Ukrainian Immigration
Ukrainian immigration commenced in 1891 when Ivan Pylypow of Nebyliv, Kalush
district, Galicia, learned about the "free lands" available on the
Prairies from Galician German acquaintances who had emigrated some years
earlier. After investigating settlement possibilities in Manitoba and
Alberta with Wasyl Eleniak, a fellow villager, Pylypow returned to Galicia to
bring back both men's families and as many friends and relatives as could be
persuaded to accompany them. Although he was arrested and tried for
sedition by the Austrian authorities, and prevented from making his way back to
Canada until 1893, the publicity generated by his trial advertised
to Canada more effectively than he himself could have done. By 1894 a
Ukrainian settlement had emerged in the vicinity of Star, Alberta.
Ukrainian immigration assumed mass proportions in 1896. It was
accelerated by Dr. Joseph Oleskiv, a young agronomist of populist sympathies.
Oleskiv collected data on Western Canada, visited the region, met with
representatives of the Department of the Interior, lectured widely about Canada,
and penned two popular pamphlets that were published and distributed to their
reading clubs by the Prosvita and Kachkovsky societies. He envisaged an
orderly and controlled immigration of hand-picked and well-capitalized peasant
farmers who would be assisted by the Canadian government. Their poor
countrymen would follow a few years later when the former group would be in a
position to help them.
Clifford Sifton, the new Liberal Minister of the Interior (1896-1905) on the
other hand, was determined to bring the Prairies with Britons, Americans and
northern Europeans, he was a pragmatist who was indifferent to the ethnic
background of the settlers provided they were thrifty and industrious
agriculturalists. Consequently agreements were concluded with European
agents to recruit east European immigrants, including Ukrainians. As a
result Ukrainian immigration to Canada was not the orderly and controlled
process envisaged by Oleskiv (who, in any case, was dead by 1903). The
majority of Ukrainian immigrants who came to Canada were illiterate and without
capital. Even after Sifton's successors, Frank Oliver and Robert Rogers,
curtailed efforts to recruit east European agriculturalists, Ukrainian
immigration continued to increase, sustained by a momentum of its own.
Moreover, after 1905, the demand of industry, primarily the railroad companies
and mining interests, for cheap labour stimulated the influx of single men
seeking work rather than land. The majority of Ukrainian immigrants who
entered Canada between 1905 and 1914 fell into this category. By 1914
about 170,000 Ukrainians had entered Canada and about 20-25% of the
Ukrainian-Canadian population was in Alberta.
The outbreak of war in 1914 terminated Ukrainian immigration. In 1919,
confronted with a labour surplus, the federal government bowed to nativist
pressure and barred most east central Europeans from entering Canada.
Within five years however, a massive exodus of unemployed Canadian labourers and
the inability to find suitable replacements in Britain caused the ban to be
lifted.
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