Neebing Centre & S, Ontario (1891 census)
Neebing Centre & S was a census subdivision in Ontario, recorded in the 1891 Census of Canada with a population of 1,118. The administrative centroid was at approximately 48.382°N, 89.348°W.
Population
In 1891, Neebing Centre & S had a population of 1,118: 655 male and 463 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 NO DATA, 1881 (0.0% share).
Later boundary forms
- In a later year, this CSD became part of Neebing, 1901 (35.2% share).
Neighbouring Census Subdivisions in 1891
In the 1891 census, Neebing Centre & S shared boundaries with:
Full census record, 1891
The 1891 census recorded 81 measurements for this Census Subdivision across 5 categories.
Population & families (1891). This community's record includes 1,118 total population, 655 males, 463 females, 339 married persons, 222 families, 177 married males, 162 married females, 62 widowed persons, 33 widowed males, 29 widowed females, 5 average size of families. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T2; V1T3.)
Age structure (1891). This community's record includes 717 single persons under 18, 445 single males under 18, 272 single females under 18. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T3.)
Ethnic origin (1891). This community's record includes 1,015 persons who are not French Canadian, 103 French Canadians. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T3.)
Buildings & housing (1891). This community's record includes 215 occupied houses, 188 houses, 184 houses built of wood, 109 houses of 2 stories, 77 houses of 1 story, 56 houses of 6 to 10 rooms, 38 uninhabited houses, 32 houses of 2 rooms, 29 houses of 5 rooms, 27 dwellings that are vessels and shanties, 22 houses of 4 rooms, 20 houses of 3 rooms, 15 houses of 1 room, 8 houses of 11 to 15 rooms, 6 houses of over 15 rooms, 4 houses under construction, 3 houses built of brick, 2 houses of more than 3 stories, 1 houses built of stone. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T2.)
Agriculture (1891). This community's record includes 15,793 bushels of potatoes, 13,030 acres of land in farms, 10,935 acres of farmland in woodland or forest, 6,625 bushels of oats, 3,749 bushels of turnips, 3,712 pounds of homemade butter, 2,095 acres of improved land in farms, 1,948 chickens, 1,614 acres of farmland under crops, 524 cattle killed or sold, 506 tons of hay, 440 acres of farmland in pasture, 406 acres of hay crops, 361 swine slaughtered or sold, 218 swine, 185 acres of oats, 125 sheep slaughtered or sold, 105 occupants of farms, 100 other cattle, 99 farm occupants who own their land, 99 milk cows, 98 acres of potatoes, 90 bushels of spring wheat, 80 horses aged over 3 years, 74 bushels of peas, 73 ducks, 65 bushels of barley, 48 pounds of coarse wool produced on farms, 47 persons living on farms under 10 acres, 41 acres of farmland in gardens or orchards, 40 bushels of rye, 25 persons living on farms between 101 and 200 acres, 24 geese, 22 turkeys, 21 oxen, 20 acres of turnips, 15 other fowl, 15 persons living on farms between 51 and 100 acres, 12 sheep, 11 persons living on farms between 11 and 50 acres, 8 bushels of beans, 7 horses aged 3 years and under, 7 persons living on farms over 200 acres, 6 farm occupants who rent their land, 3 acres of wheat, 2 acres of barley. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V2T16; V4T2; V4T3.)
Identifiers
- TCP UID:
ON046033— year-scoped identifier from the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary file - Persistent place ID:
PLACE_ON046033— 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 1891 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). "Neebing Centre & S, Ontario (1891 census)" in HGIS Canada Knowledge Graph. Retrieved from https://jimclifford.ca/hgiscanada/places/on/neebing-centre-s-on046033-1891/.