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Originally Posted by Andy6
Probably not many. The "big cities" weren't some sort of hugely prestigious thing in the early 20th century. Urban life wasn't nearly as desirable or as interesting to many people as rural and agricultural life. Canada attracted immigrants with images of farms, not cities. Even if you wanted to live in a big city, every town in the country west of Ontario was convinced that it would be a big city before long, and the emergence of many big cities from small towns in the previous decades made such claims seem perfectly plausible.
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Many of the big immigrant early 20th century European immigrants went to the Prairies - German-Russians, Scandinavians, Ukrainians.
Winnipeg of course had a lot of working class Ukrainian immigrants. My feeling is the present-day Ukrainian Canadian population in other Prairie cities like Saskatoon and Edmonton however largely made their way there from the rural hinterlands, rather than direct immigration to those cities (which were pretty small pre-WWII).