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Treaty 6

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Treaty 6 is an agreement between the Canadian monarch and the Plain and Wood Cree Indians and other tribes of Indians at Fort Carlton, Fort Pitt and Battle River. The area agreed upon by the Plain and Wood Cree represents most of the central area of the current provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta. One Manitoba band also signed on to the treaty by adhesion in 1898. The treaty signings began in August 1876, with adhesions added in 1898 in central Saskatchewan in the Montreal Lake area.

Reasons

At this time, the buffalo, the staple of the people that lived on the plains, was disappearing at an alarming rate due to the settlement activities.[citation needed] The chiefs realized that if they did not sign a treaty with the Crown, they might starve or have to attack more of the forts and settlements within the area. A second major reason for the signing of the treaty was that a smallpox epidemic had recently gone through the area, killing many of the Cree. Also Ohtiyaw pounded the chiefs wife.

Terms

The First Nations people gave up their customary title to the land under common law in exchange for provisions from the government.

The Plain and Wood Cree Tribes of Indians, and all other the Indians inhabiting the district hereinafter described and defined, do hereby cede, release, surrender and yield up to the Government of the Dominion of Canada, for Her Majesty the Queen and Her successors forever, all their rights, titles and privileges, whatsoever, to the lands included within the following limits...[1]

In exchange, certain areas were "reserved" (i.e. protected from encroachment by white settlers). These lands can be taken or sold by the government, but only with the consent of the natives peoples or with compensation. In addition the government promised to open schools for Indian children and restrict the sale of alcohol on reserves.

Each Native family of five covered by Treaty 6 also received 4.45 square miles (11.5 km2) of land (128 acres (52 ha) per person), which they could sell back to the Government of Canada for compensation. Each person immediately received $12 (CA$) and an additional $5 a year. The chief and other band officer would receive a salary of $25 per year plus one horse, one harness, and one wagon or two carts. The people would, collectively, also receive $1500 per year for ammunition and fishing net twine. As well each family was to be given an entire suite of agricultural tools including ploughs, axes, hoes, and several bags of seed, as well a payment, at the Indian agent's discretion of up $1000 per year for the first three years after a reserve was surveyed. One of the selling points of the treaty was that a medicine chest would be kept at the home of the Indian agent for use by the people. Another of the selling points was the guarantee of assistance for famine or pestilence relief.

The "medicine chest clause" has been interpreted by native leaders to mean that the federal government has an obligation to provide all forms of healthcare to First Nations people on an ongoing basis.

At the time Treaty 6 was signed, the famous medicine chest clause was inserted at Indian insistence that the Indian agent should keep a medicine chest at his house for use. Today Indian thinking is this means medical care, in general terms, the medicine chest may be all they had at that time and place but today we have a broader range of medical care and this is a symbol for that.

— historian John Taylor[2]

The interpretation of that clause is very different for the federal government employees or bureaucrats and the Indian leadership because to us and to our elders and leaders who negotiated and signed that treaty, it refers to health care and health benefits for our people. And because our traditional way of healing is still present and alive but we recognized that we would need that assistance

— Former Grand Chief of the FSIN Perry Bellegarde[3]

Signatories

One of the chiefs who signed this treaty was Poundmaker. Big Bear signed an adhesion in 1882.

Timeline

Date Event
23 August 1876 First signing at Fort Carlton
28 August 1876 Second signing at Fort Carlton
9 September 1876 Fort Pitt signing
9 August 1877 Fort Pitt adhesion signing by Cree bands
25 September 1877 Blackfoot Crossing at Bow River signing (at Siksika Nation reserve, Alberta)
19 August 1878 Additional signing
29 August 1878 Battleford signing
3 September 1878 Carlton signing
18 September 1878 Additional signing, Michel Band, near Edmonton, Alberta
2 July 1879 Fort Walsh signing
8 December 1882 Further Fort Walsh signing
11 February 1889 Montreal Lake signing
10 August 1898 Colomb band signing in Manitoba
25 May 1944 Rocky Mountain House adhesion signing
13 May 1950 Further Rocky Mountain House adhesion signing
21 November 1950 Witchekan Lake signing
18 August 1954 Cochin signing
15 May 1956 Further Cochin signing
1958 The Michel Band is "enfranchised" by the Department of Indian Affairs, and the reserve is dissolved. This is the only case of an entire band (save a few individuals) being involuntarily enfranchised.[4]

List of Treaty 6 First Nations

Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations

The Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations was created in the spring of 1993 by 17 of Treaty Six band governments to be the "united political voice" of the Treaty Six First Nations.[5]

On 6 July 2012, the City of Edmonton, represented by Mayor Stephen Mandel signed a partnership agreement with the Confederacy. This believed to be the first such agreement between a city in Alberta and a group of First Nations governments. Edmonton is within Treaty 6 territory and has the second largest Aboriginal population of any municipality in Canada.[6]

See also

References