As of the 2016 Census 56,270 people (1.41% of the population) in Alberta have Hungarian roots,[1] of which 7,660 have some knowledge of the language.
The memorial of János Mráz, in 1895 in Bashaw indicated that there were already 25 Hungarian families, each of which farmed a homestead.
[3] The 2016 Census showed 27,880 people living in Saskatchewan who have Hungarian roots or were born in Hungary.
[5] Significant Hungarian populations exist in the Saskatchewan settlements of St. Benedict, Prud'homme, Yellow Creek, Zichydorf, East Central, Cudworth, Whitewood and Mistatim.
[5] Later Hungarians also settled down in the northern parts of Saskatchewan, close to Wakaw, where the Buda School District was.
As of the 2016 Census, Ontario had 163,500 people that have Hungarian ancestry or were born in Hungary,[1] accounting for 1.23% of the population.
There were significant Hungarian populations in Brantford, Kitchener, Oshawa, St. Catharines, Niagara Falls and in Port Colborne.
[11] After the First World War, thousands of Hungarians emigrated to Canada, especially from the rural classes.
[9] In 1933 two Hungarian newspapers were established by John Rapai, the Kanadai Magyar Újság and the Wellandi Kisújság.
[13] In 1949 a so-called Delhi & Tobacco District Hungarian House was dedicated in Delhi-Tillsonburg, which had been initiated by Rapai two years earlier.
[15] 1956-1957 saw a large wave of Hungarian migration to Prince Edward Island, and probably the largest ever.
A special Emergency Relief Committee was established to manage the arrival of Hungarian refugees, led by Minister of Health M.L.
[16] In addition to a reception centre which was established in the neighbourhood of Falconwood, in Charlottetown, a number of other groups participated in supporting the settlement of the Hungarians including the province's Red Cross, Women's Institute, Catholic Women's League, as well local volunteer doctors and nurses.
[16] It was believed that the Hungarians were the "right type" of immigrant and could contribute to the province's agricultural sector.