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Aldina Marie Stangby Interview
Alex Ouellette Interview
Alfred (Albert) Mishibinijima 1
Alfred (Albert) Mishibinijima 2
Alfred Durocher #1
Alfred Durocher #2
Alphonse Antoine 1
Alphonse Antoine 2
Alphonse Antoine 3
Ancient Nahuatl Poetry, Containing the Nahuatl Text of XXVII [27] Ancient Mexican Poems
Andrew Harry Whiteford Interview
Appendix I: Haida Stories and Beliefs
Archie Nicolas Interview
[Association Interprovinciale Watching Over Our Schools]
Letter sent to the Deputy Minister of Indian Affairs protesting the fact that French is not being taught at the Duck Lake Indian School. States that this is contrary the Act of Union signed in 1840. Translated from the French.
Battleford Beleaguered.
Bud Pocha Interview
By Canoe and Dog Train Among the Cree and Salteaux Indians
The Canadian Indian (vol. 1, no. 1, Oct., 1890 - vol.1, no. 12, Sept., 1891)
Missionary publication. Content and language reflect the attitudes and policies of the times.
Chief Poundmaker
Chinook and Shorthand Rudiments: with Which the Chinook Jargon and the Wawa Shorthand Can Be Mastered Without a Teacher in a Few Hours
Clarence Joseph Trotchie Interview
Comite / Riel-Ritchot de Saint-Norbert.
Contribution to Passamaquoddy Folk-Lore
[Crime Report re Little Pine Reserve Indians ... Alleged Sun Dance]; [Re: Indian Sundance, Rocky Mountain House District, Alberta]
First document is a report written by Kingston, dated July 6, 1928, asks for instructions regarding whether or not participants should be charged given the fact that the event did not appear to violate the Indian Act. Second document is a letter by McCormack, describing ceremonies which took place at Rocky Mountain House and Hobbema, Alberta.
Crowd gathered around Aboriginal People in Yorkton
The Delight Makers
Delima F. Parenteau Interview
Delima Rose Ouellette Interview
The Déné Languages: Considered in Themselves and Incidentally in Their Relations to Non-American Idioms
Denny Dumas, Shorty Lander - Gold Medal Winner
[Diary of James Mackinlay]
One bound copy of the diary maintained by Mackinlay May 7- August 23, 1890 during a summer journey northward from near Taltheilei on the east end of Great Slave Lake in the company of Wharburton Pike. Pike used the diary freely in his narrative of the journey called The Barren Grounds of Northern Canada. Mention of "Indians" in various situations and circumstances from trading and guiding to getting equipment made or repaired. Frequent mention of caribou and other animals killed and fish caught.