Events

Title Sub Event Start Date
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