La population totale du Canada depuis 1600
Louis-Edmond Hamelin
Abstract
An attempt is made to calculate the population of Canada since the period of discovery. The author bas made a few corrections to official statistics and bas added the figures for Newfoundland (prior to 1949) and for the Indians and Eskimos (prior to 1851). Throughout it is a question of the same territory, that of present-day Canada.
Visualized in this fashion, the history of the population of Canada falls into jour periods :
1. 1600-1710 : The total population declined because the slow increase in European immigrants did not compensate for the decrease in numbers of indigenous peoples ;
2. 1710-1775 : The total population grew slowly during this period but, after two centuries of colonisation, Canada remained a land of Indians ;
3. In less than a century the total population soared from 300,000 to 3,000,000 ; never would Canada experience an equally long period characterized by such a high rate of demographic expansion. Canada became British ;
4. The present century bas seen jour demographic periods ; rapid increase took place during two of these periods : 1896-1914 and since 1942.
The alternation of rates of growth emphasizes the sensitivity of the Canadian economy to both external and internal events.
| Auteur : | Louis-Edmond Hamelin |
|---|---|
| Titre : | La population totale du Canada depuis 1600 |
| Revue : | Cahiers de géographie du Québec, Volume 9, numéro 18, 1965, p. 159-167 |
| URI : | http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/020594ar |
| DOI : | 10.7202/020594ar |
Tous droits réservés © Cahiers de géographie du Québec, 1965

