Swedish Canadian

Sweden Swedish Canadians Canada
Svensk-kanadensare
Total population
Swedish
341,845 (by ancestry, 2011 Census)[1]
1.1% of Canada's population
Regions with significant populations
 Canada
 British Columbia 106,085
 Alberta 96,890
Languages
Canadian English · Swedish · Canadian French
Religion
Protestantism[2]
Related ethnic groups
Swedes · Swedish Americans · Swedish Britons · Scandinavians

Swedish Canadians (Swedish: Svenskkanadensare) are Canadian citizens of Swedish ancestry or Sweden-born people who resides in Canada. The Swedish Canadian community in Canada is 330,000.[3] The vast majority of them reside west of Lake Superior, primarily in Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver. Toronto is the most popular settlement spot for newcomers. Despite having an influential presence and distinctive cultural bond, only 20,000 Canadian persons of Swedish descent speak Swedish.

Immigration history

A few Swedes trickled into Canada even before it became a country in 1867, but the first real wave of immigration began in the late 1890s and ended with the onset of the First World War in 1914. Included in this group were a significant number of farmers who had settled first in the United States.

The first Swede, Jacob Fahlström, arrived in Canada in 1809, as an employee of the Hudson's Bay Company. He was succeeded in 1812 by another Swedish man, who was accompanied by two other men from Norway and Ireland to populate the Red River Colony in lower Manitoba. A much more substantive wave of Swedish settlers immigrated to Canada from the United States between 1868 and 1914, as land for farming became more and more scarce in America. Crop failures in their home country between 1866 and 1868 encouraged a similar exodus from Sweden.

The second and largest wave, which came during the 1920s, endured both the depression of the 1930s and the Second World War 193945. The third wave, although not as numerous, has been steady since the 1950s.

The immigrant pattern in Canada differs slightly from their counterpart in the United States. Whereas the majority of the earlier Swedish immigrants in America are from south-central Sweden, a significant portion of the Swedish immigrants in Canada are from the Stockholm region and Northern Sweden.[4]

As the economic situation improved after the Second World War, the overall emigration rate of Sweden slowed down considerably. Very much like recent Swedish emigrants found in other parts of the world, many of the newcomers are connected with Swedish companies, and do not intend to remain in the country permanently.

Spatial distribution

Most Swedes settled in western Canada, from northern Ontario to British Columbia. There were only a handful of strictly Swedish communities, the earliest being Scandinavia, Manitoba, in 1885 and Stockholm, Saskatchewan, in 1886. The Census of Canada shows that Swedish immigrants could be found scattered throughout every province and territory, with pockets in rural areas and in some towns and cities.

Winnipeg acted as the Swedish capital of Canada until the 1940s when Vancouver took over this title. A significant number of Swedes live in Calgary and Edmonton and their environs, but the Toronto area is home to the largest concentration of newcomers, where it has one of the largest concentration of Swedish business in North America.[5]

More than 175 places' names in Canada are of Swedish origin,[6] which include Uppsala (Ontario), Stockholm (Saskatchewan) and Thorsby (Alberta).

Assimilation

Adapting to the ways of a new country is never easy, but most Swedes considered it a primary goal in order to achieve success. Early immigrants made every effort to master the English language, at the same time supporting a fairly large number of Swedish-language newspapers, including two weeklies. The only Swedish magazine in North America today, the Swedish Press, is published in Vancouver, B.C. Recent immigrants who have learned English in Swedish schools do not have this problem.

Swedes are accustomed to four distinct seasons. Although Sweden is located quite far north (in the Western Hemisphere it would lie in the middle of Hudson Bay), the Gulf Stream modifies its climate dramatically. The reason so many Swedes settled on the prairies was not because the landscape was similar, but because land was available.

Notable Swedish Canadians

Noteworthy Canadians of Swedish origin include Senator Pamela Wallin, Judge Tom Berger who headed the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline inquiry, architect Arthur Erickson who designed Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto and the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C., singer-songwriter and recording artist Michael Saxell, Harry Strom who was the premier of Alberta (19681971), naturalist Louise de Kiriline Lawrence who was the most prolific contributor to the Audubon, and Ralph Gustafson who won the Governor General's Award for poetry in 1974.

Further reading

See also

References

  1. Statistics Canada, Census 2006 Selected Ethnic Origins1, for Canada, Provinces and Territories 20% sample data
  2. (Statistics Canada, Census 2001 Selected Demographic and Cultural Characteristics (105), Selected Ethnic Groups (100), Age Groups (6), Sex (3) and Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3) for Population, for Canada, Provinces, Territories and Census Metropolitan Areas 1 , 2001 Census 20% sample data)
  3. Statistics Canada - Swedes in Canada
  4. http://www.multiculturalcanada.ca/Encyclopedia/A-Z/s13/2
  5. Ruprecht, Tony. Toronto's Many Faces
  6. http://www.swedesincanada.ca/facts.html

External links