Mother tongue (2021):

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Age groups !! Both sexes !! Male !! Female

During 2011, it was estimated that 90 individuals within Elizabethtown-Kitley belonged to a visible minority group. This accounted for 1.0% of the township's total population; in Ontario, the percentage is 25.9%. The biggest visible minority groups were South Asian and Black. The majority of these cemeteries are old family burying ground dating from the late 1700s to the early 1800s - a time when burying the dead on the family's land was common. Many have been fully transcribed through local volunteer efforts however many are not, possibly due to the fact the stones are now illegible from deterioration. Most of the old family burial plots are completely abandoned or located on private properties. Additionally, the Brockville cemeteries are located within Elizabethtown-Kitley.

The following is an incomplete list of all registered cemeteries recorded as being within Elizabethtown-Kitley township by the Ontario Genealogical Society (many of these cemeteries are also known by other or multiple names; the names listed here are those specified by the Ontario Genealogical Society): The cemetery is on land originally granted to one of Jessup's Rangers, Jonathan Fulford. On June 7, 1786, the cemetery was opened with the burial of Fulford's infant son.