Archived Content

Information identified as archived is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please contact us to request a format other than those available.

Focus on Geography Series, 2011 Census

Census subdivision of St. Paul, T - Alberta

Map of St. Paul, T (shaded in green), Alberta

Map of St. Paul, T

Interactive version of map

Population, 2011 and 2006 censuses

Chart A: St. Paul, T - Population, 2011 and 2006 censuses

Chart A description: St. Paul, T - Population, 2011 and 2006 censuses

Prov. rank
83
Nat. rank
669

In 2011, St. Paul (Town) had a population of 5,400, representing a percentage change of 5.8% from 2006. This compares to the national average growth of 5.9%.

Land area is 7.89 square kilometres with a population density of 684.7 persons per square kilometre. This compares to the provincial land area of 640,081.87 square kilometres with a population density of 5.7 persons per square kilometre.

In 2011, St. Paul (Town) had 2,169 private dwellings occupied by usual residents. The change in private dwellings occupied by usual residents from 2006 was 10.5%. For Canada as a whole, the number of private dwellings occupied by usual residents increased 7.1%.

Population and dwelling counts

St. Paul (Town) – Neighbouring census subdivisions

Table 1 St. Paul (Town) – Neighbouring census subdivisions, population change, 2006 to 2011
Census subdivision (CSD) name CSD type Population
2011 2006 % change
St. Paul County No. 19, Alta. MD 5,831 5,925 -1.6

Alberta – Census subdivisions with 5,000-plus population with the highest population growth

Table 2 Alberta – Census subdivisions with 5,000-plus population with the highest population growth, population change, 2006 to 2011
Census subdivision (CSD) name CSD type Population
2011 2006 % change
Chestermere T 14,824 9,923 A 49.4
Beaumont T 13,284 8,961 48.2
Airdrie CY 42,564 28,927 47.1
Leduc CY 24,279 16,967 43.1
Okotoks T 24,511 17,150 A 42.9

Alberta – Census subdivisions with 5,000-plus population with the lowest population growth

Table 3 Alberta – Census subdivisions with 5,000-plus population with the lowest population growth, population change, 2006 to 2011
Census subdivision (CSD) name CSD type Population
2011 2006 % change
Lac la Biche County MD 8,402 9,123 A -7.9
Willow Creek No. 26 MD 5,107 5,337 -4.3
Crowsnest Pass SM 5,565 5,749 -3.2
Greenview No. 16 MD 5,299 5,464 -3.0
Lethbridge County MD 10,061 10,254 A -1.9

Age and sex

St. Paul, T – Age distribution

Table 4 St. Paul, T – Age distributions by broad age groups and sex, 2011 Census
Age groups Both sexes Males Females
0 to 14 18.9% 18.8% 19.0%
15 to 64 63.2% 66.2% 60.6%
65 and over 17.9% 15.0% 20.4%

In 2011, the percentage of the population aged 65 and over in St. Paul, T was 17.9%, compared with a national percentage of 14.8%. The percentage of the working age population (15 to 64) was 63.2% and the percentage of children aged 0 to 14 was 18.9%. In comparison, the national percentages were 68.5% for the population aged 15 to 64 and 16.7% for the population aged 0 to 14.

St. Paul, T – Population by broad age groups and sex

Table 5 St. Paul, T – Population by broad age groups, sex and population change between 2006 and 2011, 2006 to 2011 censuses
Broad age groups by sex Population
2011 2006 change % change
Both sexes
Total 5,400 5,110 290 5.7
0 to 14 1,020 1,035 -15 -1.4
15 to 64 3,415 3,120 295 9.5
65 and over 965 955 10 1.0
Males
Total 2,560 2,405 155 6.4
0 to 14 480 510 -30 -5.9
15 to 64 1,695 1,505 190 12.6
65 and over 385 395 -10 -2.5
Females
Total 2,840 2,700 140 5.2
0 to 14 540 525 15 2.9
15 to 64 1,720 1,610 110 6.8
65 and over 580 565 15 2.7

St. Paul, T – Population by five-year age groups and sex

Table 6 St. Paul, T – Population by five-year age groups and sex, 2011 Census
Age groups Both sexes Males Females
Total - Age groups 5,400 2,560 2,840
0 to 4 years 390 180 210
5 to 9 years 310 150 165
10 to 14 years 315 150 165
15 to 19 years 360 195 160
20 to 24 years 375 190 185
25 to 29 years 420 215 205
30 to 34 years 370 175 185
35 to 39 years 330 160 165
40 to 44 years 295 140 155
45 to 49 years 325 160 165
50 to 54 years 360 170 195
55 to 59 years 330 170 160
60 to 64 years 255 110 145
65 to 69 years 210 100 110
70 to 74 years 205 90 115
75 to 79 years 185 75 105
80 to 84 years 185 75 110
85 years and over 185 45 140
Median age 37.1 35.7 38.8

St. Paul, T – Median age1 of the population

In 2011, the median age in St. Paul, T was 37.1 years. In comparison, the median age of Alberta was 36.5 years.

Table 7 Canada, Alberta and St. Paul, T – Median age, 2006 and 2011 censuses
  Median age
2006 2011
Canada 39.5 40.6
Alberta 36.0 36.5
St. Paul, T 37.6 37.1

Families and households

In 2011, the number of census families2 in St. Paul was 1,450, which represents a change of 9.0% from 2006. This compares to a growth rate for Canada of 5.5% over the same period.


In St. Paul, 67.6% of census families were married couples in 2011, while 15.2% were common-law-couples and 16.9% were lone-parent families.

St. Paul – Family structure

Table 8 Canada, Alberta, CSD of St. Paul, T and neighbouring census subdivisions – Distribution of census families by family structure, 2011 Census
Geographic name Total families Married-couple families Common-law-couple families Lone-parent families % change, census families, 2006 to 2011
number % number % number %
Canada  9,389,695 6,293,950 67.0 1,567,905 16.7 1,527,840 16.3 5.5
Alberta  999,525 719,355 72.0 135,660 13.6 144,510 14.5 10.5
St. Paul, T 1,450 980 67.6 220 15.2 245 16.9 9.0
St. Paul County No. 19, MD 1,780 1,485 83.4 155 8.7 135 7.6 0.0

St. Paul – Presence of children within couple families

Among couples (married and common-law) in the census subdivision of St. Paul, 44.0% were couples with children aged 24 and under at home. In comparison, as a whole, 46.9% of couples in Canada had children aged 24 and under at home.

Presence of children within couple families
* Children aged 24 and under at home
Married couples with children * 435
Married couples without children * 545
Common-law-couples with children * 100
Common-law-couples without children * 130

St. Paul – Marital status

In St. Paul, 56.1% of the total population aged 15 and over were either married (45.9%) or living with a common-law partner (10.2%).

The remaining 43.8% were not married and not living with a common-law partner, including those who were single (never-married), separated, divorced or widowed.

Note: Percentages may not total 100 percent due to random rounding.

Table 9 Canada, Alberta, St. Paul, T – Population 15 years and older by marital status, 2011 Census
Marital status St. Paul, T Alberta Canada
number % number % number %
Total - Population 15 years and over 4,380 100.0 2,960,470 100.0 27,869,345 100.0
Married or living with a common-law partner 2,455 56.1 1,756,860 59.3 16,084,490 57.7
Married (and not separated) 2,010 45.9 1,484,705 50.2 12,941,965 46.4
Living common-law 445 10.2 272,155 9.2 3,142,525 11.3
Not married and not living with a common-law partner 1,920 43.8 1,203,615 40.7 11,784,855 42.3
Single (never legally married) 1,160 26.5 823,935 27.8 7,816,045 28.0
Separated 115 2.6 70,855 2.4 698,245 2.5
Divorced 250 5.7 177,375 6.0 1,686,035 6.0
Widowed 400 9.1 131,440 4.4 1,584,525 5.7

St. Paul – Types of private households

There were 2,170 private households3 in St. Paul in 2011, a change of 10.4% from 2006. Of these, 24.0% of households were comprised of couples with children aged 24 and under at home, a change of -4.6% compared with five years earlier.

Table 10 Canada, Alberta, St. Paul, T – Distribution of households by household type, 2011 Census
Household type4 St. Paul, T Alberta Canada
number % number % number %
Total private households 2,170 100.0 1,390,275 100.0 13,320,615 100.0
Couple-family households with children
aged 24 and under at home5
520 24.0 407,145 29.3 3,524,915 26.5
Couple-family households without children
aged 24 and under at home6
640 29.5 406,380 29.2 3,935,540 29.5
Lone-parent family households7 210 9.7 128,330 9.2 1,375,450 10.3
One-person households 660 30.4 342,735 24.7 3,673,310 27.6
Multiple family households8 45 2.1 27,900 2.0 268,060 2.0
Other households9 105 4.8 77,785 5.6 543,340 4.1

St. Paul – Structural type of dwelling

In St. Paul, 72.8% of private households lived in single-detached houses and 0.0% lived in apartments in buildings that have five or more storeys. The rest lived in other types of dwelling structures.

Table 11 Canada, Alberta, St. Paul, T – Distribution of private households by structural type of dwelling, 2011 Census
Structural type of dwelling St. Paul, T Alberta Canada
number % number % number %
Total - Structural type of dwelling 2,170 100.0 1,390,275 100.0 13,320,615 100.0
Single-detached house 1,580 72.8 883,260 63.5 7,329,150 55.0
Semi-detached house 90 4.1 71,850 5.2 646,240 4.9
Row house 80 3.7 97,865 7.0 791,600 5.9
Apartment, building that has five or more storeys 0 0.0 58,205 4.2 1,234,770 9.3
Apartment, building that has fewer than five storeys 335 15.4 197,945 14.2 2,397,555 18.0
Apartment, duplex 10 0.5 33,505 2.4 704,485 5.3
Other single-attached house10 5 0.2 1,060 0.1 33,310 0.3
Movable dwelling11 75 3.5 46,590 3.4 183,510 1.4

Language

St. Paul, T – Mother tongue

Chart J: St. Paul, T - Mother tongue and language spoken most often at home

Chart J description: St. Paul, T - Mother tongue and language spoken most often at home

Note: Counts for mother tongue as well as those for language spoken most often at home include single responses only.

In St. Paul, 73.8% of the population reported English only as mother tongue, 14.1% reported French only, and 9.7% reported a non-official language only, in 2011. In comparison, the provincial / territorial percentages were 77.0% for English only, 1.9% for French only and 19.4% for only non-official languages.

In 2011, 90.0% of the population spoke only English most often at home, 4.9% spoke only French and 2.9% spoke only a non-official language. In comparison, the provincial / territorial percentages were 85.7% for only English, 0.7% for only French and 10.5% for only a non-official language.

Table 12 St. Paul, T – Mother tongue and language spoken most often at home, 2011 Census
Selected languages Mother tongue Language spoken most often at home
number % number %
Total 5,195 100.0 5,190 100.0
English 3,835 73.8 4,670 90.0
French 735 14.1 255 4.9
Non-official language 505 9.7 150 2.9
Multiple responses 120 2.3 115 2.2
Table 13 St. Paul, T – Mother-tongue retention, 2011 Census
Mother tongue Mother-tongue retention12
(in percentage)
Total retention; language spoken at home at least on a regular basis Complete retention; language spoken most often at home Partial retention; language spoken at home on a regular basis
Note: Counts for mother tongue and home language include single response of a language as well as multiple responses of a language with English and/or French.
English 99.5 99.0 0.5
French 60.8 35.4 25.3
Non-official language 57.9 32.5 25.4

St. Paul, T – Non-official languages

In St. Paul, the three most common mother tongues were Ukrainian (3.7%), Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino) (1.7%) and Cree, n.o.s. (1.1%), in 2011. In comparison, the most common mother tongues at the provincial / territorial level were German (2.3%), Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino) (1.9%) and Panjabi (Punjabi) (1.5%).

Table 14 St. Paul, T – The most common non-official-language mother tongues, 2011 Census
Mother tongue Number Percentage of non-official language mother-tongue population Percentage of total population
Note: Counts for mother tongue and home language include single response of a language as well as multiple responses of a language with English and/or French.
Ukrainian 190 33.3 3.7
Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino) 90 15.8 1.7
Cree, n.o.s. 55 9.6 1.1
German 40 7.0 0.8
Polish 25 4.4 0.5

St. Paul, T – Bilingualism

Table 15 St. Paul, T – Rate of English-French bilingualism by mother tongue and age groups, 2011 Census
Age groups Mother tongue
Total English French Non-official language
Note: Counts for mother tongue include single responses only. Consequently, the total excludes multiple responses.
Total 21.0 9.9 90.5 3.0
0 to 19 18.1 14.5 80.0 0.0
20 to 44 16.4 9.5 91.2 3.4
45 to 64 24.2 7.5 93.9 3.7
65 and over 30.5 2.9 91.7 2.6
Table 16 St. Paul, T – Knowledge of official languages, 2011 Census
Knowledge of official languages Number Percentage
Total 5,195 100.0
English only 4,045 77.9
French only 25 0.5
English and French 1,110 21.4
Neither English nor French 15 0.3

Symbols:

···
not applicable
excludes census data for one or more incompletely enumerated Indian reserves or Indian settlements. For further information, refer to Notes.
incompletely enumerated Indian reserve or Indian settlement. For further information, refer to Notes.
A
adjusted figure due to boundary change. For further information, refer to Content considerations.
E
use with caution. For further information, refer to Cautionary note.


Source:

Statistics Canada. 2012. Focus on Geography Series, 2011 Census. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-310-XWE2011004. Ottawa, Ontario. Analytical products, 2011 Census. Last updated October 24, 2012.
 

Related data:

Date modified: