Search
Aboriginal Aspirations
Aboriginal Participation in Canadian Military Service: Historic and Contemporary Contexts
Aboriginal Soldiers From Quebec: The Conflicts at Home and Abroad
Discussion of Aboriginal participation in military service.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.25.
Aboriginal Veterans Were Left on Their Own
Aboriginal Vets Proud of Service in Korea
The Abortive Fenian Raid on Manitoba, Account by One Who Knew Its Secret History
The Adivasis of India: A History of Discrimination, Conflict and Resistance
Adventures of a Surveyor in the Canadian Northwest, 1880-1883
African Indigenous Women in the 21st Century
American Native Tribes Join Relief Efforts
Asserting Indigenous Peoples' Rights Is Not An Act Of Terrorism
Atrocities Against Indigenous Women in Burma
Australia & Race: Stop the World, We Want to Get Off!
Autonomy in Chiapas Mexico
The Back of the Homefront: Black and American Indian Women in Wisconsin During World War II
Bandits or Rebels? Hmong Resistance in the New Laostate
Batoche
The Battle at the Grand Coteau: July 13 and 14, 1851
Battle of Seven Oaks
The Battle of Seven Oaks: The Debate over Métis Independence
Examines the influence of the Battle of Seven Oaks on the creation of Métis nationhood.
Big Bear
Big Bear: Mistahimaskwa, a Hero Worth Commemorating
Big Bear's Pacifist Roar: The CBC Conjures Up an Intriguing Figure
The Big Woman Befriends the Sioux
Black Elk Speaks: A Native American View of Nineteenth-Century American History
Blackfeet Class Play Honored at Conference
The Book as a "Contact Zone": Textualizing Orality in James Welch's Fools Crow
Bows & Arrows
Bringing Them in Alive: Selective Service and Native Americans
Built to Intimidate
Butler’s “Great Lone Land”
Cadet David Moniac: A Creek Indian's Schooling at West Point, 1817-1822
The Campaign of 1885: A Contemporary Account
Letters written by Canadian Militia Colour Sergeant William Thomas Wrighton in April and May of 1885 describe his experience at the Battle of Batoche during the Northwest Resistance. Includes archival photos of the soldiers and battlegrounds taken by Captain J. Peters. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 100.
Canadian Indians at the Front
Brief article argues that even though men were not citizens and therefore knew "no politics as yet", they enlisted because they were monarchists. Comments on the high number "Indians" who volunteered for service. Tone reflects attitudes of the time. Several issues on one pdf. To access this article use page counter at the top of the screen and go to page 972 of 1276.