October 11, 2024.
  5. ^ "French losing ground outside Quebec". Calgary Herald. August 31, 1972. p. 23. Retrieved October 11, 2024.
  6. ^ Population electorial districts Statistics Canada. 1971. Retrieved August 26, 2024.