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The following Table gives the acreage and estimated total population of each Health District of the City of Victoria, and the number of persons per acre:-

Health District.

Total Acreage.

Built-over Area (includ- Chinese

ing Streets)

Houses.

in Acres.

Non- Chinese Houses.

Non-Chinese Persons per Chinese Population

Acre on Population. including

built-over

Troops.

Areas.

1

531

134

822

157

11,970

1,175

98

243

140

968

62

23,710 {

495

185

1,680 Troops

3

232

137

27

412

5,310

3,070

61

4

56

53

1,032

176

26,220

1,386

521

5

29

27

1,040

62

24,550

413

925

6

30

27

891

15

21,170

102

788

7

36

31

901

16,300

64

528

00

8

49

47

1,002

22,280

30

475

9

44

44

1,015

17

24,620

170

563

10

252

106

745

48

12,560

502

123

1,502

746

8,476

957

188,690

9,084

265

There are also some 2,000 Chinese servants, etc. resident at the Peak.

The area of No. 3 Health District has been enlarged to the extent of 68 acres so as to include the houses on the South side of Conduit Road and a few extra lots on the Peak Road which have now been built upon. In spite of this addition however there are 132 persons to the acre in the City as a whole, that is to say, including all the outlying vacant lands, the villages, the Race Course and the Cemeteries in No. 1 Health District, the Public Gardens and all the vacant military land in Nos. 2, 3 and 10 Health Districts, and all the unoccupied hillside below the upper limit of the City Health Districts (ie., from 450 feet to 600 feet above. high water mark).

District No. 5 shows an estimated population of more than 900 persons to the acre, which indicates excessive overcrowding, while the remaining Central Districts also show far too many persons to the acre. It was hoped that the electric tramway would do much to lessen the overcrowding in the more Central Districts of the City, by enabling the workers to live on the outskirts of the City and come in daily to their work, but unfortunately the result has at present been that more workers have crowded into the central districts and use the tramway to go out to their daily work. Thus if we compare the year 1902 (before the tramway was built) with the past year, we find that the number of persons per acre in the built-over areas of Districts 1, 2, 3, 9 and 10 has fallen from 157 persons in 1902 to 146 persons in 1904 while in the more Central Districts 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 the population has in- creased from 562 persons per acre in 1902 to 608 persons per acre in 1904. It must be remembered however that with such a changing population as we have in this Colony, it is extremely difficult to accurately gauge the increments of population over a period of years and these figures will no doubt need considerable modification in the light of the quinquennial census which will probably be taken

in 1906.

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The greater proximity to theatres and places of amusement is no doubt the attraction which has led to this migration of the working classes to the more Central Districts, but this will no doubt be met in due course by the establishment of similar places of amusement on the outskirts of the City when the owners of property realize that these are necessary to the letting of their premises.

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