Legislation Provided Metis Heads of Family with Scrip |
|
1874-00-00 |
Creation of Department of the Interior |
Indian Affairs Becomes Branch of Department of the Interior |
1873-07-01 |
Cypress Hills Massacre |
|
1873-06-01 |
Creation of the North-West Mounted Police |
1874 March West and subsequent police and Indigenous relations. |
1873-03-00 |
Interruption of HBC Geological Survey |
|
1873-00-00 |
Metis Letter Inquiring About How to Claim Land Along the South Saskatchewan River |
|
1872-01-17 |
Governor and Council Appointed to Prairie Region |
|
1872-00-00 |
Metis Outmigration from Manitoba |
|
1872-00-00 |
Board of Health passes Resolution to Ban the Export of Saskatchewan Furs |
Final Decline of the Fur Trade on the Plains |
1871-04-24 |
Plains Chiefs Appeal to Government for Help |
Government Delays Treaty Until 1876 |
1871-04-13 |
Peace Treaty Between the Niitsitapi (Blackfoot) and the Nehiyaw (Cree): Assiniboine Alliance |
|
1871-00-00 |
Treaty 4 Negotiations |
Potential signatories informed of government failure by Treaty 1 signatories. |
1871-00-00 |
Meeting with HBC at Fort Carlton to determine where the Metis would home |
|
1870-12-31 |
Red River Resistance, Manitoba Act of 1870 and Reign of Terror |
|
1870-05-12 |
The Decline of the Niitsitapi (Blackfoot) |
|
1870-00-00 |
Arrival of Forces of Colonel Garnet Wolseley in Manitoba |
|
1870-00-00 |
The Department of Indian Affairs Adopts a stringent Financial Policy |
|
1870-00-00 |
Cultural Dislocation - Loss of Metis Languages and Culture through Education System and other Forms of Assimilation |
|
1870-00-00 |
English Protestant Migration into Manitoba |
|
1870-00-00 |
Metis Buffalo Economy - Buffalo Near-Extinction |
Impact on Metis economy, welfare, survival |
1870-00-00 |
Racist and Gendered Perceptions of Indigenous Women |
|
1870-00-00 |
Metis Economic Activity Post-Resistance / Post-1870 and Post-1885 |
Following the Red River (1870) and Riel Resistances (1885), an increased number of Metis individuals became alienated from their land and were forced to make a meagre living on road allowances or unoccupied settler land. This was in part the intent of the government as a form of retaliation for the efforts of the Metis in assertion of land rights and self-determination. |
1870-00-00 |
Metis Community at Batoche |
Battle of Batoche (1885) |
1870-00-00 |
Metis Loss of Education Opportunities Due to Forced Transience and Lack of Government Funding |
The government's refusal to recognize land rights led to Metis dispossession of land. Survival required Metis families to move frequently in search of work and to avoid eviction. |
1870-00-00 |
Distribution of Metis Scrip in Association with Manitoba Act - Land Dispossession |
Scrip fraud and speculation |
1870-00-00 |
Rupert's Land Transfer |
|
1869-11-19 |
Smallpox Outbreak |
|
1869-00-00 |
Red River Colony Loses Their Crops Four Consecutive Years |
|
1868-00-00 |
John A. Macdonald Speech to the Throne 1867 |
|
1867-11-07 |
Connolly v Woolrich and Johnson et al. [1867] |
Establishment of the Legality of Aboriginal Marriage |
1867-00-00 |