The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation

Sponsored by the Centre for Rupert's Land Studies in collaboration with host sponsors the Friends of the Rocky Mountain House National Historic Site, the David Thompson Centennial Brigade and the Rocky Mountain House community. Rich in the history of the fur trade, voyageurs and adventurers, Ro...

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Main Author: Wheeler, Winona
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2149/1787
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spelling ftathabasuniv:oai:auspace.athabascau.ca:2149 /1787 2023-11-05T03:41:59+01:00 The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation Wheeler, Winona 2008-12-09T22:32:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/2149/1787 en eng 92.927.G1030 & 83.R020.0902; http://hdl.handle.net/2149/1787 Fisher River Cree Treaty No.5 First Nation Presentation 2008 ftathabasuniv 2023-10-08T07:34:59Z Sponsored by the Centre for Rupert's Land Studies in collaboration with host sponsors the Friends of the Rocky Mountain House National Historic Site, the David Thompson Centennial Brigade and the Rocky Mountain House community. Rich in the history of the fur trade, voyageurs and adventurers, Rocky Mountain House, Alberta is an ideal location for the 2008 Rupert's Land Colloquium. The North Saskatchewan River brought fur traders here over 200 years ago. Pushing ever further west from Hudson Bay and Montreal, rival companies in fierce competition sought to extend trade to more groups of Aboriginal people. In the year 1799, two trading posts were established: Acton House by the Hudson' s Bay Company and Rocky Mountain House by the North West Company. These two companies, before and after amalgamation, traded with nine different Aboriginal Peoples in the Rocky Mountains. 2008 marks the 200th anniversary of David Thompson' s arrival at Rocky Mountain House after spending the winter on the west side of the Rocky Mountains. He was making his way to Fort William to bring news of his breakthrough into the Pacific watershed. Distinctive pre and post colloquium activities are in the works. Themes being considered for the pre-colloquium workshop, which will have a First Nations focus, include: cultural property, traditions and protocols; repatriation ceremonies; and ethics of research involving Indigenous Peoples. Academic & Professional Development Fund (A&PDF) Conference Object First Nations Hudson Bay Athabasca University: AUSpace
institution Open Polar
collection Athabasca University: AUSpace
op_collection_id ftathabasuniv
language English
topic Fisher River Cree
Treaty No.5 First Nation
spellingShingle Fisher River Cree
Treaty No.5 First Nation
Wheeler, Winona
The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation
topic_facet Fisher River Cree
Treaty No.5 First Nation
description Sponsored by the Centre for Rupert's Land Studies in collaboration with host sponsors the Friends of the Rocky Mountain House National Historic Site, the David Thompson Centennial Brigade and the Rocky Mountain House community. Rich in the history of the fur trade, voyageurs and adventurers, Rocky Mountain House, Alberta is an ideal location for the 2008 Rupert's Land Colloquium. The North Saskatchewan River brought fur traders here over 200 years ago. Pushing ever further west from Hudson Bay and Montreal, rival companies in fierce competition sought to extend trade to more groups of Aboriginal people. In the year 1799, two trading posts were established: Acton House by the Hudson' s Bay Company and Rocky Mountain House by the North West Company. These two companies, before and after amalgamation, traded with nine different Aboriginal Peoples in the Rocky Mountains. 2008 marks the 200th anniversary of David Thompson' s arrival at Rocky Mountain House after spending the winter on the west side of the Rocky Mountains. He was making his way to Fort William to bring news of his breakthrough into the Pacific watershed. Distinctive pre and post colloquium activities are in the works. Themes being considered for the pre-colloquium workshop, which will have a First Nations focus, include: cultural property, traditions and protocols; repatriation ceremonies; and ethics of research involving Indigenous Peoples. Academic & Professional Development Fund (A&PDF)
format Conference Object
author Wheeler, Winona
author_facet Wheeler, Winona
author_sort Wheeler, Winona
title The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation
title_short The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation
title_full The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation
title_fullStr The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation
title_full_unstemmed The Fur Trade, Treaty No. 5 and the Fisher River First Nation
title_sort fur trade, treaty no. 5 and the fisher river first nation
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2149/1787
genre First Nations
Hudson Bay
genre_facet First Nations
Hudson Bay
op_relation 92.927.G1030 & 83.R020.0902;
http://hdl.handle.net/2149/1787
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