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Pass system (Canadian history)

The pass system (1885–1951) was a Canadian federal government Department of Indian Affairs (DIA) segregationist policy, first initiated on a significant scale in the region that became the three prairie provinces in the wake of the 1885 North-West Rebellion—as part of a series of highly restrictive measures—to confine Indigenous people to Indian reserves—newly-established through the numbered treaties.[1][2]: 162–5  The "Indian pass system"—introduced as a temporary emergency measure to quell First Nations resistance—was formalized and became permanent under successive federal governments.[3][4] In archived correspondence between the three federal officials who were the "most prominent in the development and implementation of Indian policy" in the 1880s and 1890s—John A. Macdonald (1815–1891), Edgar Dewdney (1835–1916), and Hayter Reed (1849–1936),[1] it was evident that they were all cognizant of the lack of a legal basis for the pass system,[1] and that it did not respect treaty agreements.[5]

The pass system, according to a University of Calgary history professor, Sarah Cooper, "was never a law; it was never codified in the Indian Act, and it can only be described as a 'policy.'"[5][Notes 1] The pass system remained in place until the 1940s— and allegedly in some cases, into the 1950s—to segregate Indigenous peoples in the prairies from the tens of thousands of newly-arrived immigrants and settlers who were claiming fertile prairie farming lands as part of the federal policy of promoting massive agricultural production.[5] The pass system was mainly implemented in Alberta and other regions in the western prairies, in Treaty 4, Treaty 6, and Treaty 7 areas.[Notes 2] Federal officials rationalized that "Indians had to be kept separate from the rest of society for their own good, as contact tended to be injurious to them," according to Sarah Carter, a history professor at the University of Calgary.[5]

The pass system was enforced by the Department of Indian Affairs (DIA) through an amendment to the Indian Act which granted local Indian Agents the powers of a Justice of the Peace. Through their judicial power over almost every aspect of First Nations' lives, the local agents could enforce the pass system arbitrarily. Under the pretext of criminal code vagrancy laws and loitering provisions of the Indian Act, they authorized North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) officers to detain Indigenous people who were off reserve without the required document signed by either an agent or one of the instructors of the agricultural programs.[6]: 30  Most detainees would be returned to their reserves; punishment for leaving the reserve without a pass could include imprisonment.

A July 11, 1941 letter from the federal government instructed all local Indian agents to submit all passes to Ottawa to be destroyed and to phase out the system.[7][8]

The 2015 report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) investigation described the policies of the pass system, the Indian reserve system, the Indian residential school system as "aggressive assimilation".[9]: 133 

Context

 

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) described the period from 1764 to 1969 as a time of "Displacement and Assimilation."[9] From 1871 through the 1880s, as agricultural settlements expanded across the prairies, the Canadian government signed the numbered treaties, established the reserve system, and encouraged First Nations to adopt farming with the creation of industrial boarding schools.[10] By the 1880s, after 80 years of over hunting, bison populations in the western prairies—upon which the First Nations depended—collapsed, leading to famine.[11] Sarah Carter described how, "The buffalo was the foundation of the Plains economy, providing people not only with a crucial source of protein and vitamins but with many other necessities, including shelter, clothing, containers, and tools."[12][13][14] In the late 18th and 19th centuries smallpox epidemics decimated indigenous communities.[13] First Nations had no alternative but to accept the government's policies.[11] The TRC report described the policies—including the reserve system, the residential schools, and the pass system—as "aggressive assimilation".[9]: 133 

Scope

Vancouver Island University historian, Keith D. Smith described the pass system in his 2009 book Liberalism, Surveillance, and Resistance: Indigenous Communities in Western Canada, 1877-1927, as a "highly effective component of a "coercive and flexible" "matrix" of restrictive "laws, regulations, and policies" to "confine Indigenous people to their reserves" and advance the "interests of non-Indigenous settlers."[15]: 60–77 [16] Smith wrote that, "Under this initiative, a reserve resident was required to first secure a written pass from their Indian agent if they wanted to visit family or friends in a nearby village; check on their children at a residential school; participate in a celebration or attend a cultural event in a neighbouring community; leave their reserve to hunt, fish, and collect resources; find paid employment; travel to urban centres; or leave the reserve for any other reason."[15]: 60–77 [16]

The pass system was mainly implemented in Treaty 4, Treaty 6, and Treaty 7 areas, the regions that became the prairie provinces.

The role of federal government officials (1879–1890s)

John A. Macdonald (1815–1891), Edgar Dewdney (1835–1916), and Hayter Reed (1849–1936) were the three federal officials who were the "most prominent in the development and implementation of Indian policy" during this period.[1] Macdonald was Canada's first Prime Minister from 1867 until 1873 and had a second term from 1878 until 1891. From 1879 to 1887 Macdonald, who was both Superintendent General of Indian Affair and Prime Minister, never visited the First Nations. Macdonald had promised a transcontinental railway to link British Columbia, which had joined the Confederation in 1871, with eastern Canada. When he won his second term, he was under pressure to complete the Canadian Pacific Railway. The last spike on November 7, 1885 marked the completion of the railway, for which Macdonald has been honoured by many and condemned by others.[17][18] Canada's national story often celebrates Macdonald and the CP railway as it brought prosperity to many Canadians. Indigenous peoples were removed from their traditional lands to make way for the CPR, including approximately 5,000 Indigenous people who were "expelled from the Cypress Hills of Saskatchewan in the 1880s alone[...] One tactic used by local Indian agents against recalcitrant bands was to withhold rations."[18] In his 2013 book Clearing the Plains: Disease, Politics of Starvation, and the Loss of Indigenous Life, Canadian scholar, James Daschuk, described how the "institutionalisation of a pass system, which confined First Nations peoples to reserves, later became a vector for the spread of infectious diseases."[19][13] Ottawa-based Lawrence Vankoughnet, a top-ranking DIA bureaucrat, is often cited as the person responsible for cutting rations to First Nations reserves after the collapse of the buffalo herds, to minimize costs. Other historians place the blame largely on Dewdney who was known for engaging in power struggles with Vankoughnet.[20] It was Vankoughnet who first alluded to a pass system in his 1884 annual report, claiming it had the potential to "prevent Indians from camping indiscriminately near white settlements."[3]

In 1879, Macdonald had chosen Dewdney to succeed David Laird as Superintendent of Indian Affairs because of Dewdney's "firmness and tact, mature judgement and experience, and 'knowledge of the Indian character'."[20]: 66  Dewdney served as Lieutenant Governor of the North-West Territories from December 3, 1881 until his resignation on July 1, 1888 as governor and as commissioner.[21]: 124  Dewdney hired Hayter Reed (1849–1936) as his Assistant Commissioner.[20]: 63–120  Reed, who was recommended by Dewdney as his replacement as Indian Commissioner, continued to implement departmental policies that promoted "protection, civilization, and assimilation." Reed said, "If the Indian is to become a source of profit to the country, it is clear that he must be amalgamated with the white population."[20]: 101 [21]

Role of local Indian Agents

In the 1870s, the DIA put in place local Indian Agents to "ensure social control and social transformation of First Nations groups". In 1885, the power of the local Indian Agents was expanded giving them the authority as a justice of the peace in legal matters, as well as the right to confine Indigenous people to their reserves through the pass system. They already had the power "to recommend a Chief be removed from council and to force children either attend or to refuse a child to attend residential schools.[22]

Resistance and post-rebellion

In the mid-1880s in the Saskatchewan District of the North-West Territories, Treaty 6 Cree people led by Mistahimaskwa (Big Bear) (1825–1888) were facing starvation as bison herds disappeared. Big Bear rose up in frustration against the government, and protested treaty agreements. In five months in 1885, the Métis engaged in armed conflict with the Canadian government. These combined events are known as the North-West Resistance of 1885 —North-West Rebellion. The armed response from the federal government ended the uprisings and discouraged others. After this unsuccessful North-West Resistance, the Canadian government faced little opposition to its expansion,[23] the arrival of settlers, and the construction of the railway.

Reed, then Indian agent for the Saskatchewan region,[24] asked Macdonald to restrict the movement of Indians and stressed that the security and well-being of the country and the white settlers was at risk. On March 26, 1885, the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) Superintendent attempted to seize what he considered an important supply point. As a result of that confrontation, 12 men of the NWMP died and 11 were wounded. Five Metis and 1 Cree were also killed in the battle.[25]: 207–9 [26]

In 1884 and 1885, the pass system emerged as Dewdney instructed the newly-formed North-West Mounted Police to "detain native leaders as they attempted to travel to meetings, breaking up gatherings where legal resistance and court challenges were being discussed, and [used] rations to squeeze the Plains peoples into submission".[27]: 53 

Following the 1885 Rebellion, Macdonald and his administration introduced the "most restrictive policies and legislation" with the goal of "breaking up the tribal system and assimilating First Nations people".[1][28] Historian Sarah Carter described the pass system—"first initiated on a large scale" during the 1885 crisis—as the "most notorious of the post-1885 measures."[2]: 162–5 

In the post-Rebellion years, the eastern regions began to learn about how Plains Indigenous people were starving.[17]

As requested by Dewdney, Reed, who was then Assistant Indian Commissioner to Indian Commissioner, drafted a “Memorandum on the Future Management of Indians" which outlined policies in response to the 1885 rebellion.[24][1][29] The Memorandum supported harsh punishments for the perpetrators of the uprisings to prevent "future turbulence". It called for the abolition of the tribal system, the repression of medicine dances, and confinement of all rebels to their reserves through the use of a pass system.[29] The horses of rebels should also be confiscated.[29] Reed had already begun to implement a system of "keeping the Indians on their respective Reserves and not allowing any [to] leave them without passes", according to an August 16, 1885 memo from Reed to Dewdney.[3][30] Reed wrote that, he was aware that the pass system was "hardly supportable by any legal enactment but we must do many things which can only be supported by common sense and by what may be for the general good. I get the police to send out daily and send any Indians without passes back to their reserves."[3][30] Dewdney added his comments to the Memo and forwarded it to Macdonald and Deputy Superintendent General of Indian Affairs, Vankoughnet in August 1885.[31]: 36  The pass system emerged from this final document with its revisions and refinements.[29] The pass system was mentioned in correspondence between Macdonald and his Deputy Superintendent General of Indian Affairs, Lawrence Vankoughnet. An August 1885 letter said, "As to the disloyal bands this [pass system] should be carried out in consequence of their disloyalty. The system should be introduced in the loyal Bands as well and the advantage of the change pressed upon them. But no punishment for breaking bounds could be inflicted and in case of resistance on the grounds of Treaty right should not be insisted upon."[32][33]: 168 

Vankoughnet said, "The status of the Indians in Canada is that of a minor with the Government as the guardian. It has been stated that his "remarks represent the quintessential statement of federal government policy in the early period, 1873-1912."[31]: 36 

According to the TRC, Indian Affairs instituted the pass system following the North-West Rebellion, with the intention of confining First Nations "to their reserves in selected areas of the prairie west".[9][3]: 25 

Aggressive assimilation: reserves, residential schools, and the pass system

 

The pass system is considered to be one aspect of the assimilation process that also included the reserve system first introduced in Upper Canada in the 1830s[6] and the residential school system, with is roots in the boys' day school for Six Nations Reserve children—the Mohawk Institute in Brantford, Upper Canada in 1828—the first of the residential schools established with the goal of assimilating Indigenous children.[3]: 26  The March 14, 1879 Report on Industrial Schools for Indians and Half-Breeds by Nicolas Flood Davin[Notes 3] was commissioned by Macdonald and informed the establishment of industrial boarding schools in Canada, the precursors of the Canadian Indian residential school system. Davin reported on American industrial schools that had been introduced while Ulysses S. Grant was President of the United States.[34][35]

According to a 1980 Geographical Review article, Canadian government policy in the 1880s and 1890s "set the pattern for the segregation of prairie Indians from Canadian society, despite government rhetoric that promised to assimilate the Indian in Canadian life."[10]

As First Nations members were moved to the reserves, many of them became successful farmers and ranchers. The NWMP preferred to buy hay from Treaty 7 ranchers since it was considered superior feed for NWMP horses. However, non-indigenous farmers and ranchers believed that First Nations farmers were being given handouts, which were seen as unfair competition. That became one of the reasons that First Nations had the pass system imposed on them.[12]: 117–9 

On July 11, 1856, Sir John A. Macdonald wrote to the Provincial Secretary in Toronto in a letter stating, "2nd: As to the mode of managing the Indian property so as to secure its full benefit to the Indians without impeding the settlement of the country."[36]

Pass system had no legal basis

The policy—which was never enacted through legislation, but was endorsed by the ministry of Indian Affairs—vested Indian Agents with the authority to control the length of time and the purpose of leaves and visits to reserves, through the use of obligatory signed passes, according to the University of Saskatchewan's Department of Native Studies' professor, Frank Laurie Barron.[3]

Because the "ban lacked any legislative basis it was enforced through an amendment to the Indian Act giving the Indian agent the powers of a Justice of the Peace so that he might enforce the provisions of the criminal code dealing with vagrancy and loitering."[6]: 30 

Those who did not possess a pass or permit were charged under the Vagrancy Act. Many officers knew that the First Nations members were not able to pursue legal matters in court.[37] The North West Mounted Police Superintendent McIlree in Calgary had his officers return people from Sarcee (Tsuu T'ina) to the reserve, whether or not they had a pass.[citation needed]

Prime Minister Macdonald said that, "I beg to inform you that there has never been any legal authority for compelling Indians who leave their Reserve to return to them, but it has always been felt that it would be a great mistake for this matter to stand too strictly in the letter of the law."[38]: 93 

Macdonald was aware that the measure violated the treaties.[39]: 301  The only way that the pass system could be implemented was through the powers that Indian agents held, which was similar to that of the police, over the First Nations.

Premiership of Wilfrid Laurier

Wilfrid Laurier, who was a Liberal Prime Minister from 1896 until 1911, said that Dewdney had caused unrest among the First Nations, which in turn had caused the North-West Rebellion. Dewdney was accused of being too generous to the First Nations because he increased rations and met with various groups to inquire about the treatment First Nation peoples were getting from government officials.[20]: 78–81 

Clifford Sifton served as Laurier's Minister of the Interior from 1896 until 1905.[40]: 33  Sifton "left Indian policy in the hands of an "Indians Affairs" bureaucracy with little sympathy for the aspirations of First Nations."[40]: 4  Sifton's mandate was to oversee development of the land, to shape immigration policy to increase immigration, particularly to attract immigrants to the Prairie provinces who would contribute to building "a nation of good farmers." To fulfill this mandate Sifton promoted railroads by convincing the federal government to help finance the Canadian National Railway which included a section that went through the Crow's Nest Pass.[41]: 169  Under Sifton, the DOI "aggressively promoted settlement in Western Canada".[42][43] Sifton had reorganized the department early in his mandate, placing the DIA—which was intended to focus First Nations' concerns—at a lower priority compared to the Interior department—which supported the rights of settlers. This was also reflected in the people hired in the DIA—they had little sympathy for First Nations and no experience working with them.[44]

Lasting impact of 60 years of the pass system

The numbered treaties were signed in the 1870s granting the newly established government of Canada in the Post-Confederation period large tracts of land throughout the Prairies, Canadian North and Northwestern Ontario on traditional indigenous lands.[45][46]: 26  Barron described how First Nations, who had once served as allies to the British, became wards of the newly-formed Canadian nation. In the 1870s, the government undertook a project of remaking First Nations to become more like the "white rural farmer". Reserves and residential schools became the sites for that training.[3]: 26 

The First Nations "were cut off from their children in residential schools, other relatives, and dispossessed of the ability to freely hunt, fish and trade, resulting in devastating and lasting financial impacts, with obvious human consequences."[47] The policy's effects included First Nations' inability to conduct trade and commerce or to attend cultural and social gatherings with neighboring Reserves and their isolation from Canadian society.

Bourgeault described how the pass system and vagrancy laws prevented First Nations from participating in the larger economy except as labourers.[48]: 293, 295, 296  The sale of agricultural products for example was seriously restricted by these policies.

The pass system affected hunting, commerce, and cultural ceremonies. First Nations visiting other reserves were required to obtain a pass from the Indian agent, regardless of the proximity of the reserves to each other. Cecile Many Guns from Brocket, Alberta, in 1973 told of two men visiting from another nearby reserve without a permit. The police retrieved them and forced them to sleep on a stone floor for the night. The next day, the two men were returned to where they came from. She indicated in her interview with Dila Provost and Albert Yellowhorn incidents details on the lack of dignity shown to Indians, who were viewed with suspicion by white people.[38]: 46 

Victoria McHugh recalled that even going from Siksika to Tsuu T'ina, people were allowed only up to five days to visit and return to Siksika. Bill McLean mentioned[where?] that the missionaries, with the help of the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) and government officials tried to stop the Sun Dance, and condemn the ceremony. Sun Dances had allowed First Nations from various groups to travel from community to community, but the pass system did not allow for the intercommunity travel.[citation needed] Elva Lefthand said that hunting became more restrictive under the pass system.[49]: 152–3 

The pass system in the prairies, which is now considered to be "segregationist scheme", was studied by a delegation from South African in 1902, as a "method of social control".[3]: 26 

End of the pass system

In the 1890s, First Nation farmers protested the pass system, and many Indian agents and farmer instructors sided with them. As a result, they were fired for their efforts to bring to light that First Nations were being required to get a permit to sell grain and other farm products. The pass system continued to be enforced until the 1940s, and in some cases into the 1950s.[50]: 53–4 

Objections to the policy were raised by the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) in 1893, and Commissioner William Herchmer instructed police to request, not order, First Nations to go back to their reserves.[51] Herchmer was aware that the pass system was not entrenched in law. Reed wrote in a June 14, 1893 letter that he disagreed strongly with Herchmer, saying it was preferable that the NWMP abstain from 'requesting' that First Nations return to their reserves, because it would draw their attention to the fact that the NWMP were "powerless to enforce" these requests. He said, "Had the order been kept quiet, the Indians might have remained for some time in ignorance, but as I have already seen references to it in the public press, no expectation of withholding it from them need now be entertained."[38]: 93 

The pass system was phased out after a July 11, 1941 letter was circulated to all local Indian agents by then Department of Mines and Resources Indian branch director, Harold McGill. The letter included orders for all passes to be sent to Ottawa for destruction.[7][8]

The pass system was formally repealed in 1951.[3]

Missing archives

The policy is the subject of a 2015 documentary film, The Pass System.[52][53][54] In producing his 50-minute documentary which uncovered the "hidden history of the pass system", filmmaker Alex Williams spent five years searching in archives and in communities for evidence of its existence. [47][55][7]

In her June 26, 2016 article in the Toronto Star which discussed Williams's 2015 documentary, Joanna Smith wrote that the federal government admitted that "some records of the pass system—the apartheid-like policy that forbade First Nations from leaving their reserves without written permission—were destroyed before anyone knew of their historical value."[8]

A 1941 federal government directive requested that all passbooks be returned to Ottawa for destruction. Williams says that the reason for the directive "remains a mystery."[8] One of the Saskatchewan Archives Board's original signed permission slips, that had been issued by the Department of Indian Affairs on June 3, 1897, is featured in the documentary. An adult resident, Sawphawpahkayo, from a reserve not far from Duck Lake, Saskatchewan had received a 10-day pass in order to get married.[8] Williams was able to piece together the hidden stories with "first and second hand accounts of elders who experienced and lived under this system or have information that was passed down of their parents and grandparents about living under this system of segregation."[56]

By 1974, when the Treaties and Historical Research Centre undertook a study for the DIA to "determine whether the pass system had even existed", archival material such as historical passes and stubs, had already been destroyed.[7] A director of library and archives at the Calgary-headquartered Glenbow Museum said in a 2016 interview with The Star, that it was "absolutely astonishing" that in 1974, "federal government had to rely on outside sources to study its own policy."[7]

Even among First Nations and in Canadian society, very little is known today about the pass system and the policies surrounding its implementation.

The pass system in literature

In his 1973 book "Voices of the Plains Cree", Reverend Edward Ahenakew's fictional character Old Kayam described how every man on the reserve had to beg for permits. Kayam said, "for myself I would rather starve than go beg for such a trifling thing as a permit to sell one load of hay."[2]: 230 [57]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In her 1999 publication, Aboriginal People and Colonizers of Western Canada to 1900, Cooper a history professor at the University of Calgary said that "the pass system was never a law; it was never codified in the Indian Act, and it can only be described as a 'policy.' From the time of the earliest discussions about such a system, there was recognition among officials that it ran directly counter to the treaties and had no validity in law."
  2. ^ Cree and Saulteaux First Nation band governments representatives signed Treaty 4 or . Treaty 4 land included most of what is now southern Saskatchewan, as well as small areas in what is now western Manitoba and southeastern Alberta. Signatures to Treaty 6 were added from 1871 to 1877 by Plains Cree and Woods Cree, Assiniboine, and other band governments at Fort Carlton and Fort Pitt. Treaty 7 (1875) was signed by the Blackfoot, First Nation band governments in what is today the southern portion of Alberta.
  3. ^ Known as the Davin Report.

References

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  47. ^ a b Williams, Alex (Director) (2015). The Pass System Official Trailer. The Pass. Retrieved June 29, 2021.
  48. ^ Bourgeault, Ron (2006). "Aboriginal Labour in the North-West". Prairie Forum. 31 (2).
  49. ^ Treaty 7 Elders; Hildebrandt, Walter; Rider, Dorothy First; Carter, Sarah (1996). The True Spirit and Original Intent of Treaty 7. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-1522-2.
  50. ^ Buckley, Helen (April 4, 1992). From Wooden Ploughs To Welfare: Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-6328-5.
  51. ^ Cram, Stephanie (February 19, 2016). "Dark History of Canada's First Nations pass system uncovered in documentary". CBC News.
  52. ^ Benjoe, Kerry (November 26, 2015). "First Nation reserves prior to 1960s were 'open-air prisons,' says Saskatoon filmmaker behind The Pass System". Leader-Post. Postmedia Network. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  53. ^ Smith, Johanna (April 9, 2016). "Documentary chases fragile trail of pass system that once controlled movement of First Nations". The Star. Ottawa, Ontario. Retrieved June 29, 2021.
  54. ^ Smith, Joanna (April 10, 2016). "'The Pass System' explores dark chapter in Canadian history". Toronto Star. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
  55. ^ Benjoe, Kerry (November 26, 2015). "First Nation reserves prior to 1960s were 'open-air prisons,' says Saskatoon filmmaker behind The Pass System". Leader-Post. Postmedia Network. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  56. ^ "Pass System viewing examines history of racial segregation". Lakeland Today. St. Paul. March 22, 2016. Retrieved June 29, 2021.
  57. ^ Helen Buckley (1992). From Wooden Plow To Welfare: Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces. Montreal: McGill–Queen's University Press. pp. 57–58.


pass, system, canadian, history, pass, system, 1885, 1951, canadian, federal, government, department, indian, affairs, segregationist, policy, first, initiated, significant, scale, region, that, became, three, prairie, provinces, wake, 1885, north, west, rebel. The pass system 1885 1951 was a Canadian federal government Department of Indian Affairs DIA segregationist policy first initiated on a significant scale in the region that became the three prairie provinces in the wake of the 1885 North West Rebellion as part of a series of highly restrictive measures to confine Indigenous people to Indian reserves newly established through the numbered treaties 1 2 162 5 The Indian pass system introduced as a temporary emergency measure to quell First Nations resistance was formalized and became permanent under successive federal governments 3 4 In archived correspondence between the three federal officials who were the most prominent in the development and implementation of Indian policy in the 1880s and 1890s John A Macdonald 1815 1891 Edgar Dewdney 1835 1916 and Hayter Reed 1849 1936 1 it was evident that they were all cognizant of the lack of a legal basis for the pass system 1 and that it did not respect treaty agreements 5 The pass system according to a University of Calgary history professor Sarah Cooper was never a law it was never codified in the Indian Act and it can only be described as a policy 5 Notes 1 The pass system remained in place until the 1940s and allegedly in some cases into the 1950s to segregate Indigenous peoples in the prairies from the tens of thousands of newly arrived immigrants and settlers who were claiming fertile prairie farming lands as part of the federal policy of promoting massive agricultural production 5 The pass system was mainly implemented in Alberta and other regions in the western prairies in Treaty 4 Treaty 6 and Treaty 7 areas Notes 2 Federal officials rationalized that Indians had to be kept separate from the rest of society for their own good as contact tended to be injurious to them according to Sarah Carter a history professor at the University of Calgary 5 The pass system was enforced by the Department of Indian Affairs DIA through an amendment to the Indian Act which granted local Indian Agents the powers of a Justice of the Peace Through their judicial power over almost every aspect of First Nations lives the local agents could enforce the pass system arbitrarily Under the pretext of criminal code vagrancy laws and loitering provisions of the Indian Act they authorized North West Mounted Police NWMP officers to detain Indigenous people who were off reserve without the required document signed by either an agent or one of the instructors of the agricultural programs 6 30 Most detainees would be returned to their reserves punishment for leaving the reserve without a pass could include imprisonment A July 11 1941 letter from the federal government instructed all local Indian agents to submit all passes to Ottawa to be destroyed and to phase out the system 7 8 The 2015 report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission TRC investigation described the policies of the pass system the Indian reserve system the Indian residential school system as aggressive assimilation 9 133 Contents 1 Context 2 Scope 3 The role of federal government officials 1879 1890s 3 1 Role of local Indian Agents 4 Resistance and post rebellion 5 Aggressive assimilation reserves residential schools and the pass system 5 1 Pass system had no legal basis 6 Premiership of Wilfrid Laurier 7 Lasting impact of 60 years of the pass system 8 End of the pass system 9 Missing archives 10 The pass system in literature 11 See also 12 Notes 13 ReferencesContext Edit The Truth and Reconciliation Commission TRC described the period from 1764 to 1969 as a time of Displacement and Assimilation 9 From 1871 through the 1880s as agricultural settlements expanded across the prairies the Canadian government signed the numbered treaties established the reserve system and encouraged First Nations to adopt farming with the creation of industrial boarding schools 10 By the 1880s after 80 years of over hunting bison populations in the western prairies upon which the First Nations depended collapsed leading to famine 11 Sarah Carter described how The buffalo was the foundation of the Plains economy providing people not only with a crucial source of protein and vitamins but with many other necessities including shelter clothing containers and tools 12 13 14 In the late 18th and 19th centuries smallpox epidemics decimated indigenous communities 13 First Nations had no alternative but to accept the government s policies 11 The TRC report described the policies including the reserve system the residential schools and the pass system as aggressive assimilation 9 133 Scope EditVancouver Island University historian Keith D Smith described the pass system in his 2009 book Liberalism Surveillance and Resistance Indigenous Communities in Western Canada 1877 1927 as a highly effective component of a coercive and flexible matrix of restrictive laws regulations and policies to confine Indigenous people to their reserves and advance the interests of non Indigenous settlers 15 60 77 16 Smith wrote that Under this initiative a reserve resident was required to first secure a written pass from their Indian agent if they wanted to visit family or friends in a nearby village check on their children at a residential school participate in a celebration or attend a cultural event in a neighbouring community leave their reserve to hunt fish and collect resources find paid employment travel to urban centres or leave the reserve for any other reason 15 60 77 16 The pass system was mainly implemented in Treaty 4 Treaty 6 and Treaty 7 areas the regions that became the prairie provinces The role of federal government officials 1879 1890s EditJohn A Macdonald 1815 1891 Edgar Dewdney 1835 1916 and Hayter Reed 1849 1936 were the three federal officials who were the most prominent in the development and implementation of Indian policy during this period 1 Macdonald was Canada s first Prime Minister from 1867 until 1873 and had a second term from 1878 until 1891 From 1879 to 1887 Macdonald who was both Superintendent General of Indian Affair and Prime Minister never visited the First Nations Macdonald had promised a transcontinental railway to link British Columbia which had joined the Confederation in 1871 with eastern Canada When he won his second term he was under pressure to complete the Canadian Pacific Railway The last spike on November 7 1885 marked the completion of the railway for which Macdonald has been honoured by many and condemned by others 17 18 Canada s national story often celebrates Macdonald and the CP railway as it brought prosperity to many Canadians Indigenous peoples were removed from their traditional lands to make way for the CPR including approximately 5 000 Indigenous people who were expelled from the Cypress Hills of Saskatchewan in the 1880s alone One tactic used by local Indian agents against recalcitrant bands was to withhold rations 18 In his 2013 book Clearing the Plains Disease Politics of Starvation and the Loss of Indigenous Life Canadian scholar James Daschuk described how the institutionalisation of a pass system which confined First Nations peoples to reserves later became a vector for the spread of infectious diseases 19 13 Ottawa based Lawrence Vankoughnet a top ranking DIA bureaucrat is often cited as the person responsible for cutting rations to First Nations reserves after the collapse of the buffalo herds to minimize costs Other historians place the blame largely on Dewdney who was known for engaging in power struggles with Vankoughnet 20 It was Vankoughnet who first alluded to a pass system in his 1884 annual report claiming it had the potential to prevent Indians from camping indiscriminately near white settlements 3 In 1879 Macdonald had chosen Dewdney to succeed David Laird as Superintendent of Indian Affairs because of Dewdney s firmness and tact mature judgement and experience and knowledge of the Indian character 20 66 Dewdney served as Lieutenant Governor of the North West Territories from December 3 1881 until his resignation on July 1 1888 as governor and as commissioner 21 124 Dewdney hired Hayter Reed 1849 1936 as his Assistant Commissioner 20 63 120 Reed who was recommended by Dewdney as his replacement as Indian Commissioner continued to implement departmental policies that promoted protection civilization and assimilation Reed said If the Indian is to become a source of profit to the country it is clear that he must be amalgamated with the white population 20 101 21 Role of local Indian Agents Edit In the 1870s the DIA put in place local Indian Agents to ensure social control and social transformation of First Nations groups In 1885 the power of the local Indian Agents was expanded giving them the authority as a justice of the peace in legal matters as well as the right to confine Indigenous people to their reserves through the pass system They already had the power to recommend a Chief be removed from council and to force children either attend or to refuse a child to attend residential schools 22 Resistance and post rebellion EditIn the mid 1880s in the Saskatchewan District of the North West Territories Treaty 6 Cree people led by Mistahimaskwa Big Bear 1825 1888 were facing starvation as bison herds disappeared Big Bear rose up in frustration against the government and protested treaty agreements In five months in 1885 the Metis engaged in armed conflict with the Canadian government These combined events are known as the North West Resistance of 1885 North West Rebellion The armed response from the federal government ended the uprisings and discouraged others After this unsuccessful North West Resistance the Canadian government faced little opposition to its expansion 23 the arrival of settlers and the construction of the railway Reed then Indian agent for the Saskatchewan region 24 asked Macdonald to restrict the movement of Indians and stressed that the security and well being of the country and the white settlers was at risk On March 26 1885 the North West Mounted Police NWMP Superintendent attempted to seize what he considered an important supply point As a result of that confrontation 12 men of the NWMP died and 11 were wounded Five Metis and 1 Cree were also killed in the battle 25 207 9 26 In 1884 and 1885 the pass system emerged as Dewdney instructed the newly formed North West Mounted Police to detain native leaders as they attempted to travel to meetings breaking up gatherings where legal resistance and court challenges were being discussed and used rations to squeeze the Plains peoples into submission 27 53 Following the 1885 Rebellion Macdonald and his administration introduced the most restrictive policies and legislation with the goal of breaking up the tribal system and assimilating First Nations people 1 28 Historian Sarah Carter described the pass system first initiated on a large scale during the 1885 crisis as the most notorious of the post 1885 measures 2 162 5 In the post Rebellion years the eastern regions began to learn about how Plains Indigenous people were starving 17 As requested by Dewdney Reed who was then Assistant Indian Commissioner to Indian Commissioner drafted a Memorandum on the Future Management of Indians which outlined policies in response to the 1885 rebellion 24 1 29 The Memorandum supported harsh punishments for the perpetrators of the uprisings to prevent future turbulence It called for the abolition of the tribal system the repression of medicine dances and confinement of all rebels to their reserves through the use of a pass system 29 The horses of rebels should also be confiscated 29 Reed had already begun to implement a system of keeping the Indians on their respective Reserves and not allowing any to leave them without passes according to an August 16 1885 memo from Reed to Dewdney 3 30 Reed wrote that he was aware that the pass system was hardly supportable by any legal enactment but we must do many things which can only be supported by common sense and by what may be for the general good I get the police to send out daily and send any Indians without passes back to their reserves 3 30 Dewdney added his comments to the Memo and forwarded it to Macdonald and Deputy Superintendent General of Indian Affairs Vankoughnet in August 1885 31 36 The pass system emerged from this final document with its revisions and refinements 29 The pass system was mentioned in correspondence between Macdonald and his Deputy Superintendent General of Indian Affairs Lawrence Vankoughnet An August 1885 letter said As to the disloyal bands this pass system should be carried out in consequence of their disloyalty The system should be introduced in the loyal Bands as well and the advantage of the change pressed upon them But no punishment for breaking bounds could be inflicted and in case of resistance on the grounds of Treaty right should not be insisted upon 32 33 168 Vankoughnet said The status of the Indians in Canada is that of a minor with the Government as the guardian It has been stated that his remarks represent the quintessential statement of federal government policy in the early period 1873 1912 31 36 According to the TRC Indian Affairs instituted the pass system following the North West Rebellion with the intention of confining First Nations to their reserves in selected areas of the prairie west 9 3 25 Aggressive assimilation reserves residential schools and the pass system Edit The pass system is considered to be one aspect of the assimilation process that also included the reserve system first introduced in Upper Canada in the 1830s 6 and the residential school system with is roots in the boys day school for Six Nations Reserve children the Mohawk Institute in Brantford Upper Canada in 1828 the first of the residential schools established with the goal of assimilating Indigenous children 3 26 The March 14 1879 Report on Industrial Schools for Indians and Half Breeds by Nicolas Flood Davin Notes 3 was commissioned by Macdonald and informed the establishment of industrial boarding schools in Canada the precursors of the Canadian Indian residential school system Davin reported on American industrial schools that had been introduced while Ulysses S Grant was President of the United States 34 35 According to a 1980 Geographical Review article Canadian government policy in the 1880s and 1890s set the pattern for the segregation of prairie Indians from Canadian society despite government rhetoric that promised to assimilate the Indian in Canadian life 10 As First Nations members were moved to the reserves many of them became successful farmers and ranchers The NWMP preferred to buy hay from Treaty 7 ranchers since it was considered superior feed for NWMP horses However non indigenous farmers and ranchers believed that First Nations farmers were being given handouts which were seen as unfair competition That became one of the reasons that First Nations had the pass system imposed on them 12 117 9 On July 11 1856 Sir John A Macdonald wrote to the Provincial Secretary in Toronto in a letter stating 2nd As to the mode of managing the Indian property so as to secure its full benefit to the Indians without impeding the settlement of the country 36 Pass system had no legal basis Edit The policy which was never enacted through legislation but was endorsed by the ministry of Indian Affairs vested Indian Agents with the authority to control the length of time and the purpose of leaves and visits to reserves through the use of obligatory signed passes according to the University of Saskatchewan s Department of Native Studies professor Frank Laurie Barron 3 Because the ban lacked any legislative basis it was enforced through an amendment to the Indian Act giving the Indian agent the powers of a Justice of the Peace so that he might enforce the provisions of the criminal code dealing with vagrancy and loitering 6 30 Those who did not possess a pass or permit were charged under the Vagrancy Act Many officers knew that the First Nations members were not able to pursue legal matters in court 37 The North West Mounted Police Superintendent McIlree in Calgary had his officers return people from Sarcee Tsuu T ina to the reserve whether or not they had a pass citation needed Prime Minister Macdonald said that I beg to inform you that there has never been any legal authority for compelling Indians who leave their Reserve to return to them but it has always been felt that it would be a great mistake for this matter to stand too strictly in the letter of the law 38 93 Macdonald was aware that the measure violated the treaties 39 301 The only way that the pass system could be implemented was through the powers that Indian agents held which was similar to that of the police over the First Nations Premiership of Wilfrid Laurier EditWilfrid Laurier who was a Liberal Prime Minister from 1896 until 1911 said that Dewdney had caused unrest among the First Nations which in turn had caused the North West Rebellion Dewdney was accused of being too generous to the First Nations because he increased rations and met with various groups to inquire about the treatment First Nation peoples were getting from government officials 20 78 81 Clifford Sifton served as Laurier s Minister of the Interior from 1896 until 1905 40 33 Sifton left Indian policy in the hands of an Indians Affairs bureaucracy with little sympathy for the aspirations of First Nations 40 4 Sifton s mandate was to oversee development of the land to shape immigration policy to increase immigration particularly to attract immigrants to the Prairie provinces who would contribute to building a nation of good farmers To fulfill this mandate Sifton promoted railroads by convincing the federal government to help finance the Canadian National Railway which included a section that went through the Crow s Nest Pass 41 169 Under Sifton the DOI aggressively promoted settlement in Western Canada 42 43 Sifton had reorganized the department early in his mandate placing the DIA which was intended to focus First Nations concerns at a lower priority compared to the Interior department which supported the rights of settlers This was also reflected in the people hired in the DIA they had little sympathy for First Nations and no experience working with them 44 Lasting impact of 60 years of the pass system EditThe numbered treaties were signed in the 1870s granting the newly established government of Canada in the Post Confederation period large tracts of land throughout the Prairies Canadian North and Northwestern Ontario on traditional indigenous lands 45 46 26 Barron described how First Nations who had once served as allies to the British became wards of the newly formed Canadian nation In the 1870s the government undertook a project of remaking First Nations to become more like the white rural farmer Reserves and residential schools became the sites for that training 3 26 The First Nations were cut off from their children in residential schools other relatives and dispossessed of the ability to freely hunt fish and trade resulting in devastating and lasting financial impacts with obvious human consequences 47 The policy s effects included First Nations inability to conduct trade and commerce or to attend cultural and social gatherings with neighboring Reserves and their isolation from Canadian society Bourgeault described how the pass system and vagrancy laws prevented First Nations from participating in the larger economy except as labourers 48 293 295 296 The sale of agricultural products for example was seriously restricted by these policies The pass system affected hunting commerce and cultural ceremonies First Nations visiting other reserves were required to obtain a pass from the Indian agent regardless of the proximity of the reserves to each other Cecile Many Guns from Brocket Alberta in 1973 told of two men visiting from another nearby reserve without a permit The police retrieved them and forced them to sleep on a stone floor for the night The next day the two men were returned to where they came from She indicated in her interview with Dila Provost and Albert Yellowhorn incidents details on the lack of dignity shown to Indians who were viewed with suspicion by white people 38 46 Victoria McHugh recalled that even going from Siksika to Tsuu T ina people were allowed only up to five days to visit and return to Siksika Bill McLean mentioned where that the missionaries with the help of the North West Mounted Police NWMP and government officials tried to stop the Sun Dance and condemn the ceremony Sun Dances had allowed First Nations from various groups to travel from community to community but the pass system did not allow for the intercommunity travel citation needed Elva Lefthand said that hunting became more restrictive under the pass system 49 152 3 The pass system in the prairies which is now considered to be segregationist scheme was studied by a delegation from South African in 1902 as a method of social control 3 26 End of the pass system EditIn the 1890s First Nation farmers protested the pass system and many Indian agents and farmer instructors sided with them As a result they were fired for their efforts to bring to light that First Nations were being required to get a permit to sell grain and other farm products The pass system continued to be enforced until the 1940s and in some cases into the 1950s 50 53 4 Objections to the policy were raised by the North West Mounted Police NWMP in 1893 and Commissioner William Herchmer instructed police to request not order First Nations to go back to their reserves 51 Herchmer was aware that the pass system was not entrenched in law Reed wrote in a June 14 1893 letter that he disagreed strongly with Herchmer saying it was preferable that the NWMP abstain from requesting that First Nations return to their reserves because it would draw their attention to the fact that the NWMP were powerless to enforce these requests He said Had the order been kept quiet the Indians might have remained for some time in ignorance but as I have already seen references to it in the public press no expectation of withholding it from them need now be entertained 38 93 The pass system was phased out after a July 11 1941 letter was circulated to all local Indian agents by then Department of Mines and Resources Indian branch director Harold McGill The letter included orders for all passes to be sent to Ottawa for destruction 7 8 The pass system was formally repealed in 1951 3 Missing archives EditThe policy is the subject of a 2015 documentary film The Pass System 52 53 54 In producing his 50 minute documentary which uncovered the hidden history of the pass system filmmaker Alex Williams spent five years searching in archives and in communities for evidence of its existence 47 55 7 In her June 26 2016 article in the Toronto Star which discussed Williams s 2015 documentary Joanna Smith wrote that the federal government admitted that some records of the pass system the apartheid like policy that forbade First Nations from leaving their reserves without written permission were destroyed before anyone knew of their historical value 8 A 1941 federal government directive requested that all passbooks be returned to Ottawa for destruction Williams says that the reason for the directive remains a mystery 8 One of the Saskatchewan Archives Board s original signed permission slips that had been issued by the Department of Indian Affairs on June 3 1897 is featured in the documentary An adult resident Sawphawpahkayo from a reserve not far from Duck Lake Saskatchewan had received a 10 day pass in order to get married 8 Williams was able to piece together the hidden stories with first and second hand accounts of elders who experienced and lived under this system or have information that was passed down of their parents and grandparents about living under this system of segregation 56 By 1974 when the Treaties and Historical Research Centre undertook a study for the DIA to determine whether the pass system had even existed archival material such as historical passes and stubs had already been destroyed 7 A director of library and archives at the Calgary headquartered Glenbow Museum said in a 2016 interview with The Star that it was absolutely astonishing that in 1974 federal government had to rely on outside sources to study its own policy 7 Even among First Nations and in Canadian society very little is known today about the pass system and the policies surrounding its implementation The pass system in literature EditIn his 1973 book Voices of the Plains Cree Reverend Edward Ahenakew s fictional character Old Kayam described how every man on the reserve had to beg for permits Kayam said for myself I would rather starve than go beg for such a trifling thing as a permit to sell one load of hay 2 230 57 See also EditBurreau of Indian Affairs Pass System in the United States during the same era Pass laws a similar system in South Africa Israeli permit regime in the West BankNotes Edit In her 1999 publication Aboriginal People and Colonizers of Western Canada to 1900 Cooper a history professor at the University of Calgary said that the pass system was never a law it was never codified in the Indian Act and it can only be described as a policy From the time of the earliest discussions about such a system there was recognition among officials that it ran directly counter to the treaties and had no validity in law Cree and Saulteaux First Nation band governments representatives signed Treaty 4 or Qu Appelle Treaty in 1874 Treaty 4 land included most of what is now southern Saskatchewan as well as small areas in what is now western Manitoba and southeastern Alberta Signatures to Treaty 6 were added from 1871 to 1877 by Plains Cree and Woods Cree Assiniboine and other band governments at Fort Carlton and Fort Pitt Treaty 7 1875 was signed by the Blackfoot First Nation band governments in what is today the southern portion of Alberta Known as the Davin Report References Edit a b c d e f Indian Policy and the Early Reserve Period University of Saskatchewan Indigenous Saskatchewan Encyclopedia Archived from the original on June 26 2021 Retrieved June 26 2021 a b c Carter Sarah 1990 Lost Harvests McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773557444 Retrieved June 26 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Barron F Laurie 1988 The Indian Pass System in the Canadian West 1882 1935 PDF Prairie Forum 13 1 18 Archived from the original PDF on April 14 2021 Retrieved June 27 2021 Cram Stephanie February 19 2016 Dark history of Canada s First Nations pass system uncovered in documentary CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 20 2016 a b c d Carter Sarah 1999 Aboriginal People and Colonizers of Western Canada to 1900 University of Toronto Press p 195 ISBN 0802079954 a b c Barron F Laurie 1984 A Summary of Federal Indian Policy in the Canadian West 1867 1984 PDF Native Studies Review 1 1 28 39 Archived from the original PDF on June 26 2021 Retrieved June 26 2021 a b c d e Smith Johanna April 9 2016 Documentary chases fragile trail of pass system that once controlled movement of First Nations The Star Ottawa Ontario Retrieved June 29 2021 a b c d e Smith Joanna April 10 2016 The Pass System explores dark chapter in Canadian history Toronto Star Retrieved June 26 2021 a b c d What We Have Learned Principles of Truth and Reconciliation PDF Report 2015 p 192 ISBN 978 0 660 02073 0 Archived from the original PDF on June 7 2021 a b McQuillan D Aidan 1980 Creation of Indian Reserves on the Canadian Prairies 1870 1885 Geographical Review 70 4 379 396 doi 10 2307 214075 ISSN 0016 7428 JSTOR 214075 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b Dobak William A 1996 Killing the Canadian Buffalo 1821 1881 The Western Historical Quarterly 27 1 33 52 doi 10 2307 969920 ISSN 0043 3810 JSTOR 969920 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b Carter Sarah 2007 We Must Farm To Enable Us To Live The Plains Cree And Agriculture To 1900 In Francis Douglas R Kitzan Chris eds The Prairie West As Promised Land PDF Calgary University of Calgary Press Archived from the original PDF on January 10 2021 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b c Daschuk James 2013 Clearing the Plains Disease Politics of Starvation and the Loss of Indigenous Life University of Regina Press p 386 ISBN 9780889776210 OCLC 840250989 Plummer Kevin December 5 2013 An Unsettling Prairie History A Review of James Daschuk s Clearing the Plains Active History Retrieved June 26 2021 a b Smith Keith Douglas 2009 Liberalism Surveillance and Resistance Indigenous Communities in Western Canada 1877 1927 Athabasca University Press ISBN 978 1 897425 39 8 a b Smith Keith 2016 Living with Treaties In Belshaw John Douglas ed Canadian History Post Confederation BCampus Victoria B C Retrieved June 28 2021 a b Hopper Tristin August 28 2018 Here is what Sir John A Macdonald did to Indigenous people National Post Retrieved June 30 2021 a b Andrew Gee Eric March 3 2020 The railways got very wealthy on our land How rail s colonial past made it a target for blockades Toronto Retrieved June 27 2021 Boateng G O 2016 Book Review of Daschuk J 2013 Clearing the Plains Disease Politics of Starvation and the Loss of Aboriginal Life The International Indigenous Policy Journal 7 1 doi 10 18584 iipj 2016 7 1 6 a b c d e Titley Brian February 1 2009 The Indian Commissioners Agents of the State and Indian Policy in Canada s Prairie West 1873 1932 Edmonton The University of Alberta Press ISBN 978 0 88864 489 3 a b Gavigan Shelley A M 2013 Hunger Horses and Government Men Criminal Law on the Aboriginal Plains 1870 1905 UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 2253 4 Retrieved June 27 2021 Alberta Regional Professional Development Consortium Treaties 4 6 7 Alberta Schools Council Alberta Schools Conversation Guide archived from the original on June 30 2021 retrieved June 30 2021 McLeod Neil 1999 Rethinking Treaty Six in the spirit of Mistah maskwa Big Bear PDF The Canadian Journal of Native Studies XIX 20 Archived from the original PDF on June 3 2021 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b Nestor Robert James 1998 Hayter Reed Severalty and the Subdivision of Indian Reserves on the Canadian Prairies PDF M A diss Regina Saskatchewan University of Regina p 29 Archived from the original PDF on June 27 2021 Retrieved June 27 2021 Olive Patricia Dickason William Newbigging 2015 A Concise History of Canada s First Nations 3rd ed Oxford University Press Aftermath of the North West Resistance Riel Resistance Gladue Rights Research Database retrieved June 27 2021 Belshaw John Douglas 2016 Canada and the First Nations of the West BCampus Canadian History Post Confederation Victoria B C Retrieved June 28 2021 Carter Sarah December 25 1999 Aboriginal People and Colonizers of Western Canada to 1900 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 9076 9 a b c d Reed Hayter July 20 1885 Memorandum on the Future Management of Indians PDF Report Archived from the original PDF on November 21 2014 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b PAC Dewdney Papers North West Rebellion MG 27 2076 87 a b Shewell Hugh January 1 2004 Enough to Keep Them Alive Indian Welfare in Canada 1873 1965 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 8610 5 Vankoughnest to Superintendent General vol 3710 August 17 1885 pp 550 3 PAC RG 10 F Laurie Barron James B Waldram eds 1986 1885 and after Native society in transition Canadian Plains Research Center CPRC Regina ISBN 978 0 88977 042 3 Conference proceedings of a conference held at the University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon on May 1985 Davin Nicolas Flood March 14 1879 Report on Industrial Schools for Indians and Half Breeds Report Ottawa Retrieved June 27 2021 Henderson Jennifer Wakeham Pauline eds 2013 Appendix A Aboriginal Peoples and Residential Schools Reconciling Canada Critical Perspectives on the Culture of Redress Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 1168 9 Retrieved May 5 2017 Hodgins Bruce W 1973 Johnson J K Stelmack Carole B eds The Papers of the Prime Ministers The Letters of Sir John A Macdonald II 1858 1861 The Canadian Historical Review 54 85 88 ISSN 1710 1093 Retrieved June 27 2021 Hall D J From Treaties To Reserves The Federal Government and Native Peoples in Territorial Alberta 1870 1905 Montreal McGill Queen s University Press 2015 p 302 a b c Smith Keith D August 20 2014 Strange Visitors Documents in Indigenous Settler Relations in Canada from 1876 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 0568 8 Hall David John 2015 From Treaties to Reserves The Federal Government and Native Peoples in Territorial Alberta 1870 1905 McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 4595 3 a b Marchildon Gregory P ed February 25 2009 Immigration amp Settlement 1870 1939 1 ed Regina University of Regina Press ISBN 978 0 88977 230 4 Stevens G R 1973 History of the CN Canadian National Railways New York Collier Macmillan Publishers Hall David J 1981 Clifford Sifton Vol 1 Hall David J 1985 Clifford Sifton Vol 2 Treaty Eight 1899 PDF Indian and Northern Affairs Canada INAC Treaty Research Report 83 Retrieved June 29 2021 Numbered Treaty Overview Canadiana Canada in the Making Retrieved November 16 2009 First Nations in Canada Government of Canada Indigenous and Northern Affairs June 7 2011 Retrieved June 26 2021 a b Williams Alex Director 2015 The Pass System Official Trailer The Pass Retrieved June 29 2021 Bourgeault Ron 2006 Aboriginal Labour in the North West Prairie Forum 31 2 Treaty 7 Elders Hildebrandt Walter Rider Dorothy First Carter Sarah 1996 The True Spirit and Original Intent of Treaty 7 McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 1522 2 Buckley Helen April 4 1992 From Wooden Ploughs To Welfare Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 6328 5 Cram Stephanie February 19 2016 Dark History of Canada s First Nations pass system uncovered in documentary CBC News Benjoe Kerry November 26 2015 First Nation reserves prior to 1960s were open air prisons says Saskatoon filmmaker behind The Pass System Leader Post Postmedia Network Retrieved December 13 2015 Smith Johanna April 9 2016 Documentary chases fragile trail of pass system that once controlled movement of First Nations The Star Ottawa Ontario Retrieved June 29 2021 Smith Joanna April 10 2016 The Pass System explores dark chapter in Canadian history Toronto Star Retrieved June 26 2021 Benjoe Kerry November 26 2015 First Nation reserves prior to 1960s were open air prisons says Saskatoon filmmaker behind The Pass System Leader Post Postmedia Network Retrieved December 13 2015 Pass System viewing examines history of racial segregation Lakeland Today St Paul March 22 2016 Retrieved June 29 2021 Helen Buckley 1992 From Wooden Plow To Welfare Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces Montreal McGill Queen s University Press pp 57 58 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pass system Canadian history amp 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