HGIS CanadaQuebecSte. Julienne › 1891
Year: 1891  |  Province: Quebec  |  Wikidata: Q3464313

Ste. Julienne, Quebec (1891 census)

Ste. Julienne was a census subdivision in Quebec, recorded in the 1891 Census of Canada with a population of 1,150. The community is grounded to Wikidata Q3464313. The administrative centroid was at approximately 45.969°N, 73.731°W.

Population

In 1891, Ste. Julienne had a population of 1,150: 576 male and 574 female residents.

Population trajectory across census years

YearPopulation
18611,399
18711,117
18811,132
18911,150
19011,289
19111,265
19211,302

Cross-year identity established by spatial polygon overlap (SAME_AS chains across the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary files).

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

Neighbouring Census Subdivisions in 1891

In the 1891 census, Ste. Julienne shared boundaries with:

Full census record, 1891

The 1891 census recorded 83 measurements for this Census Subdivision across 5 categories.

Population & families (1891). This community's record includes 1,150 total population, 576 males, 574 females, 416 married persons, 241 families, 208 married females, 208 married males, 33 widowed persons, 27 widowed females, 6 widowed males, 4.60 average size of families. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T2; V1T3.)

Age structure (1891). This community's record includes 701 single persons under 18, 362 single males under 18, 339 single females under 18. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T3.)

Ethnic origin (1891). This community's record includes 1,053 French Canadians, 97 persons who are not French Canadian. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T3.)

Buildings & housing (1891). This community's record includes 220 houses, 220 occupied houses, 214 houses of 1 story, 210 houses built of wood, 63 houses of 6 to 10 rooms, 51 houses of 4 rooms, 48 houses of 5 rooms, 37 uninhabited houses, 28 houses of 3 rooms, 22 houses of 2 rooms, 9 houses built of stone, 6 houses of 2 stories, 5 houses of 11 to 15 rooms, 3 houses of over 15 rooms, 1 houses built of brick, 1 houses under construction. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V1T2.)

Agriculture (1891). This community's record includes 34,426 pounds of homemade butter, 19,207 acres of land in farms, 13,739 bushels of oats, 12,606 bushels of potatoes, 11,133 acres of improved land in farms, 8,074 acres of farmland in woodland or forest, 5,783 acres of farmland under crops, 5,260 acres of farmland in pasture, 2,835 bushels of turnips, 2,363 bushels of corn, 2,306 acres of hay crops, 2,115 chickens, 1,925 acres of oats, 1,872 bushels of buckwheat, 1,862 tons of hay, 1,486 pounds of coarse wool produced on farms, 1,013 bushels of peas, 589 bushels of spring wheat, 571 bushels of barley, 542 milk cows, 437 sheep, 426 swine slaughtered or sold, 363 bushels of clover, timothy, or other grass seed, 307 other cattle, 285 horses aged over 3 years, 249 swine, 241 sheep slaughtered or sold, 216 occupants of farms, 185 farm occupants who own their land, 165 acres of potatoes, 148 cattle killed or sold, 90 acres of farmland in gardens or orchards, 87 horses aged 3 years and under, 82 acres of wheat, 75 persons living on farms under 10 acres, 73 turkeys, 62 persons living on farms between 101 and 200 acres, 49 acres of barley, 41 persons living on farms between 51 and 100 acres, 27 bushels of beans, 20 persons living on farms over 200 acres, 18 persons living on farms between 11 and 50 acres, 16 farm occupants who rent their land, 15 employees on farms, 15 pounds of cheese produced on farms, 12 acres of turnips, 9 geese, 8 other fowl, 7 ducks, 5 oxen, 3 bushels of rye. (Source: 1891 Census of Canada, V2T16; V4T2; V4T3.)

Identifiers

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). "Ste. Julienne, Quebec (1891 census)" in HGIS Canada Knowledge Graph. Retrieved from https://jimclifford.ca/hgiscanada/places/qc/ste-julienne-qc170007-1891/.