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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.
Batoche Dinner - Royal Regiment of Canada - Toronto, ON
[Buffalo hunt] - Perehudoff painting
The Buffalo Lake Métis Site: A Late Nineteenth Century Settlement in the Parkland of Central Alberta
Canadian History - Historic Sites and Monuments - Duck Lake
Citizenship Ceremony - Winnipeg, Manitoba
Council of the Northwest Territories, Fort Simpson
Crowd awaiting John Diefenbaker's arrival at Fort Simpson
Diefenbaker and RCMP at Batoche Ceremony
Diefenbaker at Batoche cemetery
Document One: The Fulton Report
Edited version of a discussion paper prepared by E. Davie Fulton to assist in the resolution of the Lubicon Lake Band's struggle for tradition lands. The Lubicon Cree were missing from the original signing and negotiations of Treaty 8. Introduction by Peter Kulchyski.
Documents Two and Three: Dene/Metis Agreement in Principle with the Federal Government and Introduction
Introduction and two documents related to the signing of the Agreement-In-Principal between the Déne and Métis of the North West Territories and Government of Canada resolving a land claim of the Native people.
Education -- Other -- Schools for Indians -- Yukon
Federal Government Executive -- The Prime Minister of Canada - Travel, Trips, Visits etc. -- Official Visits -- Northwest Territories and Yukon
Federal -- Provincial Welfare Services -- Indian and Eskimo Welfare-Assiniboine
Federal -- Provincial Welfare Services -- Indian and Eskimo Welfare-Blood
Federal -- Provincial Welfare Services -- Indian and Eskimo Welfare - Meadow Lake
Federal-Provincial Welfare Services - Indian and Eskimo Welfare -Shellbrook
Fort Battleford National Historic Park
Fur Trader's Story
[Government forces, Batoche] - Perehudoff painting
Homestead Venture, 1883-1892 An Ayrshire Man’s Letters Home, Part I
An edited collection of correspondence published in the Ayrshire Post, and written by William Gibson, a Scottish farmer settled in the Wolseley, SK area. Letters discuss the day-to-day life of farming in the area and describe Gibson’s interactions with the nearby Nêhiyawak (Cree) people. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 98.