Search
Agent-Based Modeling of the Spread of the 1918--1919 Spanish Flu in Three Canadian Fur Trading Communities
BC First Peoples 12: Teacher Resource Guide
Bibliography on Indigenous Rights in Canada, 1995-2022
Exhaustive list (856 pages).
Blanketing a Nation: Tracing the Social Life of the Hudson's Bay Company Point Blanket Through Canadian Visual Culture
[Book Review]
[Book Reviews]
[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
Castor Resartus: The Beaver Hat in History
Compilation of primary sources, mainly newspaper articles.
Chief Left Hand: Southern Arapaho
Comment dit-on tchistchimanisi8 en Francais? The Translation of Montagnais Ecological Knowledge in Antoine Silvy's Dictionnaire montagnais-francais (ca. 1678-1684)
Commerce de Fourrures et Competition a Betsiamites de 1850 a 1880
Content and Activities for Teaching about Indians of Washington State: Grades K-6
Covers three geographic regions: Washington coast, Puget Sound and the Plateau. Each topic is divided into pre-contact, contact and contemporary times.
Cultures in Contact, The Impact of European Contacts on Native American Cultural Institutions, A.D. 1000-1800
Do Glaciers Listen? Local Knowledge, Colonial Encounters & Social Imagination
Dry Millennium: Temperance and a New Social Order in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Canada and Red River
Early Fur Trade on the Northern Plains: Canadian Traders Among the Mandan and Hidatsa Indians, 1738-1818
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]
An Ethnohistory of the Western Ojibwa, 1780-1830
The Exploration of Northwest Coast Indian Art, 1774-2003
Fifty HIstorical Vignettes: Views of the Common People
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 Western Canadian Society 1670-1870
Grade 4: Alsumsuti Ujit T’an Teli-l’nuimk = To Be Indigenous Is to be Free = Topelomosu Wen Skicinuwit
Content focused on the Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqewiyik, and Passamaquoddy (Peskotomuhkati) peoples of New Brunswick.
Handbook of the American Frontier, Four Centuries of Indian-White Relationships, Vol. 1: The Southeastern Woodlands
Harmon's Journal, 1800-1819
Heirs of an Ambivalent Empire : French-Indigenous Relations And the Rise of the Métis in the Hudson Bay Watershed
Historical Encounters: Aboriginal Testimony and Colonial Forms of Commemoration
Historical Profile of the Great Slave Lake Area’s Mixed European-Indian Ancestry Community
Home from the Hill: A History of Métis in Western Canada
2nd edition.
Imagined Passages
Indigenous Historic Archaeology of the 19th-Century Secwepemc Village at Thompson's River Post, Kamloops, British Columbia
Indigenous Ingenuity and the Fur Trade: Lesson Plan
For use with Grades 5-12.
Jean Baptiste Cadotte's First Family: Genealogical Summary
Cadotte (sometimes spelt Cadot) was a prominent figure in the Lake Superior fur trade and married two Ojibwe women, Athanasie and Catherine. These articles focus on the children of Athanasie, also known as Equawaice, part of the Bullhead Catfish clan.
Compilation of three articles which appeared in Michigan's Habitant Heritage in 2020-2021.
Jean Baptiste Cadotte's Second Family: Genealogical Summary
Cadotte (sometimes spelt Cadot) was a prominent figure in the Lake Superior fur trade and married two Ojibwe women, Athanasie and Catherine. These articles focus on the children of Catherine, whom he married in the custom of the country.
Compilation of four articles which appeared in Michigan's Habitant Heritage in 2015-2016.
Related: Jean Baptiste Cadotte's First Family.
"Just Following the Buffao" Origins of a Montana Métis Community
Leaving Paradise: Indigenous Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest, 1787-1898
The Legend of Thanadelthur: Elders’ Oral History and Hudson’s Bay Company Journals + Thainaltth’er noriya hołts’į, Ëna chu Dene chu ëłehëla nį; Bëghą honį ëritł’is hëla (HBC), ąłnëdhë behonié tth’i łą sį
Examines Dene oral stories to discuss the impact of Thanadelthur to her community and the fur trade.