HGIS Canada › Saskatchewan › 184 townships
184 townships, Saskatchewan (1911–1911)
184 townships was a census subdivision in Saskatchewan, recorded in 1 census between 1911 and 1911.
Population trajectory across census years
| Census year | Population | Page |
|---|---|---|
| 1911 | 32,262 | View 1911 detail → |
Cross-year identity established by spatial polygon overlap (SAME_AS chains across the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary files).
Boundary lineage
Predecessors
- split off from Hafford, VL in 1921
- split off from Waldheim, VL in 1921
- split off from 405. Great Bend in 1921
- split off from Hepburn, VL in 1921
- split off from 374. Warman in 1921
- split off from Dalmeny, VL in 1921
- split off from 375. Park in 1921
- split off from 373. Aberdeen in 1921
- split off from 344. Cory in 1921
- split off from Vanscoy, VL in 1921
- split off from 343. Blucher in 1921
- split off from 345. Loganton in 1921
- split off from Bradwell, VL in 1921
- split off from 314. Dundurn in 1921
- split off from 315. Montrose in 1921
- split off from Swanson, VL in 1921
- split off from Ardath, VL in 1921
- split off from 284. Rudy in 1921
- split off from 313. Lost River in 1921
- split off from 283. Rosedale in 1921
- split off from Strongfield, VL in 1921
- split off from 254. Loreburn in 1921
- split off from 253 Willner in 1921
- incorporates territory from Saskatoon, East—Est in 1911
- incorporates territory from Saskatoon, West—Ouest in 1911
- incorporates territory from Fish Creek in 1911
- incorporates territory from Osler in 1911
- incorporates territory from Hague in 1911
- incorporates territory from Schmidtsburg in 1911
- incorporates territory from Rosthern in 1911
- incorporates territory from Waldheim in 1911
- incorporates territory from Ebenfeld in 1911
Identifiers
- Persistent place ID:
PLACE_SK216001— 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.