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American Indian Digital History Project
Includes links to several publications: The Indian Historian; The American Indian Magazine: A Journal of Race Progress; Honga: The Leader; The Indian Voice; Woonspe Wankantu: Santee Normal Training School, and Akwesasne Notes.
Chippewa Exercises: Being a Practical Introduction into the Study of the Chippewa Language
Course of Study for the Indian Schools of the United States: Industrial and Literary
[Dave Robertson & Sugar Falls: A Residential School Story]
[Dr. James S. Frideres: First Nations in the Twenty-First Century]
[Dr. Jessica Metcalfe and American Indian Fashion]
[Dr. Lee Wilson University of Saskatchewan, Indigenous Science]
Duncan Campbell Scott - Sketch. - [1901 or 1902].
Historical note:
Duncan Campbell Scott (b. 2 August 1862-19 December 1947) was a Canadian poet and prose writer. Charles G.D. Roberts, Bliss Carman, Archibald Lampman and Scott are known as the "Confederation poets". Scott was also deputy superintendent of the Department of Indian Affairs, a position he held from 1913 to 1932.Elderly Indian Man sitting on a chair, Prince Albert, NWT.
Historical note:
Excerpts from Olive's Letters to Her Sister Alice (1942-1947)
Letters from historian Olive Patricia Dickason during her time spent at Notre Dame College in Wilcox, Saskatchewan.
The Father of St. Kilda: Twenty Years in Isolation in the Sub-Arctic Territory of the Hudson's Bay Company
[First Nations Water Rights at the Centre for Human Rights Research]
Five Sioux Indians Posing, Prince Albert District, NWT.
Historical note:
Four Sioux Indians pose at their camp, Prince Albert District, NWT.
Historical note:
Group Photo at Onion Lake Indian Agency
History of Indian Boarding Schools
Selection of photos of schools.
Hon. James Allan Smart - Sketch. - [1901 or 1902].
Indian Camp Prince Albert District, NWT.
Historical note:
Indian Camp with Teepee, Prince Albert District, NWT.
Historical note:
Indian Family in front of Teepee.
Historical note:
Theodore Henry James Charmbury or T. H. J. as he was known, was an assistant to photographer Samuel Gray in Prince Albert for two years before starting his own studio there in 1902. He moved to Saskatoon in 1918, and was mainly a portrait photographer there until he retired in 1938. He photographed several Native leaders including Fine Day and Kahneepotaytayo. Two fires (1931, 1942) destroyed a huge portion of his negative collection.Indian Family Poses in front of Teepee, Prince Albert District, NWT.
Historical note:
Indian Territory, Descriptive, Biographical and Genealogical: Including the Landed Estates, County Seats, Etc., Etc., With a General History of the Territory
Indians performing a traditional ceremony, Prince Albert, NWT.
Historical note:
Interview with Curator Ellen Taubman, Changing Hands: Art without Reservation 3, Museum of Arts and Design, New York City
[Jamie Black and the Red Dress Project]
[Jamie Black and the REDress Project]
[Jamie Wilson and Racism. Part I]
[Jamie Wilson and Racism. Part II: The Good Stuff]
[Jessica Jaconson-Konefall, Indigenous New Media and Settler Societies in Canadian Cities]
[Jessica Metcalfe and American Indian Fashion]
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 197
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 199[b]
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 199[c]
Kathlamet Texts
[Kim Ncnabb [sic]: Part 2]
Legacies of the Tribal Languages of Arizona: Gifts or Responsibilities
[Leo Baskatawang, Applied Research, Marching From Vancouver to Ottawa]
[Nooksack Place Names. Part 1]
[Nooksack Place Names. Part II]
The North-West Passage by Land: Being the Narrative of an Expedition From the Atlantic to the Pacific Undertaken With the View of Exploring a Route Across the Continent to British Columbia Through British Territory, by one of the Northern Passes in the Rocky Mountains
The Origin of the Totemism of the Aborigines of British Columbia
"Presbyterian Mission School Report, Makoce Waste, 1901-2."
Prints: "Esquimaux and their Kayak"
Prints: "Esquimaux, Peels River"
Prints: "Our Neighbours in the Arctic"
Prints: "Trading with the Esquimaux"
Redefining Indigenous Perspectives Through Art and Dialogue with Bob Haozous
Sequoyah National Research Center
Website is one of the largest repositories of Native American publications including newspaper & periodical collections, manuscripts & special collections. Also includes Dr. J. W. Wiggins Native American Art Collection, SNRC newsletters, links and other research collections.
Sioux Dance (probably Wahpeton Dakota) near Prince Albert, NWT.
Historical note: