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Lheidli T'enneh Band

The Lheidli T'enneh Band also known as the Lheidli T'enneh First Nation and historically known as the Fort George Indian Band is the First Nations band government for the Lheidli T'enneh, a subgroup of the Dakelh people whose traditional territory includes the City of Prince George, British Columbia. The name means "The People from the confluence of the two rivers" in the Carrier language referring to how the Nechako River enters the Fraser River at Prince George.

Lheidli T'enneh First Nation
Lheidli T'enneh
Band number 611
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
Government
 • TypeFirst Nations Council
 • ChiefDolleen Logan
Population
 (Dec 2023)
 • Total795
 49 males, 47 females on reserve. Remainder live off reserve[1]
Time zoneUTC-7 (Pacific Time Zone (PTZ))
 • Summer (DST)DST
Postal code span
V2K 5X8
Area code250
Websitewww.lheidli.ca
Main Office: 1041 Whenun Road, Prince George, BC, V2K 5X8

The Lheidli T'enneh are Carrier people. Their traditional language, now spoken only by a few people, is a dialect of the Carrier language. The Lheidli T'enneh did not have permanent settlements in what is modern day Prince George until the arrival of the HBC post Fort George. Temporary and seasonal settlements were used across the traditional territory and archeological evidence of fishing camps along the Nechako and Fraser rivers as well as the Beaverly area.[2]

19th and 20th centuries edit

HBC Trading Post edit

The Northwest Company established a trading post near the confluence of the Nechako and Fraser rivers in the early 1820s. The Northwest Company and Husdon's Bay Company merged in 1821. First Nations in the area were expected to bring furs to the post in exchange for goods. This original post was closed in 1824 but rebuilt in 1829 further down the Fraser river. The HBC Fort George Trading post was part of a series of HBC posts in the north.

First Nations who traded with the HBC post soon developed a permanent settlement close to Fort George trading post along the Fraser river towards the confluence. In 1839 a census of the Lheidli village recorded 75 men, 50 women and 62 children for a total of 187.[3] in 1883 the Fort George Indian Reserve was established, the footprint of which would later become the land wanted and acquired by the Grand Trunk pacific Railway to build its Prince George townsite. The Fort George Reserve No.1 encompassed 1366 acres.[4] Three other reserve sites were also surveyed around the region. The land was considered to be agriculturally worthless and remote enough to not interfere the development.[4] Census in the 1890s there were 29 houses with 124 residents in the village.[4] People living in the village relied on hunting, fishing, and trapping and had also cultivated garden patches as trade with the HBC post diminished.

Roman Catholic priests and Oblate missionaries from other posts in the region visited the Lheidli T'enneh often.[4]

Acquisition of Reserve No.1 by the Railway edit

In 1908, the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway identified the Reserve No.1 land as an ideal area for a railway and station site,[4] and attempted to claim all the 1366 acres as needed for railway purposes, and thus circumvent negotiations with the Department of Indian Affairs. This was rejected. The Department of Indian Affairs wished to protect the Lheidli T'enneh's interests but also supported railway development. By 1910 the DIA agent in the area was concerned about the influence of white settlers on the Lheidli T'enneh, including the supply of liquor to the village and that "civilization has overtaken them too rapidly"[4] DIA Indian Agent John McDougall however saw that the Lheidli T'enneh had come to see the value of the land and employed that in negotiations.

Between 1908 and 1911 several offers for the acquisition of the Reserve No.1 lands were made by the GTP and others such as Charles Millar (of BC Express) who wanted to develop the land. The Department of Indian Affairs in conjunction with railroad representatives made several offers for the land. In 1910 Chief Louis described the attachment to the land and village to McDougall, who reported that "Land, Cash, and farm equipment"[4] would be needed to overcome resistance, and the band was considered to be averse to a sale. McDougall met with Chief Louis again in December 1910 offering $68,300 ($50/acre) but Chief Louis told McDougall that "they could not in their present mind surrender this reserve".[4] A vote was held at a meeting two days later with members of the Band over age 21. the vote approved the surrender of the reserve land 12–11, but Chief Louis asked to talk with his people and the Band did not consider the vote final.[4] The Band appointed Oblate Missionary E.C Bellot as an emissary to Ottawa with a larger cash demand of $1000 per acre, which was refused by DIA representatives. Upon return to Fort George, a new vote by the Band unanimously turned down the sale.[4] During this time, the business developers of Fort George Townsite opposed the sale of the reserve lands as it would lead to its rival building a competing town[4] while South Fort George, which was built close to the old HBC Post and the village, welcomed the railway and its townsite.

In 1911, federal Indian agent W.J. MacAllan took on the negotiations with assistance from Reverend Father Coccola. Father Coccola conflicted role as he had interests in the well-being of the Lheidli T'enneh but was also negotiating on behalf of the railway company[4] which might connect to his mission on Stuart Lake. Father Coccola had wanted to relocated the Lheidli T'enneh to a safer area where they would be away from settlers and could be schooled in agriculture and in religion.[4] Coccola suggested to the band that "if it tolerated intoxicating liquor and moral disorders, he would be the first to insist to have them removed".[4] Coccola made several statements that he would convince or persuade the Band to relocate if they refused offers, and even involved himself in pricing amounts that could be offers to the Lheidli T'enneh.[4] With several offers and refusals, the Lheidli T'enneh saw a split in support for a land sale. Chief Louis favored the surrender of the land, but Joseph Quah, an influential leader in the Band, wanted a higher price.[4]

 

On 18 November 1911, The Fort George Indian Band eventually agreed to sell the Reserve No.1 lands for $125,000 (one quarter to be paid immediately) which included $25,000 for construction on reserve No.2 and No.3 and the preservation of the original village cemetery.[4] The band committed to relocate by June 1912. The vote for this agreement saw 32 in favor and one against, and three abstentions. The timeline was difficult to keep as new buildings had to be constructed. Delays in contracts being awarded by the government to build a new village meant that few could move by the deadline and Band members planted crops needed later in the year. The June 1912 payment was withheld as the DIA saw the planting as refusal to leave. Chief Louis argued that the agreement stated that the payment was to be made in June and was not contingent on relocation. Winter was also coming and the crops would be needed if the new village was not built or supplies given to the Band.[4]

The new village was completed in 1913 with Band members moving there in September. The old village was destroyed "to force the Indians away"[4] and ensure that it was not reoccupied. The Fort George Herald reported the destruction of the old village as "the torch of the white man will be thrust into the remaining houses and the village will disappear quietly in a cloud of smoke".[4] Indian Agent W. J. MacAllan's accounts of the situation reveal a need on his part and the part of the GTP to strong arm the bandmembers out, targeting two cabins in the village that were empty as the residents were away hinting "I knew that to set fire to the cabins would cause a flare up of intense excitement and give me the break I needed, for a crisis had to be created before the deadlock could be broken".[5]

The site of Reserve No.2 (Shelley) was much further away from the new Prince George townsite and other communities. The land was not particularly fertile for agriculture and the Band suffered economically. The site of the old village and the HBC post would become Fort George Park. The Cemetery would become Reserve No.1A.

21st century edit

There are approximately 400 members of the Lheidli T'enneh First Nation.[3] Many also live off the reserve.

The Lheidli T'enneh Treaty edit

On October 29, 2006, the Lheidli T'enneh became the first people to initiate a treaty with British Columbia and Canada within the framework of the British Columbia Treaty Process created in response to the Delgamuukw case. It remains for the treaty to be ratified by a vote of Lheidli T'enneh band members, by the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, and by the Canadian Parliament.

On February 9, 2007, the Treaty 8 First Nations launched a legal challenge of the ratification of Lheidli T'enneh treaty. The Treaty 8 First Nations asserted that Canada, British Columbia and the Lheidli T'enneh did not adequately consult them about the overlap of the Lheidli T'enneh treaty area and the area of Treaty 8.

The Treaty 8 First Nations sought an interlocutory injunction preventing the ratification of the treaty until such time as the parties resolves the issues of the overlap. Justice Wilson of the Supreme Court of British Columbia denied the plaintiff's application for an interlocutory injunction.

A similar challenge was launched by the Secwepemc Nation on March 12, 2007.

The Lheidli T'enneh band members did not ratify the treaty in a treaty ratification vote held on March 30, 2007. In the vote 123 people voted against the treaty and 111 voted in favour of it.

In response to this outcome, the British Columbia Treaty Commission undertook a "Lheidli T’enneh Communications Probe" to determine why the treaty was not ratified. This included a survey carried out by the Mustel Group, a marketing and public opinion research firm based in Vancouver.

The Lheidli T'enneh nation is currently preparing for another ratification vote.[timeframe?]

Canada Winter Games edit

The City of Prince George, as part of its 100th anniversary celebrations, hosted the 2015 Canada Winter Games. The Lheidli T'enneh were the Official Host First Nation, the first time the Games acknowledged a First Nations as a formal partner.[6]

Fort George Park renaming edit

In 2015, Prince George City Council voted in favor of renaming Fort George Park, which is the location of the original HBC post and Lheidli T'enneh village, to Lheidli T'enneh Memorial Park.[7]

In 2017, 11 human remains were found in an area of the park being developed for a new shelter.[8] The area where remains were found is outside the fence line of the established Cemetery (reserve No.1A), but the fence line of the cemetery is disputed, and remains are likely to be found in a large area around the Cemetery.

Treaty debate edit

In June 2018, the Lheidli T'enneh First Nation voted against a proposed treaty with the federal and provincial governments, which would have granted self-governance powers.[9]

Pipeline explosion edit

The Lheidli T'enneh First Nation was affected by an explosion on the Enbridge BC Pipeline in October 2018. The explosion forced about 100 members of the Band to evacuate their homes, even though nobody was hurt in the explosion, and no property was damaged apart from the pipeline itself.[10] In 2019, the First Nation filed a lawsuit seeking a permanent injunction which would prevent Enbridge from operating the pipeline in their territory and reserves, and require the company to dismantle the pipeline and restore the affected lands to their natural state.[11]

Potlatch (Balhats) edit

In November 2019, the Lheidli T'enneh hosted their first potlatch (Balhat) in 73 years.[12]

Notable members edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Registered Population - Lheidli T'enneh". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada.
  2. ^ Prince George Free Press. Archaeologists find artifacts in Beaverly 12 Jul 2007
  3. ^ a b "Lheidli T'enneh website". 14 April 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Vogt, D. and Gamble D.A. (2010). ""You Don't Suppose the Dominion Government Wants to Cheat the Indians?": The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway and the Fort George Reserve, 1908-12". BC Studies. 166: 55–72. doi:10.14288/bcs.v0i166.288.
  5. ^ George, N. D. "Decolonizing the Empathic Settler Mind: An Autoethnographic Inquiry". Antioch University, 2014.
  6. ^ . Host First Nations Secretariat. Archived from the original on 20 October 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  7. ^ Evelyn, Charelle (Jun 15, 2015). "Welcome to Lheidli T'enneh Memorial Park".
  8. ^ Migdal ·, Alex (Jul 29, 2017). "11 historical human remains discovered in archaeological dig at Prince George park".
  9. ^ "Lheidli T'enneh First Nation votes no to government treaty". CBC News. June 24, 2018. Members of the Lheidli T'enneh First Nation in north-central B.C. have voted against a treaty that would have provided them with land, resource rights and the power to self-govern.
  10. ^ News (2018-10-10). "'It was huge': Enbridge gas pipeline ruptures, sparking massive fire and evacuation north of Prince George, B.C. | Financial Post". Retrieved 2019-03-17. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  11. ^ "First Nation affected by B.C. pipeline explosion files lawsuit against Enbridge | Globalnews.ca". globalnews.ca. 2019-02-27. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  12. ^ "Lheidli T'enneh Nation hosts first potlatch in 73 years". PG Citizen. Nov 29, 2019.
  • Poser, William (1999). Lheidli T'enneh Hubughunek (Fort George Carrier Lexicon) (third ed.). Prince George, BC: Lheidli T'enneh.
  • Runnals, Francis Edwin (1946). A History of Prince George. Prince George: the author.
  • news article about treaty signing
  • Treaty 8 Legal challenge Documents
  • reasons for judgment
  • Tribal council seeks to delay treaty ratification

External links edit

lheidli, enneh, band, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, novem. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lheidli T enneh Band news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Lheidli T enneh Band also known as the Lheidli T enneh First Nation and historically known as the Fort George Indian Band is the First Nations band government for the Lheidli T enneh a subgroup of the Dakelh people whose traditional territory includes the City of Prince George British Columbia The name means The People from the confluence of the two rivers in the Carrier language referring to how the Nechako River enters the Fraser River at Prince George Lheidli T enneh First Nation Lheidli T ennehBand number 611CountryCanadaProvinceBritish ColumbiaGovernment TypeFirst Nations Council ChiefDolleen LoganPopulation Dec 2023 Total795 49 males 47 females on reserve Remainder live off reserve 1 Time zoneUTC 7 Pacific Time Zone PTZ Summer DST DSTPostal code spanV2K 5X8Area code250Websitewww wbr lheidli wbr caMain Office 1041 Whenun Road Prince George BC V2K 5X8The Lheidli T enneh are Carrier people Their traditional language now spoken only by a few people is a dialect of the Carrier language The Lheidli T enneh did not have permanent settlements in what is modern day Prince George until the arrival of the HBC post Fort George Temporary and seasonal settlements were used across the traditional territory and archeological evidence of fishing camps along the Nechako and Fraser rivers as well as the Beaverly area 2 Contents 1 19th and 20th centuries 1 1 HBC Trading Post 1 2 Acquisition of Reserve No 1 by the Railway 2 21st century 2 1 The Lheidli T enneh Treaty 2 2 Canada Winter Games 2 3 Fort George Park renaming 2 4 Treaty debate 2 5 Pipeline explosion 2 6 Potlatch Balhats 3 Notable members 4 References 5 External links19th and 20th centuries editHBC Trading Post edit The Northwest Company established a trading post near the confluence of the Nechako and Fraser rivers in the early 1820s The Northwest Company and Husdon s Bay Company merged in 1821 First Nations in the area were expected to bring furs to the post in exchange for goods This original post was closed in 1824 but rebuilt in 1829 further down the Fraser river The HBC Fort George Trading post was part of a series of HBC posts in the north First Nations who traded with the HBC post soon developed a permanent settlement close to Fort George trading post along the Fraser river towards the confluence In 1839 a census of the Lheidli village recorded 75 men 50 women and 62 children for a total of 187 3 in 1883 the Fort George Indian Reserve was established the footprint of which would later become the land wanted and acquired by the Grand Trunk pacific Railway to build its Prince George townsite The Fort George Reserve No 1 encompassed 1366 acres 4 Three other reserve sites were also surveyed around the region The land was considered to be agriculturally worthless and remote enough to not interfere the development 4 Census in the 1890s there were 29 houses with 124 residents in the village 4 People living in the village relied on hunting fishing and trapping and had also cultivated garden patches as trade with the HBC post diminished Roman Catholic priests and Oblate missionaries from other posts in the region visited the Lheidli T enneh often 4 Acquisition of Reserve No 1 by the Railway edit In 1908 the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway identified the Reserve No 1 land as an ideal area for a railway and station site 4 and attempted to claim all the 1366 acres as needed for railway purposes and thus circumvent negotiations with the Department of Indian Affairs This was rejected The Department of Indian Affairs wished to protect the Lheidli T enneh s interests but also supported railway development By 1910 the DIA agent in the area was concerned about the influence of white settlers on the Lheidli T enneh including the supply of liquor to the village and that civilization has overtaken them too rapidly 4 DIA Indian Agent John McDougall however saw that the Lheidli T enneh had come to see the value of the land and employed that in negotiations Between 1908 and 1911 several offers for the acquisition of the Reserve No 1 lands were made by the GTP and others such as Charles Millar of BC Express who wanted to develop the land The Department of Indian Affairs in conjunction with railroad representatives made several offers for the land In 1910 Chief Louis described the attachment to the land and village to McDougall who reported that Land Cash and farm equipment 4 would be needed to overcome resistance and the band was considered to be averse to a sale McDougall met with Chief Louis again in December 1910 offering 68 300 50 acre but Chief Louis told McDougall that they could not in their present mind surrender this reserve 4 A vote was held at a meeting two days later with members of the Band over age 21 the vote approved the surrender of the reserve land 12 11 but Chief Louis asked to talk with his people and the Band did not consider the vote final 4 The Band appointed Oblate Missionary E C Bellot as an emissary to Ottawa with a larger cash demand of 1000 per acre which was refused by DIA representatives Upon return to Fort George a new vote by the Band unanimously turned down the sale 4 During this time the business developers of Fort George Townsite opposed the sale of the reserve lands as it would lead to its rival building a competing town 4 while South Fort George which was built close to the old HBC Post and the village welcomed the railway and its townsite In 1911 federal Indian agent W J MacAllan took on the negotiations with assistance from Reverend Father Coccola Father Coccola conflicted role as he had interests in the well being of the Lheidli T enneh but was also negotiating on behalf of the railway company 4 which might connect to his mission on Stuart Lake Father Coccola had wanted to relocated the Lheidli T enneh to a safer area where they would be away from settlers and could be schooled in agriculture and in religion 4 Coccola suggested to the band that if it tolerated intoxicating liquor and moral disorders he would be the first to insist to have them removed 4 Coccola made several statements that he would convince or persuade the Band to relocate if they refused offers and even involved himself in pricing amounts that could be offers to the Lheidli T enneh 4 With several offers and refusals the Lheidli T enneh saw a split in support for a land sale Chief Louis favored the surrender of the land but Joseph Quah an influential leader in the Band wanted a higher price 4 nbsp On 18 November 1911 The Fort George Indian Band eventually agreed to sell the Reserve No 1 lands for 125 000 one quarter to be paid immediately which included 25 000 for construction on reserve No 2 and No 3 and the preservation of the original village cemetery 4 The band committed to relocate by June 1912 The vote for this agreement saw 32 in favor and one against and three abstentions The timeline was difficult to keep as new buildings had to be constructed Delays in contracts being awarded by the government to build a new village meant that few could move by the deadline and Band members planted crops needed later in the year The June 1912 payment was withheld as the DIA saw the planting as refusal to leave Chief Louis argued that the agreement stated that the payment was to be made in June and was not contingent on relocation Winter was also coming and the crops would be needed if the new village was not built or supplies given to the Band 4 The new village was completed in 1913 with Band members moving there in September The old village was destroyed to force the Indians away 4 and ensure that it was not reoccupied The Fort George Herald reported the destruction of the old village as the torch of the white man will be thrust into the remaining houses and the village will disappear quietly in a cloud of smoke 4 Indian Agent W J MacAllan s accounts of the situation reveal a need on his part and the part of the GTP to strong arm the bandmembers out targeting two cabins in the village that were empty as the residents were away hinting I knew that to set fire to the cabins would cause a flare up of intense excitement and give me the break I needed for a crisis had to be created before the deadlock could be broken 5 The site of Reserve No 2 Shelley was much further away from the new Prince George townsite and other communities The land was not particularly fertile for agriculture and the Band suffered economically The site of the old village and the HBC post would become Fort George Park The Cemetery would become Reserve No 1A 21st century editThere are approximately 400 members of the Lheidli T enneh First Nation 3 Many also live off the reserve The Lheidli T enneh Treaty edit On October 29 2006 the Lheidli T enneh became the first people to initiate a treaty with British Columbia and Canada within the framework of the British Columbia Treaty Process created in response to the Delgamuukw case It remains for the treaty to be ratified by a vote of Lheidli T enneh band members by the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia and by the Canadian Parliament On February 9 2007 the Treaty 8 First Nations launched a legal challenge of the ratification of Lheidli T enneh treaty The Treaty 8 First Nations asserted that Canada British Columbia and the Lheidli T enneh did not adequately consult them about the overlap of the Lheidli T enneh treaty area and the area of Treaty 8 The Treaty 8 First Nations sought an interlocutory injunction preventing the ratification of the treaty until such time as the parties resolves the issues of the overlap Justice Wilson of the Supreme Court of British Columbia denied the plaintiff s application for an interlocutory injunction A similar challenge was launched by the Secwepemc Nation on March 12 2007 The Lheidli T enneh band members did not ratify the treaty in a treaty ratification vote held on March 30 2007 In the vote 123 people voted against the treaty and 111 voted in favour of it In response to this outcome the British Columbia Treaty Commission undertook a Lheidli T enneh Communications Probe to determine why the treaty was not ratified This included a survey carried out by the Mustel Group a marketing and public opinion research firm based in Vancouver The Lheidli T enneh nation is currently preparing for another ratification vote timeframe Canada Winter Games edit The City of Prince George as part of its 100th anniversary celebrations hosted the 2015 Canada Winter Games The Lheidli T enneh were the Official Host First Nation the first time the Games acknowledged a First Nations as a formal partner 6 Fort George Park renaming edit In 2015 Prince George City Council voted in favor of renaming Fort George Park which is the location of the original HBC post and Lheidli T enneh village to Lheidli T enneh Memorial Park 7 In 2017 11 human remains were found in an area of the park being developed for a new shelter 8 The area where remains were found is outside the fence line of the established Cemetery reserve No 1A but the fence line of the cemetery is disputed and remains are likely to be found in a large area around the Cemetery Treaty debate edit In June 2018 the Lheidli T enneh First Nation voted against a proposed treaty with the federal and provincial governments which would have granted self governance powers 9 Pipeline explosion edit The Lheidli T enneh First Nation was affected by an explosion on the Enbridge BC Pipeline in October 2018 The explosion forced about 100 members of the Band to evacuate their homes even though nobody was hurt in the explosion and no property was damaged apart from the pipeline itself 10 In 2019 the First Nation filed a lawsuit seeking a permanent injunction which would prevent Enbridge from operating the pipeline in their territory and reserves and require the company to dismantle the pipeline and restore the affected lands to their natural state 11 Potlatch Balhats edit In November 2019 the Lheidli T enneh hosted their first potlatch Balhat in 73 years 12 Notable members editKym Gouchie Marcel GagnonReferences edit Registered Population Lheidli T enneh Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Prince George Free Press Archaeologists find artifacts in Beaverly 12 Jul 2007 a b Lheidli T enneh website 14 April 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Vogt D and Gamble D A 2010 You Don t Suppose the Dominion Government Wants to Cheat the Indians The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway and the Fort George Reserve 1908 12 BC Studies 166 55 72 doi 10 14288 bcs v0i166 288 George N D Decolonizing the Empathic Settler Mind An Autoethnographic Inquiry Antioch University 2014 Lheidli 2015 Host First Nations Secretariat Archived from the original on 20 October 2015 Retrieved 15 March 2015 Evelyn Charelle Jun 15 2015 Welcome to Lheidli T enneh Memorial Park Migdal Alex Jul 29 2017 11 historical human remains discovered in archaeological dig at Prince George park Lheidli T enneh First Nation votes no to government treaty CBC News June 24 2018 Members of the Lheidli T enneh First Nation in north central B C have voted against a treaty that would have provided them with land resource rights and the power to self govern News 2018 10 10 It was huge Enbridge gas pipeline ruptures sparking massive fire and evacuation north of Prince George B C Financial Post Retrieved 2019 03 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help First Nation affected by B C pipeline explosion files lawsuit against Enbridge Globalnews ca globalnews ca 2019 02 27 Retrieved 2019 04 11 Lheidli T enneh Nation hosts first potlatch in 73 years PG Citizen Nov 29 2019 Poser William 1999 Lheidli T enneh Hubughunek Fort George Carrier Lexicon third ed Prince George BC Lheidli T enneh Runnals Francis Edwin 1946 A History of Prince George Prince George the author BC Treaty Commission news release Lheidli T enneh Final Agreement news article about treaty signing Treaty 8 Legal challenge Documents reasons for judgment Tribal council seeks to delay treaty ratification PDF BC Treaty Commission calls For ProbeExternal links editLheidli T enneh web site Lheidli Carrier Dictionary Official Lheidli T enneh Treaty website BC Treaty Commission Lheidli T enneh page First Nation Profile Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lheidli T 27enneh Band amp oldid 1217247393, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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