This form permits you to specify the characteristics of individuals that you are looking for in the 1921 Census of Canada.
Once you have made all of your desired selections, click on the "Query" button centered at the top of the form.
The "Coverage" button performs a search of the database to report on which Districts and Sub-Districts are included in the current database.
Province
The Census of 1921 covered the Dominion of Canada, which was divided into nine provinces: New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia, as well as the North-West Territories. If you wish to limit the search to a specific province the choice is made using the selection list.
At present the only data entered is for part of Ontario.
District
The country was divided into Census Districts which corresponded approximately to electoral districts or ridings. Although some of these Districts have the same name as Counties, they do not generally have the same boundaries as the Counties with the same name.
Initially this selection list includes all Districts in the country. If a Province is selected then the District selection list is populated with an alphabetical list of the census Districts in that Province.
Count
The Count field permits specifying how many records are to be displayed at at a time. The default is 20 records.
Sub-District
Each census District, was divided into census Sub-Districts, The selection list of sub-districts is populated when you select a District. In the 1921 census sub-districts represented individual enumeration divisions, so there are frequently multiple sub-districts for a single township, town, or city ward. In an annoying move the central administration of the Census merged multiple enumeration divisions within a single District if those divisions shared an enumerator. As a result many urban Sub-Districts have multiple page sequences corresponding to the separate enumeration divisions.
Page
Each page of the population census contained room for 50 individuals. It is anticipated that the user will choose to search an individual page only for the situation when the entire page, all 50 individuals, are the desired target set. Therefore selecting a specific page within a specific enumeration division ignores the Count field so that all rows of the page are displayed and changes the default sort order to display the records in the order they appear in the original.
As mentioned above in an annoying move the central administration of the Census merged multiple enumeration divisions within a single District if those divisions shared an enumerator. As a result many urban Sub-Districts have multiple page sequences corresponding to the separate enumeration divisions.
Given Names
This field is used to specify text which is matched against the given names of individuals in the database. This search is done as a case-insensitive pattern match, not a simple comparison.
Specifying simple text, comprising letters and spaces, matches against any names containing that text. "John" or "john" or "JOHN" will match "Johnathan" and "William John" as well as the simple "John".
The text may be a regular expression. There are too many options to enumerate here, but a few examples include:
Surname
This field is used to specify text to look for in the surname of individuals. If the value contains only letters and spaces then only names that match exactly (except for case) are found. Otherwise this uses the same pattern matching as described for Given Names. For example to match surnames starting with "McL..." and ending with ".n", such as "McLean", "McLain", "McLennan", or "McLellan" you could specify "^McL.*n$".
The meaning of this field changes if the Soundex option is selected.
Soundex
The Soundex code has been used for decades to attempt to match names that sound similar. For example it is used by police forces to perform a rough match for the names of drivers. It is a problematic tool, as it is based upon the phonetics of British surnames. If you select this option along with a complete surname, not a pattern match, in the Surname field, then the search is made for surnames that "sound like" the given surname. For example specifying Soundex together with "McLean" will match all of the surnames in the pattern match example under "Surname", but many other names as well, such "McCallum", "McAllan", "McClain", and "McWilliams".
Sex
Select this option if you only want to look for male or female individuals.
Marital Status
Select this option if you wish to restrict the search based upon the marital status of the individuals.
Occupation
This option is used to search for individuals based upon their listed occupations. This is again a pattern match. For example searching for "Labo[u]{0,1}rer" will match any occupation that contains either "Laborer" or "Labourer", including "Farm Labourer" and "R'y Laborer".
Birth Place
This option is used to search for individuals based upon where they were born. This is a pattern match. For example searching for "Canada" will also match "Canada East", "Canada West", "Lower Canada", and "Upper Canada".
Religion
This option is used to search for individuals based upon their religious affiliation. This is a pattern match. For example searching for "Meth" will match any religion containing that string, including "Wesleyan Methodist", "C. Meth.", "New Connexion Methodist", and "Methodist Episcopal".
Address
This option is used to search for individuals based upon their address. This is a pattern match. For example searching for "Dundas St" will match any address containing that string, including "137 Dundas St", "cor of Queen St & Dundas St" and "Dundas Station".
Origin
The Origin field is used to search for individuals with a particular ethnic origin. Note that by the instructions to the enumerators the term "Canadian" only applied to Canadiens-françaises, and the term "American" was not to be used, regardless of how many generations the individual's family had been living in America.
Birth Year & Range
The Birth Year and Range fields are used to search for individuals based upon their approximate birth year calculated from their age at the time of the census in spring 1921.