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An Act to amend the Indian Act. [Assented to 4th May, 1910.]
An Act to Further Amend "The Indian Act, 1880." (April 19, 1884)
The Advantages of Mingling Indians with Whites
Speech given by Pratt, who established Carlisle Indian Industrial School, the first of the Indian residential schools in the United States, in 1879. Taken from The Proceedings of the National Conference of Charities and Correction, Nineteenth Annual Session.
Related Material: Excerpt.
Are the Carrier Sociology and Mythology Indigious or Exotic?
Bibliography of the Athapascan Languages
Bishop Hare's Indian Boarding Schools in South Dakota
Bishop Newnham distributing a treat to the Native peoples
Blackfoot Lodge Tales: The Story of a Prairie People
The Butterfly in Hopi Myth and Ritual
"Calf Mountain" Mound in Manitoba
The Chimariko Indians and Language
Chippewa Music [vol. 1]
Chukchee Mythology
The Chumash and Costanoan Languages
The Conspiracy of Pontiac and the Indian War After the Conquest of Canada [Volume 1]
The Conspiracy of Pontiac and the Indian War After the Conquest of Canada [Volume 2]
Copy of General Instructions to Newly Appointed Indian Agents in British Columbia
A Crisis in the Cause of Indian Education
Development of a Pawnee Myth: Ti-Ke-Wa-Kush: The Man Who Called the Buffalo
Early Blackfoot History
Eighth Report on the North-Western Tribes of Canada
The Ellis Landing Shellmound
Ethnological Problems in Canada
The Face Pullers: Ch.1 Images - Ceremony of Erecting Sundance Lodge
The Face Pullers: Ch.3 Images - Betty Hunter-Stoney
The Face Pullers: Ch.3 Images - Boys of the Indian Reserve, Saskatoon
Black and white photograph of a group of Indigenous men on the White Cap Reserve seated in an early automobile as Charlie Eagle turns the crank. From the book The Face Pullers: Photographing Native Canadians, 1871-1939 by Brock Silversides.
The Face Pullers: Ch.3 Images - Indian Delegation to Meet Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Lloydminster
Black and white photograph of a group of indigenous men comprising a delegation to meet Sir Wilfred Laurier in Lloydminster, including, (from front left) Fox, Mr. Quinney Sr. John Calling Bull, Napeview, Feather Trousers, Horse, Ugly Fingers, Carpenter, Angus Quinney, Benjamin Quinney, Jean Baptiste Opissinow, Young Chief, Joe Taylor, William Sibbald, Father Cunningham, Mikwyapiy, Flying About, Three Legs, Anoine Muskego, Misihew, Silly Man.
From the book The Face Pullers: Photographing Native Canadians, 1871-1939 by Brock Silversides.
The Face Pullers: Ch.3 images - Indigenous Woman and Daughter
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - " A Mystery to Solve"
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - " A Mystery to Solve"-2
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - Big Belly
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - Corporal and "Scouts"
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - Inside Medicine Lodge
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - Joe Big Plume
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - Spring Chief
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - Walking Buffalo
The Face Pullers: Ch.4 Images - Yellow Horse, Head Chief
The Face Pullers - Unused Photos- Many Shots and White Headed Chief
Foundations of Government in the West / a paper delivered before the Regina Canadian Club / By Commissioner A.B. Perry, C.M.G. - 1 January 1910.
Glimpses of the Past in the Red River Settlement, from Letters of Mr. John Pritchard, 1805-1836
Happy Hunting Grounds
History of the Old Testament: Age I, From Adam to Abraham, containing 2083 years
Historical note:
No author is provided but J.C. Pilling's "Bibliography of Chinookan Languages" attributes the text to Louis Napoleon St. Onge.Honore Jaxon (William Henry Jackson) - Portrait
Historical note:
Honore Jaxon, aka William Henry Jackson. Jaxon was Riel's secretary leading up to the Northwest Resistance and his only white Protestant follower. Prior to this he had been secretary of the Prince Albert Settler's Union. After the resistance he escaped to the United States where he was active in the Labour Movement and the Bahai faith.