I've seen that listing before, along with "FR" beside my French-Canadians. I agree that it most likely means English Canada.
Thank you everyone for your insight. I hadn't thought of it that way. I guess it was pretty obvious now that I think about it. So I guess I have to stop saying that I'm part French Canadian now that I know my relative was from the english part of Canada. Was Victoria, Ontario in the English section or was it a mixed area with french being spoken? Kim P.S. One more question I had. I remember recently that a list (I'm on so many) mentioned that the spouse didn't have to get naturalized if the other spouse was naturalized? On the census it reads as John was naturalized, but Fannie didn't have dates, but she had what looks like "Un" for both columns under number of years in the US and Naturalization. (this is also written under other people) Wouldn't they have written down the no. of years she was in the US at least? Does the UN stand for unknown? Pgfhall2@aol.com wrote: > I've seen that listing before, along with "FR" beside my French-Canadians. I > agree that it most likely means English Canada.