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Métis

The Métis (/mˈt(s)/ may-TEE(S); French: [metis]; Canadian French: [meˈtsɪs];[citation needed] Michif: [mɪˈtʃɪf]) are an Indigenous people whose historical homelands include Canada's three Prairie Provinces, as well as parts of British Columbia, the Northwest Territories, Northwest Ontario and the northern United States.[2][3][4] They have a shared history and culture, deriving from specific mixed European (primarily French, Scottish, and English) and Indigenous ancestry, which became distinct through ethnogenesis by the mid-18th century,[5] during the early years of the North American fur trade.[6]

Métis
Michif
Métis
Total population
624,220[1] (2021)
Canada624,220[1]
United StatesUnknown
Languages
Michif, Cree, Canadian French, North American English, Hand Talk, Bungee, other Indigenous languages
Religion
Predominantly Christianity (Roman Catholicism and Protestantism)
Métis
"mixed"
PeopleMétis
LanguageMichif
Métis French
Hand Talk
CountryMichif Piyii

In Canada, the Métis, with a population of 624,220 as of 2021,[1] are one of three major groups of Indigenous peoples that were legally recognized in the Constitution Act of 1982, the other two groups being the First Nations and Inuit.[7]

Smaller communities who self-identify as Métis exist in Canada and the United States,[8] such as the Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians of Montana. The United States recognizes the Little Shell Tribe as an Ojibwe Native American tribe.

Alberta is the only Canadian province with a recognized Métis land base: the eight Métis Settlements, with a population of approximately 5,000 people on 1.25 million acres (5,100 km2)[9] and the newer Metis lands near Fort McKay, purchased from the Government of Alberta in 2017.[10]

Background edit

Etymology edit

The word métis itself is originally French for "person of mixed parentage" and derives from the Latin word mixtus, "mixed."[11][12][13][14]

Semantic definitions edit

Starting in the 17th century, the French word métis was initially used as a noun by those in the North American fur trade, and by settlers in general, to refer to people of mixed European and North American Indigenous parentage in New France (which at that time extended from southern Quebec through the Great Lakes to the Mississippi River, thence southward to Mississippi and Alabama). At the time, it applied generally to French-speaking people who were of partial Indigenous and partial ethnic French descent.[12][15] It also came to be used for people of mixed European and Indigenous backgrounds in other French colonies, generally the children of unions between Frenchmen and women from the colonized areas,[12][15] including Guadeloupe in the Caribbean;[16] Senegal in West Africa;[17] Algeria in North Africa;[18] and the former French Indochina in Southeast Asia.[19]

The first documented "métis" child was a girl born about 1628 near Lake Nipissing, given the first name Marguerite, who was the daughter of a Nipissing Indian woman and Jean Nicollet de Belleborne (born about 1598, likely in Cherbourg, France).[20][21]

As French Canadians followed the North American fur trade to the west, some of the settlers made unions with different Indigenous women, including the Cree. Descendants of English or Scottish and Natives were in some cases historically called "half-breeds" or "country born". They sometimes adopted a more agrarian culture of subsistence farming and tended to be reared in Protestant denominations.[22]

While the definitions and usage of the terms "Métis", "Metis" and "metis" (lowercase) have at times been controversial and contentious, there are legal definitions.[23]

Capital 'M' Métis refers to a particular sociocultural heritage and an ethnic identification. It is more than a racial classification and refers specifically to the Métis Indigenous peoples in Canada and the United States. Numerous spellings of Métis have been used interchangeably, including métif, michif; currently the most agreed-upon spelling is Métis; however, some prefer to use Metis as inclusive of persons of both English and French descent.[24]

The spelling métis with a lowercase m functions as an adjective. The definition of the word has at times been disputed, as some people have attempted to use lower-case métis in the archaic sense of having a single, distant Indigenous ancestor or being in some other way "mixed".[23] However, the majority of Indigenous groups and legal scholars define Métis as the people who live on the Métis homeland.[25] "Most curators and scholars argue that the development of the Métis nation occurred at the Red River Settlement and that Métis families dispersed from there to other regions."[26]

Canadian Geographic's Indigenous Peoples Altas of Canada identifies Métis people as one of three Canadian Indigenous peoples in the following terms:[27]

Within non-Indigenous society, there are two competing ideas of what being Métis means. The first, when spelled with a lowercase "m" (métis), means individuals or people having mixed-race parents and ancestries, e.g., North American Indigenous and European/Euro-Canadian/Euro-American. It is a racial categorization. This is the oldest meaning of métis and is based on the French verb métisser [sic],[28] to mix races or ethnicities. The related noun for the act of race-mixing is métissage.[28] The second meaning of being Métis, and the one that is embraced by the Métis Nation, relates to a self-defining people with a distinct history in a specific region (Western Canada's prairies) with some spillover into British Columbia, Ontario, North Dakota, Montana and Northwest Territories. In this case, the term Métis is spelled with an uppercase "M" and often, but does not always, contain an accent aigu (é).

The Métis of Canada and the Métis of the United States adopted parts of their Indigenous and European cultures while forming customs and traditions of their own, as well as developing a common language.[29] Some argue that the ethnogenesis of the Métis began when the Métis organized politically at the Battle of Seven Oaks in 1816, while others argue that the ethnogenesis began prior to this battle, before fur traders emigrated from the Great Lakes region to the Western plains.[30]

Other groups and individuals edit

Scholars, Métis people, and First Nations elders and community leaders concur that only the descendants of the Red River Métis should be constitutionally recognized as Métis people, as they developed a distinct culture as a people historically, and have continued to exist as a distinct culture and community over many generations.[31][32][33][34][35]

Objections to this standard have been made to the Métis National Council, by both individuals and newly-formed groups who do not meet the established citizenship criteria.[34] These individuals and unrecognized groups have recently emerged largely in the Maritime, Quebec, and Ontario regions, and are generally referred to as "Eastern Metis".[33] These complainants usually assert that having a single, distant, Indigenous or possibly-Indigenous ancestor should be enough to be considered Métis. They also disagree that they should have to meet the resident requirement as defined by the federally recognized Métis organizations.[33][36]

Since the early 2000s, there has been a meteoric rise in the number of people self-identifying as Métis in Eastern Canada. New census data shows the highest increases in self-reported “Métis” people between 2006 and 2016 were in Québec (149.2 per cent) and in Nova Scotia (124.3 per cent). In Canada during the same period, the increase was less than 60 per cent. Rather than a spike in birth rates, almost all of the increase is due to white Franco-Québécois and Acadian settlers "becoming" Indigenous.[36]

David Chartrand, president of the Manitoba Métis Federation, responding in 2020 said he does not believe these new, self-identified individuals and communities are Métis,

They are not part of us, never were. There is no connection historically in any way or fashion that they can use as even an argument to say that they are part of our nation.[34]

In a 2016 decision, Daniels v Canada (Indian Affairs and Northern Development), the Supreme Court of Canada stated in par. 17:[37]

There is no consensus on who is considered Métis or a non-status Indian, nor need there be. Cultural and ethnic labels do not lend themselves to neat boundaries. 'Métis' can refer to the historic Métis community in Manitoba's Red River Settlement or it can be used as a general term for anyone with mixed European and Aboriginal heritage. Some mixed-ancestry communities identify as Métis, others as Indian.

Indigenous elders from the Miꞌkmaq and other First Nations communities in the Eastern part of Canada, along with recognized Métis leaders, do not agree with the settler-colonial perspective, and say that there is no distinct Metis community or culture in the Maritimes or Quebec, and that these newly-formed, "Eastern Metis" groups are not legitimate:[35][33]

People of mixed blood in the region either integrated into Indigenous communities or assimilated with European newcomers, unlike the distinct Metis People of Louis Riel in Western Canada.

"When you're looking at the Maritimes and Quebec, the children of intermarriage were accepted by either party, in our case the Mi'kmaq or the Acadian," Mi'kmaw elder and historian Daniel Paul says. "There was no such thing as a Metis community here in this region."[33]

Riel's Métis edit

Quoting Riel from Tremaudan's Histoire de la nation métisse dans l'ouest canadien:[38][39]

The Métis have as paternal ancestors the former employees of the Hudson's Bay and North-West Companies, and as maternal ancestors Indian women belonging to various tribes.

The French word Métis is derived from the Latin participle mixtus, which means "mixed"; it expresses well the idea it represents.

Quite appropriate also, was the corresponding English term "Half-Breed" in the first generation of blood mixing, but now that European blood and Indian blood are mingled to varying degrees, it is no longer generally applicable.

The French word Métis expresses the idea of this mixture in as satisfactory a way as possible, and becomes by that fact, a proper race name suitable for our race.

A little observation in passing without offending anyone.

Very polite and amiable people, may sometimes say to a Métis, “You don't look at all like a Métis. You surely can't have much Indian blood. Why, you could pass anywhere for pure White.”

The Métis, a trifle disconcerted by the tone of these remarks, would like to lay claim to both sides of his origin. But fear of upsetting or totally dispelling these kind assumptions holds him back. While he is hesitating to choose among the different replies that come to mind, words like these succeed in silencing him completely. "Ah! bah! You have scarcely any Indian blood. You haven't enough worth mentioning." Here is how the Métis think privately.

"It is true that our Indian origin is humble, but it is indeed just that we honour our mothers as well as our fathers. Why should we be so preoccupied with what degree of mingling we have of European and Indian blood? No matter how little we have of one or the other, do not both gratitude and filial love require us to make a point of saying, 'We are Métis."

Métis people in Canada edit

 
Contemporary lithograph of the Battle of Batoche

Métis people in Canada are specific cultural communities who trace their descent to First Nations and European settlers, primarily the French, in the early decades of the colonisation of Canada. Métis peoples are recognized as one of Canada's Indigenous peoples under the Constitution Act of 1982, along with First Nations and Inuit. On April 8, 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada Daniels v Canada appeal held that "Métis and non status Indians are 'Indians' under s. 91(24)", but excluded the Powley test as the only criterion to determine Metis identity. Canadian Métis represent the majority of people who identify as Métis, although there are a number of Métis in the United States. In Canada, the population is 587,545 with 20.5 percent living in Ontario and 19.5 percent in Alberta. The Acadians of eastern Canada, some of whom have mixed French and Indigenous origins,[40] are not Métis according to Indian and Northern Affairs Canada and other historic Indigenous communities. This viewpoint sees Métis as historically the children of French fur traders and Nehiyaw women of western and west central Canada.[41]

While the Métis initially developed as the mixed-race descendants of early unions between First Nations and colonial-era European settlers (usually Indigenous women and male French settlers), within generations (particularly in central and western Canada), a distinct Métis culture developed. The women in the unions in eastern Canada were usually Algonquin and Ojibwe, and in western Canada they were Saulteaux, Cree, Ojibwe, Nakoda and Dakota/Lakota or of mixed descent from these peoples. Their unions with European men engaged in the fur trade in the Old Northwest were often of the type known as marriage à la façon du pays ("according to the custom of the country").[42]

After New France was ceded to Great Britain's control in 1763, there was an important distinction between French Métis born of francophone voyageur fathers and the Anglo-Métis (known as "country born" or Mixed Bloods, for instance in the 1870 census of Manitoba) descended from English or Scottish fathers.[43] Today these two cultures have essentially coalesced into location-specific Métis traditions. This does not preclude a range of other Métis cultural expressions across North America.[44][45] Such polyethnic people were historically referred to by other terms, many of which are now considered to be offensive, such as Mixed-bloods, Half-breeds, Bois-Brûlés, Bungi, Black Scots and Jackatars,[46] the latter term having meaning in a Newfoundland context.[47]

While people of Métis culture or heritage are found across Canada, the traditional Métis "homeland" (areas where Métis populations and culture developed as a distinct ethnicity historically) includes much of the present-day Canadian Prairies along with parts of Northwestern Ontario, British Columbia, and the Northwest-Nunavut Territory.[35][48] The most well-known group are the "Red River Métis", centering on southern and central parts of Manitoba along the Red River of the North.

Closely related are the Métis in the United States, primarily those in border areas such as Northern Michigan, the Red River Valley and Eastern Montana. These were areas in which there was considerable Aboriginal and European mixing due to the 19th-century fur trade. However, they do not have a federally recognized status in the United States, except as enrolled members of federally recognized tribes.[49] Although Métis existed farther west than today's Manitoba, much less is known about the Métis of Northern Canada.

Identity edit

Self-identity and legal status edit

In 2016, 587,545 people in Canada self-identified as Métis. They represented 35.1% of the total Aboriginal population and 1.5% of the total Canadian population.[50] Most Métis people today are descendants of unions between generations of Métis individuals and live in urban areas. The exception are the Métis in rural and northern parts that exist in close proximity to First Nations communities.

Over the past century, countless Métis have assimilated into the general European Canadian populations. Métis heritage (and thereby Aboriginal ancestry) is more common than is generally realized.[42] People with more distant ancestry, who assimilated into non-Métis society, are not part of the Métis ethnicity or culture.[51][52]

"What we're seeing is the phenomenon of non-Indigenous people, or those with a very distant ancestry – from the 1600 and 1700s – now claiming that they now have political rights which prevail over those Indigenous nations,” said Veldon Coburn, a professor in Indigenous studies at the University of Ottawa and member of the Algonquins of Pikwàkanagàn.[51]

Unlike among First Nations peoples, laws concerning the Métis make no distinction between Treaty status and non-Treaty status. The Métis did not sign treaties with Canada, with the exception of an adhesion to Treaty 3 in Northwest Ontario. This adherence was never implemented by the federal government. The legal definition is not yet fully developed. Section Thirty-five of the Constitution Act, 1982 recognizes the rights of Indian, Métis and Inuit; however, that text does not define these groups.[42] In 2003, the Supreme Court of Canada defined a Métis person as someone who self-identifies as Métis, has an ancestral connection to the historic Métis community, and is accepted by the modern community with continuity to the historic Métis community.[53]

View of identity edit

The most well-known and historically documented mixed-ancestry population in Canadian history are the groups who developed during the fur trade in south-eastern Rupert's Land, primarily in the Red River Settlement (now Manitoba) and the Southbranch Settlements (Saskatchewan). In the late nineteenth century, they organized politically (led by men who had European educations) and had confrontations with the Canadian government in an effort to assert their independence.

This was not the only place where some degree of intermixing (métisser)[28] between European and Indigenous people occurred. It was part of the history of colonization from the earliest days of settlements on the Atlantic Coast throughout the Americas.[54]: 2, 5  But the strong sense of ethnic national identity among the mostly French- and Michif-speaking Métis along the Red River, demonstrated during armed resistance movements led by Louis Riel, resulted in a specific use of the term "Métis" throughout Canada.

Continued organizing and political activity resulted in "the Métis" gaining official recognition from the national government as one of the recognized Aboriginal groups in S.35 of the Constitution Act, 1982, which states:[55]

35. (1) The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the Aboriginal People of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.

(2) In this Act, "Aboriginal Peoples of Canada" includes the Indian, Inuit, and Métis Peoples of Canada.
— Constitution Act, 1982

Section 35(2) does not define criteria for an individual who is Métis. This has left open the question of whether "Métis" in this context should apply only to the descendants of the Red River Métis or to all mixed-ancestry groups and individuals. Many members of First Nations may have mixed ancestry but identify primarily by the tribal nation, rather than as Métis.

Lack of a legal definition edit

In contrast to the Indian Act, which creates an Indian Register for all (Status) First Nations people, settler-colonial definitions of Métis, Metis and metis have at times been at odds with the definitions of the communities themselves.[33] Some commentators have argued that one of the rights of an Indigenous people is to define their own identity, precluding the need for a government-sanctioned definition.[54]: 9–10 

Alberta is the only province to have defined the term in law under the Métis Settlements Act (MSA), which defines a Métis as "a person of Aboriginal ancestry who identifies with Métis history and culture". This was done in the context of creating a test for legal eligibility for membership in one of Alberta's eight Métis settlements. The MSA, together with requirements at the community level (Elder & community acceptance) create the legal requirements for residency on the Métis Settlements. In Alberta law, belonging to a "Métis Association" (Métis National Council or any of its affiliates, Métis Federation of Canada, Congress of Aboriginal People) does not grant one the rights granted to members of the Alberta Métis Settlements. The MSA test excludes those people who are Status Indians (that is, a member of a First Nation), an exclusion which was upheld by the Supreme Court in Alberta v. Cunningham (2011).[54]: 10–11 

The number of people self-identifying as Métis has risen sharply since the late 20th century: between 1996 and 2006, the population of Canadians who self-identify as Métis nearly doubled, to approximately 390,000.[54]: 2  From 2006 to 2016, according to census results from Statistics Canada, those numbers rose by 125% in Nova Scotia, and 150% in Quebec. Also in that time, "Dozens" of new "Metis" organizations appeared, none of whom could demonstrate any ties to continually-existing Métis communities.[33]

Until R v. Powley (2003), there was no legal definition of Métis other than the legal requirements found in the Métis Settlements Act of 1990. The Powley case involved a claim by Steven Powley and his son Rodney, two members of the Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario Métis community who were asserting Métis hunting rights. The Supreme Court of Canada outlined three broad factors to identify Métis who have Hunting Rights as Aboriginal peoples:[56]

  • self-identification as a Métis individual;
  • ancestral connection to an historic Métis community; and
  • acceptance by a Métis community.

All three factors must be present for an individual to qualify under the SCC legal definition of Métis. In addition, the court stated that

[t]he term Métis in s. 35 does not encompass all individuals with mixed Indian and European heritage; rather, it refers to distinctive peoples who, in addition to their mixed ancestry, developed their own customs, ways of life, and recognizable group identity separate from their Indian or Inuit and European forebears.[54]: 9  The court was explicit that its ten-point test is not a comprehensive definition of Métis.

Questions remain as to whether Métis have treaty rights; this is an explosive issue in the Canadian Aboriginal community today. It has been stated that "only First Nations could legitimately sign treaties with the government so, by definition, Métis have no Treaty rights."[57] One treaty names Métis in the title: the Halfbreed (Métis in the French version) Adhesion to Treaty 3. Another, the Robinson Superior Treaty of 1850, listed 84 persons classified as "half-breeds" in the Treaty, so included them and their descendants.[58] Hundreds, if not thousands, of Métis were initially included in a number of other treaties, and then excluded under later amendments to the Indian Act.[57]

Definitions used by Métis representative organizations edit

Two main advocacy groups claim to speak for the Métis in Canada: the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP) and the Métis National Council (MNC). Each uses different approaches to define Métis individuals. The CAP, which has nine regional affiliates, represents all Indigenous peoples in Canada who are living off-reserve, including Métis and non-Status Indians. It does not provide a definition of "Métis", but instead leaves each affiliate determine its own membership criteria.

Due to the exclusion of a Métis representative among the Native Council of Canada's two seats at the Constitutional Conference in 1983, the Manitoba Métis Federation (MMF), the Association of Métis and Non-Status Indians of Saskatchewan (AMNSIS) and the Métis Association of Alberta (MAA) withdrew from the NCC (CAP's predecessor) and formed the Métis National Council. Its political leadership of the time stated that the NCC's "pan-Aboriginal approach to issues did not allow the Métis Nation to effectively represent itself".[54]: 11  The MNC views the Métis as a single nation with a common history and culture centred on the fur trade of "west-central North America" in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This position has been subject to much debate and controversy.[59][60]

In 2003, MNC had five provincial affiliates:

  • Métis Nation of Ontario Secretariat,
  • Manitoba Métis Federation Inc.,
  • Métis Nation - Saskatchewan,
  • Métis Nation of Alberta, and the
  • Métis Nation of British Columbia.

The Metis Nation of Alberta (MNA), formerly known as the Métis Association of Alberta (MAA), adopted the following "Definition of Métis":

Métis means a person who self-identifies as a Métis, is distinct from other aboriginal peoples, is of historic Métis Nation ancestry, and is accepted by the Métis Nation.[61]

Several local, independent Métis organizations have been founded in Canada. In Northern Canada neither the CAP nor the MNC have affiliates; here local Métis organizations deal directly with the federal government and are part of the Aboriginal land claims process. Three of the comprehensive settlements (modern treaties) in force in the Northwest Territories include benefits for Métis people who can prove local Aboriginal ancestry prior to 1921 (Treaty 11).[54]: 13 

The federal government recognizes the Métis National Council as the representative Métis group.[62] In December 2016, Prime Minister Trudeau made a commitment to the leaders of the Assembly of First Nations, the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, and the Métis National Council to have annual meetings. He also committed to two other initiatives aimed at heeding the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) which examined abuses at Indian Residential Schools.[62]

Indigenous Affairs Canada, the relevant federal ministry, deals with the MNC. On April 13, 2017, the two parties signed the Canada-Métis Nation Accord, with the goal of working with the Métis Nation, as represented by the Métis National Council, on a Nation to Nation basis.[63]

In response to the Powley decision, Métis organizations are issuing Métis Nation citizenship cards to their members. Several organizations are registered with the Canadian government to provide Métis cards.[64] The criteria to receive a card and the rights associated with the card vary with each organization. For example, for membership in the Métis Nation of Alberta (MNA), an applicant must provide a documented genealogy and family tree dating to the mid-1800s, proving descent from one or more members of historic Métis groups.[65]

Cultural definitions edit

Cultural definitions of Métis identity inform legal and political ones.

The 1996 Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples stated:

'Métis' means a person who self-identifies as Métis, is distinct from other Aboriginal peoples, is of historic Métis Nation Ancestry and who is accepted by the Métis Nation.[54]: 12  Many Canadians have mixed Aboriginal/non-Aboriginal ancestry, but that does not make them Métis or even Aboriginal … What distinguishes Métis people from everyone else is that they associate themselves with a culture that is distinctly Métis.[54]: 14 

Traditional markers of Métis culture include use of Aboriginal-European languages, such as Michif (French-Cree-Dene) and Bungi (Cree-Ojibwa-English); distinctive clothing, such as the arrowed sash (ceinture flêchée); a rich repertoire of fiddle music, jigs and square dances, and practising a traditional economy based on hunting, trapping, and gathering. However, these cultural markers do not exclude Métis that do not partake in them.[54]: 14–15 

Canadian history edit

 
The Trapper's Bride by Alfred Jacob Miller, 1837

During the height of the North American fur trade in New France from 1650 onward, many French and British fur traders married First Nations and Inuit women, mainly Cree, Ojibwa or Saulteaux located in the Great Lakes area and later into the north west.[66] The majority of these fur traders were French and Scottish; the French majority were Catholic.[67] These marriages are commonly referred to as marriage à la façon du pays or marriage according to the "custom of the country."[68]

 
Métis fur trader, c. 1870

At first, the Hudson's Bay Company officially forbade these relationships. However, many Indigenous peoples actively encouraged them, because they drew fur traders into Indigenous kinship circles, creating social ties that supported the economic relationships developing between them and Europeans. When Indigenous women married European men, they introduced them to their people and their culture, taught them about the land and its resources, and worked alongside them. Indigenous women paddled and steered canoes, made moccasins out of moose skin, netted webbing for snowshoes, skinned animals and dried their meat for pemmican, split and dried fish, snared rabbits and partridges, and helped to manufacture birchbark canoes. Intermarriage made the fur trade more successful.[69]

The children of these marriages were often introduced to Catholicism, but grew up in primarily First Nations societies.[69] They were thought of as the familial bond between the Europeans and First Nations and Inuit of North America. As adults, the men often worked as fur-trade company interpreters, as well as fur trappers in their turn.[70] Many of the first generations of Métis lived within the First Nations societies of their wives and children, but also started to marry Métis women.

By the early 19th century, marriage between European fur traders and First Nations or Inuit women started to decline as European fur traders began to marry Métis women instead, because Métis women were familiar with both white and Indigenous cultures, and could interpret.[69]

According to historian Jacob A. Schooley, the Métis developed over at least two generations and within different economic classes. In the first stage, "servant" (employee) traders of the fur trade companies, known as wintering partners, would stay for the season with First Nations bands, and make a "country marriage" with a high-status native woman. This woman and her children would move to live in the vicinity of a trading fort or post, becoming "House Indians" (as they were called by the company men). House Indians eventually formed distinct bands. Children raised within these "House Indian" bands often became employees of the companies. (Foster cites the York boat captain Paulet Paul as an example). Eventually this second-generation group ended employment with the company and became commonly known as "freemen" traders and trappers. They lived with their families raising children in a distinct culture, accustomed to the fur-trade life, that valued free trading and the buffalo hunt in particular. He considered that the third generation, who were sometimes Métis on both sides, were the first true Métis. He suggests that in the Red River region, many "House Indians" (and some non-"House" First Nations) were assimilated into Métis culture due to the Catholic church's strong presence in that region. In the Fort Edmonton region, however, many House Indians never adopted a Métis identity but continued to identify primarily as Cree, Saulteaux, Ojibwa, and Chipweyan descendants up until the early 20th century.[71][72] The Métis played a vital role in the success of the western fur trade. They were skilled hunters and trappers, and were raised to appreciate both Aboriginal and European cultures.[73] Métis understanding of both societies and customs helped bridge cultural gaps, resulting in better trading relationships.[73] The Hudson's Bay Company discouraged unions between their fur traders and First Nations and Inuit women, while the North West Company (the English-speaking Quebec-based fur trading company) supported such marriages. Trappers often married First Nations women too, and operated outside company structures.[74] The Métis peoples were respected as valuable employees of both fur trade companies, due to their skills as voyageurs, bison hunters, and interpreters, and for their knowledge of the lands.

 
Rupert's Land, showing location of York Factory

By the early 19th century, European immigrants, mainly Scottish farmers, along with Métis families from the Great Lakes region moved to the Red River Valley in present-day Manitoba.[75][76] The Hudson's Bay Company, which now administered a monopoly over the territory then called Rupert's Land, assigned plots of land to European settlers.[77] The allocation of Red River land caused conflict with those already living in the area, as well as with the North West Company, whose trade routes had been cut in half. Many Métis were working as fur traders with both the North West Company and the Hudson's Bay Company. Others were working as free traders, or buffalo hunters supplying pemmican to the fur trade.[78] The buffalo were declining in number, and the Métis and First Nations had to go farther and further west to hunt them.[79] Profits from the fur trade were declining because of a reduction in European demand due to changing tastes, as well as the need for the Hudson's Bay Company to extend its reach farther from its main posts to get furs.

Most references to the Métis in the 19th century applied to the Plains Métis, but more particularly the Red River Métis.[71] But, the Plains Métis tended to identify by occupational categories: buffalo hunters, pemmican and fur traders, and "tripmen" in the York boat fur brigades among the men;[71] the moccasin sewers and cooks among the women. The largest community in the Assiniboine-Red River district had a different lifestyle and culture from those Métis located in the Saskatchewan, Alberta, Athabasca, and Peace river valleys to the west.[71]

 
Métis drivers with Red River carts, c. 1860

In 1869, two years after Canadian Confederacy, the Government of Canada exerted its power over the people living in Rupert's Land after it acquired the land in the mid-19th century from the Hudson's Bay Company.[80] The Métis and the Anglo-Métis (commonly known as Countryborn, children of First Nations women and Orcadian, other Scottish or English men),[81] joined forces to stand up for their rights. They wanted to protect their traditional ways of life against an aggressive and distant Anglo-Canadian government and its local colonizing agents.[77] An 1870 census of Manitoba classified the population as follows: 11,963 total people. Of this number 558 were defined as Indians (First Nations). There were 5,757 Métis and 4,083 English-speaking Mixed Bloods. The remaining 1,565 people were of predominately European, Canadian or American background.

During this time the Canadian government signed treaties (known as the "Numbered Treaties") with various First Nations. These Nations ceded property rights to almost the entire western plains to the Government of Canada. In return for their ceding traditional lands, the Canadian government promised food, education, medical help, etc.[82] While the Métis generally did not sign any treaty as a group, they were sometimes included, even listed as "half-breeds" in some records.[83]

In the late 19th century, following the British North America Act (1867), Louis Riel, a Métis who was formally educated, became a leader of the Métis in the Red River area. He denounced the Canadian government surveys on Métis lands in a speech delivered in late August 1869 in front of Saint Boniface Cathedral.[84] The Métis became more fearful when the Canadian government appointed the notoriously anti-French William McDougall as the Lieutenant Governor of the Northwest Territories on September 28, 1869, in anticipation of a formal transfer of lands to take effect in December.[85]} On November 2, 1869, Louis Riel and 120 men seized Upper Fort Garry, the administrative headquarters of the Hudson's Bay Company. This was the first overt act of Métis resistance.[84] On March 4, 1870, the Provisional Government, led by Louis Riel, executed Thomas Scott after Scott was convicted of insubordination and treason.[84] The elected Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia[86] subsequently sent three delegates to Ottawa to negotiate with the Canadian government. This resulted in the Manitoba Act and that province's entry into the Canadian Confederation. Due to the execution of Scott, Riel was charged with murder and fled to the United States in exile.[77]

 
Copy of the "Warrant to Apprehend" Riel and Lépine, issued in Winnipeg

In March 1885, the Métis heard that a contingent of 500 North-West Mounted Police was heading west.[87] They organized and formed the Provisional Government of Saskatchewan, with Pierre Parenteau as president and Gabriel Dumont as adjutant-general. Riel took charge of a few hundred armed men. They suffered defeat by Canadian armed forces in a conflict known as the North-West Resistance, which occurred in northern Saskatchewan from March 26 to May 12, 1885.[88][89][90][91] Gabriel Dumont fled to the United States, while Riel, Poundmaker, and Big Bear surrendered. Big Bear and Poundmaker each were convicted and received a three-year sentence. On July 6, 1885, Riel was convicted of high treason and was sentenced to hang. Riel appealed but he was executed on November 16, 1885.[77]

Culture edit

Language edit

A majority of the Métis once spoke, and many still speak, either Métis French or an Indigenous language such as Cree, Anishinaabemowin, Denésoliné, etc. A few in some regions spoke a mixed language called Michif which is composed of Plains Cree verbs and French nouns. Michif, Mechif or Métchif is a phonetic spelling of the Métis pronunciation of Métif, a variant of Métis.[92] The Métis today predominantly speak Canadian English, with Canadian French a strong second language, as well as numerous Aboriginal tongues.[93]

Michif is most used in the United States, notably in the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation of North Dakota. There Michif is the official language of the Métis who reside on this Chippewa (Ojibwe) reservation.[94] After years of decline in use of these languages, the provincial Métis councils are encouraging their revival, use in communities and teaching in schools. The encouragement and use of Métis French and Michif is growing due to outreach after at least a generation of decline.[95]

The 19th-century community of Anglo-Métis, more commonly known as Countryborn, were children of people in the Rupert's Land fur trade; they were typically of Orcadian, other Scottish, or English paternal descent and Aboriginal maternal descent.[95] Their first languages would have been Aboriginal (Cree language, Saulteaux language, Assiniboine language, etc.) and English. The Gaelic and Scots spoken by Orcadians and other Scots became part of the creole language referred to as "Bungee".[96]

Flag edit

The Métis flag is one of the oldest patriotic flags originating in Canada.[97] The Métis have two flags. Both flags use the same design of a central infinity symbol, but are different colours. The first red flag was given to Cuthbert Grant in 1815 by the North-West Company as reported by James Sutherland. Days before the Battle of Seven Oaks, "La Grenouillère" in 1816, Peter Fidler recorded Cuthbert Grant flying the blue flag. The red and blue are not cultural or linguistic identifiers and do not represent the companies.[98]

Cultural genocide edit

In 2019, the final report, Reclaiming Power and Place,[99] by the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls stated "The violence the National Inquiry heard amounts to a race-based genocide of Indigenous Peoples, including First Nations, Inuit and Métis, which especially targets women and girls."

Land ownership edit

Issues of land ownership became a central theme, as the Métis sold most of the 600,000 acres (2430 km2) they received in the first settlement.[100][101]

During the 1930s, political activism arose in Métis communities in Alberta and Saskatchewan over land rights, and some filed land claims for the return of certain lands.[102] Five men, sometimes dubbed "The Famous Five", (James P. Brady, Malcolm Norris, Peter Tomkins Jr., Joe Dion, Felix Callihoo) were instrumental in having the Alberta government form the 1934 "Ewing Commission", headed by Albert Ewing, to deal with land claims[103] The Alberta government passed the Métis Population Betterment Act in 1938.The Act provided funding and land to the Métis.[104] (The provincial government later rescinded portions of the land in certain areas.[104])

In 1972 the Red River Point Society began leasing land around the community of Fort McKay, Alberta on behalf of the Metis community there.[105] In 2017, the Fort McKay local of the Metis Nation of Alberta purchased some land outright.[10]

Organizations edit

Pre-Batoche edit

 
Councillors of the Métis Provisional Government, 1870. Louis Riel sits in the centre.

he Provisional Government of Saskatchewan was the name given by Louis Riel to the independent state he declared during the North-West Rebellion (Resistance) of 1885 in what is today the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The governing council was named the Exovedate, Latin for "of the flock".[106] The council debated issues ranging from military policy to local bylaws and theological issues. It met at Batoche, Saskatchewan, and exercised real authority only over the Southbranch Settlement. The provisional government collapsed that year after the Battle of Batoche.

L'Association des Métis d'Alberta et les Territories du Nord-Ouest (1928) and Métis Association of Alberta (1932) edit

Founded by the "Metis famous five", this was the first stable Metis organization in Alberta that could advocate to the provincial government there. It led to the creation of the Ewing Commission to study Metis issues, which in turn resulted in the Métis Population Betterment Act and the creation of the Metis Settlements.

Native Council of Canada (1971) and Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (1993) edit

Founded in 1971, this was a pan-Indigenous umbrella group that included member organizations that represented all off-reserve First Nations as well as the Metis. In 1983, many of its Western Metis members split off to from the Metis National Council. The Native Council of Canada continues today as the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP) and its nine regional affiliates represent all Aboriginal people who are not part of the reserve system, including Métis and non-Status Indians.

Metis National Council (1983) edit

The Métis National Council was formed in 1983, following the recognition of the Métis as "aboriginal peoples of Canada", in Section Thirty-five of the Constitution Act, 1982.[107] The MNC was a member of the World Council of Indigenous Peoples (WCIP).[citation needed] In 1997 the Métis National Council was granted NGO Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council. The MNC's first ambassador to this group was Clement Chartier. MNC is a founding member of the American Council of Indigenous Peoples (ACIP).[108]

The Métis National Council is currently composed of four provincial Métis organizations, though numbers have varied over time.[109] namely,

There used to be five groups, but in September 2021 the Manitoba Metis Federation left over membership issues involving the Métis Nation of Ontario (MNO), with President David Chartrand citing issues of the Council accepting the MNO despite the MNO having "nearly 80 per cent non-Métis Nation Citizens in their registry."[111] The Métis National Council has stated that they reject the idea of new Ontario Métis communities,[35] and in 2020 they suspended the membership of the Métis Nation of Ontario,[112] due to concerns that 90% of the MNOs registered members did not fulfill the requirements of citizenship put in place by the National Council in 2002, notably the requirement for an ancestral link to the Métis homelands and the Red River area specifically.[112][113]. On March 22, 2022, in response to David Chartrand's comments on MNO suspension, President Margaret Froh stated her position that "The MNO was never suspended, the MNO was on probation and there was a decision by just a few individuals declaring that the MNO was suspended when in fact that wasn't correct and in fact we (MNO) went to court and the court concluded we were not suspended.[114] The Ontario group had granted memberships to people from four disputed communities:[115][116] Mattawa, Georgian Bay, Killarney, and Temiskaming, claiming these groups consist of Métis people, and not simply regions inhabited by First Nations individuals and some settlers, but without cultural ties to the recognized Métis communities.[117] When the suspension was announced, a motion was passed to create a panel of experts, including representatives from the four Métis Nation governments (including MNO), to "gather information and present findings and recommendations" on how to proceed.[115]

The National Council holds province-wide ballot box elections for political positions in these associations, held at regular intervals, for regional and provincial leadership. Métis citizens and their communities are represented and participate in these Métis governance structures by way of elected Locals or Community Councils, as well as provincial assemblies held annually.[118]

Métis settlements of Alberta edit

 
A Métis flag. National symbols in settlements are common, such as the motto "Our People, Our Land, Our Culture, Our Future"

The Métis settlements in Alberta are the only recognized land base of Métis in Canada. They are represented and governed collectively by a unique Métis government known as the Métis Settlements General Council (MSGC),[119] also known as the "All-Council". The MSGC is the provincial, national, and international representative of the Federated Métis Settlements. It holds fee simple land title via Letters Patents to 1.25 million acres (5060 km2) of land, making the MSGC the largest land holder in the province, other than the Crown in the Right of Alberta. The MSGC is the only recognized Métis Government in Canada with prescribed land, power, and jurisdiction via the Métis Settlements Act.[120] (This legislation followed legal suits filed by the Métis Settlements against the Crown in the 1970s).

The Métis settlements consist of predominantly Indigenous Métis populations native to Northern Alberta – distinct from those of the Red River, the Great Lakes, and other migrant Métis from further east. However, following the Riel and Dumont resistances some Red-River Métis fled westward, where they married into the contemporary Métis settlement populations during the end of the 19th century and into the early 20th century. Historically referred to as the "Nomadic Half-breeds", the Métis of Northern Alberta have a unique history.[121] Their fight for land is still evident today with the eight contemporary Métis settlements.[122]

Following the formal establishment of the Métis settlements, then called Half-Breed Colonies, in the 1930s by a distinct Métis political organization, the Métis populations in Northern Alberta were the only Métis to secure communal Métis lands. During renewed Indigenous activism during the 1960s into the 1970s, political organizations were formed or revived among the Métis. In Alberta, the Métis settlements united as: The "Alberta Federation of Métis Settlement Associations" in the mid-1970s. Today, the Federation is represented by the Métis Settlements General Council.[119]

During the constitutional talks of 1982, the Métis were recognized as one of the three Aboriginal peoples of Canada, in part by the Federation of Métis Settlements. In 1990, the Alberta government, following years of conferences and negotiations between the Federation of Métis Settlements (FMS) and the Crown in the Right of Alberta, restored land titles to the northern Métis communities through the Métis Settlement Act, replacing the Métis Betterment Act.[123] Originally the first Métis settlements in Alberta were called colonies and consisted of:

  • Buffalo Lake (Caslan) or Beaver River
  • Cold Lake
  • East Prairie (south of Lesser Slave Lake)
  • Elizabeth (east of Elk Point)
  • Fishing Lake (Packechawanis)
  • Gift Lake (Ma-cha-cho-wi-se) or Utikuma Lake
  • Goodfish Lake
  • Kikino
  • Kings Land
  • Marlboro
  • Paddle Prairie (or Keg River)
  • Peavine (Big Prairie, north of High Prairie)
  • Touchwood
  • Wolf Lake (north of Bonnyville)

In the 1960s, the settlements of Marlboro, Touchwood, Cold Lake, and Wolf Lake were dissolved by Order-in-Council by the Alberta Government. The remaining Métis Settlers were forced to move into one of the eight remaining Métis Settlements – leaving the eight contemporary Métis Settlements.

The position of Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians was created in 1985 as a portfolio in the Canadian Cabinet.[124] The Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development is officially responsible only for Status Indians and largely with those living on Indian reserves. The new position was created in order provide a liaison between the federal government and Métis and non-status Aboriginal peoples, urban Aboriginals, and their representatives.[124]

Ontario Métis Aboriginal Association edit

The Woodland Métis are not affiliated with the Métis Nation of Ontario (MNO) and MNO President Tony Belcourt said in 2005 that he did not know who OMAA members are, but that they are not Métis.[125] In a Supreme Court of Canada appeal (Document C28533, page 17), the federal government states that "membership in OMAA and/or MNO does not establish membership in the specific local aboriginal community for the purposes of establishing a s. 35 [Indigenous and treaty] right. Neither OMAA nor the MNO constitute the sort of discrete, historic and site-specific community contemplated by Van der Peet capable of holding a constitutionally protected aboriginal right".[126] (See: Other groups and individuals)

Distribution edit

According to the 2016 Canada Census, a total of 587,545 individuals self-identified as Métis.[127] However, it is doubtful that all such individuals would meet the objective tests laid out in the Supreme Court decisions Powley and Daniels and therefore qualify as "Métis" for the purposes of Canadian law. Data from this section is from the 2016 Canadian Census by Statistics Canada.[128]

Canadians identifying as Métis
Province / Territory Percentage of self-identified Métis
(out of total population)
Canada total 1.7%
Newfoundland and Labrador 1.5%
Prince Edward Island 0.6%
Nova Scotia 2.8%
New Brunswick 1.5%
Quebec 0.8%
Ontario 1.0%
Manitoba 7.3%
Saskatchewan 5.2%
Alberta 2.9%
British Columbia 2.0%
Yukon 2.9%
Northwest Territories 7.1%
Nunavut 0.5%

Métis people in the United States edit

 
Paul Kane's oil painting Half-Breeds Running Buffalo, depicting a Métis buffalo hunt on the prairies of Dakota in June 1846

Métis people in the United States are a specific culture and community, who descend from unions between Native American and early European colonist parents – usually Indigenous women who married French, and later Scottish or English, men, who worked as fur trappers and traders during the 17th to 19th centuries in the fur trade era. The women were usually Algonquian, Ojibwe and Cree. They developed as an ethnic and cultural group from the descendants of these unions.

In the French colonies, people of mixed Indigenous and French ancestry were referred to by those who spoke French as métis, meaning "mixture." Being bilingual, these people were able to trade European goods, such as muskets, for the furs and hides at a trading post. These Métis were found throughout the Great Lakes area and to the west, in the Rocky Mountains. While the word in this usage originally had no ethnic designation (and was not capitalized in English), it grew to describe a specific ethnicity by the early 19th century. This use (of simply meaning "mixed") excludes mixed-race people born of unions in other settings or more recently than about 1870.

Fewer Métis live in the U.S. than in Canada. During the early colonial era, people moved easily back and forth through Canada and the British colonies.

As of 2018, Métis people lived in Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, Minnesota, North Dakota and Montana.[129]

Geography edit

With exploration, settlement, and exploitation of resources by French and British fur trading interests across North America, European men often had relationships and sometimes marriages with Native American women. Often both sides felt such marriages were beneficial in strengthening the fur trade. Indigenous women often served as interpreters and could introduce their men to their people. Because many Native Americans and First Nations often had matrilineal kinship systems, the mixed-race children were considered born to the mother's clan and usually raised in her culture. Fewer were educated in European schools.[130] The métis children that did attempt to go about integrating into European societies faced many issues with attempting to obtain citizenship within these early settlements.[131] The métis men in the northern tier typically worked in the fur trade and later hunting and as guides. The métis based in Red River Colony eventually settled throughout the Canadian Prairies as a distinct ethnic group with its own culture known as the Métis.[130][132]

American history edit

Between 1795 and 1815, a network of Métis settlements and trading posts was established throughout what is now the US states of Michigan and Wisconsin and to a lesser extent in Illinois and Indiana. As late as 1829, the Métis were dominant in the economy of present-day Wisconsin and Northern Michigan.[133]

 
A Metis family poses with their Red River carts in a field in western North Dakota. (1883) State Historical Society of North Dakota (A4365)

During the early days of territorial Michigan, Métis and French played a dominant role in elections. It was largely with Métis support that Gabriel Richard was elected as delegate to Congress. After Michigan was admitted as a state and under pressure of increased European-American settlers from eastern states, many Métis migrated westward into the Canadian Prairies, including the Red River Colony and the Southbranch Settlement.[134] Others identified with Chippewa groups, while many others were subsumed in an ethnic "French" identity, such as the Muskrat French.[135] By the late 1830s only in the area of Sault Ste. Marie was there recognition of the Métis as a significant part of the community.[136]

Another major Métis settlement was La Baye, located at the present site of Green Bay, Wisconsin. In 1816 most of its residents were Métis.[137]

In Montana a large group of Métis from Pembina region hunted there in the 1860s, eventually forming an agricultural settlement in the Judith Basin by 1880. This settlement eventually disintegrated, with most Métis leaving or identifying more strongly either as "white" or "Indian".[138]

Metis often participated in interracial marriages. The French in specific, viewed these marriages as sensible and realistic. Americans, however, viewed interracial marriages as unsound as the idea of racial purity was seen as the only option. Although it was legal, the result of these marriages generally resulted in the loss of status for the spouse of the highest social class, as well as for any children produced during the marriage. The French, however, seemed to motivate fur traders to participate in interracial marriages with Indian tribes as they helped to be beneficial to the fur trade business and also to spread religion. Generally speaking, these marriages were happy ones, that lasted and brought together differing groups of people and benefitted the fur trade business.[139][140]

Current population edit

Mixed-race people live throughout Canada and the northern United States but only some in the US identify ethnically and culturally as Métis. A strong Prairie Métis identity exists in the Métis Homeland which existed in most of Rupert's Land,[141] but also extends south from Canada into Minnesota, Montana and North Dakota,.[142] A number of self-identified Métis live in North Dakota, mostly in Pembina County.[143] Many members of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians (a federally recognized Tribe) identify as Métis or Michif rather than as strictly Ojibwe.[144]

Many Métis families are recorded in the U.S. Census for the historic Métis settlement areas along the Detroit and St. Clair rivers, Mackinac Island and Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, as well as Green Bay in Wisconsin.[145] Their ancestral families were often formed in the early 19th-century fur trading era.

Métis persons have generally not organized as an ethnic or political group in the United States as they have in Canada, where they had armed confrontations.

The first "Conference on the Métis in North America" was held in Chicago in 1981,[146] after increasing research about this people. This also was a period of increased appreciation for different ethnic groups and reappraisal of the histories of settlement of North America. Papers at the conference focused on "becoming Métis" and the role of history in formation of this ethnic group, defined in Canada as having Aboriginal status. The Metis peoples and their history continue to be extensively studied, especially by scholars in Canada and the United States.[147]

Louis Riel and the United States edit

Riel had a significant impact on the Métis community in Canada, especially in the Manitoba region. However, he did also have a distinct relationship with the Métis in the United States and was in fact at the time of his execution an American citizen.[148] Riel attempted to be a leader for the Métis community in the United States and contributed immensely in the defence of the Métis rights, especially those who occupied the Red River region throughout his life.

On October 22, 1844, Louis Riel was born in the Red River settlement known as the territory of Assiniboia.[148] He was born with British background; however, as the Métis are a mobile community, he travelled a lot and had a transitional identity, meaning he would often cross the Canada and United States border. During the 19th century, there were few American-born citizens living in Red River altogether.

Riel greatly contributed to the defense of Métis justice, more specifically on November 22, 1869, Riel arrived in Winnipeg to discuss with McDougall the rights of the Métis community. At the end of the settlement McDougall agreed to guarantee a "List of Rights".[148] That statement also incorporated four clauses of the Dakota bill of rights. This Bill of rights was the rise of the American Métis influence during the Red River Métis revolution and was an important milestone in Métis justice.

The following years saw a constant battle between the government in charge and the Métis people that also created conflict involving citizenship of Métis leaders, such as Louis Riel, who was crossing the border without proper notice. This caused repercussions for Riel who was now wanted by the Ontario government. He was later accused for the Scott Death, a murder case which was decided without a proper trial and by 1874 there was a warrant out for his arrest in Winnipeg.[148] Because of the warrant accusations in Canada, Riel saw the United States as a safer territory for himself and the Métis people. The following years led to Riel running from the Canadian government because of the murder convictions and this is when he spent most of his time in the United States. Riel struggled with mental health problems and decided in the following years that it was time to receive proper treatment in the American northeast from 1875 to 1878. Once better decided to change his life by obtaining an American residence and decided to complete the journey of the liberation of the Métis people that he first started in 1869. With the help of the United States military, Riel wanted to invade Manitoba to obtain control. However, because of the lack of desire to cause conflict with the Canadian military the American military rejected his proposition. He then tried to create an international alliance between the Aboriginal and Metis people, which was not a success either. In the end his main objective was to simply improve the living conditions and rights of the Métis people in the United States. The failed attempts for Riel to defend the Métis community lead to further mental breakdowns and hospitalization, now in Quebec.[148]

Riel returned to Montana from 1879 to continue on his mission to defend the Métis community in the United States. Riel wanted the Métis and the Native people of the region to join forces and create a political movement against the provisional government. Both parties denied this profound movement and after yet another failed attempt to create a revolution he decided to officially become an American citizen and declared "The United States sheltered me, The English didn't care/what they owe they will pay/! I am citizen".[148] He then spent the next four years improving the conditions of the Montana Métis in any way he could.

Riel stayed in the United States from 1880 to 1884 fighting to obtain official residency from the American government but without success he finally departed for Saskatchewan in 1884. Riel concentrated his public life on improving the situation of the Montana Metis and had a big impact on the Métis people in the United States by attempting to address their rights and improve overall living conditions. The following years was a constant battle to obtain official citizenship from the American government. In the end, an American citizenship did not permit the protection from Canadian convictions. The American officials did not confirm his American citizenship because of fear of further conflict with the Canadian government and confirmed Riel's execution for treason in 1885.[148]

Medicine Line (Canada–U.S. border) edit

The Métis homeland existed before the implementation of the Canada–U.S. border and continues to exist on both sides of this border today. The implementation of the border affected the Métis in a multitude of ways, with border enforcement growing from relaxed to increasingly stronger over time.[149] In the late 18th century, to early 19th century the Métis found that in times of conflict, they could cross the 49th parallel North in either direction and the trouble following them would stop and so the border was known as the Medicine Line. This began to change toward the end of the 19th century when the border became more enforced and the Canadian government saw an opportunity to put an end to the line hopping by using military force.[149] This effectively split some of the Métis population and restricted the mobility of the People. The enforcement of the border was used as a means for governments on either side of the Medicine Line in the grand prairies to control the Métis population and to restrict their access to buffalo.[149] Because of the importance of kinship and mobility for Métis communities,[29] this had negative implications and resulted in different experiences and hardships for people in the now divided group.

Métis experience in the U.S. is largely coloured by unratified treaties and the lack of federal representation of Métis communities as a legitimate people, and this can be seen in the case of the Little Shell Tribe in Montana.[150] While experiences in Canada are also affected by the misrecognition of the Métis, many Métis were dispossessed of their lands when they were sold to settlers and some communities set up road allowance villages. These small villages were squatters' villages along Crown land outside of established villages in the prairies of Canada.[151] These villages were often burned by local authorities and had to be rebuilt by surviving members of the communities who lived in them.

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-09-21). "Indigenous identity by Registered or Treaty Indian status: Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-21.
  2. ^ Kermoal, N.; Andersen, C. (2021). Daniels v. Canada: In and Beyond the Courts. University of Manitoba Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-88755-931-0. Retrieved Dec 3, 2022. Its historic homeland includes large parts of what are now known as the Prairie provinces, extending into parts of Ontario, British Columbia, the Northwest Territories and the northwest United States
  3. ^ "Métis Homeland". Rupertsland Institute. Retrieved 2021-07-24. Métis villages sprang up along the riverways from the Great Lakes to the Mackenzie Delta. The Rupert's Land territory included all or parts of present-day Northwest-Nunavut Territory, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, and became known to the Métis as the "Métis Homeland."
  4. ^ Andersen, C. (2014). Métis: Race, Recognition, and the Struggle for Indigenous Peoplehood. UBC Press - Rupertsland Centre for Métis Research in the Faculty of Native Studies at the University of Alberta. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-7748-2723-2. The MNC's narrative traces the geographical boundaries of what it terms the "Métis Homeland" to the historical waterways from northern Ontario to British Columbia and from the Northwest Territories to the northern United States.
  5. ^ Préfontaine, Darren R. "Métis History". Indigenous Saskatchewan Encyclopedia. University of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  6. ^ Rea & Scott 2017
  7. ^ "Aboriginal peoples in Canada: Key results from the 2016 Census". StatCan. 25 October 2017.
  8. ^ Peterson & Brown 1985, Introduction
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  10. ^ a b "Small northern Alberta community gets bigger with historic land purchase | Globalnews.ca". Global News. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  11. ^ "Metis". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  12. ^ a b c "Métis". Oxford English Dictionary.
  13. ^ Paul, Robert (1986). Le petit robert, vol. 1 : dictionnaire alphabetique (1989 ed.). Les Dictionnaires Robert-Canada. p. 1228. ISBN 0004335147. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
  14. ^ O'Toole 2017, p. 32 : "Selon le Petit Robert, une vieille acception de « métis » ... ."
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  24. ^ Flanagan 1990, pp. 71–94
  25. ^ Teillet, Jean (September 13, 2019). "The confusing world of Métis identity". Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  26. ^ Bell 2013, Page 4
  27. ^ "Métis > Identity". Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada. Canadian Geographic. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  28. ^ a b c O'Toole 2017, p. 32: "Pour éviter la confusion, on a tendance à parler de métissage ou de métissé plutôt que de « métis »."
  29. ^ a b St-Onge, Podruchny & Macdougall 2012
  30. ^ Andersen 2011
  31. ^ Chartrand & Giokas 2002
  32. ^ Chartrand 2002
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  • Robson, Kathryn; Yee, Jennifer (2005). France and "Indochina": Cultural Representations. Lexington Books. ISBN 0739108409.
  • Quan, Holly (2009), Native Chiefs and Famous Métis: Leadership and Bravery in the Canadian West, Heritage House, ISBN 978-1-894974-74-5
  • St-Onge, Nicole; Podruchny, Carolyn; Macdougall, Brenda, eds. (2012). Contours of a People: Metis family, mobility, and history. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806142791.
  • Sawchuck, J. (2001). Negotiating an Identity: Métis Political Organizations, the Canadian Government, and Competing Concepts of Aboriginality. American Indian Quarterly, 25(1), 73–92.
  • Sprague, Douglas N (1988), Canada and the Métis, 1869–1885, Wilfrid Laurier University Press, ISBN 0-88920-958-8
  • Teillet, Jean (2019). The North-West Is Our Mother: The Story of Louis Riel's People, Patrick Crean Editions. ISBN 978-1443450126
  • Tremaudan, Auguste-Henri de (1936a). l'Histoire de la nation métisse dans l'ouest canadien (in French). Montreal: Éditions Albert Lévesque. pp. ?. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  • Tremaudan, Auguste-Henri de (1936b) [1982]. l'Histoire de la nation métisse dans l'ouest canadien [Hold High Your Heads: History of the Metis Nation in Western Canada]. Translated by Maguet, Elizabeth. Winnipeg: Pemmican Publications. p. ?.
  • Van Kirk, Sylvia (1983). Many Tender Ties: Women in Fur-Trade Society, 1670–1870. University of Oklahoma Press. doi:10.2307/3346234. ISBN 978-0-8061-1847-5. JSTOR 3346234.
  • Vrooman, N. (2019). There are a Range of Identities with Being Little Shell, Just As the Wider America. Distinctly Montana Magazine, pp 68–69 of 98.
  • Wall, Denis (2008), The Alberta Métis letters, 1930–1940: policy review and annotations, DWRG Press, ISBN 978-0-9809026-2-4
  • Weinstein, John (2007). Quiet Revolution West: The Rebirth of Métis Nationalism. Calgary: Fifth House Publishers. ISBN 978-1897252215.

External links edit

  • The Rupertsland Institute (Alberta) – A service dedicated to the research and development, education, and training and employment of Métis individuals. It is affiliated with the Métis Nations of Alberta. Along with providing financial aid, the Rupertsland Institute helps Métis individuals acquire essential skills for employment.
  • The Métis Museum – "Métis Political Organizations" compiled by Lawrence Barkwell, Louis Riel Institute; Manitoba, Canada
  • "Metis Firsts in North America: Many Little Known Facts About the Metis" compiled by Lawrence Barkwell, Manitoba Métis Federation; Canada, 2011.
  • Métis Nation
  • Métis Museum (Gabriel Dumont Institute)
  • Milan Métis Healing Art Project—MMHAP
  • Métis in the Courts. Site includes interviews with legal and history experts on Métis issues.
  • The MNO and “New” Historic Métis Communities - Darren O'Toole, University of Ottawa

métis, other, uses, metis, confused, with, meitei, people, french, metis, canadian, french, meˈtsɪs, citation, needed, michif, mɪˈtʃɪf, indigenous, people, whose, historical, homelands, include, canada, three, prairie, provinces, well, parts, british, columbia. For other uses see Metis Not to be confused with Meitei people The Metis m eɪ ˈ t iː s may TEE S French metis Canadian French meˈtsɪs citation needed Michif mɪˈtʃɪf are an Indigenous people whose historical homelands include Canada s three Prairie Provinces as well as parts of British Columbia the Northwest Territories Northwest Ontario and the northern United States 2 3 4 They have a shared history and culture deriving from specific mixed European primarily French Scottish and English and Indigenous ancestry which became distinct through ethnogenesis by the mid 18th century 5 during the early years of the North American fur trade 6 MetisMichifMetisMetis flagsTotal population624 220 1 2021 Canada624 220 1 United StatesUnknownLanguagesMichif Cree Canadian French North American English Hand Talk Bungee other Indigenous languagesReligionPredominantly Christianity Roman Catholicism and Protestantism Metis mixed PeopleMetisLanguageMichifMetis FrenchHand TalkCountryMichif PiyiiIn Canada the Metis with a population of 624 220 as of 2021 1 are one of three major groups of Indigenous peoples that were legally recognized in the Constitution Act of 1982 the other two groups being the First Nations and Inuit 7 Smaller communities who self identify as Metis exist in Canada and the United States 8 such as the Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians of Montana The United States recognizes the Little Shell Tribe as an Ojibwe Native American tribe Alberta is the only Canadian province with a recognized Metis land base the eight Metis Settlements with a population of approximately 5 000 people on 1 25 million acres 5 100 km2 9 and the newer Metis lands near Fort McKay purchased from the Government of Alberta in 2017 10 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Semantic definitions 1 3 Other groups and individuals 1 4 Riel s Metis 2 Metis people in Canada 2 1 Identity 2 1 1 Self identity and legal status 2 1 2 View of identity 2 1 3 Lack of a legal definition 2 1 4 Definitions used by Metis representative organizations 2 1 5 Cultural definitions 2 2 Canadian history 2 3 Culture 2 3 1 Language 2 3 2 Flag 2 3 3 Cultural genocide 2 4 Land ownership 2 5 Organizations 2 5 1 Pre Batoche 2 5 2 L Association des Metis d Alberta et les Territories du Nord Ouest 1928 and Metis Association of Alberta 1932 2 5 3 Native Council of Canada 1971 and Congress of Aboriginal Peoples 1993 2 5 4 Metis National Council 1983 2 5 5 Metis settlements of Alberta 2 5 6 Ontario Metis Aboriginal Association 2 6 Distribution 3 Metis people in the United States 3 1 Geography 3 2 American history 3 3 Current population 3 4 Louis Riel and the United States 4 Medicine Line Canada U S border 5 See also 6 Citations 7 Bibliography 8 External linksBackground editEtymology edit The word metis itself is originally French for person of mixed parentage and derives from the Latin word mixtus mixed 11 12 13 14 Semantic definitions edit Starting in the 17th century the French word metis was initially used as a noun by those in the North American fur trade and by settlers in general to refer to people of mixed European and North American Indigenous parentage in New France which at that time extended from southern Quebec through the Great Lakes to the Mississippi River thence southward to Mississippi and Alabama At the time it applied generally to French speaking people who were of partial Indigenous and partial ethnic French descent 12 15 It also came to be used for people of mixed European and Indigenous backgrounds in other French colonies generally the children of unions between Frenchmen and women from the colonized areas 12 15 including Guadeloupe in the Caribbean 16 Senegal in West Africa 17 Algeria in North Africa 18 and the former French Indochina in Southeast Asia 19 The first documented metis child was a girl born about 1628 near Lake Nipissing given the first name Marguerite who was the daughter of a Nipissing Indian woman and Jean Nicollet de Belleborne born about 1598 likely in Cherbourg France 20 21 As French Canadians followed the North American fur trade to the west some of the settlers made unions with different Indigenous women including the Cree Descendants of English or Scottish and Natives were in some cases historically called half breeds or country born They sometimes adopted a more agrarian culture of subsistence farming and tended to be reared in Protestant denominations 22 While the definitions and usage of the terms Metis Metis and metis lowercase have at times been controversial and contentious there are legal definitions 23 Capital M Metis refers to a particular sociocultural heritage and an ethnic identification It is more than a racial classification and refers specifically to the Metis Indigenous peoples in Canada and the United States Numerous spellings of Metis have been used interchangeably including metif michif currently the most agreed upon spelling is Metis however some prefer to use Metis as inclusive of persons of both English and French descent 24 The spelling metis with a lowercase m functions as an adjective The definition of the word has at times been disputed as some people have attempted to use lower case metis in the archaic sense of having a single distant Indigenous ancestor or being in some other way mixed 23 However the majority of Indigenous groups and legal scholars define Metis as the people who live on the Metis homeland 25 Most curators and scholars argue that the development of the Metis nation occurred at the Red River Settlement and that Metis families dispersed from there to other regions 26 Canadian Geographic s Indigenous Peoples Altas of Canada identifies Metis people as one of three Canadian Indigenous peoples in the following terms 27 Within non Indigenous society there are two competing ideas of what being Metis means The first when spelled with a lowercase m metis means individuals or people having mixed race parents and ancestries e g North American Indigenous and European Euro Canadian Euro American It is a racial categorization This is the oldest meaning of metis and is based on the French verb metisser sic 28 to mix races or ethnicities The related noun for the act of race mixing is metissage 28 The second meaning of being Metis and the one that is embraced by the Metis Nation relates to a self defining people with a distinct history in a specific region Western Canada s prairies with some spillover into British Columbia Ontario North Dakota Montana and Northwest Territories In this case the term Metis is spelled with an uppercase M and often but does not always contain an accent aigu e The Metis of Canada and the Metis of the United States adopted parts of their Indigenous and European cultures while forming customs and traditions of their own as well as developing a common language 29 Some argue that the ethnogenesis of the Metis began when the Metis organized politically at the Battle of Seven Oaks in 1816 while others argue that the ethnogenesis began prior to this battle before fur traders emigrated from the Great Lakes region to the Western plains 30 Other groups and individuals edit Scholars Metis people and First Nations elders and community leaders concur that only the descendants of the Red River Metis should be constitutionally recognized as Metis people as they developed a distinct culture as a people historically and have continued to exist as a distinct culture and community over many generations 31 32 33 34 35 Objections to this standard have been made to the Metis National Council by both individuals and newly formed groups who do not meet the established citizenship criteria 34 These individuals and unrecognized groups have recently emerged largely in the Maritime Quebec and Ontario regions and are generally referred to as Eastern Metis 33 These complainants usually assert that having a single distant Indigenous or possibly Indigenous ancestor should be enough to be considered Metis They also disagree that they should have to meet the resident requirement as defined by the federally recognized Metis organizations 33 36 Since the early 2000s there has been a meteoric rise in the number of people self identifying as Metis in Eastern Canada New census data shows the highest increases in self reported Metis people between 2006 and 2016 were in Quebec 149 2 per cent and in Nova Scotia 124 3 per cent In Canada during the same period the increase was less than 60 per cent Rather than a spike in birth rates almost all of the increase is due to white Franco Quebecois and Acadian settlers becoming Indigenous 36 David Chartrand president of the Manitoba Metis Federation responding in 2020 said he does not believe these new self identified individuals and communities are Metis They are not part of us never were There is no connection historically in any way or fashion that they can use as even an argument to say that they are part of our nation 34 In a 2016 decision Daniels v Canada Indian Affairs and Northern Development the Supreme Court of Canada stated in par 17 37 There is no consensus on who is considered Metis or a non status Indian nor need there be Cultural and ethnic labels do not lend themselves to neat boundaries Metis can refer to the historic Metis community in Manitoba s Red River Settlement or it can be used as a general term for anyone with mixed European and Aboriginal heritage Some mixed ancestry communities identify as Metis others as Indian Indigenous elders from the Miꞌkmaq and other First Nations communities in the Eastern part of Canada along with recognized Metis leaders do not agree with the settler colonial perspective and say that there is no distinct Metis community or culture in the Maritimes or Quebec and that these newly formed Eastern Metis groups are not legitimate 35 33 People of mixed blood in the region either integrated into Indigenous communities or assimilated with European newcomers unlike the distinct Metis People of Louis Riel in Western Canada When you re looking at the Maritimes and Quebec the children of intermarriage were accepted by either party in our case the Mi kmaq or the Acadian Mi kmaw elder and historian Daniel Paul says There was no such thing as a Metis community here in this region 33 Riel s Metis edit Quoting Riel from Tremaudan s Histoire de la nation metisse dans l ouest canadien 38 39 The Metis have as paternal ancestors the former employees of the Hudson s Bay and North West Companies and as maternal ancestors Indian women belonging to various tribes The French word Metis is derived from the Latin participle mixtus which means mixed it expresses well the idea it represents Quite appropriate also was the corresponding English term Half Breed in the first generation of blood mixing but now that European blood and Indian blood are mingled to varying degrees it is no longer generally applicable The French word Metis expresses the idea of this mixture in as satisfactory a way as possible and becomes by that fact a proper race name suitable for our race A little observation in passing without offending anyone Very polite and amiable people may sometimes say to a Metis You don t look at all like a Metis You surely can t have much Indian blood Why you could pass anywhere for pure White The Metis a trifle disconcerted by the tone of these remarks would like to lay claim to both sides of his origin But fear of upsetting or totally dispelling these kind assumptions holds him back While he is hesitating to choose among the different replies that come to mind words like these succeed in silencing him completely Ah bah You have scarcely any Indian blood You haven t enough worth mentioning Here is how the Metis think privately It is true that our Indian origin is humble but it is indeed just that we honour our mothers as well as our fathers Why should we be so preoccupied with what degree of mingling we have of European and Indian blood No matter how little we have of one or the other do not both gratitude and filial love require us to make a point of saying We are Metis Metis people in Canada edit nbsp Contemporary lithograph of the Battle of BatocheMetis people in Canada are specific cultural communities who trace their descent to First Nations and European settlers primarily the French in the early decades of the colonisation of Canada Metis peoples are recognized as one of Canada s Indigenous peoples under the Constitution Act of 1982 along with First Nations and Inuit On April 8 2014 the Supreme Court of Canada Daniels v Canada appeal held that Metis and non status Indians are Indians under s 91 24 but excluded the Powley test as the only criterion to determine Metis identity Canadian Metis represent the majority of people who identify as Metis although there are a number of Metis in the United States In Canada the population is 587 545 with 20 5 percent living in Ontario and 19 5 percent in Alberta The Acadians of eastern Canada some of whom have mixed French and Indigenous origins 40 are not Metis according to Indian and Northern Affairs Canada and other historic Indigenous communities This viewpoint sees Metis as historically the children of French fur traders and Nehiyaw women of western and west central Canada 41 While the Metis initially developed as the mixed race descendants of early unions between First Nations and colonial era European settlers usually Indigenous women and male French settlers within generations particularly in central and western Canada a distinct Metis culture developed The women in the unions in eastern Canada were usually Algonquin and Ojibwe and in western Canada they were Saulteaux Cree Ojibwe Nakoda and Dakota Lakota or of mixed descent from these peoples Their unions with European men engaged in the fur trade in the Old Northwest were often of the type known as marriage a la facon du pays according to the custom of the country 42 After New France was ceded to Great Britain s control in 1763 there was an important distinction between French Metis born of francophone voyageur fathers and the Anglo Metis known as country born or Mixed Bloods for instance in the 1870 census of Manitoba descended from English or Scottish fathers 43 Today these two cultures have essentially coalesced into location specific Metis traditions This does not preclude a range of other Metis cultural expressions across North America 44 45 Such polyethnic people were historically referred to by other terms many of which are now considered to be offensive such as Mixed bloods Half breeds Bois Brules Bungi Black Scots and Jackatars 46 the latter term having meaning in a Newfoundland context 47 While people of Metis culture or heritage are found across Canada the traditional Metis homeland areas where Metis populations and culture developed as a distinct ethnicity historically includes much of the present day Canadian Prairies along with parts of Northwestern Ontario British Columbia and the Northwest Nunavut Territory 35 48 The most well known group are the Red River Metis centering on southern and central parts of Manitoba along the Red River of the North Closely related are the Metis in the United States primarily those in border areas such as Northern Michigan the Red River Valley and Eastern Montana These were areas in which there was considerable Aboriginal and European mixing due to the 19th century fur trade However they do not have a federally recognized status in the United States except as enrolled members of federally recognized tribes 49 Although Metis existed farther west than today s Manitoba much less is known about the Metis of Northern Canada Identity edit Self identity and legal status edit In 2016 587 545 people in Canada self identified as Metis They represented 35 1 of the total Aboriginal population and 1 5 of the total Canadian population 50 Most Metis people today are descendants of unions between generations of Metis individuals and live in urban areas The exception are the Metis in rural and northern parts that exist in close proximity to First Nations communities Over the past century countless Metis have assimilated into the general European Canadian populations Metis heritage and thereby Aboriginal ancestry is more common than is generally realized 42 People with more distant ancestry who assimilated into non Metis society are not part of the Metis ethnicity or culture 51 52 What we re seeing is the phenomenon of non Indigenous people or those with a very distant ancestry from the 1600 and 1700s now claiming that they now have political rights which prevail over those Indigenous nations said Veldon Coburn a professor in Indigenous studies at the University of Ottawa and member of the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan 51 Unlike among First Nations peoples laws concerning the Metis make no distinction between Treaty status and non Treaty status The Metis did not sign treaties with Canada with the exception of an adhesion to Treaty 3 in Northwest Ontario This adherence was never implemented by the federal government The legal definition is not yet fully developed Section Thirty five of the Constitution Act 1982 recognizes the rights of Indian Metis and Inuit however that text does not define these groups 42 In 2003 the Supreme Court of Canada defined a Metis person as someone who self identifies as Metis has an ancestral connection to the historic Metis community and is accepted by the modern community with continuity to the historic Metis community 53 View of identity edit The most well known and historically documented mixed ancestry population in Canadian history are the groups who developed during the fur trade in south eastern Rupert s Land primarily in the Red River Settlement now Manitoba and the Southbranch Settlements Saskatchewan In the late nineteenth century they organized politically led by men who had European educations and had confrontations with the Canadian government in an effort to assert their independence This was not the only place where some degree of intermixing metisser 28 between European and Indigenous people occurred It was part of the history of colonization from the earliest days of settlements on the Atlantic Coast throughout the Americas 54 2 5 But the strong sense of ethnic national identity among the mostly French and Michif speaking Metis along the Red River demonstrated during armed resistance movements led by Louis Riel resulted in a specific use of the term Metis throughout Canada Continued organizing and political activity resulted in the Metis gaining official recognition from the national government as one of the recognized Aboriginal groups in S 35 of the Constitution Act 1982 which states 55 35 1 The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the Aboriginal People of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed 2 In this Act Aboriginal Peoples of Canada includes the Indian Inuit and Metis Peoples of Canada Constitution Act 1982 Section 35 2 does not define criteria for an individual who is Metis This has left open the question of whether Metis in this context should apply only to the descendants of the Red River Metis or to all mixed ancestry groups and individuals Many members of First Nations may have mixed ancestry but identify primarily by the tribal nation rather than as Metis Lack of a legal definition edit Further information R v Powley In contrast to the Indian Act which creates an Indian Register for all Status First Nations people settler colonial definitions of Metis Metis and metis have at times been at odds with the definitions of the communities themselves 33 Some commentators have argued that one of the rights of an Indigenous people is to define their own identity precluding the need for a government sanctioned definition 54 9 10 Alberta is the only province to have defined the term in law under the Metis Settlements Act MSA which defines a Metis as a person of Aboriginal ancestry who identifies with Metis history and culture This was done in the context of creating a test for legal eligibility for membership in one of Alberta s eight Metis settlements The MSA together with requirements at the community level Elder amp community acceptance create the legal requirements for residency on the Metis Settlements In Alberta law belonging to a Metis Association Metis National Council or any of its affiliates Metis Federation of Canada Congress of Aboriginal People does not grant one the rights granted to members of the Alberta Metis Settlements The MSA test excludes those people who are Status Indians that is a member of a First Nation an exclusion which was upheld by the Supreme Court in Alberta v Cunningham 2011 54 10 11 The number of people self identifying as Metis has risen sharply since the late 20th century between 1996 and 2006 the population of Canadians who self identify as Metis nearly doubled to approximately 390 000 54 2 From 2006 to 2016 according to census results from Statistics Canada those numbers rose by 125 in Nova Scotia and 150 in Quebec Also in that time Dozens of new Metis organizations appeared none of whom could demonstrate any ties to continually existing Metis communities 33 Until R v Powley 2003 there was no legal definition of Metis other than the legal requirements found in the Metis Settlements Act of 1990 The Powley case involved a claim by Steven Powley and his son Rodney two members of the Sault Ste Marie Ontario Metis community who were asserting Metis hunting rights The Supreme Court of Canada outlined three broad factors to identify Metis who have Hunting Rights as Aboriginal peoples 56 self identification as a Metis individual ancestral connection to an historic Metis community and acceptance by a Metis community All three factors must be present for an individual to qualify under the SCC legal definition of Metis In addition the court stated that t he term Metis in s 35 does not encompass all individuals with mixed Indian and European heritage rather it refers to distinctive peoples who in addition to their mixed ancestry developed their own customs ways of life and recognizable group identity separate from their Indian or Inuit and European forebears 54 9 The court was explicit that its ten point test is not a comprehensive definition of Metis Questions remain as to whether Metis have treaty rights this is an explosive issue in the Canadian Aboriginal community today It has been stated that only First Nations could legitimately sign treaties with the government so by definition Metis have no Treaty rights 57 One treaty names Metis in the title the Halfbreed Metis in the French version Adhesion to Treaty 3 Another the Robinson Superior Treaty of 1850 listed 84 persons classified as half breeds in the Treaty so included them and their descendants 58 Hundreds if not thousands of Metis were initially included in a number of other treaties and then excluded under later amendments to the Indian Act 57 Definitions used by Metis representative organizations edit Two main advocacy groups claim to speak for the Metis in Canada the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples CAP and the Metis National Council MNC Each uses different approaches to define Metis individuals The CAP which has nine regional affiliates represents all Indigenous peoples in Canada who are living off reserve including Metis and non Status Indians It does not provide a definition of Metis but instead leaves each affiliate determine its own membership criteria Due to the exclusion of a Metis representative among the Native Council of Canada s two seats at the Constitutional Conference in 1983 the Manitoba Metis Federation MMF the Association of Metis and Non Status Indians of Saskatchewan AMNSIS and the Metis Association of Alberta MAA withdrew from the NCC CAP s predecessor and formed the Metis National Council Its political leadership of the time stated that the NCC s pan Aboriginal approach to issues did not allow the Metis Nation to effectively represent itself 54 11 The MNC views the Metis as a single nation with a common history and culture centred on the fur trade of west central North America in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries This position has been subject to much debate and controversy 59 60 In 2003 MNC had five provincial affiliates Metis Nation of Ontario Secretariat Manitoba Metis Federation Inc Metis Nation Saskatchewan Metis Nation of Alberta and the Metis Nation of British Columbia The Metis Nation of Alberta MNA formerly known as the Metis Association of Alberta MAA adopted the following Definition of Metis Metis means a person who self identifies as a Metis is distinct from other aboriginal peoples is of historic Metis Nation ancestry and is accepted by the Metis Nation 61 Several local independent Metis organizations have been founded in Canada In Northern Canada neither the CAP nor the MNC have affiliates here local Metis organizations deal directly with the federal government and are part of the Aboriginal land claims process Three of the comprehensive settlements modern treaties in force in the Northwest Territories include benefits for Metis people who can prove local Aboriginal ancestry prior to 1921 Treaty 11 54 13 The federal government recognizes the Metis National Council as the representative Metis group 62 In December 2016 Prime Minister Trudeau made a commitment to the leaders of the Assembly of First Nations the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami and the Metis National Council to have annual meetings He also committed to two other initiatives aimed at heeding the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission TRC which examined abuses at Indian Residential Schools 62 Indigenous Affairs Canada the relevant federal ministry deals with the MNC On April 13 2017 the two parties signed the Canada Metis Nation Accord with the goal of working with the Metis Nation as represented by the Metis National Council on a Nation to Nation basis 63 In response to the Powley decision Metis organizations are issuing Metis Nation citizenship cards to their members Several organizations are registered with the Canadian government to provide Metis cards 64 The criteria to receive a card and the rights associated with the card vary with each organization For example for membership in the Metis Nation of Alberta MNA an applicant must provide a documented genealogy and family tree dating to the mid 1800s proving descent from one or more members of historic Metis groups 65 Cultural definitions edit Cultural definitions of Metis identity inform legal and political ones The 1996 Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples stated Metis means a person who self identifies as Metis is distinct from other Aboriginal peoples is of historic Metis Nation Ancestry and who is accepted by the Metis Nation 54 12 Many Canadians have mixed Aboriginal non Aboriginal ancestry but that does not make them Metis or even Aboriginal What distinguishes Metis people from everyone else is that they associate themselves with a culture that is distinctly Metis 54 14 Traditional markers of Metis culture include use of Aboriginal European languages such as Michif French Cree Dene and Bungi Cree Ojibwa English distinctive clothing such as the arrowed sash ceinture flechee a rich repertoire of fiddle music jigs and square dances and practising a traditional economy based on hunting trapping and gathering However these cultural markers do not exclude Metis that do not partake in them 54 14 15 Canadian history edit nbsp The Trapper s Bride by Alfred Jacob Miller 1837During the height of the North American fur trade in New France from 1650 onward many French and British fur traders married First Nations and Inuit women mainly Cree Ojibwa or Saulteaux located in the Great Lakes area and later into the north west 66 The majority of these fur traders were French and Scottish the French majority were Catholic 67 These marriages are commonly referred to as marriage a la facon du pays or marriage according to the custom of the country 68 nbsp Metis fur trader c 1870At first the Hudson s Bay Company officially forbade these relationships However many Indigenous peoples actively encouraged them because they drew fur traders into Indigenous kinship circles creating social ties that supported the economic relationships developing between them and Europeans When Indigenous women married European men they introduced them to their people and their culture taught them about the land and its resources and worked alongside them Indigenous women paddled and steered canoes made moccasins out of moose skin netted webbing for snowshoes skinned animals and dried their meat for pemmican split and dried fish snared rabbits and partridges and helped to manufacture birchbark canoes Intermarriage made the fur trade more successful 69 The children of these marriages were often introduced to Catholicism but grew up in primarily First Nations societies 69 They were thought of as the familial bond between the Europeans and First Nations and Inuit of North America As adults the men often worked as fur trade company interpreters as well as fur trappers in their turn 70 Many of the first generations of Metis lived within the First Nations societies of their wives and children but also started to marry Metis women By the early 19th century marriage between European fur traders and First Nations or Inuit women started to decline as European fur traders began to marry Metis women instead because Metis women were familiar with both white and Indigenous cultures and could interpret 69 According to historian Jacob A Schooley the Metis developed over at least two generations and within different economic classes In the first stage servant employee traders of the fur trade companies known as wintering partners would stay for the season with First Nations bands and make a country marriage with a high status native woman This woman and her children would move to live in the vicinity of a trading fort or post becoming House Indians as they were called by the company men House Indians eventually formed distinct bands Children raised within these House Indian bands often became employees of the companies Foster cites the York boat captain Paulet Paul as an example Eventually this second generation group ended employment with the company and became commonly known as freemen traders and trappers They lived with their families raising children in a distinct culture accustomed to the fur trade life that valued free trading and the buffalo hunt in particular He considered that the third generation who were sometimes Metis on both sides were the first true Metis He suggests that in the Red River region many House Indians and some non House First Nations were assimilated into Metis culture due to the Catholic church s strong presence in that region In the Fort Edmonton region however many House Indians never adopted a Metis identity but continued to identify primarily as Cree Saulteaux Ojibwa and Chipweyan descendants up until the early 20th century 71 72 The Metis played a vital role in the success of the western fur trade They were skilled hunters and trappers and were raised to appreciate both Aboriginal and European cultures 73 Metis understanding of both societies and customs helped bridge cultural gaps resulting in better trading relationships 73 The Hudson s Bay Company discouraged unions between their fur traders and First Nations and Inuit women while the North West Company the English speaking Quebec based fur trading company supported such marriages Trappers often married First Nations women too and operated outside company structures 74 The Metis peoples were respected as valuable employees of both fur trade companies due to their skills as voyageurs bison hunters and interpreters and for their knowledge of the lands nbsp Rupert s Land showing location of York FactoryBy the early 19th century European immigrants mainly Scottish farmers along with Metis families from the Great Lakes region moved to the Red River Valley in present day Manitoba 75 76 The Hudson s Bay Company which now administered a monopoly over the territory then called Rupert s Land assigned plots of land to European settlers 77 The allocation of Red River land caused conflict with those already living in the area as well as with the North West Company whose trade routes had been cut in half Many Metis were working as fur traders with both the North West Company and the Hudson s Bay Company Others were working as free traders or buffalo hunters supplying pemmican to the fur trade 78 The buffalo were declining in number and the Metis and First Nations had to go farther and further west to hunt them 79 Profits from the fur trade were declining because of a reduction in European demand due to changing tastes as well as the need for the Hudson s Bay Company to extend its reach farther from its main posts to get furs Most references to the Metis in the 19th century applied to the Plains Metis but more particularly the Red River Metis 71 But the Plains Metis tended to identify by occupational categories buffalo hunters pemmican and fur traders and tripmen in the York boat fur brigades among the men 71 the moccasin sewers and cooks among the women The largest community in the Assiniboine Red River district had a different lifestyle and culture from those Metis located in the Saskatchewan Alberta Athabasca and Peace river valleys to the west 71 nbsp Metis drivers with Red River carts c 1860In 1869 two years after Canadian Confederacy the Government of Canada exerted its power over the people living in Rupert s Land after it acquired the land in the mid 19th century from the Hudson s Bay Company 80 The Metis and the Anglo Metis commonly known as Countryborn children of First Nations women and Orcadian other Scottish or English men 81 joined forces to stand up for their rights They wanted to protect their traditional ways of life against an aggressive and distant Anglo Canadian government and its local colonizing agents 77 An 1870 census of Manitoba classified the population as follows 11 963 total people Of this number 558 were defined as Indians First Nations There were 5 757 Metis and 4 083 English speaking Mixed Bloods The remaining 1 565 people were of predominately European Canadian or American background During this time the Canadian government signed treaties known as the Numbered Treaties with various First Nations These Nations ceded property rights to almost the entire western plains to the Government of Canada In return for their ceding traditional lands the Canadian government promised food education medical help etc 82 While the Metis generally did not sign any treaty as a group they were sometimes included even listed as half breeds in some records 83 In the late 19th century following the British North America Act 1867 Louis Riel a Metis who was formally educated became a leader of the Metis in the Red River area He denounced the Canadian government surveys on Metis lands in a speech delivered in late August 1869 in front of Saint Boniface Cathedral 84 The Metis became more fearful when the Canadian government appointed the notoriously anti French William McDougall as the Lieutenant Governor of the Northwest Territories on September 28 1869 in anticipation of a formal transfer of lands to take effect in December 85 On November 2 1869 Louis Riel and 120 men seized Upper Fort Garry the administrative headquarters of the Hudson s Bay Company This was the first overt act of Metis resistance 84 On March 4 1870 the Provisional Government led by Louis Riel executed Thomas Scott after Scott was convicted of insubordination and treason 84 The elected Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia 86 subsequently sent three delegates to Ottawa to negotiate with the Canadian government This resulted in the Manitoba Act and that province s entry into the Canadian Confederation Due to the execution of Scott Riel was charged with murder and fled to the United States in exile 77 nbsp Copy of the Warrant to Apprehend Riel and Lepine issued in WinnipegIn March 1885 the Metis heard that a contingent of 500 North West Mounted Police was heading west 87 They organized and formed the Provisional Government of Saskatchewan with Pierre Parenteau as president and Gabriel Dumont as adjutant general Riel took charge of a few hundred armed men They suffered defeat by Canadian armed forces in a conflict known as the North West Resistance which occurred in northern Saskatchewan from March 26 to May 12 1885 88 89 90 91 Gabriel Dumont fled to the United States while Riel Poundmaker and Big Bear surrendered Big Bear and Poundmaker each were convicted and received a three year sentence On July 6 1885 Riel was convicted of high treason and was sentenced to hang Riel appealed but he was executed on November 16 1885 77 Culture edit Language edit Further information Michif language and Bungi creole A majority of the Metis once spoke and many still speak either Metis French or an Indigenous language such as Cree Anishinaabemowin Denesoline etc A few in some regions spoke a mixed language called Michif which is composed of Plains Cree verbs and French nouns Michif Mechif or Metchif is a phonetic spelling of the Metis pronunciation of Metif a variant of Metis 92 The Metis today predominantly speak Canadian English with Canadian French a strong second language as well as numerous Aboriginal tongues 93 Michif is most used in the United States notably in the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation of North Dakota There Michif is the official language of the Metis who reside on this Chippewa Ojibwe reservation 94 After years of decline in use of these languages the provincial Metis councils are encouraging their revival use in communities and teaching in schools The encouragement and use of Metis French and Michif is growing due to outreach after at least a generation of decline 95 The 19th century community of Anglo Metis more commonly known as Countryborn were children of people in the Rupert s Land fur trade they were typically of Orcadian other Scottish or English paternal descent and Aboriginal maternal descent 95 Their first languages would have been Aboriginal Cree language Saulteaux language Assiniboine language etc and English The Gaelic and Scots spoken by Orcadians and other Scots became part of the creole language referred to as Bungee 96 Flag edit The Metis flag is one of the oldest patriotic flags originating in Canada 97 The Metis have two flags Both flags use the same design of a central infinity symbol but are different colours The first red flag was given to Cuthbert Grant in 1815 by the North West Company as reported by James Sutherland Days before the Battle of Seven Oaks La Grenouillere in 1816 Peter Fidler recorded Cuthbert Grant flying the blue flag The red and blue are not cultural or linguistic identifiers and do not represent the companies 98 Cultural genocide edit In 2019 the final report Reclaiming Power and Place 99 by the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls stated The violence the National Inquiry heard amounts to a race based genocide of Indigenous Peoples including First Nations Inuit and Metis which especially targets women and girls Land ownership edit Issues of land ownership became a central theme as the Metis sold most of the 600 000 acres 2430 km2 they received in the first settlement 100 101 During the 1930s political activism arose in Metis communities in Alberta and Saskatchewan over land rights and some filed land claims for the return of certain lands 102 Five men sometimes dubbed The Famous Five James P Brady Malcolm Norris Peter Tomkins Jr Joe Dion Felix Callihoo were instrumental in having the Alberta government form the 1934 Ewing Commission headed by Albert Ewing to deal with land claims 103 The Alberta government passed the Metis Population Betterment Act in 1938 The Act provided funding and land to the Metis 104 The provincial government later rescinded portions of the land in certain areas 104 In 1972 the Red River Point Society began leasing land around the community of Fort McKay Alberta on behalf of the Metis community there 105 In 2017 the Fort McKay local of the Metis Nation of Alberta purchased some land outright 10 Organizations edit Pre Batoche edit nbsp Councillors of the Metis Provisional Government 1870 Louis Riel sits in the centre he Provisional Government of Saskatchewan was the name given by Louis Riel to the independent state he declared during the North West Rebellion Resistance of 1885 in what is today the Canadian province of Saskatchewan The governing council was named the Exovedate Latin for of the flock 106 The council debated issues ranging from military policy to local bylaws and theological issues It met at Batoche Saskatchewan and exercised real authority only over the Southbranch Settlement The provisional government collapsed that year after the Battle of Batoche L Association des Metis d Alberta et les Territories du Nord Ouest 1928 and Metis Association of Alberta 1932 edit Founded by the Metis famous five this was the first stable Metis organization in Alberta that could advocate to the provincial government there It led to the creation of the Ewing Commission to study Metis issues which in turn resulted in the Metis Population Betterment Act and the creation of the Metis Settlements Native Council of Canada 1971 and Congress of Aboriginal Peoples 1993 edit Founded in 1971 this was a pan Indigenous umbrella group that included member organizations that represented all off reserve First Nations as well as the Metis In 1983 many of its Western Metis members split off to from the Metis National Council The Native Council of Canada continues today as the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples CAP and its nine regional affiliates represent all Aboriginal people who are not part of the reserve system including Metis and non Status Indians Metis National Council 1983 edit The Metis National Council was formed in 1983 following the recognition of the Metis as aboriginal peoples of Canada in Section Thirty five of the Constitution Act 1982 107 The MNC was a member of the World Council of Indigenous Peoples WCIP citation needed In 1997 the Metis National Council was granted NGO Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council The MNC s first ambassador to this group was Clement Chartier MNC is a founding member of the American Council of Indigenous Peoples ACIP 108 The Metis National Council is currently composed of four provincial Metis organizations though numbers have varied over time 109 namely Metis Nation of Alberta Metis Nation British Columbia Metis Nation Saskatchewan Metis Nation of Ontario 110 There used to be five groups but in September 2021 the Manitoba Metis Federation left over membership issues involving the Metis Nation of Ontario MNO with President David Chartrand citing issues of the Council accepting the MNO despite the MNO having nearly 80 per cent non Metis Nation Citizens in their registry 111 The Metis National Council has stated that they reject the idea of new Ontario Metis communities 35 and in 2020 they suspended the membership of the Metis Nation of Ontario 112 due to concerns that 90 of the MNOs registered members did not fulfill the requirements of citizenship put in place by the National Council in 2002 notably the requirement for an ancestral link to the Metis homelands and the Red River area specifically 112 113 On March 22 2022 in response to David Chartrand s comments on MNO suspension President Margaret Froh stated her position that The MNO was never suspended the MNO was on probation and there was a decision by just a few individuals declaring that the MNO was suspended when in fact that wasn t correct and in fact we MNO went to court and the court concluded we were not suspended 114 The Ontario group had granted memberships to people from four disputed communities 115 116 Mattawa Georgian Bay Killarney and Temiskaming claiming these groups consist of Metis people and not simply regions inhabited by First Nations individuals and some settlers but without cultural ties to the recognized Metis communities 117 When the suspension was announced a motion was passed to create a panel of experts including representatives from the four Metis Nation governments including MNO to gather information and present findings and recommendations on how to proceed 115 The National Council holds province wide ballot box elections for political positions in these associations held at regular intervals for regional and provincial leadership Metis citizens and their communities are represented and participate in these Metis governance structures by way of elected Locals or Community Councils as well as provincial assemblies held annually 118 Metis settlements of Alberta edit nbsp A Metis flag National symbols in settlements are common such as the motto Our People Our Land Our Culture Our Future The Metis settlements in Alberta are the only recognized land base of Metis in Canada They are represented and governed collectively by a unique Metis government known as the Metis Settlements General Council MSGC 119 also known as the All Council The MSGC is the provincial national and international representative of the Federated Metis Settlements It holds fee simple land title via Letters Patents to 1 25 million acres 5060 km2 of land making the MSGC the largest land holder in the province other than the Crown in the Right of Alberta The MSGC is the only recognized Metis Government in Canada with prescribed land power and jurisdiction via the Metis Settlements Act 120 This legislation followed legal suits filed by the Metis Settlements against the Crown in the 1970s The Metis settlements consist of predominantly Indigenous Metis populations native to Northern Alberta distinct from those of the Red River the Great Lakes and other migrant Metis from further east However following the Riel and Dumont resistances some Red River Metis fled westward where they married into the contemporary Metis settlement populations during the end of the 19th century and into the early 20th century Historically referred to as the Nomadic Half breeds the Metis of Northern Alberta have a unique history 121 Their fight for land is still evident today with the eight contemporary Metis settlements 122 Following the formal establishment of the Metis settlements then called Half Breed Colonies in the 1930s by a distinct Metis political organization the Metis populations in Northern Alberta were the only Metis to secure communal Metis lands During renewed Indigenous activism during the 1960s into the 1970s political organizations were formed or revived among the Metis In Alberta the Metis settlements united as The Alberta Federation of Metis Settlement Associations in the mid 1970s Today the Federation is represented by the Metis Settlements General Council 119 During the constitutional talks of 1982 the Metis were recognized as one of the three Aboriginal peoples of Canada in part by the Federation of Metis Settlements In 1990 the Alberta government following years of conferences and negotiations between the Federation of Metis Settlements FMS and the Crown in the Right of Alberta restored land titles to the northern Metis communities through the Metis Settlement Act replacing the Metis Betterment Act 123 Originally the first Metis settlements in Alberta were called colonies and consisted of Buffalo Lake Caslan or Beaver River Cold Lake East Prairie south of Lesser Slave Lake Elizabeth east of Elk Point Fishing Lake Packechawanis Gift Lake Ma cha cho wi se or Utikuma Lake Goodfish Lake Kikino Kings Land Marlboro Paddle Prairie or Keg River Peavine Big Prairie north of High Prairie Touchwood Wolf Lake north of Bonnyville In the 1960s the settlements of Marlboro Touchwood Cold Lake and Wolf Lake were dissolved by Order in Council by the Alberta Government The remaining Metis Settlers were forced to move into one of the eight remaining Metis Settlements leaving the eight contemporary Metis Settlements The position of Federal Interlocutor for Metis and Non Status Indians was created in 1985 as a portfolio in the Canadian Cabinet 124 The Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development is officially responsible only for Status Indians and largely with those living on Indian reserves The new position was created in order provide a liaison between the federal government and Metis and non status Aboriginal peoples urban Aboriginals and their representatives 124 Ontario Metis Aboriginal Association edit The Woodland Metis are not affiliated with the Metis Nation of Ontario MNO and MNO President Tony Belcourt said in 2005 that he did not know who OMAA members are but that they are not Metis 125 In a Supreme Court of Canada appeal Document C28533 page 17 the federal government states that membership in OMAA and or MNO does not establish membership in the specific local aboriginal community for the purposes of establishing a s 35 Indigenous and treaty right Neither OMAA nor the MNO constitute the sort of discrete historic and site specific community contemplated by Van der Peet capable of holding a constitutionally protected aboriginal right 126 See Other groups and individuals Distribution edit According to the 2016 Canada Census a total of 587 545 individuals self identified as Metis 127 However it is doubtful that all such individuals would meet the objective tests laid out in the Supreme Court decisions Powley and Daniels and therefore qualify as Metis for the purposes of Canadian law Data from this section is from the 2016 Canadian Census by Statistics Canada 128 Canadians identifying as Metis Province Territory Percentage of self identified Metis out of total population Canada total 1 7 Newfoundland and Labrador 1 5 Prince Edward Island 0 6 Nova Scotia 2 8 New Brunswick 1 5 Quebec 0 8 Ontario 1 0 Manitoba 7 3 Saskatchewan 5 2 Alberta 2 9 British Columbia 2 0 Yukon 2 9 Northwest Territories 7 1 Nunavut 0 5 Metis people in the United States edit nbsp Paul Kane s oil painting Half Breeds Running Buffalo depicting a Metis buffalo hunt on the prairies of Dakota in June 1846Metis people in the United States are a specific culture and community who descend from unions between Native American and early European colonist parents usually Indigenous women who married French and later Scottish or English men who worked as fur trappers and traders during the 17th to 19th centuries in the fur trade era The women were usually Algonquian Ojibwe and Cree They developed as an ethnic and cultural group from the descendants of these unions In the French colonies people of mixed Indigenous and French ancestry were referred to by those who spoke French as metis meaning mixture Being bilingual these people were able to trade European goods such as muskets for the furs and hides at a trading post These Metis were found throughout the Great Lakes area and to the west in the Rocky Mountains While the word in this usage originally had no ethnic designation and was not capitalized in English it grew to describe a specific ethnicity by the early 19th century This use of simply meaning mixed excludes mixed race people born of unions in other settings or more recently than about 1870 Fewer Metis live in the U S than in Canada During the early colonial era people moved easily back and forth through Canada and the British colonies As of 2018 Metis people lived in Michigan Illinois Ohio Minnesota North Dakota and Montana 129 Geography edit With exploration settlement and exploitation of resources by French and British fur trading interests across North America European men often had relationships and sometimes marriages with Native American women Often both sides felt such marriages were beneficial in strengthening the fur trade Indigenous women often served as interpreters and could introduce their men to their people Because many Native Americans and First Nations often had matrilineal kinship systems the mixed race children were considered born to the mother s clan and usually raised in her culture Fewer were educated in European schools 130 The metis children that did attempt to go about integrating into European societies faced many issues with attempting to obtain citizenship within these early settlements 131 The metis men in the northern tier typically worked in the fur trade and later hunting and as guides The metis based in Red River Colony eventually settled throughout the Canadian Prairies as a distinct ethnic group with its own culture known as the Metis 130 132 American history edit Between 1795 and 1815 a network of Metis settlements and trading posts was established throughout what is now the US states of Michigan and Wisconsin and to a lesser extent in Illinois and Indiana As late as 1829 the Metis were dominant in the economy of present day Wisconsin and Northern Michigan 133 nbsp A Metis family poses with their Red River carts in a field in western North Dakota 1883 State Historical Society of North Dakota A4365 During the early days of territorial Michigan Metis and French played a dominant role in elections It was largely with Metis support that Gabriel Richard was elected as delegate to Congress After Michigan was admitted as a state and under pressure of increased European American settlers from eastern states many Metis migrated westward into the Canadian Prairies including the Red River Colony and the Southbranch Settlement 134 Others identified with Chippewa groups while many others were subsumed in an ethnic French identity such as the Muskrat French 135 By the late 1830s only in the area of Sault Ste Marie was there recognition of the Metis as a significant part of the community 136 Another major Metis settlement was La Baye located at the present site of Green Bay Wisconsin In 1816 most of its residents were Metis 137 In Montana a large group of Metis from Pembina region hunted there in the 1860s eventually forming an agricultural settlement in the Judith Basin by 1880 This settlement eventually disintegrated with most Metis leaving or identifying more strongly either as white or Indian 138 Metis often participated in interracial marriages The French in specific viewed these marriages as sensible and realistic Americans however viewed interracial marriages as unsound as the idea of racial purity was seen as the only option Although it was legal the result of these marriages generally resulted in the loss of status for the spouse of the highest social class as well as for any children produced during the marriage The French however seemed to motivate fur traders to participate in interracial marriages with Indian tribes as they helped to be beneficial to the fur trade business and also to spread religion Generally speaking these marriages were happy ones that lasted and brought together differing groups of people and benefitted the fur trade business 139 140 Current population edit Mixed race people live throughout Canada and the northern United States but only some in the US identify ethnically and culturally as Metis A strong Prairie Metis identity exists in the Metis Homeland which existed in most of Rupert s Land 141 but also extends south from Canada into Minnesota Montana and North Dakota 142 A number of self identified Metis live in North Dakota mostly in Pembina County 143 Many members of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians a federally recognized Tribe identify as Metis or Michif rather than as strictly Ojibwe 144 Many Metis families are recorded in the U S Census for the historic Metis settlement areas along the Detroit and St Clair rivers Mackinac Island and Sault Ste Marie Michigan as well as Green Bay in Wisconsin 145 Their ancestral families were often formed in the early 19th century fur trading era Metis persons have generally not organized as an ethnic or political group in the United States as they have in Canada where they had armed confrontations The first Conference on the Metis in North America was held in Chicago in 1981 146 after increasing research about this people This also was a period of increased appreciation for different ethnic groups and reappraisal of the histories of settlement of North America Papers at the conference focused on becoming Metis and the role of history in formation of this ethnic group defined in Canada as having Aboriginal status The Metis peoples and their history continue to be extensively studied especially by scholars in Canada and the United States 147 Louis Riel and the United States edit Riel had a significant impact on the Metis community in Canada especially in the Manitoba region However he did also have a distinct relationship with the Metis in the United States and was in fact at the time of his execution an American citizen 148 Riel attempted to be a leader for the Metis community in the United States and contributed immensely in the defence of the Metis rights especially those who occupied the Red River region throughout his life On October 22 1844 Louis Riel was born in the Red River settlement known as the territory of Assiniboia 148 He was born with British background however as the Metis are a mobile community he travelled a lot and had a transitional identity meaning he would often cross the Canada and United States border During the 19th century there were few American born citizens living in Red River altogether Riel greatly contributed to the defense of Metis justice more specifically on November 22 1869 Riel arrived in Winnipeg to discuss with McDougall the rights of the Metis community At the end of the settlement McDougall agreed to guarantee a List of Rights 148 That statement also incorporated four clauses of the Dakota bill of rights This Bill of rights was the rise of the American Metis influence during the Red River Metis revolution and was an important milestone in Metis justice The following years saw a constant battle between the government in charge and the Metis people that also created conflict involving citizenship of Metis leaders such as Louis Riel who was crossing the border without proper notice This caused repercussions for Riel who was now wanted by the Ontario government He was later accused for the Scott Death a murder case which was decided without a proper trial and by 1874 there was a warrant out for his arrest in Winnipeg 148 Because of the warrant accusations in Canada Riel saw the United States as a safer territory for himself and the Metis people The following years led to Riel running from the Canadian government because of the murder convictions and this is when he spent most of his time in the United States Riel struggled with mental health problems and decided in the following years that it was time to receive proper treatment in the American northeast from 1875 to 1878 Once better decided to change his life by obtaining an American residence and decided to complete the journey of the liberation of the Metis people that he first started in 1869 With the help of the United States military Riel wanted to invade Manitoba to obtain control However because of the lack of desire to cause conflict with the Canadian military the American military rejected his proposition He then tried to create an international alliance between the Aboriginal and Metis people which was not a success either In the end his main objective was to simply improve the living conditions and rights of the Metis people in the United States The failed attempts for Riel to defend the Metis community lead to further mental breakdowns and hospitalization now in Quebec 148 Riel returned to Montana from 1879 to continue on his mission to defend the Metis community in the United States Riel wanted the Metis and the Native people of the region to join forces and create a political movement against the provisional government Both parties denied this profound movement and after yet another failed attempt to create a revolution he decided to officially become an American citizen and declared The United States sheltered me The English didn t care what they owe they will pay I am citizen 148 He then spent the next four years improving the conditions of the Montana Metis in any way he could Riel stayed in the United States from 1880 to 1884 fighting to obtain official residency from the American government but without success he finally departed for Saskatchewan in 1884 Riel concentrated his public life on improving the situation of the Montana Metis and had a big impact on the Metis people in the United States by attempting to address their rights and improve overall living conditions The following years was a constant battle to obtain official citizenship from the American government In the end an American citizenship did not permit the protection from Canadian convictions The American officials did not confirm his American citizenship because of fear of further conflict with the Canadian government and confirmed Riel s execution for treason in 1885 148 Medicine Line Canada U S border editThe Metis homeland existed before the implementation of the Canada U S border and continues to exist on both sides of this border today The implementation of the border affected the Metis in a multitude of ways with border enforcement growing from relaxed to increasingly stronger over time 149 In the late 18th century to early 19th century the Metis found that in times of conflict they could cross the 49th parallel North in either direction and the trouble following them would stop and so the border was known as the Medicine Line This began to change toward the end of the 19th century when the border became more enforced and the Canadian government saw an opportunity to put an end to the line hopping by using military force 149 This effectively split some of the Metis population and restricted the mobility of the People The enforcement of the border was used as a means for governments on either side of the Medicine Line in the grand prairies to control the Metis population and to restrict their access to buffalo 149 Because of the importance of kinship and mobility for Metis communities 29 this had negative implications and resulted in different experiences and hardships for people in the now divided group Metis experience in the U S is largely coloured by unratified treaties and the lack of federal representation of Metis communities as a legitimate people and this can be seen in the case of the Little Shell Tribe in Montana 150 While experiences in Canada are also affected by the misrecognition of the Metis many Metis were dispossessed of their lands when they were sold to settlers and some communities set up road allowance villages These small villages were squatters villages along Crown land outside of established villages in the prairies of Canada 151 These villages were often burned by local authorities and had to be rebuilt by surviving members of the communities who lived in them See also edit nbsp Indigenous peoples of the Americas portalList of Metis people Little Shell Band of Chippewa Indians Index of articles related to Indigenous Canadians Mestizo Spanish cognate for a person of mixed Indigenous American and European heritage in Latin America Mestico Portuguese cognate for a person with one Indigenous and one European parent Sexual victimization of Native American women Marriage a la facon du pays Marriage as a trading strategy in the North American fur trade Indian princess Historic roles of Native American womenCitations edit a b c Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2022 09 21 Indigenous identity by Registered or Treaty Indian status Canada provinces and territories census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 21 Kermoal N Andersen C 2021 Daniels v Canada In and Beyond the Courts University of Manitoba Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 88755 931 0 Retrieved Dec 3 2022 Its historic homeland includes large parts of what are now known as the Prairie provinces extending into parts of Ontario British Columbia the Northwest Territories and the northwest United States Metis Homeland Rupertsland Institute Retrieved 2021 07 24 Metis villages sprang up along the riverways from the Great Lakes to the Mackenzie Delta The Rupert s Land territory included all or parts of present day Northwest Nunavut Territory Ontario Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta and British Columbia and became known to the Metis as the Metis Homeland Andersen C 2014 Metis Race Recognition and the Struggle for Indigenous Peoplehood UBC Press Rupertsland Centre for Metis Research in the Faculty of Native Studies at the University of Alberta p 108 ISBN 978 0 7748 2723 2 The MNC s narrative traces the geographical boundaries of what it terms the Metis Homeland to the historical waterways from northern Ontario to British Columbia and from the Northwest Territories to the northern United States Prefontaine Darren R Metis History Indigenous Saskatchewan Encyclopedia University of Saskatchewan Retrieved 18 October 2021 Rea amp Scott 2017 Aboriginal peoples in Canada Key results from the 2016 Census StatCan 25 October 2017 Peterson amp Brown 1985 Introduction Metis Relations alberta ca Province of Alberta Retrieved 26 July 2020 a b Small northern Alberta community gets bigger with historic land purchase Globalnews ca Global News Retrieved 2023 11 01 Metis Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 18 October 2021 a b c Metis Oxford English Dictionary Paul Robert 1986 Le petit robert vol 1 dictionnaire alphabetique 1989 ed Les Dictionnaires Robert Canada p 1228 ISBN 0004335147 Retrieved 19 March 2022 O Toole 2017 p 32 Selon le Petit Robert une vieille acception de metis a b Metis Etymologie de Metis Etymology of Metis Ortolang in French Centre National de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales Retrieved July 17 2017 James Alexander 2001 pp 14 5 Jones 2013 p 296 Lorcin 2006 pp 210 211 Robson amp Yee 2005 pp 210 211 Hamelin Jean Gagnon Jacques 1979 1966 Jean Nicollet de Belleborne Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol 1 University of Toronto Universite Laval Retrieved February 13 2022 Madill 1983 E Foster The Metis The People and the Term 1978 3 Prairie Forum 79 at 86 87 107 a b Gaudry Adam Welch Mary Agnes Gallant David 2020 2009 Metis The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved September 1 2019 Flanagan 1990 pp 71 94 Teillet Jean September 13 2019 The confusing world of Metis identity Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved February 15 2022 Bell 2013 Page 4 Metis gt Identity Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada Canadian Geographic Retrieved March 13 2022 a b c O Toole 2017 p 32 Pour eviter la confusion on a tendance a parler de metissage ou de metisse plutot que de metis a b St Onge Podruchny amp Macdougall 2012 Andersen 2011 Chartrand amp Giokas 2002 Chartrand 2002 a b c d e f g The controversial rise of the eastern Metis Where were these people all this time cbc ca May 27 2018 Retrieved Aug 25 2022 a b c Wright Teresa 2020 01 26 Metis leaders raise concerns about national council call for reform thestar com Retrieved 2022 11 20 a b c d Metis National Council rejects idea of new Ontario Metis communities after 2nd identity forum Mar 27 2021 Retrieved Dec 1 2022 David Chartrand vice president of the Metis National Council says communities outside northwestern Ontario are not connected to the Metis homeland or to the culture of the nation The Metis National Council MNC has released a statement flat out rejecting new Metis communities particularly in Ontario Chartrand is worried that many of the new people who claim to be Metis in Ontario might have mixed First Nations and European ancestry but don t necessarily have a connection to Metis culture history or the Metis homeland He said the homeland of the Metis extends to parts of northwestern Ontario including the regions around Kenora and Fort Frances but questioned the validity of communities in other parts of Ontario a b Leroux Darryl R J Gaudry Adam October 25 2017 Becoming Indigenous The rise of Eastern Metis in Canada The Conversation Retrieved November 20 2022 gt Daniels v Canada Indian Affairs and Northern Development 2016 SCC 12 CanLII 2016 1 SCR 99 par 17 retrieved on 2022 03 17 Tremaudan 1936a Excerpted from Appendice Dernier Memoire de Louis Riel Les Metis du Nord Ouest p 434 435 Tremaudan 1936b Pritchard Pritchard amp Pritchard 2004 Page 36 Abbe Pierre Maillard claimed that racial intermixing had proceeded so far by 1753 that in fifty years it would be impossible to distinguish Amerindian from French in Acadia Malette Sebastien 2018 04 19 Who are the Metis sebastienmalette ca Retrieved 2021 08 25 a b c Barkwell Dorion amp Prefontaine 2001 Madill 1983 p 20 unpublished consulting report Carolyn Harrington analyzes in detail the historical development of mixed bloods in middle northern Ontario from 1623 in Development of a Half Breed Community in the Upper Great Lakes What to Search Topics Genealogy and Family History Library and Archives Canada 6 October 2014 Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved November 15 2018 Rinella Steven 2008 American Buffalo In Search of A Lost Icon NY Spiegel and Grau McNab amp Lischke 2005 Jackatars The term jackatar The Oxford Companion to Canadian History Oxford University Press January 2004 ISBN 978 0 19 541559 9 Retrieved 2022 03 15 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Metis Homeland Rupertsland Institute Retrieved 2022 01 17 Howard James H 1965 The Plains Ojibwa or Bungi hunters and warriors of the Northern Prairies with special reference to the Turtle Mountain band University of South Dakota Museum Anthropology Papers 1 Lincoln Nebraska J and L Reprint Co Reprints in Anthropology 7 1977 Aboriginal identity population Canada 2016 StatCan 25 October 2017 Retrieved November 15 2018 a b Cecco Leland 24 Oct 2021 We know who we are Inuit row raises questions over identity and ancestry The Guardian Retrieved 14 April 2022 Also at issue is the growing number of people identifying as Metis and trace their ancestry to both Indigenous people and European settlers in the Prairie region Some such groups have faced allegations they are appropriating Indigenous identity Critics of the NunatuKavut point out that in 2010 it changed its name from the Labrador Metis Council NunatuKavut which has been an organization since the 1980s says the term Metis was used for a lineage of both Indigenous and settler ancestry but that Inuit now better reflects their membership Others remain skeptical What we re seeing is the phenomenon of non Indigenous people or those with a very distant ancestry from the 1600 and 1700s now claiming that they now have political rights which prevail over those Indigenous nations said Veldon Coburn a professor in Indigenous studies at the University of Ottawa and member of the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan Gaudry Adam June 21 2016 Metis Are a People Not a Historical Process The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada Retrieved 14 April 2022 This means that beyond self identification and ancestry being claimed by the Metis Nation is integral to being Metis as it is with any other Indigenous people Lambrecht Kirk N 2013 Aboriginal Consultation Environmental Assessment and Regulatory Review in Canada University of Regina Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 88977 298 4 a b c d e f g h i j Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Aboriginal Peoples 41st Parliament 1st Session The People Who Own Themselves Recognition of Metis Identity in Canada PDF 10th ed Canada Parliament Senate June 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2014 Part II Rights of the Aboriginal People of Canada The Constitution Acts 1867 to 1982 Canadian Department of Justice 7 August 2020 Retrieved 13 April 2022 R v Powley 2003 SCC 43 CanLII 2003 2 SCR 207 retrieved on 2022 03 17 a b McNab amp Lischke 2007 Morris Alexander The Treaties of Canada with the Indians of Manitoba and the North West Territories Including the Negotiations on which They Were Belfords Clarke amp Co 1880 Gaudry Adam 2016 Metis are a People not a historical process The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved September 1 2019 Gagnon Denis 2018 2016 The Other Metis The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved September 1 2019 The Metis History albertametis com The Metis Nation of Alberta a b Galloway Gloria Trudeau pledges annual meetings with Indigenous leaders to advance reconciliation The Globe and Mail Retrieved November 15 2018 Canada Metis Nation Accord 20 April 2017 Archived from the original on November 15 2018 Retrieved November 15 2018 Aboriginal Canada Portal Metis Card Archived 2013 02 05 at the Wayback Machine MNA membership Archived 2013 11 06 at the Wayback Machine Metis Nation of Alberta Metis Russell M Lawson Benjamin A Lawson eds 11 October 2019 Race and Ethnicity in America From Pre contact to the Present 4 volumes ABC CLIO pp 127 ISBN 978 1 4408 5097 4 OCLC 1089256893 James Minahan 2013 Ethnic Groups of the Americas An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 241 ISBN 978 1 61069 163 5 OCLC 1026065993 Gerhard J Ens Joe Sawchuk 27 January 2016 From New Peoples to New Nations Aspects of Metis History and Identity from the Eighteenth to the Twenty first Centuries University of Toronto Press pp 45 ISBN 978 1 4426 2150 3 a b c Van Kirk 1983 Belshaw John Douglas Apr 13 2015 8 8 Fur Trade Society and the Metis BCcampus Open Publishing Open Textbooks Adapted and Created by BC Faculty Retrieved Feb 14 2023 a b c d Foster John E 1985 Paulet Paul Metis or House Indian Folk Hero Manitoba History Manitoba Historical Society 9 Spring Retrieved 7 December 2012 Binnema Ens amp Macleod 2001 pp ix xxii a b The Metis Nation Angelhair Archived from the original on 2009 08 01 Who are the Metis Metis National Council Archived from the original on 2010 02 26 Canada A Country by Consent Manitoba Joins Confederation The Metis www canadahistoryproject ca Ray 2016 pp 210 212 a b c d Riel and the Metis people PDF The Departments of Advanced Education and Literacy Competitiveness Training and Trade and Education Citizenship and Youth Archived from the original PDF on 2008 11 22 Retrieved 2009 10 03 Peters E Stock M Werner A 2018 Rooster Town The History of an Urban Metis Community 1901 1961 University of Manitoba Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 88755 566 4 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Hogue M 2015 Metis and the Medicine Line Creating a Border and Dividing a People The David J Weber Series in the New Borderlands History University of North Carolina Press p 124 ISBN 978 1 4696 2106 7 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Gillespie 2007 Jackson 2007 Treaty 10 The Canadian Encyclopedia Aug 29 2016 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Do the Metis fall within section 91 24 of the Constitution Act 1867 by Bradford W Morse and John Giokas Z1 1991 1 41 170E PDF Canada ca Government of Canada Publications Jul 1 2002 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 a b c Thomas Lewis H 2016 1982 Riel Louis 1844 85 Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol 11 1881 1890 University of Toronto Universite Laval Retrieved November 15 2018 King T 2012 The Inconvenient Indian A Curious Account of Native People in North America Doubleday Canada p 21 ISBN 978 0 385 67405 8 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 The Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia Manitoba Government Indigenous Reconciliation and Northern Relations Retrieved November 15 2018 Weinstein 2007 1885 Northwest Resistance Canadian Geographic Retrieved 10 September 2022 The North West Resistance Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on 5 September 2022 Retrieved 5 September 2022 Thistle Jesse 2014 The 1885 Northwest Resistance Causes to the Conflict HPS History and Political Science Journal 3 Teillet Jean 17 September 2019 The North West Is Our Mother The Story of Louis Riel s People the Metis Nation HarperCollins pp 576 pages ISBN 978 1 4434 5014 0 Barkwell Lawrence J Fleury Normand 2017 Michif Language Resources An Annotated Bibliography PDF Winnipeg Louis Riel Institute Fast Facts on Metis Metis Culture amp Heritage Resource Centre Archived from the original on 2010 01 10 Retrieved 2009 10 03 Bakker 1997 Chapter 1 Introduction The Problem of Michif pp 3 4 Online a b Barkwell Dorion amp Hourie 2006 Eleanor M Blaine 2017 2008 Bungi The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved September 1 2019 Early Nationalism Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada Jun 5 2018 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 The Metis flag Gabriel Dumont Institute Metis Culture amp Heritage Resource Centre Archived from the original on 2009 03 04 Retrieved 2009 10 03 Reclaiming Power and Place The Final Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Ens Gerhard 1983 Metis Lands in Manitoba Manitoba History 5 Sprague D N 1980 The Manitoba Land Question 1870 1882 Journal of Canadian Studies 15 3 74 84 doi 10 3138 jcs 15 3 74 S2CID 152155284 Barkwell 2016 Arneil B 2017 Domestic Colonies The Turn Inward to Colony OUP Oxford p 118 ISBN 978 0 19 252512 3 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 a b Pocklington T C 1991 The Government and Politics of the Alberta Metis Settlements Canadian plains studies Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina p 26 ISBN 978 0 88977 060 7 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 History Fort McKay Metis Nation 2020 05 15 Retrieved 2023 11 01 Metis gt 1885 Northwest Resistance Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada Canadian Geographic Retrieved March 16 2022 INAN Section 35 of the Constitution Act 1982 Background Jan 28 2021 13 May 2021 Retrieved 21 April 2022 Founding Meeting of the American Council of Indigenous Peoples YouTube Apr 18 2018 Retrieved March 16 2022 Mann Michelle M 2007 First Nations Metis and Inuit Children and Youth Time to Act National Council of Welfare vol 127 Ottawa National Council of Welfare ISBN 978 0 662 46640 6 Metis National Council www metisnation ca Retrieved 2023 02 08 Manitoba Metis Federation leaves Metis National Council Sep 29 2021 Retrieved Dec 1 2022 a b Metis leaders raise concerns about national council call for reform thestar com 2020 01 26 Retrieved 2021 04 15 Lachance Miguel Pilion Didier August 23 2019 Les Metis de l Ontario tentent de s entendre au sujet de la gouvernance Radio Canada in Canadian French Retrieved 2022 11 29 M Sarrazin fait reference a une resolution du Ralliement national des Metis RNM qui exige de la NMO la mise en place d une definition plus stricte du statut de Metis pour mettre fin a une probation La probation je m en fous car le Ralliement n a aucune autorite sur nous affirme Mme Picotte Ward Dennis 2022 03 22 3 16 Metis National Council moving forward says MNO president APTN News Retrieved 2023 02 09 a b MNO will present its case to determine future in Metis National Council stcatharinesstandard com 2021 10 06 Retrieved 2023 02 08 Metis Nation of Ontario Harvesting Metis Nation of Ontario Retrieved 2023 02 08 You can t be us Manitoba Metis Federation unanimously passes resolution to leave Metis National Council APTN News Archived from the original on 2020 10 28 Metis National Council homepage a b Metis Settlements of Alberta msgc ca Retrieved March 16 2022 Alberta Government of Sep 17 2012 Alberta King s Printer Alberta ca Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Peterson J Brown J S H 2001 The New Peoples Being and Becoming Metis in North America Manitoba Series in Native Hist Series III Series Minnesota Historical Society Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 87351 408 8 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Darcy L MacPherson et MacPherson D L Schwartz B P Manitoba Law Journal A Review of the Current Legal Landscape 2015 Volume 38 1 Manitoba Law Journal p 57 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 History of Metis Settlements in Canada The Canadian Encyclopedia Apr 21 2022 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 a b Office of the Federal Interlocutor for Metis and Non Status Indians Mandate Roles and Responsibilities Indian and Northern Affairs Canada 2009 Archived from the original on 2010 01 28 Retrieved 2010 04 18 OMAA names MNO in legal action against governments Ammsa com Retrieved November 15 2018 Supreme Court of Canada Queen vs Powley amp Powley Report December 2002 C28533 Retrieved November 15 2018 Aboriginal Population Profile 2016 Census Canada StatCan 21 June 2018 Retrieved November 15 2018 2016 Census of Canada Topic based tabulations Ethnic Origin 247 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 and Sex 3 for the Population of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2006 Census 20 Sample Data StatCan 25 October 2017 Retrieved November 11 2020 Peterson amp Brown 1985 p 5 a b Poitras Pratt 2019 Lapier Rosalyn American Indian Family History Project OCLC 967481139 23 pages Bell 2013 p 4 Peterson amp Brown 1985 pp 44 45 Barkwell Lawrence J Louis Riel Institute 2016 The Metis homeland its settlements and communities Winnipeg MB ISBN 978 1 927531 12 9 OCLC 956556384 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link James Laforest 2016 A Metis Family in the Detroit River Region and Pays d en Haut Michigan Historical Review The Michigan Historical Review Project MUSE 42 2 67 doi 10 5342 michhistrevi 42 2 0067 ISSN 0890 1686 Binnema T Neylan S 2011 New Histories for Old Changing Perspectives on Canada s Native Pasts UBC Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 7748 4012 5 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Kerry A Trask Settlement in a Half Savage Land Life and Loss in the Metis Community of La Baye Michigan Historical Review Vol 15 no 1 Spring 1989 p 1 Annette Travis R 2010 Where the Buffalo Roam Migration of the French Red River Metis to Lewiston Montana PDF Masters thesis Montana State University Fredrickson George M March 2005 Mulattoes and metis Attitudes toward miscegenation in the United States and France since the seventeenth century International Social Science Journal 57 183 103 112 doi 10 1111 j 0020 8701 2005 00534 x ISSN 0020 8701 Peterson amp Brown 1985 pp 41 67 Labelle M J 2023 The Boomerang Effect of Decolonization Post Orientalism and the Politics of Difference McGill Queen s University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 2280 1543 7 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Foster M H 2016 We Know Who We Are Metis Identity in a Montana Community University of Oklahoma Press p 23 ISBN 978 0 8061 8234 6 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 The Metis A Blending of Two Cultures history nd gov Pembina State Museum History State Historical Society of North Dakota Retrieved 2016 01 07 White Weasel Charlie 1989 Old White Rice The Great Chief Genesis of the Pembina Turtle Mountain Chippewa Belcourt North Dakota Self published p 5 Trask Kerry A 1989 Settlement in a Half Savage Land Life and Loss in the Metis Community of La Baye Michigan Historical Review Central Michigan University 15 1 1 27 ISSN 0890 1686 JSTOR 20173154 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 Peter C Douaud Reviewed Work The New Peoples Being and Becoming Metis in North America by Jacqueline Peterson Jennifer S H Brown American Indian Quarterly Vol 11 No 2 Spring 1987 pp 159 161 University of Nebraska Press Article doi 10 2307 1183704 subscription required accessed 12 May 2015 Giroux Monique 2018 New Directions and Revisionist Histories in Metis Studies Acadiensis Acadiensis Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region 47 2 142 150 ISSN 0044 5851 JSTOR 26556916 Retrieved Feb 14 2023 a b c d e f g Bumsted J M March 1999 Louis Riel and the United States American Review of Canadian Studies 29 1 17 41 doi 10 1080 02722019909481620 ISSN 0272 2011 a b c Hogue 2002 Vrooman Nicholas C P Spring 2019 The Persistence of the Little Shell People Distinctly Montana Magazine 67 69 MacKinnon 2018Bibliography editAndersen Chris 1 January 2011 Moya Tipimsook The People Who Aren t Their Own Bosses Racialization and the Misrecognition of Metis In Upper Great Lakes Ethnohistory Ethnohistory 58 1 37 63 doi 10 1215 00141801 2010 063 Andersen C 2014 More Than the Sum of Our Rebellions Metis Histories Beyond Batoche Ethnohistory 61 4 619 633 doi 10 1215 00141801 2717795 Andersen Chris 2014 Metis Race Recognition and the Struggle for Indigenous Peoplehood Vancouver UBC Press Bakker Peter 1997 A Language of Our Own The Genesis of Michif the Mixed Cree French Language of the Canadian Metis Oxford studies in anthrological linguistics New York amp Oxford Oxford University Press Inc ISBN 0 19 509712 2 Retrieved 2009 10 03 Paperback Book preview link provided Barkwell L n d Metis Political Organizations Barkwell Lawrence 2013 2002 Metis Rights and Land Claims in Canada An Annotated Bibliography Accessed September 1 2019 Barkwell Lawrence J 2010 The Battle of Seven Oaks a Metis perspective Winnipeg Manitoba Louis Riel Institute ISBN 978 0 9809912 9 1 Barkwell Lawrence J 2010 Women of the Metis Nation Winnipeg Louis Riel Institute ISBN 978 0 9809912 5 3 Barkwell Lawrence J 2011 Veterans and Families of the 1885 Northwest Resistance Saskatoon Gabriel Dumont Institute ISBN 978 1 926795 03 4 Barkwell Lawrence J 2016 The Metis homeland its settlements and communities Winnipeg Manitoba Louis Riel Institute ISBN 978 1 927531129 Barkwell Lawrence J Dorion Leah Prefontaine Darren 2001 Metis Legacy A Historiography and Annotated Bibliography Winnipeg Pemmican Publications Inc amp Saskatoon Gabriel Dumont Institute ISBN 1 894717 03 1 Barkwell Lawrence J Dorion Leah Hourie Audreen 2006 Metis Legacy II Michif Culture Heritage and Folkways Metis Legacy Series Vol 2 Saskatoon Gabriel Dumont Institute ISBN 0 920915 80 9 Barnholden Michael 2009 Circumstances Alter Photographs Captain James Peters Reports from the War of 1885 Vancouver BC Talonbooks ISBN 978 0 88922 621 0 Bell Gloria Jane 2013 Oscillating Identities In Adams Christopher Dahl Gregg Peach Ian eds Metis in Canada history identity law and politics The University of Alberta Press ISBN 978 0 88864 722 1 Most curators and scholars argue that the development of the Metis nation occurred at the Red River Settlement and that Metis families dispersed from there to other regions Binnema Theodore Ens Gerhard J Macleod Rod April 30 2001 From Rupert s Land to Canada Essays in Honour of John E Foster University of Alberta ISBN 9780888643636 Chartrand Paul LAH 2002 The Hard Case of Defining The Metis People and their Rights A Comment on R v Powley Constitutional Forum Constitutionnel Centre for Constitutional Studies 12 3 84 93 Retrieved 2022 03 15 CanLIIDocs 376 Chartrand Paul L A H Giokas John 2002 Defining the Metis People The Hard Case of Canadian Aboriginal Law In Chartrand Paul L A H ed Who Are Canada s Aboriginal Peoples Recognition Definition and Jurisdiction Saskatoon Purich pp 268 294 Dumont Gabriel Gabriel Dumont Speaks Talonbooks 2009 ISBN 978 0 88922 625 8 Friesen Gerald 1987 The Canadian Prairies Toronto Toronto University Press ISBN 0 8020 6648 8 Flanagan T 1990 The History of Metis Aboriginal Rights Politics Principle and Policy Canadian Journal of Law and Society 5 71 94 doi 10 1017 S0829320100001721 S2CID 142986900 Foster Martha Harroun Summer 2006a Just Following the Buffalo Origins of a Montana Metis Community Great Plains Quarterly Lincoln NE Center for Great Plains Studies University of Nebraska 97 3 185 202 Foster Martha Harroun 2006b We Know Who We Are Metis Identity in a Montana Community University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0806137053 Gaudry Adam 2013 The Metis ization of Canada The Process of Claiming Louis Riel Metissage and the Metis People as Canada s Mythical Origin Aboriginal Policy Studies 2 2 64 87 Gillespie Greg 2007 Hunting for Empire Narrative of Sport in Rupert s Land 1840 70 Vancouver BC Canada UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 1354 9 Giraud Marcel 1984 Le Metis canadien Marcel Giraud introduction du professeur J E Foster avec Louise Zuk in French Saint Boniface Man Editions du Ble ISBN 0920640451 Hogue Michel Winter 2002 Disputing the Medicine Line The Plains Crees and the Canadian American Border 1876 1885 Montana The Magazine of Western History 52 4 2 17 JSTOR 4520462 Hogue Michel 2015 Metis and the Medicine Line Creating a Border and Dividing a People Reigina University of Regina Press ISBN 978 0889773806 Huel Raymond Joseph Armand 1996 Proclaiming the Gospel to the Indians and the Metis University of Alberta Press ISBN 0 88864 267 9 Jackson John C 2007 Children of the Fur Trade Forgotten Metis of the Pacific Northwest Corvallis Oregon State Univ Press ISBN 978 0 87071 194 7 James Alexander Simone A 2001 Mother Imagery in the Novels of Afro Caribbean Women University of Missouri Press ISBN 082626316X Jones Hilary 2013 The Metis of Senegal Urban Life and Politics in French West Africa Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253007056 LeBel Sylvie 2003 Le parcours identitaire des Metis du Canada evolution dynamisme et mythes In Langlois S Letourneau J eds Aspects de la nouvelle francophonie canadienne Quebec Presses de l Universite Laval pp 75 94 ISBN 2 7637 8083 0 Lorcin Patricia M E 2006 Algeria amp France 1800 2000 Identity Memory Nostalgia Syracuse University Press ISBN 0815630743 MacKinnon D J 2018 Metis pioneers Marie Rose Delorme Smith and Isabella Clark Hardisty Lougheed First ed Edmonton Alberta The University of Alberta Press Madill D July 1983 Select Annotaded Bibliography on Metis History and Claims PDF Treaties and Historical Research Centre Research Branch Corporate Policy Ottawa Indian and Northern Affairs Canada McNab David Lischke Ute 2005 Walking a Tightrope Aboriginal People and their Representations Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press ISBN 9780889204607 McNab David Lischke Ute 2007 The Long Journey of a Forgotten People Metis Identities and Family Histories Waterloo Ont Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 0 88920 523 9 Miller James Rodger 2017 From Riel to Metis Reflections on Native newcomer Relations Selected Essays University of Toronto Press pp 37 60 O Toole D 2017 Y a t il des communautes metisses au Quebec Une perspective juridique PDF Nouveaux Cahiers du socialisme 18 29 36 Poitras Pratt Yvonne August 25 2019 Digital Storytelling in Indigenous Education A decolonizing journey for a Metis community 1st ed New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group doi 10 4324 9781315265544 ISBN 978 1 315 26554 4 S2CID 199176897 Peterson Jacqueline Brown Jennifer S H eds 1985 The New Peoples Being and Becoming Metis in North America Critical Studies in Native History Minnesota Historical Society Press ISBN 0 87351 408 4 Pritchard James Pritchard James S Pritchard Professor James January 22 2004 In Search of Empire The French in the Americas 1670 1730 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82742 3 Ray Arthur J 2016 Aboriginal Rights Claims and the Making and Remaking of History McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 4743 8 Rea J E Scott J 2017 2006 Manitoba Act The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved November 29 2019 Robson Kathryn Yee Jennifer 2005 France and Indochina Cultural Representations Lexington Books ISBN 0739108409 Quan Holly 2009 Native Chiefs and Famous Metis Leadership and Bravery in the Canadian West Heritage House ISBN 978 1 894974 74 5 St Onge Nicole Podruchny Carolyn Macdougall Brenda eds 2012 Contours of a People Metis family mobility and history Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0806142791 Sawchuck J 2001 Negotiating an Identity Metis Political Organizations the Canadian Government and Competing Concepts of Aboriginality American Indian Quarterly 25 1 73 92 Sprague Douglas N 1988 Canada and the Metis 1869 1885 Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 0 88920 958 8 Teillet Jean 2019 The North West Is Our Mother The Story of Louis Riel s People Patrick Crean Editions ISBN 978 1443450126 Tremaudan Auguste Henri de 1936a l Histoire de la nation metisse dans l ouest canadien in French Montreal Editions Albert Levesque pp Retrieved 1 August 2020 Tremaudan Auguste Henri de 1936b 1982 l Histoire de la nation metisse dans l ouest canadien Hold High Your Heads History of the Metis Nation in Western Canada Translated by Maguet Elizabeth Winnipeg Pemmican Publications p Van Kirk Sylvia 1983 Many Tender Ties Women in Fur Trade Society 1670 1870 University of Oklahoma Press doi 10 2307 3346234 ISBN 978 0 8061 1847 5 JSTOR 3346234 Vrooman N 2019 There are a Range of Identities with Being Little Shell Just As the Wider America Distinctly Montana Magazine pp 68 69 of 98 Wall Denis 2008 The Alberta Metis letters 1930 1940 policy review and annotations DWRG Press ISBN 978 0 9809026 2 4 Weinstein John 2007 Quiet Revolution West The Rebirth of Metis Nationalism Calgary Fifth House Publishers ISBN 978 1897252215 External links edit nbsp Look up Metis in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Look up metis in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Metis The Rupertsland Institute Alberta A service dedicated to the research and development education and training and employment of Metis individuals It is affiliated with the Metis Nations of Alberta Along with providing financial aid the Rupertsland Institute helps Metis individuals acquire essential skills for employment The Metis Museum Metis Political Organizations compiled by Lawrence Barkwell Louis Riel Institute Manitoba Canada Metis Firsts in North America Many Little Known Facts About the Metis compiled by Lawrence Barkwell Manitoba Metis Federation Canada 2011 Metis Nation Congress of Aboriginal Peoples Metis Museum Gabriel Dumont Institute Milan Metis Healing Art Project MMHAP Metis in the Courts Site includes interviews with legal and history experts on Metis issues The MNO and New Historic Metis Communities Darren O Toole University of Ottawa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metis amp oldid 1196612392 Metis people in Canada, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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