Indigenous peoples of Canada

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          Indigenous peoples of Canada

            30 Archival description results for Indigenous peoples of Canada

            15 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
            252-1
            ON00120 023-1-.1-4-.252-1 · Item · February 1942
            Part of Sudbury Star

            One image of a head and shoulder shot of Army Recruiter Private Albert Shigwadja during World War II (WWII).

            252-2
            ON00120 023-1-.1-4-.252-2 · Item · February 1942
            Part of Sudbury Star

            One image of a head and shoulder shot of Army Recruiter Private Albert Shigwadja during World War II (WWII).

            CA ON00333 14-005 · Fonds · 1981-2009

            Fonds includes minutes, records, and other documents pertaining to the formation of Aboriginal Strategy Circle in the Kawarthas.

            Aboriginal Strategy Circle in the Kawarthas
            CA ON00003 F023 · Fonds · 1989-2019

            Fonds consists of terms of reference, minutes, meeting dockets, reports, correspondence, subject files, and graphic materials.
            The fonds includes the records of the Anglican Council of Indigenous Peoples (1995- ), Sacred Circles, as well as the records of the department of Indigenous Ministries.

            Anglican Council of Indigenous People (ACIP)
            CA ON00159 P032 · Fonds · 1848-2022

            The Diocese of Moosonee Synod Office fonds attests to the work of the administrative body that oversees Anglican missionaries and clergy within the Diocese of Moosonee. The fonds focuses on the James Bay area in northern Ontario and north-western Quebec, although records document the growing importance of communities south of the James Bay over the course of the 20th century. Early records document the work of Anglican missionaries such as John Horden, Thomas Vincent, James Edmond Peck, and G.W. Walton in communities such as Moose Factory, Fort George, and Fort Albany. Missionary accounts of the harsh climate and difficulties navigating the northern terrain are coupled with accounts of religious ceremonies and interactions between clergy and European settlers employed by the HBC in the fur-trade and other industries, as well as interactions with Indigenous populations, most notably the Cree, who were established in the Moose River region prior to the arrival of Europeans. Records contain missionary accounts of daily life in the north and focus on clergy members’ involvement in the community, their family life, administrative matters between the church and the HBC—Diocesan property was leased from the company initially—, trapping and hunting statistics, as well as the basic necessities for surviving the winter months; annual grocery and supply lists sent south are included. As the majority of the content was created by clergy, the records document a Eurocentric-Anglican perspective, although due to the substantial Indigenous population in the James Bay Area, many of the records document changes to Indigenous communities as a result of European contact. The fonds documents some of the earliest interactions between Anglican missionaries and First Nations, Inuit, and Métis populations, although records become more plentiful after the official creation of the Diocese of Moosonee in 1872. The records of various Bishops, Archdeacons, and clergy members illustrate the structure of the Anglican Church and the administrative interactions between the Diocese and the parishes that it oversees. Records also document the financial relationship between the Diocese of Moosonee and the CMS, the MSCC, and the Anglican Forward Movement. These associations provided financial support to Missionary Diocese of the Anglican Church.

            Changes in the social, cultural, and economic fabric of the many communities that make up the Diocese of Moosonee are also evident within the records. Records track the movement of communities including: Albany’s relocation to Kashechewan and Fort George’s relocation to Chisasibi. The rise in industrial interest in the north, especially in hard rock mining, followed by a boom in immigration to northern communities starting in the early half of the 20th century are reflected in the growing demand for parishes across northern Ontario and western Quebec. The Diocesan administration also wrote about and considered other matters including: changes to provincial education systems, municipal power initiatives, transportation, agriculture, and many other Municipal, Provincial, and Federal issues. Records also document broad shifts in policy concerning Indigenous populations from the signing of Treaty No. 9 in 1905 through the Indian Residential School era of the mid-20th century, the period of Indigenous emancipation starting in the 1960s, and the period of reconciliation in the early 21st century.

            The fonds consists of correspondence sent and received by clergy, including all Diocesean Bishops; meeting minutes from Diocesan Executives, Synods, and various other committees managed by the Diocese, as well as those meetings concerning individual parishes. Photographs depicting clergy, residents, towns, cities, cultural activities, hunting and fishing, religious ceremonies and celebrations, amongst many other activities, are included. Videotapes, as well as legal and financial records, missionary and Bishop’s journals, diaries, and account books document the foundation of the Diocese and describe the relationship between the Diocese, its parishes, and the communities to which those parishes serve. The records inform us of the administrative functions of the Synod Office including: hiring clergy and overseeing matters of finance. These records also illustrate the different networking relationships between the Diocese and the General Synod, the Diocese and churches of other denominations, and the Diocese of Moosonee and other Anglican Dioceses. Moreover, the records give insight as to the daily existence and development of the many communities within Northern Ontario and north-western Quebec that make up the body of the Diocese of Moosonee. Liturgical records of individual parishes are not found in this fonds.

            Anglican Church of Canada. Diocese of Moosonee
            CA ON00159 P229 · Collection · ca. 1957-1997 (predominant 1960-1979)

            The Canadian Association in Support of the Native Peoples (CASNP) collection consists of the documentation accumulated by the CASNP. There are no administrative files or other records that address the administration or activities of the Association.

            The resources consist of photocopies of newspaper clippings, reports, studies, and statistics. The documentation accumulated by CASNP provides an overview of the life conditions and status of Indigenous Peoples (First Nation, Inuit and Metis) in Canada for over 20 years. Most of the files concern Indigenous communities in Canada but some files address situations of Indigenous Peoples in the U.S.A., Mexico, New-Zealand, Australia and Africa. The different documents are filed under topics and cover many issues such as: education, rights, economy, life conditions, culture, racism, health, government policies (federal, provincial and municipal), as well as Indigenous associations at different political levels.

            CA ON00156 DA TD/CTLC · Collection · 2007

            This collection comprises documents received in response to an Access to Information request addressed to Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) by the Corporation of the Town of Deseronto, Ontario, in 2008. The request asked for copies of documentation submitted as part of the Culbertson Tract land claim of the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte and upon which the decision to allow the claim had been based.

            The documents in this collection are all photocopies of materials located in public archives in Canada. The materials range in date from 1779 to 1959 and record the interactions between the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte and the British and Canadian governments, in relation to lands, from the time of their departure from the Mohawk Valley to the mid-twentieth century.

            David Newhouse collection
            CA ON00333 11-007 · Collection · 1960-2008

            This collection is comprised of research files, published articles, government documents, reports and supporting documents all pertaining to Aboriginal issues in Canada. The materials were deposited by the Indigenous Studies Department, Trent University. Some documents were reallocated to the Government Documents section of Bata Library, some were returned to the Indigenous Studies Department, and those deemed to be of archival value are represented herein.

            Newhouse, David
            Donald B. Smith fonds
            CA ON00333 13-007 & 15-009 · Fonds

            Fonds consists of Professor Donald B. Smith's research material pertaining to the eighteenth and nineteenth century history of the Ojibwe of southern Ontario. The research materials consist primarily of photocopies of published articles, bibliographical references, and handwritten notes; included is material related to the Mississauga (Ojibwe) of the Trent River Valley. Interspersed within the files is correspondence with other academics and authors.

            Dr. Penny Petrone fonds
            Fonds

            Dr. Penny Serafina Petrone (1925-2005) taught at Lakehead University's Faculty of Education. She was also an author, researcher, and traveller. The records reflect her research on Indigenous literature and culture and on the history of education in Canada; her writings including memoirs, personal records, and records of travel.

            The records are divided into series as follows:

            First Nations Literature and Culture (First People First Voices, 1983; Native Literature in Canada, 1990)
            Inuit and Arctic Literature and Culture (Northern Voices, 1988)
            Isabella Valancy Crawford (research supporting thesis)
            Memoirs, biographical, and family materials (Breaking the Mould, 1995; Embracing Serafina 2000)
            Travels (Europe, USSR, Asia, South America, North America)
            Speeches, reviews, articles, and lectures
            Education & teaching
            Canadian writers
            Travels (Uganda, China)

            Fonds Roland Cloutier
            CA ON00402 RC · Fonds · 1915-2007

            The fonds contains textual and photographic records of Roland Cloutier’s involvement in Northern Ontario’s lumber industry. It provides information on some of the Hearst area lumber companies and on organizations such as the Hearst Lumbermen’s Association and the Ontario Lumber Manufacturers’ Association. The fonds also includes documents pertaining to the Hearst Forest Management company, the Northern Ontario Development Corporation, and to René Fontaine in his role as a member of the Ontario legislature and minister in the Ontario government. This is complemented by government reports, studies analyzing the situation and needs of the lumber industry and of Northern Ontario’s economy, handbooks relating to the working practices of the industry and maps mostly illustrating cutting rights in the forest of the region.

            Cloutier, Roland
            Gary Elwood Nichol fonds.
            Fonds · 1980

            Fonds is comprised of nine one-inch master video reels of ten documentaries produced by documentary filmmaker Gary Elwood Nichol in the 1980s. Of primarily an Indigenous focus, the films were produced in co-operation with Indigenous communities and cover such themes as healing circles, substance abuse, suicide, the Pope’s original and failed visit to the Dene in 1984, Indigenous artists, etc. Shown primarily on CBC and PBS and in-flight on Air Canada, titles include: Rice Dancer; Life Circles; The Circle Moving; The Only Gift; The Yerxa’s: An Ojibway Heritage; A Gathering in Denendeh; Nature’s Gallery; Jean Luc Grondin; Smiths Falls Carvers; and the National Film Board of Canada’s Trent Severn.

            Gary Elwood Nichol
            Jackson Pind fonds
            CA ON00159 P214 · Fonds · 2016-2020

            The Jackson Pind fonds consists in a transcription of an interview he did with Mike Harris (former Premier) while researching his Master’s thesis. The interview is related to education policies and Ernie Checkeris. An autographed copy of Spirit of the Grassroots People, edited by Jackson Pind and Theodore Michael Christou, is also part of the fonds.

            Pind, Jackson
            James Scanlon fonds
            CA ON00159 P212 · Fonds · [200-?]-2008

            The James Scanlon fonds consists of the manuscript version as well as the published version of his book A Different Time Among the Northern Cree. The book is a memoir of his life and times amongst the First Nations’ of Northern Quebec and James Bay from 1953 into the 1990’s. The manuscript version, written under the title Some Anglicans and Indians- A Moosonee Memoir is the unedited version and contains more details.

            Scanlon, James
            Lina Agnes Duke fonds
            CA ON00159 P233 · Fonds · n.d.

            The Lina Agnes Duke fonds consists of four typed copies of recollections written by Lina Agnes Duke. Two of the texts are about the couple’s time in Northern Ontario, more specifically in Moose Factory, and two short texts are on her teen years. The fonds provides an insight and perspective of non-indigenous missionaries visiting Indigenous communities of Northern Ontario.

            Duke, Lina Agnes
            Fonds · 1997-2001

            The fonds contains resources used and created in the compilation of The London Township History Book. The two-volume book details the history of London, Ontario and its surrounding areas, detailing multiple elements such as geography, industry, and community. The fonds contains thirty two series; series 1-9 relate to the administration of the book project proper; series 10-25 relate to the chapters of VOlume 1 of the London Township History Book (one series per chapter).

            London Township History Book Committee
            Magrath family fonds
            CA ON00380 1979.007 · Fonds · 1759-[ca. 1975] predominant 1844-1893

            Fonds consists largely of records created and collected by members of the Magrath family, including the Reverend James Magrath and his children, in the course of administering and occupying their farming estate (called Erindale) on the Credit River. Fonds includes correspondence, legal and financial records and ledgers, and plans of the estate and environs. There is also a small amount of material added to the fonds by later descendants of the family, including family histories and annotated transcriptions of the earliest Magrath correspondence.

            The bulk of the correspondence consists of personal letters between family members, including James Magrath and his children, and most is written to Charles Magrath while on a trip to Ireland. Letters are largely concerned with family and personal affairs.

            Note that the Magrath family correspondence includes occasional references to the activities of the First Nations (Mississauga Anishinaabe) people of the Credit area at that time referred to as the Credit Indians. The nature of these references is influenced by the perspective and prejudices of the Magraths.

            The fonds comprises the following six series:

            Series 1: Correspondence
            Series 2: Legal records
            Series 3: Financial records
            Series 4: Family history records
            Series 5: Erindale Estate maps and plans
            Series 6: Transcriptions

            Magrath family, Erindale
            Mike Harris collection
            CA ON00408 C014 · Collection · 2003-2011

            Collection consists of books about the Ipperwash Crisis and treaty rights that were presented to Mike Harris by Maurice Switzer, Director of Communications of the Union of Ontario Indians, at the official opening of the Harris Learning Library on June 25, 2011. The collection also contains correspondence relating to Mike Harris' receipt of the books and their donation to the Harris Learning Library.

            Harris, Mike
            Miriam Leith fonds
            Fonds · 1855; 1961-1971

            Fonds consists of documents from Miriam A. Leith’s experience participating as a volunteer with the Indian Eskimo Association at Broughton Island, Northwest Territories. 

            Miriam Leith
            Peter S. Schmalz fonds
            CA ON00031 A2010.099 · Fonds · 1844 - 2006

            This fonds reflects Dr. Peter S. Schmalz’s career as an educator, researcher and author from the late 1960s to early 2000s. He used these resources in the creation of a Master's Thesis, a Doctoral Thesis, numerous learned articles, several books, and reports for the Ministry of Natural Resources, First Nations communities, the provincial government and federal government. The focus of his research and writing concerned First Nations as well as Town of Walkerton history.

            This fonds includes over 700 published books (not including duplicates) which reflect Dr. Schmalz's primary interest in aboriginal contact with Europeans.

            The fonds also consists of documents related to the history of the Saugeen Ojibway Nation Territory (Saugeen First Nation and Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation) which reflect the communications and relationship between the First Nations and the Imperial and Canadian governments. These documents consist of photocopied records, many of which were copied from microfilm held by the National Archives of Canada, including material from NAC's reference number RG 10 (parts of the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development fonds). Records also include microform, brochures, audiotapes and videotapes, newspapers and clippings, magazines and research cards.

            Material in the fonds also reflects the history and experience of First Nations across North America.

            The material further reflects Dr. Schmalz’s leadership in education, particularly as it relates to both the education of First Nation students and the education of others about the history of First Nations. Records relate to a co-operative education project, field archaeology and native studies summer course, as well as curriculum created by Peter Schmalz and other education resources.

            Dr. Schmalz’s work, activities and interests are also reflected through his correspondence, publications, theses, and essays.

            Finally, the fonds consists of articles, maps and original records reflecting Dr. Schmalz’s interest and research concerning the history of the Town of Walkerton and other regional history resources.

            Series / File List:

            Series 1 Research library of published books
            File 1 Books about books
            File 2 North American Native books
            File 3 Canadian Indian archaeology books
            File 4 Canadiana books
            File 5 Non-Canadian books
            File 6 Local history books
            File 7 Black studies books
            File 8 Music books and sheet music

            Series 2 Saugeen First Nation and Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation related documents
            File 1 Saugeen-Nawash rights and claims
            File 2 Newspaper clippings, articles and manuscripts
            File 3 Microform
            File 4 Experience '81 project
            File 5 Fishing rights
            File 6 Bruce County censuses
            File 7 Potawatomi among the Saugeen and Cape Croker
            File 8 Currently not open to the public
            File 9 Saugeen First Nation and Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation publications
            File 10 Research cards

            Series 3 North American First Nations resources
            File 1 Visual materials
            File 2 Theses and manuscripts
            File 3 Published works
            File 4 Letters, working papers, reports and other records
            File 5 Audio and video materials
            File 6 Newspapers, magazines and journals
            File 7 Black studies resources

            Series 4 Education
            File 1 Co-operative education project
            File 2 Reports and documents concerning development of education of First Nations people
            File 3 Curriculum created by Peter Schmalz
            File 4 Field Archaeology and Native Studies summer course
            File 5 Education resources
            File 6 Reservation : a role-playing simulation game

            Series 5 Personal documents and publications
            File 1 Correspondence
            File 2 Manuscripts, theses and essays
            File 3 Published books, articles and related documents
            File 4 [There is no file 4]
            File 5 Conferences and trips
            File 6 Restricted reports
            File 7 Miscellaneous personal documents

            Series 6 Walkerton and area history resources
            File 1 Research notes and newspaper clippings
            File 2 Arthur James Kendall murder trial
            File 3 Original records
            File 4 Articles, manuscripts and reports
            File 5 Photographs

            Series 7 Regional history resources
            File 1 Reports and photocopied documents
            File 2 Articles and manuscripts
            File 3 Maps

            Schmalz, Peter Stanley