Yukon Census
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Online Records[edit | edit source]
Online National and Provincial Population Schedules of Canada | ||||||||
Free | Free at Some Libraries (usually with a library card)* | Pay | ||||||
Family Search[1] |
Automated Genealogy[2] | Library Archives Canada[3] | Ancestry FHL[4] | Ancestry Library[5] | Ancestry Home[6] | |||
1921 | indexes | - | - | Link | Link | Link | Link | |
images | - | - | Link | Link | Link | Link | ||
1911 | indexes | - | Link | Link | Link | Link | Link | |
images | - | Link | Link | Link | Link | Link | ||
1901 | indexes | Link | Link | Link | Link | Link | Link | |
images | - | Link | Link | Link | Link | Link | ||
1891 | indexes | Link | - | Link | Link | Link | Link | |
images | - | - | Link | Link | Link | Link | ||
Family Search | Automated Genealogy | Library Archives Canada | Ancestry FHL | Ancestry Library | Ancestry Home | |||
Free | Free at Some Libraries (usually with a library card) | Pay |
Contents[edit | edit source]
The 1871 and later censuses list for each member of the household:
- Name.
- Age.
- Occupation.
- Religious affiliation.
- Birthplace (country or province).
The 1871 and 1881 censuses also list for each person:
- Father’s origin or ethnic background.
- The 1891 census, in addition, asks:
- If persons are French Canadian.
- For parents’ birthplaces.
The 1891 and later censuses also ask for a person’s:
- Relationship to head of household.
The 1901 census also asks for:
- A complete birth date, not just the year.
- The year the person immigrated to Canada.
- The year of naturalization.
- The father’s racial or tribal origin, not whether the person was of French Canadian descent.
- The 1901 census also contains a buildings and lands schedule for each locality. This schedule gives a city street address or a farm land description—such as township and range, or township, concession, and lot number—for most families.
- ↑ FamilySearch, a free online service of the Family History Library.
- ↑ Automated Genealogy, a free online service includes links to free images found at the Library and Archives Canada.
- ↑ Library Archives Canada, a free online service includes links to free images and partial indexes found at the Library and Archives Canada.
- ↑ Ancestry.com, a subscription site that provides online indexes and images to all surviving national and many provincial census records, among other sources. They have three online editions: (1) an FHL edition free only at the Family History Library and a few Family History Centers, (2) a slightly smaller Library edition free only at some public libraries, and (3) a Home edition subscription service for individuals.
- ↑ Ancestry.com, a subscription site that provides online indexes and images to all surviving national and many provincial census records, among other sources. They have three online editions: (1) an FHL edition free only at the Family History Library and a few Family History Centers, (2) a slightly smaller Library edition free only at some public libraries, and (3) a Home edition subscription service for individuals.
- ↑ Ancestry.com, a subscription site that provides online indexes and images to all surviving federal and many state census records, among other sources. They have three online editions: (1) an FHL edition free only at the Family History Library and a few Family History Centers, (2) a slightly smaller Library edition free only at some public libraries, and (3) a Home edition subscription service for individuals.