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The Occupational Adjustment of the British Immigrant in Montreal
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Reynolds, Lloyd G. (Author)
Title
The Occupational Adjustment of the British Immigrant in Montreal
Abstract
It is perhaps not surprising that existing studies of British migration to Canada deal primarily with settlement on the land. The Canadian government has made strenuous efforts to encourage immigration of this sort; there is something of glamour, too, about the movement to the last frontier on the prairies of western Canada. Yet all the while immigration has been flowing in equal volume into the industrial centres of the east. While the eyes of the nation were fixed on schemes of Empire settlement, tens of thousands of Britishers were slipping almost unnoticed into Toronto, Montreal and other metropolitan areas. In 1921 there were 54,807 persons of British birth resident in Montreal; sinoe that time over 75,000 new immigrants from Britain have given the Province of Quebec (in effect, Montreal) as their destination. A movement of this size cannot but have had profound repercussions both upon the life of the city and upon the lives of the immigrants themselves. The study of these repercussions constitutes an almost unexplored field.
Type
M.A., Sociology
University
McGill University
Place
Montreal
Date
1933
# of Pages
187 pages
Language
English
Citation
Reynolds, L. G. (1933). The Occupational Adjustment of the British Immigrant in Montreal [M.A., Sociology, McGill University]. https://escholarship.mcgill.ca/concern/theses/6h440w63v?locale=en
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