HGIS Canada › British Columbia › NO DATA
NO DATA, British Columbia (1871–1871)
NO DATA was a census subdivision in British Columbia, recorded in 1 census between 1871 and 1871.
Historical lineage
Ancestor places
- split off from NO DATA in 1871
Descendant places
- later split into Osoyoos in 1881
- later split into Cassiar, Northern Interior in 1881
- later split into Omineca in 1881
- later split into Richfield, Barkerville & Lightning Creek in 1881
- later split into Coast of main land in 1881
- later split into Quesnelmouth in 1881
- later split into Keithley Creek in 1881
- later split into William's Lake and Canoe Creek in 1881
- later split into Comox & Alberni in 1881
- later split into Clinton, Lillooet in 1881
- later split into Western Coast in 1881
- later split into Lytton and Cache Creek and Spence's Bridge and Kamloops in 1881
- later split into North in 1881
- later split into Nanaïmo, Noonas Bay in 1881
- later split into Cowichin, Salt Spring Isl. in 1881
- later split into Yale and Hope in 1881
- later split into Nicola, O’Kanagan in 1881
- later split into South in 1881
- later split into Sooke Lake, Highland, &c. in 1881
- later split into Saanich N & S in 1881
- later split into Esquimalt, Metchosin in 1881
- later split into Victoria, Johnson Street, Ward—Quartier in 1881
- later split into Victoria in 1881
- later split into Victoria, James’ Bay, Ward—Quartier in 1881
- later split into Victoria, Yates Street, Ward—Quartier in 1881
- later split into Kootenai in 1881
Population trajectory across census years
| Census year | Population | Page |
|---|---|---|
| 1871 | — | View 1871 detail → |
Cross-year identity established by spatial polygon overlap (SAME_AS chains across the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary files).
Identifiers
- Persistent place ID:
PLACE_BC999999— assigned to this enduring entity by chaining year-scoped TCP UIDs through spatial overlap - Wikidata: not yet grounded.
Sources
Census tabulations from the 1851–1921 Census of Canada series, transcribed and georeferenced by the Canadian Peoples / TCP project. Each year's detail page (linked above) cites the specific source table.