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Long road home : centennial commemoration of Jasper's Mountain Metis
https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue14412
- Medium
- Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
- Published Date
- 2014?
- Publisher
- Alberta : People & Peaks Productions ; Willmore Wilderness Foundation
- Call Number
- 07.2 W68l DVD
1 website
- Responsibility
- Willmore Wilderness Foundation ; collaborative production with the Mountain Metis Centre
- Publisher
- Alberta : People & Peaks Productions ; Willmore Wilderness Foundation
- Published Date
- 2014?
- Physical Description
- 1 digital video disc : sound, colour ; 12 cm.
- Subjects
- Jasper National Park
- Metis
- Willmore Wilderness Provincial Park
- Horses
- Pack trips
- History
- History of Alberta
- Notes
- Summary: In 1806 Metis guide Jacco Findlay was the first to blaze a packtrail over Howse Pass and the Continental Divide. He made a map for Canadian explorer David Thompson, who followed one year later. Jacco left the North West Company and became the first "Freeman" or "Otipemisiwak" in the Athabasca Valley. In 1907 the Canadian Government passed an Order in Council for the creation of the "Jasper Forest Park" enforcing the evacuation of the Metis in the Athabasca Valley. By 1909 guns were seized causing the community to surrender its homeland including Jacco's descendants. Six Metis families made their exodus after inhabiting the area for a century. This documentary, focuses on a 14-day return trip of the descendants of the evicted families, as well as Jacco's progeny. Storied are shared through the voices of family members as they reveal their struggle to preserve traditions and culture as Mountain Metis.
- ISBN
- 829982125729
- Call Number
- 07.2 W68l DVD
- Collection
- Archives Library
- URL Notes
- Website for film and Mountain Metis - Otipemisiwak
Websites
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and
potentially offensive content.
Read more.
Metis and the medicine line : creating a border and dividing a people
https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue25011
- Medium
- Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
- Published Date
- 2015
- Author
- Hogue, Michel
- Publisher
- Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada : University of Regina Press
- Call Number
- 08.1 H65m
1 website
- Author
- Hogue, Michel
- Publisher
- Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada : University of Regina Press
- Published Date
- 2015
- Physical Description
- ix, 328 pages : illustrations, maps, portraits
- Abstract
- Metis and the Medicine Line is a sprawling, ambitious look at how national borders and notions of race were created and manipulated to unlock access to indigenous lands. It is also an intimate story of individuals and families, brought vividly to life by history writing at its best. It begins with the emergence of the Plains Metis and ends with the fracturing of their communities as the Canada-U. S. border was enforced. It also explores the borderland world of the Northern Plains, where an astonishing diversity of people met and mingled: Blackfoot, Cree, Gros Ventre, Lakota, Dakota, Nez Perce, Assiniboine, Anishinaabes, Metis, Europeans, Canadians, Americans, soldiers, police, settlers, farmers, hunters, traders, bureaucrats. In examining the battles that emerged over who belonged on what side of the border, Hogue disputes Canada's peaceful settlement story of the Prairie West and challenges familiar bromides about the "world's longest undefended border. (From U of R Press website)
- Contents
- Emergence : creating a Metis borderland -- Exchange : trade, sovereignty, and the forty-ninth parallel -- Belonging : land, treaties, and the boundaries of race -- Resistance : dismantling Plains Metis borderland settlements, 1879-1885 -- Exile : scrip and enrollment commissions and the shifting boundaries of belonging, 1885-1920.
- ISBN
- 9780889773806
- Accession Number
- P2020-1
- Call Number
- 08.1 H65m
- Collection
- Archives Library
- URL Notes
- Summary on University of Regina Press website
Websites
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and
potentially offensive content.
Read more.