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Agent-Based Modeling of the Spread of the 1918--1919 Spanish Flu in Three Canadian Fur Trading Communities
Blanketing a Nation: Tracing the Social Life of the Hudson's Bay Company Point Blanket Through Canadian Visual Culture
[Book Review]
Book Review: This Precious Foliage
Book Reviews
Bridge Between Nations: A History of First Nations in the Fraser River Basin
Canada's Relationship with Inuit from Contact to the Present: A Policy Overview
Chief One Gun Interview
Civilized, Roughly: Gender, Race, and the politics of Leisure in Colonial British Columbia, 1860-1871
Comment dit-on tchistchimanisi8 en Francais? The Translation of Montagnais Ecological Knowledge in Antoine Silvy's Dictionnaire montagnais-francais (ca. 1678-1684)
The Conversion of the Port Simpson Tsimshian: Indian Control or Missionary Manipulation?
The Cry for the Dead
The Development of Capitalism and the Subjugation of Native Women in Northern Canada
Do Glaciers Listen? Local Knowledge, Colonial Encounters & Social Imagination
Don McLean Interview
Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes
Epic Wanderer: David Thompson and the Mapping of the Canadian West
[Eskimos in Europe: How They Got There and What Happened to Them Afterwards]
The Exploration of Northwest Coast Indian Art, 1774-2003
Frank and Mary One Spot Interview
Friends, Foes, and Furs : George Nelson's Lake Winnipeg Journals, 1804-1822
The Fur Trade
Intended for use in Grade 7 Social Studies classes.
Chapter from Our Canada: Origins, Peoples, Perspectives by David Rees, Darrell Anderson Gerrits, and Gratien Allaire.
The Fur Trade and Eighteenth-Century Imperialism
Fur Trader Game
For use with the article The Business That Created a Country found on p. 6 of the special issue "How Furs Built Canada" in Kayak: Canada's History Magazine for Kids. Suitable for Grades1 to 5.
Harmon's Journal, 1800-1819
Historical Encounters: Aboriginal Testimony and Colonial Forms of Commemoration
Historical Profile of the Great Slave Lake Area’s Mixed European-Indian Ancestry Community
Hold High Your Heads: History of the Métis Nation in Western Canada
Housing the Homeguard at Moose Factory: 1730-1982
[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.
Imagined Passages
In Search of the Never-Never: Mickey Dewar: Champion of History across Many Genres
The Indian, the Métis and the Fur Trade: Class, Sexism and Racism in the Transition form "Communism" to Capitalism
Indians, Animals and the Fur Trade: A Critique of Keepers of the Game
Indigenous Historic Archaeology of the 19th-Century Secwepemc Village at Thompson's River Post, Kamloops, British Columbia
Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada: Teacher's Kit for Giant Floor Map
Topics include climate change, demographics, Indigenous governance, housing, human rights, Indigenous languages, migration, famous people, original place names, residential schools, seasonal cycles, symbols, timeline, trade routes, and treaties, land disputes, agreements and rights.
Although activities were created for the giant floor map, they can be adapted to the printable tile version.
Intersocietal Relationships by Evolutionary Levels among North American Indians
James Ratt: Lots Of Changes In 50 Years Of Trapping
"Just Following the Buffao" Origins of a Montana Métis Community
Late Dorset Deposits at Iita: Site Formation and Site Destruction in Northwestern Greenland
Lawrence Clarke: Architect of Revolt
Lawrence Tobacco Interview
Leaving Paradise: Indigenous Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest, 1787-1898
Lesson Plan: Fur Trade Timeline
Designed for Grades 3-8. Information from the article Fur Trade Times in the special issue of Kayak magazine How Furs Built Canada. Students play a class game of "I Have ... Who Has?"