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Alberta's Métis people are descendants of mixed First Nations/Indigenous peoples and White/European families. The Métis are considered an aboriginal group ...
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Homesteads started being established by settlers in the early 1920s. Settlers would travel to nearby communities to encourage Métis families to reside in ...
Missing: 1910 | Show results with:1910
The Hanna-Steveville line became known as the Peavine and was eventually abandoned in the 1970's. In March 1913 crews finished the track from Hanna to Munson ...
Peavine Metis Settlement is a Metis settlement in northern Alberta, Canada within Big Lakes County. It is located on Highway 750 to the northeast of High ...
Missing: 1910 | Show results with:1910
Statistics Canada's Census Profile presents information from the 2016 Census of Population - Peavine, Métis settlement [Designated place], Alberta and ...
This timeline presents key events and developments in Indigenous history in what is now Canada, from Time Immemorial to present.
... 1910 in an organized effort to induce settlers to locate in Alberta. In 1916, the Publicity Bureau was amalgamated with the Statistical Branch and became ...
Park wardens wanted to remove the mountain Métis in. 1909 and 1910. ... These communities have played an important role in Alberta's history, society and economy.
The North-West Territorial Legislative Assembly had oversight over agriculture until 1905, when this region became part of the newly formed Province of Alberta.
With the implementation of Métis Education in. Alberta, our Métis children understand their distinct culture and history, and the key role that the Métis people.