Block Settlement

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A block settlement is particular type of land distribution which allows settlers with the same ethnicity to form small colonies. They are the rural equivalent to urban "ethnic" neighbourhoods.

This settlement type was used throughout western Canada between the late 1800s and early 1900s. Some were planned and other were spontaneously created by the settlers themselves.

The policy was of planned blocks was pursued primarily by Clifford Sifton during this time as Interior Minister. It was essentially a compromise position. Some politicians wanted all ethnic groups to be scattered evenly though the new lands to ensure they would quickly assimilate to Anglo-Canadian culture, while others did not want to live near "foreign" immigrants (as opposed to British immigrants who were not considered foreign) and demanded that they be segregated. At the time Canada was receiving large amounts of non-British, non-French, immigrants for the first time, especially Italians, Germans, Scandinavians, and Ukrainians. The newcomers themselves wanted to settle as close as possible to people with a familiar language and similar customs. The government did not want the west to be balkanised into a few large homogenous ethnic blocks, however. So several smaller colonies were set up where particular ethnic groups could settle, but these were spaced across the country.

Contents

[edit] Examples of ethnic block settlements in western Canada

[edit] African American

[edit] Doukhobor

[edit] French

See also: Franco-Manitoban, Fransaskois, and Franco-Albertan

[edit] German

[edit] Hungarian

[edit] Jewish

See also: Jewish Colonization Association

[edit] Mennonite

[edit] Romanian

[edit] Scandinavian

Key: N = Norwegian S = Swedish I = Icelandic F = Finnish D = Danish

[edit] Ukrainian

With approximate date of founding:

  1. Edna-Star, Alberta (1892). Founded by the original Ukrainian Canadian pioneers Iwan Pylypow and Wasyl Eleniak, this is the oldest and largest of the Ukrainian block settlements and was once considered the largest Ukrainian community in the world outside Eastern Europe. It is now the world's largest eco-museum, called Kalyna Country, which includes the counties of Sturgeon, Thorhild, St. Paul, Vermillion River, Two Hills, Minburn, Beaver, Lamont, and Strathcona, and many of the neighbouring towns and cities.
  2. Rabbit Hills, Alberta
  3. Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
  4. Battleford, Saskatchewan
  5. Stuartburn, Manitoba (August 1896)
  6. Dauphin, Manitoba (September 1896)
  7. Interlake, Manitoba (June 1897)
  8. Yorkton, Saskatchewan
  9. Fish Creek, Saskatchewan (June 1898)
  10. Shoal Lake, Manitoba (April 1899)
  11. Whitemouth, Manitoba

[edit] "White Russians" (Old Believers)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links