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Alberta's Metis Settlements Legislation: An Overview of Ownership and Management of Settlement Lands
Constructing a Legal Land System That Supports Economic Development For the Metis in Alberta
[Daniels in Context]
The Dispersal of the Métis
The Early West
Edgar Dewdney and the Aftermath of the Rebellion
[Ewing Commission Report]
Purpose of the commission was to "make enquiry into the condition of the half-breed population of the Province of Alberta, keeping particularly in mind the health, education, relief and general welfare of such population". As a result of the recommendations contained in the report the Métis Betterment Act was enacted and Métis Settlements were established.
Fort Pitt Historic Park - Pamphlet.. - 1967.
Historical note:
Fragmentation and Realignment: The Continuing Cycle of Métis and Non-Status Indian Political Organizations in Canada
Furrows of Stone: Race, Politics, and the Alberta Métis Land Question, 1932-1936
[G. F. Shepherd, Notes 1937-1974]
File contains hand written and typed notes of historian George Shepherd, dated from 1937-1974. The notes include several pages on Aboriginal history in the North-West, that were scanned for this database. This includes a wide variety of material: from copy of a letter written by Louis Riel, to a list of the reserves in Saskatchewan in 1962 and their estimated landbase and populations.
Historical note:
Half-Breed Commission at Sturgeon River
Heart Work: Weaving Relationality into Métis Material Culture Repatriation
Historical Archives on the Métis Experience in Northeastern Alberta
History of Métis Lands in Alberta
History of Métis Lands in Alberta
Hivernant Métis Families, Brigades and Settlements in the Cypress Hills
Land of the Red and White: 1875-1975
Making History: Our Land, Our Culture, Our Future
Métis Scrip in Alberta
“No Other Weapon Except Organization”: The Métis Association of Alberta and the 1938 Metis Population Betterment Act
The Northwest Scrip Commissions as Federal Policy - Some Initial Findings
Political Responses
Reconciliation and the Métis of Canada
Report by Lieut. William F. Butler (69th Regt.) of His Journey from Fort Garry to Rocky Mountain House and Back, During the Winter of 1870-71. to Hon. Adams G. Archibald Lieut. Gov. Manitoba, 10th March, 1871.
Excerpt from The Great Lone Land, originally published in 1873.
Report of Interview Dr. L.H. Thomas and Mr. Gabriel Leveille
Historical note: