Federal Governance

Agency Office Moves from Wynyard to Qu'Appelle

Summary

Agency office moved from Wynyard to Fort Qu'Appelle. Communities were promised that if this did not work out, the agency office could be moved back. The increased distance made it more difficult for bands near the Cypress Hills area to travel to agency offices. However, the office never returned, and instead remained at Fort Qu'Appelle

Implications
This event is an example of the government's prioritization of cost-saving measures over the well-being of Indigenous people. As well, increasing the distance required to traverse to the office likely made it more difficult for Indigenous peoples to lodge complaints, reducing the number of "Indian problems" that the agency was required to deal with.
Community

Walter Deiter Makes Request for the Removal of the Pass System

Summary

Walter Deiter was a Cree activist (from Peepeekisis Reserve) who became the leader of the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations in 1966. In 1967 he sent a letter to Indian Affairs asking that the Pass System be removed. Indian Affairs responded that if individual bands asked to have it removed, it would be. As a result, many bands wrote to Indian Affairs to inform them that they were no longer abiding by the Pass System.

Date
1967-00-00
Documents
File

Aftermath of the North-West Resistance: Restrictions on Traveling Between Bands

Summary

First Nations were prohibited from traveling between communities following the 1885 Resistance, in attempts to discourage collaboration between bands which could result in collective action. However, some band members continued to travel covertly. Those who were found to be traveling between reserves against the government's orders were punished by having their rations and annuity payments revoked.

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Date
1885-00-00
Community

Aftermath of the North-West: Weapons Prohibited

Summary

Following the 1885 North-West Resistance, First Nations and Metis ownership of guns and knives was heavily restricted, Canada fearing another resistance in which they wouldn't be able to control. Even sharp knives were confiscated, and when authorities came to confiscate weapons, some people hid their knives so that they would not be taken away. Guns and knives were both integral to subsistence patterns, and a source of wealth. Many of these items had been procured in the west out of trade relationships during the fur trade, and were a form of a currency (trade good). This was especially true of guns and ammunition, which had become a staple trade good brought by European traders and which were highly valued by Plains-orientated Indigenous peoples for hunting. Inhibiting the ability to hunt resulted in a higher reliance on Government provided aid and welfare - such as rations - this was an intended result in Canada's genocide of Indigenous peoples. Hindering the ability to feed their community members, and then refusing to supply rations to starving bands was intended to weaken and "make room" for white settlers who would come to the west at the turn of the 19th c. 


 

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Date
1885-00-00

Upset at Battleford: Unpaid Rations

Summary

Members of the Little Pine band traveled to Battleford where they were promised rations from Indian Affairs. Previously, Indian Affairs had been supplying them with rations because they were prohibited from leaving the Little Pine reserve to hunt as had been customary for generations. However, when their rations were suddenly denied, the younger members grew upset and protested vehemently. Chiefs Little Pine and Poundmaker urged their young men not to riot, but frustrations and hunger were high. 

Result

There is no indication as to how the Department of Indian Affairs or the NWMP responded to the event. However, protests similar to this one over denied rations and aid were not uncommon. The Canadian Government would withhold and limit rations however they saw fit (which was used as a tool to control and First Nations people), and in dire circumstances there was little other option than to forcibly take rations or face starvation and inevitably death. The disappearance of the Bison (or Buffalo) across the Northern Plains due to near extinction was an immense stressor on Plains-orientated Indigenous peoples who relied on the animals for food amongst other reasons. 

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Community

Bennet Government Restricts Meetings of Political Organizations

Summary

In 1934, the Bennett government introduced legislation that made it necessary for political organizations to have permits to hold meetings. As a result, Métis organizations were held secretly to avoid government surveillance and control.

Implications
Requiring that Metis people obtain permission from government officials to meet was motivated by a desire to make consciousness-raising and political mobilization more difficult. It was believed that this would make the government's agenda of assimilation more difficult to achieve. Métis organizations continued to engage in acts of resistance, however, by meeting secretly.
Sub Event
Métis Societies Meet in Secret
Date
1934-00-00

Complaints about the Quality of Tobacco and Other Goods Distributed by the Government

Summary

Indigenous people complained of the quality of tobacco, ammunition, and farming implements distributed to them. These were items that had been promised in treaty negotiations, and had been included in the written documents. The tobacco was of such bad quality that in some cases Aboriginal people simply threw it away. The shot distributed the previous year was all No. 5-8 shot, but should have been No. 2 shot instead. The wooden pitchforks that were distributed were of poor quality, and it was recommended that steel ones should be distributed instead, which would make work more efficient. Government officials like Angus Mackay who interacted with Indigenous people recognized the barriers presented by the distribution of improper goods to Indigenous people on the prairies.

Implications
The goods promised to Indigenous people were not always of sufficient quality to make them valuable and useful. These were items that had been promised in treaty negotiations, and had been included in the written documents. This reflects the government's attempts to fulfill their obligations as minimally as possible. Likely, the government did not provide Indigenous peoples with the rations and tools promised to them to continually undermine Indigenous capabilities to remain self sufficient, because the government denied quality goods promised in treaties Indigenous peoples were left to make do with what was given. By denying goods to Indigenous peoples, the government carried out their policy of assimilation by forcing Indigenous peoples to bend to the government's whims and/or succumb to disease, malnutrition, and death. Although it was not ethical, it was legal.
Sub Event
Treaty 4 and Treaty 6
Date
1876-08-00

Construction of Primrose Lake Air Weapons Range

Summary

By early 1951, the government and air force officials had appraised several locations and identified an expanse of "unoccupied" Crown land east of Lac La Biche, Alberta. The proposed air weapons range would affect natural resource exploitation, commercial fishing, and an estimated seventy-five traplines. On 19 April 1951, Defense Minister Brooke Claxton informed the House of Commons that the bombing and gunnery range, roughly centered at Primrose Lake, would extend approximately 115 miles from east to west and 40 miles from north to south, totaling almost 4,490 square miles.

Implications
The range boundaries were constructed to avoid First Nations reserves, but federal officials recognized that First Nations and Métis trappers and fishermen had interests in the affected area. A number of Aboriginal groups considered the area around Primrose Lake their traditional territory. The Canoe Lake Cree (Saskatchewan) subsisted over a territory that extended west of Canoe Lake, including the McCusker and Arsenault Lake areas. Canoe Lake Cree elders speak of a 'rich and bountiful' land teeming with animals and fish that had provided livelihoods for 'generations and generations,' wherein people made 'a lot of money' and enjoyed an 'excellent' living. The IAB determined that more than one hundred treaty Indian families relied on the range for subsistence. The Canoe Lake band in Saskatchewan and the Cold Lake band in Alberta faced the heaviest impact. Indigenous people would be forced to leave behind cabins, traps, and equipment when the range was closed. The Department of National Defense offered some compensation, although the amounts were much smaller than what Indian Affairs had demanded, and only fishermen and trappers with provincial licenses were considered for compensation. As a result of having no alternative hunting and trapping grounds and being dislocated from their primary income-generating and subsistence activities, the economies of the Cold Lake Dene and the Canoe Lake Cree communities collapsed almost immediately. Indian Agents also noted that the topography and soil conditions in the area were not conducive to successful agriculture.
Date
1951-00-00

Provision added to Legislation Regarding the Sale and Purchase of Alcohol

Summary

Member of Parliament, Mr. Paterson, recommended a provision to the legislation which criminalized First Nations from purchasing or consuming alcohol. This was to be enforced by settlers who were given the authority to report a First Nations person who allegedly broke this new, egregious law, to the Superintendent of Indian Affairs. They could provide the names of witnesses to be called, but were not required to testify themselves, so as to avoid the possibility of being harassed by the accused. This provision was agreed to by the House of Commons.


 

Result

This provision encouraged the policing of Indigenous peoples by settlers, allowed for settlers to have extensive legal power over Indigenous peoples, and created a double standard whereby Indigenous peoples were penalized for the same activities that settlers participated. As such, Indigenous peoples self-determination and authority continued to be undermined by the state, a theme widely seen throughout paternalistic policies. The Canadian Government implemented policies that criminalized Indigenous peoples in nearly every aspect of their lives, from ceremonies and community gatherings, to the sale of goods, mobility and the pass system, seeking legal counsel, voting, and many other laws that penalized Indigenous peoples for merely existing in a settler colonial state. 


 

Sources

House of Commons Debates. 4th Parliament, 2nd Session, vol. II, 12 February 1880 - 7 May 1880. Pg 1997.

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Date
1882-00-00
Region

Introduction of New System of Annuity Payment for those Absent at Time of Payment

Summary

In order to avoid the replication of annuity payments at multiple agencies, the government devised a plan by which people would receive annuities for the year in which they returned to the reserve, and the arrears for a single year at a time. For this year's annuity payments, this system resulted in a decrease of $14,000 on annuity payments for the department.

Date
1882-00-00