Collection search


in
Filters
Showing 1 - 21 of 21 filtered results
:
  1. 1
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12545
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-hunting. The fur-bearing animals are on the decrease, owing a great deal to the presence of settlers all through the country now. Farming has not been 
  2. 2
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12575
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur caught, although diminishing in quantity, is still a resource of no little importance, as they kill numbers of moose, deer and fur-bearing animals. They 
  3. 3
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12483
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-bearing animals would be made, and that they would be as free to hunt and fish after the treaty as they would be if they never entered into it. We 
  4. 4
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12620
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-bearing animals being their principal game; and for this purpose, range over a considerable area, even across the international boundary. Religion 
  5. 5
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12778
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-hunters and quite a number find employment as farm hands with white settlers. The women dress deer skins and convert them into moccasins, gloves and 
  6. 6
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12609
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-bearing animals. The main occupations are hunting, fishing and trapping for home consumption and trade. Buildings, Stock and Implements. - The houses on 
  7. 7
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12601
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-bearing animals, and kill a number of game. They fish extensively for the different companies, and realize $1.25 for each sturgeon caught. They 
  8. 8
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12474
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur and fish, or employment in connection with fishing industries to procure the other necessaries of life. INDUSTRIES. In both of these provinces the 
  9. 9
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12599
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-trading interest. Therefore, this band had the civilizing advantages of conversing with and being otherwise employed by these officers, and, necessarily 
  10. 10
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12587
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur to Prince Albert this summer, and brought down supplies for winter use. They are building several new houses, and have commenced to build a new school 
  11. 11
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12685
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur, and that I consider a low estimate. Buildings. - All buildings on the reserves are of logs, a few have shingle roofs, and nearly all have board floors 
  12. 12
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12720
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur; also the berry grounds give especially large yields. Occupation. - This band depends on fishing, hunting and trapping. The women gather the wild berry 
  13. 13
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12690
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-hunt in those regions. Treaty Payments. - Five merchants attended the treaty payments to trade with the Indians. Their goods were of a satisfactory 
  14. 14
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12598
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-bearing animals, and gardening, mostly in cultivating potatoes, of which they will raise, approximately, one thousand bushels. A large number of them 
  15. 15
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12721
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur and salmon catch was had; potatoes and wild berries yielded well. The opportunities for the Indians to earn money, as packers and guides, at high wages 
  16. 16
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12725
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-bearing animals. Health and Sanitary Condition. - The Indians are taught to observe sanitary measures, and those coming within reach have been 
  17. 17
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12555
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-hunting. They do not farm; only two or three plant a few bushels of potatoes. Buildings and Stock. - The band possesses thirty-four houses, built of 
  18. 18
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12484
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-bearing animals remain, the great bulk of the Indians will continue to hunt and to trap. The Indians are given the option of taking reserves or land in 
  19. 19
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12554
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-hunting. The farming consists in planting some potatoes and sowing a little oats. The Indians also kill a few seals. Buildings and Stock. - The band 
  20. 20
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12764
    Year:
    1899
    ... fur-sealing, and these go as hunters on the sealing schooners down the coast and to Behring Sea. Some members of nearly all the bands engage in the oulachon 
  21. 21
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    12473
    Year:
    1899
    ... Fur-bearing animals have also been fast disappearing as settlement has advanced and the beaver, for example, is seldom to be met with excepting in far 
Looking for more? Try our other search tools:
Date modified: