Chester E., Nova Scotia (1921 census)
Chester E. was a census subdivision in Nova Scotia, recorded in the 1921 Census of Canada with a population of 870. The administrative centroid was at approximately 44.657°N, 64.191°W.
Population
In 1921, Chester E. had a population of 870: 454 male and 416 female residents.
Population trajectory across census years
| Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 1911 | 850 |
| 1921 | 870 |
Cross-year identity established by spatial polygon overlap (SAME_AS chains across the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary files).
Neighbouring Census Subdivisions in 1921
In the 1921 census, Chester E. shared boundaries with:
Full census record, 1921
The 1921 census recorded 21 measurements for this Census Subdivision across 3 categories.
Population & families (1921). This community's record includes 870 total population, 454 males in the population, 453 males born in Canada, 416 females in the population, 409 females born in Canada, 4 females born in the British Empire (excluding Canada), 3 females born outside the British Empire, 1 males born outside the British Empire. (Source: 1921 Census of Canada, V1T16.)
Ethnic origin (1921). This community's record includes 374 persons of German origin, 332 persons of British origin (English), 80 persons of British origin (Scotch / Scottish), 47 persons of Dutch origin, 33 persons of British origin (Irish), 4 persons of French origin. (Source: 1921 Census of Canada, V1T27.)
Religion (1921). This community's record includes 535 Anglicans (Church of England), 171 Baptists, 89 Lutherans, 37 Roman Catholics, 30 Methodists, 7 Presbyterians, 1 adherents of other sects (residual category in 1921). (Source: 1921 Census of Canada, V1T38.)
Identifiers
- TCP UID:
NS015007— year-scoped identifier from the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary file - Persistent place ID:
PLACE_NS015007— 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 1921 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). "Chester E., Nova Scotia (1921 census)" in HGIS Canada Knowledge Graph. Retrieved from https://jimclifford.ca/hgiscanada/places/ns/chester-e-ns015007-1921/.