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“Wounded Leaving for Saskatoon" [from Fish Creek, May 2, 1885], N.W. Rebellion
Aaron Huey: America's Native Prisoners of War
Aboriginal Constable
A photograph of an Aboriginal (Cree) man wearing a military style outfit and holding a rifle. He wears a gun belt with ammunition and a revolver on his right hip. The gun belt and revolver are probably George Mann Jr's property, and it is likely that he staged this photograph. A gun belt and revolver are artifacts held by a direct descendant of Mann Jr. Picture was possibly taken on Onion Lake or Saddle Lake reserve between 1900 and 1930. Mann was known to visit these areas well into the 1920s.
Aboriginal Weapons and Pipe
Aborigines Day Saskatoon. - 21 June 2003. - Slides.
Historical note:
First proclaimed by the Governor General of Canada on 13 June 1996, June 21st of every year has become a day in the Canadian calendar that presents Aboriginal peoples with a great opportunity to express great pride for their rich diverse cultures with their families, neighbours, friends and visitors.Alberta Between the Wars, 1919-1939: The Photographs of William J. Oliver
Almighty Voice's Rifle
Almighty Voice Siege Camp
The American Indian in the Great War: Real and Imagined [Part One, Chapter Three]
Assortment of Aboriginal Artifacts
[Atimoyoo] - An Armed Cree man in Traditional Dress
The Ballad of Crowfoot
Battle Field / Duck Lake
Battleford Indians at Special Ceremony
The Beothuk of Newfoundland: A Vanished People
Big Bear at Stony Mountain Penitentiary
"Blood Indian Carrying Tomahawk"
"Blood Squaws in War Dress"
Brigadier-general W. D. Otter, recently appointed chief of staff for the Canadian Militia - Sketch. - [Between 1890 and 1910].
Bronze Plate on "North West Rebellion" Memorial, Battleford
Bullets, Teeth and Photographs: Recognising Indigenous Australians Between the Wars
Camp at Fish Creek
Camp 'B' Battery, Prince Albert
The Catholic Schoolgirl & the Wet Nurse: On the Ecology of Oppression, Trauma and Crisis
The Champlain-Iroquois Battle of 1615 - A.G. Zeller. - Booklet. - 1962.
Chapter XXIII -- "Prince Albert And The Rebellion"
Charcoal, a Blood Indian
Historical note:
Charcoal (Si'-okskitsis) was renowned for his strength and cunning as a warrior. He killed his wife's lover, fired at an Indian agent and a NWMP, and later killed a NWMP sergeant and was executed in 1897.Charles Trottier
Circumstances Alter Photographs: Captain James Peters and the War of 1885
Colonel William Otter
Conquest, Consequences, Restoration: The Art of Rebecca Belmore
Coulee at Fort Qu'Appelle, N.W.T.
Cree with Trade Gun
Crowfoot, Chief of the Blackfeet Indians
Duck Lake Battle Grounds
Eyewitness at Wounded Knee
The Face Pullers: Ch .3 Images - Mike Foxhead, WWI Soldier with Friends
Photograph of World War I soldier Mike Foxhead with Blackfoot Friends, prior to going overseas. Foxhead served with the 191st Overseas Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force and lost his life in the trenches. From the book The Face Pullers: Photographing Native Canadians, 1871-1939 by Brock Silversides.
The Face Pullers - SAB pictures - Indigenous Man with Headdress and Weapon
The Face Pullers - SAB pictures - Indigenous Women with Children
The Face Pullers - Steele Captions- Red Crow
The Face Pullers - Unused Photos "Indian Queen - Macleod Jubilee"
The Face Pullers - Unused Photos- Indigenous Man Wearing Medals
The Face Pullers - Unused Photos- Non - Indigenous Man with Dog Buying Horns from Indigenous Woman
Fine Day
Fine Day on horseback
First Shell into Batoche, May 9, 1885
[Four Sky Thunder]
Fr. Louis Cochin
Frog Lake Cairn
Historical note:
"Although it was not a military engagement, the incident known as the Frog Lake Massacre proved to be one of the most influential events associated with the North-West Resistance. Incited by hunger and mistreatment rather than political motives, a breakaway element of the Plains Cree murdered nine White men on the morning of April 2, 1885, in Frog Lake, North-West Territories (now Alberta).