Eliza Pelletier Interview
Ella Rush Interview
Elmira McLeod Interview
Elmira McLeod Interview #2
Elmira McLeod Interview #3
Elmira McLeod Interview #4
Elmira McLeod Interview #5
Elmira McLeod Interview #6
Elmira McLeod Interview #7
Elmira McLeod Interview #8
Elsie Gattie Interview
Elsie Gattie Interview #2
Ernest Mowat Interview
Ethel Beeds Interview
Eva Lapierre Interview
Eva Owl Interview #1
Eva Owl Interview #2
Frank and Mary One Spot Interview
Frank McIntyre
Fred Kellar Interview
Friends, Foes, and Furs : George Nelson's Lake Winnipeg Journals, 1804-1822
From Our Hands / An Exhibition of Native Hand Crafts. - 12 November - 5 December 1982. - Program.
Gladys MacLeanan Interview
Gordon Byce Interview
Green Lake's Isabelle Bishop
Helen Sinclair Interview
Henry Letendre Interview
Hersel Green Interview
Hettie Sylvester Interview
Howard Contin (Meskiash) Interview
[Hudson's Bay Company Archive Digitized Microfilm]
Contains links to over 10,000 volumes of the pre-1870 records from almost 500 Hudson's Bay Company posts, including post journals, incoming and outgoing correspondence and accounts, and records kept at districts and departments overseeing the post activity which include lists of servants, accounts, reports, engagement registers, abstracts of servants’ accounts and minutes of council.
Indian and Metis Friendship Centre Race Relations Conference
Indian Heroes Leaders and Patriots. - Poster. - 1983.
Interview Tape #2 with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Interview with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Interview with Rosalie and Lawrence Victor Kelly
James Mason Interview
James Ratt: Lots Of Changes In 50 Years Of Trapping
Jane McKee Interview
Janet R. Fietz
Jim Groves Interview
Joe Blondeau Interview
Joe Duquette Interview
Joe McAuley Remembers: "Today Everything Is Different"
Joe Moran Interview
Joe Morin: "I Told Myself I Shouldn't Have Come"
Joe Parisien Interview
Joe Sylvester Interview
Consists of an interview with Joe Sylvester where he gives an account of Indian medicine; legends concerning migration of Algonquin Indians; the role of elders; of the deterioration of reservation conditions following World War II; the religious significance of the number "four"; views on welfare and its role in disrupting traditional Indian values; and a legend about the origin of the drum.