Peter Fidler Canada S Forgotten Surveyor 1769 1822

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Peter Fidler: Canada's Forgotten Surveyor, 1769-1822

Author : James Grierson MacGregor
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 304 pages
File Size : 46,5 Mb
Release : 1966
Category : Northwest, Canadian
ISBN : STANFORD:36105033905543

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Peter Fidler: Canada's Forgotten Surveyor, 1769-1822 by James Grierson MacGregor Pdf

Biography, based on original sources, of Hudson's Bay Company surveyor, who mapped much of western Canada and rivals David Thompson in importance.

Peter Fidler

Author : James Grierson MacGregor
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 265 pages
File Size : 49,5 Mb
Release : 1966
Category : Alberta
ISBN : OCLC:368029412

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Peter Fidler by James Grierson MacGregor Pdf

The Writings of David Thompson, Volume 1

Author : William E. Moreau
Publisher : McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Page : 423 pages
File Size : 55,5 Mb
Release : 2015-08-14
Category : Canada, Western
ISBN : 9780773546165

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The Writings of David Thompson, Volume 1 by William E. Moreau Pdf

A vivid account of life in the fur trade and a cornerstone of Canadian literature.

Biographical Dictionary of American and Canadian Naturalists and Environmentalists

Author : George A. Cevasco,Lorne Hammond,Richard Harmond,Keir B. Sterling
Publisher : Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Page : 958 pages
File Size : 46,5 Mb
Release : 1997-12-09
Category : Science
ISBN : 9780313036491

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Biographical Dictionary of American and Canadian Naturalists and Environmentalists by George A. Cevasco,Lorne Hammond,Richard Harmond,Keir B. Sterling Pdf

Casting a wide net, this volume provides personal and professional information on some 445 American and Canadian naturalists and environmentalists, who lived from the late 15th century to the late 20th century. It includes explorers who published works on the natural history of North America, conservationists, ecologists, environmentalists, wildlife management specialists, park planners, national park administrators, zoologists, botanists, natural historians, geographers, geologists, academics, museum scientists and administrators, military personnel, travellers, government officials, political figures and writers and artists concerned with the environment. Some of the subjects are well known. The accomplishments of others are little known. Each entry contains a succinct but careful evaluation of the subject's career and contributions. Entries also include up-to-date bibliographies and information concerning manuscript sources.

Native Americans and Anglo-American Culture, 1750-1850

Author : Tim Fulford,Kevin Hutchings
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 265 pages
File Size : 55,9 Mb
Release : 2009-06-04
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780521888486

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Native Americans and Anglo-American Culture, 1750-1850 by Tim Fulford,Kevin Hutchings Pdf

This book explains how complex relationships between Britons, Native Americans and Anglo-Americans shaped eighteenth- and nineteenth-century culture.

Dictionary of Manitoba Biography

Author : J.M. Bumsted
Publisher : Univ. of Manitoba Press
Page : 735 pages
File Size : 51,6 Mb
Release : 1999-12-10
Category : Reference
ISBN : 9780887552649

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Dictionary of Manitoba Biography by J.M. Bumsted Pdf

Manitoba has been at the crossroads of many of the important debates and events in Canadian history. From the early fur trade to the Riel Rebellion to the Winnipeg General Strike, Manitobans have frequently played crucial roles in Canadian and sometimes world history. Until now, there has been no comprehensive, contemporary source for information on the many Manitobans who have left their mark on history and society. Dictionary of Manitoba Biography fills this gap, with biographical sketches of over 1700 Manitobans who have made an impact in politics, the arts, sports, commerce, agriculture, and society. It is an invaluable resource for scholars, students, and general readers interested in Canadian history. Particular emphasis has been placed on reflecting Manitoba's ethnic and social diversity, and on including men and women who were notable in their own day but have now been forgotten. Many entries also refer the reader to additional references for further reading. More than a reference book, Dictionary of Manitoba Biography is also a fascinating work of history in its own right, which presents the full and colourful scope of over 300 years of people in Manitoba history and social life, from premiers and mayors to nightclub owners and sports heroes.

Old Man’s Playing Ground

Author : Gabriel M. Yanicki
Publisher : University of Ottawa Press
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 50,6 Mb
Release : 2014-03-27
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780776621364

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Old Man’s Playing Ground by Gabriel M. Yanicki Pdf

When Hudson’s Bay Company surveyor Peter Fidler made contact with the Ktunaxa at the Gap of the Oldman River in the winter of 1792, his Piikáni guides brought him to the river’s namesake. These were the playing grounds where Napi, or Old Man, taught the various nations how to play a game as a way of making peace. In the centuries since, travellers, adventurers, and scholars have recorded several accounts of Old Man’s Playing Ground and of the hoop-and-arrow game that was played there. Although it has been destroyed, much can be learned from an interdisciplinary study of Old Man’s Playing Ground. Oral traditions of the Piikáni and other First Nations of the Northwest Plains and Interior Plateau, together with textual records spanning centuries, show it to be a place of enduring cultural significance irrespective of its physical remains. Knowledge of the site and the hoop-and-arrow game played there is widespread, in keeping with historic and ethnographic accounts of multiple groups meeting and gambling at the site. In this work, oral tradition, history, and ethnography are brought together with a geomorphic assessment of the playing ground’s most probable location—a floodplain scoured and rebuilt by floodwaters of the Oldman—and the archaeology of adjacent prehistoric campsite DlPo-8. Taken together,the locale can be understood as a nexus for cultural interaction and trade,through the medium of gambling and games, on the natural frontier between peoples of the Interior Plateau and Northwest Plains.

Alberta’s Lower Athabasca Basin

Author : Brian M. Ronaghan
Publisher : Athabasca University Press
Page : 565 pages
File Size : 53,9 Mb
Release : 2017-05-24
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9781926836904

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Alberta’s Lower Athabasca Basin by Brian M. Ronaghan Pdf

Over the past two decades, the oil sands region of northeastern Alberta has been the site of unprecedented levels of development. Alberta's Lower Athabasca Basin tells a fascinating story of how a catastrophic ice age flood left behind a unique landscape in the Lower Athabasca Basin, one that made deposits of bitumen available for surface mining. Less well known is the discovery that this flood also produced an environment that supported perhaps the most intensive use of boreal forest resources by prehistoric Native people yet recognized in Canada. Studies undertaken to meet the conservation requirements of the Alberta Historical Resources Act have yielded a rich and varied record of prehistoric habitation and activity in the oil sands area. Evidence from between 9,500 and 5,000 years ago—the result of several major excavations—has confirmed extensive human use of the region’s resources, while important contextual information provided by key geological and palaeoenvironmental studies has deepened our understanding of how the region’s early inhabitants interacted with the landscape. Touching on various elements of this rich environmental and archaeological record, the contributors to this volume use the evidence gained through research and compliance studies to offer new insights into human and natural history. They also examine the challenges of managing this irreplaceable heritage resource in the face of ongoing development. Contributors: Alwynne Beaudoin, Angela Younie, Brian O.K. Reeves, Duane Froese, Elizabeth Roberston, Eugene Gryba, Gloria Fedirchuk, Grant Clarke, John W. Ives, Janet Blakey, Jennifer Tischer, Jim Burns, Laura Roskowski, Luc Bouchet, Murray Lobb, Nancy Saxberg, Raymond LeBlanc, Robert R. Young, Robin Woywitka, Thomas V. Lowell, and Timothy Fisher

Farming across Borders

Author : Timothy P. Bowman,Kristin Hoganson,Laura Hooton,Josh MacFadyen,Todd Meyers,Peter S Morris,Andrew Dunlop,Alicia Marion Dewey,John Weber,Sonia Hernández,Rosa E Cobos,Matt Caire-Pérez,Paige Raibmon,Jason McCollom,Thomas D Isern,Suzzanne Kelley,Anthony Carlson,Stephen Mumme,Tisa Anders
Publisher : Texas A&M University Press
Page : 490 pages
File Size : 54,9 Mb
Release : 2017-10-26
Category : History
ISBN : 9781623495688

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Farming across Borders by Timothy P. Bowman,Kristin Hoganson,Laura Hooton,Josh MacFadyen,Todd Meyers,Peter S Morris,Andrew Dunlop,Alicia Marion Dewey,John Weber,Sonia Hernández,Rosa E Cobos,Matt Caire-Pérez,Paige Raibmon,Jason McCollom,Thomas D Isern,Suzzanne Kelley,Anthony Carlson,Stephen Mumme,Tisa Anders Pdf

Farming across Borders uses agricultural history to connect the regional experiences of the American West, northern Mexico, western Canada, and the North American side of the Pacific Rim, now writ large into a broad history of the North American West. Case studies of commodity production and distribution, trans-border agricultural labor, and environmental change unite to reveal new perspectives on a historiography traditionally limited to a regional approach. Sterling Evans has curated nineteen essays to explore the contours of “big” agricultural history. Crops and commodities discussed include wheat, cattle, citrus, pecans, chiles, tomatoes, sugar beets, hops, henequen, and more. Toiling over such crops, of course, were the people of the North American West, and as such, the contributing authors investigate the role of agricultural labor, from braceros and Hutterites to women working in the sorghum fields and countless other groups in between. As Evans concludes, “society as a whole (no matter in what country) often ignores the role of agriculture in the past and the present.” Farming across Borders takes an important step toward cultivating awareness and understanding of the agricultural, economic, and environmental connections that loom over the North American West regardless of lines on a map. In the words of one essay, “we are tied together . . . in a hundred different ways.”

From Rupert's Land to Canada

Author : John Elgin Foster,Rod Macleod,Theodore Binnema
Publisher : University of Alberta
Page : 328 pages
File Size : 46,7 Mb
Release : 2001-05
Category : History
ISBN : 0888643632

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From Rupert's Land to Canada by John Elgin Foster,Rod Macleod,Theodore Binnema Pdf

Dr. John E. Foster spent many years researching and interpreting the Metis, continually re-examining his own thinking about the fur trade and the West, trying to find new lines of inquiry across disciplinary boundaries, and, playing with ideas that re-imagined the Canadian West. In From Rupert's Land to Canada, in tribute to John's work, his friends and colleagues further explore themes related to "Native History and the Fur Trade," "Metis History," and the "Imagined West". Contributors include Michael Payne, Nicole St-Onge, Jan Grabowski, Jennifer Brown, Heather Rollason, Frits Pannekoek, Heather Devine, Gerhard Ens, Gerry Friesen, Ted Binnema, Ian MacLaren, Rod Macleod, Tom Flanagan and Glen Campbell.

First Across the Continent

Author : Barry M. Gough
Publisher : University of Oklahoma Press
Page : 260 pages
File Size : 52,7 Mb
Release : 1997
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0806130024

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First Across the Continent by Barry M. Gough Pdf

Chronicles the perils and triumphs of the intrepid Scotsman who explored Canada's northwestern wilderness

Listening to the Fur Trade

Author : Daniel Robert Laxer
Publisher : McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Page : 368 pages
File Size : 47,8 Mb
Release : 2022-04-05
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780228009818

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Listening to the Fur Trade by Daniel Robert Laxer Pdf

As fur traders were driven across northern North America by economic motivations, the landscape over which they plied their trade was punctuated by sound: shouting, singing, dancing, gunpowder, rattles, jingles, drums, fiddles, and – very occasionally – bagpipes. Fur trade interactions were, in a word, noisy. Daniel Laxer unearths traces of music, performance, and other intangible cultural phenomena long since silenced, allowing us to hear the fur trade for the first time. Listening to the Fur Trade uses the written record, oral history, and material culture to reveal histories of sound and music in an era before sound recording. The trading post was a noisy nexus, populated by a polyglot crowd of highly mobile people from different national, linguistic, religious, cultural, and class backgrounds. They found ways to interact every time they met, and facilitating material interests and survival went beyond the simple exchange of goods. Trust and good relations often entailed gift-giving: reciprocity was performed with dances, songs, and firearm salutes. Indigenous protocols of ceremony and treaty-making were widely adopted by fur traders, who supplied materials and technologies that sometimes changed how these ceremonies sounded. Within trading companies, masters and servants were on opposite ends of the social ladder but shared songs in the canoes and lively dances during the long winters at the trading posts. While the fur trade was propelled by economic and political interests, Listening to the Fur Trade uncovers the songs and ceremonies of First Nations people, the paddling songs of the voyageurs, and the fiddle music and step-dancing at the trading posts that provided its pulse.

Fur Trade and Exploration

Author : Theodore J. Karamanski
Publisher : University of Oklahoma Press
Page : 356 pages
File Size : 42,5 Mb
Release : 1988-01-01
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 0806120932

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Fur Trade and Exploration by Theodore J. Karamanski Pdf

Discusses the role of the Hudson's Bay Company and its fur traders in the exploration of northern B.C., the western NWT, the Yukon and eastern Alaska.

Teaching Places

Author : Audrey J. Whitson
Publisher : Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press
Page : 196 pages
File Size : 48,9 Mb
Release : 2003-05-26
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 9780889204256

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Teaching Places by Audrey J. Whitson Pdf

Teaching Places is a tale about a woman’s spiritual search, how that search calls her to the land and how the land teaches. The telling spirals, exploring loss of faith, loss of voice, and the finding of a different, broader faith and a deeper, stronger voice. Her journey takes her to many special wilderness areas across Alberta — from the edge of the Canadian Shield to mountains, prairies, boreal forest, and parkland. In the telling of her journey, she interweaves migration, evolution, family, landscape, noise, silence, and song. Remarkable for the breadth of its treatment of the spiritual journey, combining prose and poetry, the book delves into old traditions (Aboriginal, Old European, mystical Christian) and new. Genealogists, geologists, students, and instructors of natural history and theology will find this book of great value in their study and in their courses.

Clearing the Plains

Author : James William Daschuk
Publisher : University of Regina Press
Page : 345 pages
File Size : 41,6 Mb
Release : 2013
Category : History
ISBN : 9780889772960

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Clearing the Plains by James William Daschuk Pdf

In arresting, but harrowing, prose, James Daschuk examines the roles that Old World diseases, climate, and, most disturbingly, Canadian politics--the politics of ethnocide--played in the deaths and subjugation of thousands of aboriginal people in the realization of Sir John A. Macdonald's "National Dream." It was a dream that came at great expense: the present disparity in health and economic well-being between First Nations and non-Native populations, and the lingering racism and misunderstanding that permeates the national consciousness to this day. " Clearing the Plains is a tour de force that dismantles and destroys the view that Canada has a special claim to humanity in its treatment of indigenous peoples. Daschuk shows how infectious disease and state-supported starvation combined to create a creeping, relentless catastrophe that persists to the present day. The prose is gripping, the analysis is incisive, and the narrative is so chilling that it leaves its reader stunned and disturbed. For days after reading it, I was unable to shake a profound sense of sorrow. This is fearless, evidence-driven history at its finest." -Elizabeth A. Fenn, author of Pox Americana "Required reading for all Canadians." -Candace Savage, author of A Geography of Blood "Clearly written, deeply researched, and properly contextualized history...Essential reading for everyone interested in the history of indigenous North America." -J.R. McNeill, author of Mosquito Empires