Lot 301, Vancouver c pt, British Columbia (1911 census)
Lot 301, Vancouver c pt was a census subdivision in British Columbia, recorded in the 1911 Census of Canada with a population of 2,784. The administrative centroid was at approximately 49.253°N, 123.089°W.
Population
In 1911, Lot 301, Vancouver c pt had a population of 2,784: 1,540 male and 1,244 female residents.
Boundary continuity (non-identical overlaps)
Spatial polygon overlaps with adjacent census years where the boundary shifted enough that the SAME_AS chain didn't merge them. These show where the territory came from and went to even when it isn't tracked as the same persistent place.
Earlier boundary forms
- In an earlier year, this CSD was contained in Richmond, 1901 (0.1% share).
Later boundary forms
- In a later year, this CSD became part of Vancouver (pt), C, 1921 (5.5% share).
Neighbouring Census Subdivisions in 1911
In the 1911 census, Lot 301, Vancouver c pt shared boundaries with:
Full census record, 1911
The 1911 census recorded 48 measurements for this Census Subdivision across 4 categories.
Population & families (1911). This community's record includes 2,784 total population, 1,540 males in the population, 1,244 females in the population, 883 single (never-married) males, 630 married males, 618 families, 609 single (never-married) females, 577 married females, 56 widowed females, 19 widowed males, 8 males with marital status not given, 2 legally separated females. (Source: 1911 Census of Canada, V1T1; V1T2.)
Ethnic origin (1911). This community's record includes 1,231 persons of British origin (English), 674 persons of British origin (Scotch / Scottish), 424 persons of British origin (Irish), 92 persons of Italian origin, 87 persons of Scandinavian origin, 79 persons of German origin, 30 persons of French origin, 18 persons of British origin (other), 16 persons of Chinese origin, 8 persons of Greek origin, 8 persons of Swiss origin, 2 persons of Belgian origin, 1 persons of Austro-Hungarian origin, 1 persons of Dutch origin, 1 persons of Russian origin. 9 persons recorded under the 1911 official census category "Jewish" (origin/ethnicity, distinct from the V2T2 religion category "Jews"). (Source: 1911 Census of Canada, V2T7.) The 1911 enumerator also recorded 6 persons recorded under the 1911 official census category "Hindu"; in 1911 this label denoted South Asian origin (not religious identification). Reflects period British-colonial conflation of religion and ethnicity; modern usage of "Hindu" is religious., 1 persons of Japanese origin — single-county tallies of limited cross-year comparability.
Religion (1911). This community's record includes 882 Anglicans (Church of England), 753 Presbyterians, 553 Methodists, 235 Roman Catholics, 115 Lutherans, 98 Baptists, 96 persons whose religion or origin is unspecified, 54 adherents of various sects (residual category in 1911), 18 Salvation Army adherents, 16 Congregationalists, 11 Mormons (Latter-day Saints), 9 Christians (general / no denomination specified), 9 Jews, 8 Greek (Orthodox) Church adherents, 5 Friends (Quakers), 2 Adventists. (Source: 1911 Census of Canada, V2T2; V2T7.) The 1911 enumerator also recorded 16 persons recorded under the 1911 official census category "Pagans"; primarily applied to Indigenous adherents of traditional spiritual practices. The label reflects period Christian-normative framing and is preserved as the historical source category. — single-county tallies of limited cross-year comparability.
Buildings & housing (1911). This community's record includes 616 dwellings. (Source: 1911 Census of Canada, V1T2.)
Identifiers
- TCP UID:
BC011008— year-scoped identifier from the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary file - Persistent place ID:
PLACE_BC011008— computed from spatial-overlap chains across census years - Wikidata: not yet grounded. This page covers a place whose persistent identity has not yet been linked to a Wikidata entity. Identification is via TCP UID and spatial polygon only.
Sources
Census tabulations from the 1911 Census of Canada, transcribed and georeferenced by the Canadian Peoples / TCP project, hosted at the HGIS Lab, University of Saskatchewan. Persistent place identity computed from spatial-overlap chains across all available census years (1851–1921). Identity grounding to Wikidata performed via the HGIS Canada Knowledge Graph project's MCP-assisted disambiguation pipeline. See the About / Methodology page for the full data pipeline.
Cite this page
Clifford, J. (2026). "Lot 301, Vancouver c pt, British Columbia (1911 census)" in HGIS Canada Knowledge Graph. Retrieved from https://jimclifford.ca/hgiscanada/places/bc/lot-301-vancouver-c-pt-bc011008-1911/.