Search
“Wounded Leaving for Saskatoon" [from Fish Creek, May 2, 1885], N.W. Rebellion
Aaron Huey: America's Native Prisoners of War
Battle Field / Duck Lake
Battlefield of Frenchman Butte, May 28, 1885
Beardy and His Chiefs, N.W. Rebellion
'Behold the Tears': Photography as Colonial Witness
Camp at Fish Creek
Camp 'B' Battery, Prince Albert
Chief Big Bear of the Plains Cree
Chief Poundmaker
Chief Poundmaker
Chiefs with Lt. Gov. Dewdney
Conquest, Consequences, Restoration: The Art of Rebecca Belmore
Coulee at Fort Qu'Appelle, N.W.T.
Cree Chiefs from Crooked Lake
Cree Council on Sweetgrass Reserve
Dana Claxton, The Mustang Suite and Hybrid Humour
Discursive and Mediatic Battles in Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water
Discussing Portraiture, Representation and the Social Consequences of Photography: A Photographic Conversation Between Jeff Thomas and Edward S. Curtis
Duck Lake Battle Grounds
The Face Pullers: Ch. 1 Images - Big Bear 1825-88
The Face Pullers: Ch.1 Images - Chief Bobtail and Son
The Face Pullers: Ch. 1 Images - Lt. Gov. Edgar Dewdney, Piapot and Montreal Garrison Artillery
The Face Pullers: Ch. 1 Images - North-West Rebellion Participants from Both Sides
Photograph of a group of participants in the Northwest Resistance, from both sides. Left to Right: Constable Black, Louis Cochin, Inspector R.B.Deane, Alexis Andre, Beverly Robertson, Horse Child, Big Bear, Alexander Stewart, Poundmaker. From the book The Face Pullers: Photographing Native Canadians, 1871-1939 by Brock Silversides.
The Face Pullers: Ch.1 Images - Poundmaker
The Face Pullers: Ch.2 Images - Deerfoot with rifle
The Face Pullers: Ch.2 Images - Sarcee Woman
The Face Pullers: Ch. 2 Images - Unidentified Blood Warrior
Subject holding rifle, sitting on animal hide wearing traditional clothing. Shot in studio. From the book The Face Pullers: Photographing Native Canadians, 1871-1939 by Brock Silversides.
The Face Pullers: Ch. 3 Images - Staff and Students of Government Industrial School
Photograph of the staff and students of a government industrial school in Fort Qu'Appelle. From the book The Face Pullers: Photographing Native Canadians, 1871-1939 by Brock Silversides.
Fine Day
First Shell into Batoche, May 9, 1885
Fish Creek From the North
Fort Carlton, 1885
[Four Sky Thunder]
General F.D. Middleton
Government Surveyors (Scout) Corps During the 1885 Uprising
Grenadiers Relieving the 90th Battalion at Fish Creek, N.W. Rebellion, 1885
Guardhouse, N.W.M.P. Post at Regina, Sask., Where Louis Riel was Confined
"He shot Capt French"
Head and shoulders portrait of Chief Poundmaker
Images Used: Chapter 2 (A Dying Race): Portrait of Four Indigenous Peoples Outside
Images Used: Chapter 2 (A Dying Race):Portrait of Sotanah (Rainy Chief)
Interior of Fort Pitt, Just [Before] the Rebellion of 1885
Judge Hugh Richardson and Peter Hourie
Kahneepotaytayo, Big Bear's Head Dancer
Kahneepotaytayo, Big Bear's Head Dancer
A Lakota Shirt
The Land Has Memory: Indigenous Knowledge, Native Landscapes, and the National Museum of the American Indian
Learn about Western Canada in the Early 1900s through the Art of C.D. Hoy: Teacher Resource Guide for Grades 7-12
Hoy was a photographer who worked in Quesnel, British Columbia at the start of the twentieth century, when the Fraser River and Cariboo Gold Rushes were taking place, resulting in different cultural groups coming together in one location. Many of his portraits were of Indigenous people living in the area. Designed to complement the online exhibition Through the Lens of C.D. Hoy: How a Chinese Canadian Photographer Memorialized a Community.