Cultural Optimality
Cultural Optimality
Cultural Optimality
Optimality,
A Study of the
Rise and Decline of the Cree
Culture of North Eastern Ontario.
A
Thesis Submitted to the
Department of
Canadian Studies
of Carleton University
In Partial
Fulfilment
of the Requirements
For the Degree
of
Master of Arts
By
Donald E. Pugh
.
May, 1972 .
C
0NTi< :ITS .
Abstract.
P"
i .
Chapter
I . The
Introdiiction .
P" 1
Chapter II
. The AboriE;inal Cree
.
P.
l5
Chapter III . Cultural
Optimality
and the Fur
Tradeis
p. 66.
Chapter
ri . Civilization and
Its Impact Upon
the Cree .
p
.
145 .
Chapter
V.
The
Csneluslon.
T) .
235 .
Bibliography.
p.
247 "
ABSTRACT .
Although contact between a sophiaticatcc civiliz,tion
and a primitive culture often leads to the disintegration
of the vre~ I . ' :er I ndia-1 tribe, the culture of the Swampy
Cree
of the Moose River drainage basin appears to have reached
its optimal period or cultural climax during the fur trade
from their contact with European technology. A complementary
perception of the resources of the region permitted a symbiotic
division of labour
by
each culture which strengthened and
materially benefitted the other
without
a
loss in cultural
:identity. Cultural disintegration for the. Creee only occurred
in the twentieth century when the European culture altered
its goals and
relationship to the land and intrcaduced a
cultural clash
through
encroachment
on
Cree
hunting grounds,
the imposition of European laws, and the suppression
of native
Crce
custoLss and practices .
The Forts
Meant
THE
GREAT
MUSKEG
10
Moose
Fner
N*rondc
Roqn
t . Opasatica
L . barrier
L
-
-
ai!
. ybt"
ViZ* Marie
19 r
kNI
Rvels
Hovss
ma"awo
C. P . k
V4
Grand
loc Vict0ficl
Chapter I .
Introduction
.
The effects of contact
between a sophisticated
civil-
ization and a primitive
cu-1_ture has provided a theme for
many writers
. Most are inclined to agree with
the noted
Canadian historian,
George Stanley whose analysis of
the
Metis
of
Western Canada has revealed
that the "impact of
a superior civilization upon
the native Indian tribe"
inevitably to "moral and
physical decline of the
native"
and ultimately to "disaster"
for the weaker .
The economic
position of many Canadian Indian
communities to-day seems
to
provide ample testimony for the truth of
this analysis .
The disintegration of
the weaker culture before
civilization need not occur
immediately or be
inevitable.
Duff Wilson, author of a
history of the British Columbia
Indians argues that
the white culture in British Columbia
for a period of time tended to revive and
strengthen many
aspects of the native Indian culture.
To the native culture
the
new
wealth, new materials
and
new ideas brought
by
the maritime
traders . . .
provided a potent
stimulus. The arts and
crafts,
trade and technology, social and
ceremonial life were
all brought to
new peaks of development. The
climax
of Indian culture
was reached well after the arrival
of
the white man. 2
Arthur S . Morton in
his monumental history of the
Canadian [Nest has suggested
that the ideal age for the
1 . Stanley, r~cora_e . The
Bir~lh or Western_ Canada. p.
194 .
2 . Wilson, Duff.
_The_Inciian Iiiscor
: r
orBriti
sh Columbia
Vol.
1 . The Impact of
the White ` -Ian . p. 53.
Canadian
Indian
was during
the first one
hundred years of
the fur
trade.
The vices of
the European
had not taken root
among
the savages,
and the whole
situation dictated
happy
relations
between the two
parties trading
. The Indians
came voluntarily_
all the way down
to the posts on
the
Bay.
Ante undue severity
or malpractice
on the part
of the
factor and his
assistants would
diminish the
numbers coming. The
white men learned
to treat
the
natives
with'mingled kindness
and firmness,
and thev
reaped their
respect and trust
in return.
In
addition the
natives obtained
such items as
guns, ammun-
ition
and iron implements
to increase
their efficiency in
hunting
and trapping, all
of which
improved their
adaptation
to
the wilderaess
habitat .
Iron
permitted
the development
of
spearheads allowing
the spearing
of sturgeon in
boreal
rivers or encouraged
the use of
ice chisels which
allowed
the
Cree to cut the
beaver out from
their frozen pools
.
The
light durable
nature of copper
kettles increased
Cree
mobility
while woollen blankets
provided woollen
clothing
which did not dry
stiff and brittle
as did leather. In
times of famine
the Cree were served
by Europeans a
thick
oatmeal
porridge, or peas, or
salted geese to
prevent the
starvation
which otherwise would
have occurred.
Europeans
even
travelled into the
woods with food for
starving
Indian
families ~ . nd the
Hudson Bay Company
doctors
treated sick
Indians to
improve their chances
of recovery.
In. another assessment
of t}ze
interaction of
civilization
1 . Morton, A. S
. , A
History of the Canadian
west to
1870-71 .
p. 155 .
3 .
with the Indian
culture, John Anderson, former factor of
the Hudson's Bay Company post at
Moose Factory contends that
a optimum period existed in the dealings of
any
primitive
culture with the white man. "This might be described as a
period
of time when the
aborigines have sufficient of
the
white man's material civilization to ease the
burden of life,
--but yet not enough to disrupt their way of life
. "
This thesis extends the ideas
of
Duff,
Morton
and
Anderson to suggest that the cultural climax or optimal
adaptation
of the Swampy
Cree of North Eastern Ontario to
the habitat appeared to originate during
the time when
the
material aspects of the Cree culture came into contact with
and
benefitted from the superior and more efficient technology
and material objects
of a sophisticated European culture
which shared congruent goals with the simpler culture.
The optimal period is identified by the voluntary adoption of
European technology by the Cree to improve their material
situation and chances of survival in a harsh habitat
without a forced disruption and decline in cultural self-
identity . The interaction of the w'zite and Indian culture
both of whom shared a
similar
perce-otion and relationship
to the land and its resources permitted
a division. of labour
by each culture which
complemented
and materially benefitted
the other. The
relative sophistication
of the cultures took
1 . Anderson, John. Fur
Trader's Story. p.
58 .
4 .
second place to the mutual respect and common ends shared by
both cultures . In essence the sharing of common goals
permitted both cultures to thrive together in prosperity, peace
and harmony to the mutual advantage of each .
Cultural disintegration of the weaker culture only
occurred when the superior culture altered its technology,
perception and relationship to the land so that
a
clash in
goals occurred between the two cultures . For the Cree it
appeared that the increased speed of European technological
change
in the twentieth century introduced abrupt change
which cause' a cultural clash ar ,. . l brought a rapid end to the
optimal period. This abrupt change was induced by encroach-
ments
by white
settlers into Cree
hunting
grounds, the
imposition upon the Cree of outside laws, the suppression of
native Cree customs and the persuasion of the Cree by miss-
ionaries to alter their customs and beliefs .
Through a historical and anthropological study of
the
Swampy Cree situated within the territory drained by the
Moose River an attempt has been made to examine the Cree
material and non-material culture during three sequences :
the aboriginal period, the early fur trading period and
the
present
era
of
land settlement and industrial development.
Goals of the Indian culture are compared with goals of
the
white fur trading culture during the fur trade period to
illustrate
the compatible nature . of the Crae and Europaari
fur trading cultures. The goals and progress of European
industrial development in North Eastern Ontario is outlined
to
illuminate the conflict of purposes between the Cree
and the Europeans which emerged from land settlement.
The imposition of kEuropean institutions upon the Cree is
presented
to
show the results of conflicting goals upon the
weaker Cree culture. An examination of the characteristics
of the Cree culture
during
the fur trade
period
tends
to
indicate
an improvement in material conditions without a decline in
self-identity. With European land settlement and indus-
trialization thf material situation of the Cree continued
to improve. However it appears that the rapid acculturation
and arialgamation
of
the two cultures
has
led towards
the
assimilation
of
the Cree into the Anglo-Saxon culture with
the loss
of
a clear Cree identity. The optimal period of
the traditional Cree culture it
is
argued seems to have been
reached during
the
fur trading period.
The Environnental Croundolan.
5 .
Human : , -esponses to the environment deFend
on the
perception cr images of
the
environmental
reality determined
by the level of technological achievement and resource
6 .
exploitation apparent in
the material aspects of a culture.
The
material and non-material
aspects of the Cree culture
with its heavy
orientation towards survival in a
Sub-Arctic
habitat
largely limited their
perception of land resources
to hunting animals,
gathering berries, and catching
fish .
The early
European fur trader's
perception of the habitat
was
moulded by the economic
demands of the European fur
markets
during the sixteenth to
the twentieth
centuries . While the
aboriginal Cree perceived
all animals as potential
sources
of food,
clothing and shelter,
Europeans perceived only
the
pelts of certain fur bearing
animals as of real value
for sale in Europe.
As European
technology advanced during the early
twentieth
century, capitalists in Ontario
expanded their
technology
and vision to see new sources
of wealth.
White water for hydro-electricity,
black spruce for
pulpwood
and newsprint,
minerals
for
industry and fertile soil
for
agricultural
settlements were all
perceived in the land of
the Cree. These resources
had- earlier passed
unnoticed to
the Cree and European fur
trading cultures
.
The groundplan of North
Eastern Ontario
contained
many potential resources
which were perceived
over time by
the Cree
aid European cultures and
which affected
the goals
and streng'hs of
both cultures . The
shared perception of
the
fur resources during the early fur trade strengthened
the traditional Cree culture . Conflicting perceptions of
resources extending from the rapidly advancing and broadening
technology and populatioi: of, the European culture was by
the twentieth century to alter
the
wilderness
habitat
of the
Cree . In the wake of landscape change came a forced and
painful alteration in the Cree perception of resources,
causing
a
disintegration of the older cultural practice of
harvesting fur resources.
Geographical Regions.
The retreat of
pleistocene glaciation and the
of the
complex glacial-fluvio processes which followed
revealed three distinctive physiographic regions
1
Moose River drainage basin which influenced the
and patterns of flora,
fauna and mineral locations
nature
of
these resources in turn exerted a marked
upon the location and characteristics of early man
speed and
degree of
the development of this region
twentieth century capitalists
The Hudson Bay Lowlands .
completion
in the
location
The
influence
and the
by
The level expanse of the Hudson Bay Lowlands
which
emerged from the slow retreat of
the
Tyrrell
Sea northward,
revealed a poorly drained muskeg ssaj-mp of sphagnum and other
ericaceous plants, underlaid by a thick layer of
paleozoic
limestone .
Tn
the drainage basin of the Moose
River
l . Bostock, 1 1 . S, "Physiographic,Subdivisions of
Canada. "
in
Douglas .
SeolocJy and.
Economic Min: rals of
Canada.
p,
1 2 .
8 .
approximately 40 to 50,1
0
of the Lowlands is well drained,
while
the remaining 20 to 300
consists
of large shallow
lakes with no clearly defined drainage pattern. l Wet
azonal bog soils of low fertility support sparse halophytic
vegetation
including marsh grasses, _ferns and
berries
along the James Bay coast. 2
numbers
Caribou, moose,
beaver,
muskrat, otter, hare,
mink,
marten,
fox
and
fisher
1 . Coombs, D . B . "The Physiographic Subdivisions . . . "
The Geographical
B
ulletin. 1954
. p.
2
2 .
Department of Lands andForests. map 3269 . Vegetation
Patterns of the Hu,son Bav Lowlands.
3 . Swaine, T. An
A
cc3unt of_a Voya
g3 . . . p. 50 . Hanson,
H. C .
" The Kill of~gild ~eese
r~
.
L47 .
Johnston,
R. V. Report on
the James
Bay
ForestSurvey,
Moose Riv
er,
Lower Basin. passim.
9 .
all . provide
d
food and
fur for the Cree Indian.
Other access-
ible
forms
of food alone the
Moose River were
found in
partridge and ptarrAgan,
or such fish as
carpin, suckers,
northern
pike, walleye, brook
trout, whitefish
and occasion-
ally the belugia whale .
These
sources of food combined
with the
unattractive nature
of the Lowlands
confined the
Cree to travel
on,the river
arteries of the Lowlands
.
By the
twentieth century
European travel
of these
rivers had
revealed outcrops
of gypsum, lignite,
kaolin,
and
silica sands .
The Uplands .
From eighty to one
hundred and fifty miles
south of
James Bay, the Moose
River basin's
uplands, covered by
twenty to fifty feet of
drab coloured
clay from glacial
lakes
Ojibway-Barlow,
appears as
flat or rolling
country some
750
to 1,100 feet
above sealevel .
Broken
by
occasional
sand and gravel
eskers, egg shaped
drumlins, sandy kames
and
hilly moraines,
2 the clay soil
is generally quite
fertile
although its swampy,
shallow, infertile
peat bogs
created a
belief
among some early
explorers as to the
lands unsuitab-
ility for agriculture
. This discouragement
of European
agricultural interests
encouraged the continuance
of the
Cree trapping
culture as late as the
twentieth century.
Modern chemical
fertilizers and
farming technology of the
1 . Lower,
A. R. M.
A Rep
ort on the _Fish a
n
d Fisheries
of the West
Coast ofJamF~s
Bav.
passim.
2 .
See
D`~part-
n~of
LanesandForests .
Llap
5365 .
Alg
oma-
Cochrane Sure:
icial Ceolocfy.
the
early 1900's converted
the wilderness
into
an
attractive
farming bonanza which
stimulated rapid European
agricultural
settlement,
bringing an end
to the traditional
Cree culture .
Early
water
transportation necessary for
the success
of the fur
tra()e was provided
throughout
the uplands on
numerous
rivers and
lakes. The clay belt
is arairied in
the West by the
Missinaibi River
dnd its tributaries
.
The
central region is
arained by the Kapuskasing,
Chapleau,
Groundhog
ana Mattagami Rivers
and their
tributaries .
The eastern
region is drained
by the Abitibi, Little
Abitibi
and Frederick
House Rivers. The
source of the rivers are
large,
shallow and turbid
lakes in which are found
a range
of fish similar to the
lowlands .
The nature of
water transportation
in North Eastern
Ontario
influenced the rapid
development
and intensity of
the
fur trade.
The connection of the
English sea empire
of Hudson Bay
with the French
riverine empire of
the St .
Lawrence by the Moose
River system placed
the Cree
in the
customer position
between conflicting
fur companies
. The
Moose Rive-_ itself is
navigable by canoe
for some seventy
miles inland
from James Bay . Its
tributaries are
the Abitibi
River,
Navigation is
disrupted inland by a fall
line in the Precambrian S '. zield,
causing the rivers to
tumble down from the upper plateau
to
the lowlands . This fall
line provided the greatest
challenge in transportation
. 2
This
myth indirectly encouraged the pursuit of the fur
trade and
the continuation of a nomadic, hunting, trapping, fishing
and gathering culture of the Cree by discouraginq European
settlement
in the North. By the twentieth century a new
mythical belief in long warm summers in Northern
Ontario
which proeuced flourishing crops brought
a rapid influx
of
eager settlers who distinctly altered the lives of
the Cree .
1 . On cl. irate see Department of Lands and Forests
. Ontario
Resour_ -,e At
las
. pp.
4 & 5 .
Warkenton.
Canada,
A
Gecaraph. icalInterpretation. p. 285 .
Kimble,
Il
. ,eocrraphv
of theNorthlands .
Passim.
Bvers, D . "The
Environment
of
the
1lorth East. " pas
sim .
Chapman, L. J .
"The Climate
of
Northern Ontario. " C. J . A. S . 1953 . passim
.
In actual fact the clay belt
growing season
short with
frequent Spring and
Autumn
such crops as grains and
vegetables . 1
Conclusion .
The geology
and geography which
emerged from
the
Wisconsin
glaciation some
1 0,000 years ago
provided the
potential for many forms
of resource
North Eastern
Ontario.
industrial potential
. The climate
Geology
determined the
mining and
possibility, location
and economic success
Vegetation,
fauna and waterways
were major factors in
determining the
location of Indian
fur trading
posts.
The human
reaction to these
resources
cultural
perception
of
the
resources . Both
Europeans
views as to the value
of the fur
resources
seventeenth century
to the early
twentieth
latter date the
changing
perception of the
by
the Europeans
was to create a
Cree Indian .
is relatively
frosts which
exploitation in
and soil determined
the
of farming.
damage
camps and early
European
rested
upon the
possible value and
use of such
and the
Cree shared
complementary
from the
mid-
century. By
the
northern habitat
conflict of goals between
the
two cultures which
ended the native wav
of life of the
1 . See
the Canada Land
Inventory . T1 ? ---
Climates of Canada
for Agriculture
. pa
ssim
. Also the
Department of
Agriculture,
Canada. _ t ;eather
_ of the ~ro~ : incr Season
in
the Clay
Belt of Western
nuebec andNorthern
Ontario.
Publication
1 234 .
15 .
Chapter II . The Aborig inal
Cree Cu lture .
An analysis of the thesis
that the,native way
of life
of
the Cree Indian
reached its cultural climax
or optimal
period during
its early dealings with the
Europeans when
both cultures shared similar goals, demands
a clear
definition
of terms
.
From an anthropological viewpoint
reference to
the "native way of life"
raises the question of culture
and
the problems associated with cultural
definition.
Reference
to the dealings of the Cree with
tile
white
man raises the
question of acculturation,
its definitions and
processes
.
The suggestion
that there was an optimal
period or cultural
climax
introduces the temporal element, and
the necessity
for
an analysis of cultural goals.
Culture.
A
multitude of definitions of culture abound
.
The
simplest suggests
that culture is "regular behaviour
of
members
of a particular society defined as a group
of
people who interact with
one another more than they do with
1
_
outsiders . "
Degrees of acculturation
l . Milan,
F
. A. The Acculturation of the Contemporary_
Eskimo
of Wainwright , Ala
ska_ . p.
6
2 . '~Iurdock,
George
n
.
"How Culture Changes" in Shapiro,
H.
Men, Culture
an
d Society .
p
. 248 .
3 . Rcdiield, R. "iemorandu: n for the Studs of Acculturation
. "
American Anthropologist . 1936 . p .
149 .
have been establis=hed o: - a continuum i ; . terms of identity
.
The
Cree culture appeared to pass through a four stage
sequence. There was the native group with its orientation
towards the unmodified aboriginal Indian past
.
The native
modified Cree emerged during the fur trade, nativist in
orientation but supporting European modifications in their
material culture
which
improved
their
adaptation to the
habitat
. To- day European- modified Cree continue to think
of themselves as Indians but are culturally integrated with
the
white life stv]e. Very few Cree at Moose Factory have
yet reached the fourth stage, the European marginal identity
which consists of Indians
who
have cut themselves off from
their Indian culture and
who no
longer
consider themselves
1
as
Cree.
The rate of acculturation determined the success or the
Cree in accepting and adapting white technology and customs
to their life style.
Casual
contact between the Cree and
a
few Europeans, both with similar interests and both
holding
a
predisposition for change,
slowed the rate of
Cree acculturation by permitting the pursuit of traditional
goals and a maintenance of a clear cultural
identity.
During the fur trade, contact by the European fur
traders
oriented the Cree along lines
of their traditional hunting,
trapping
and
nomad?_c society
. This type of contact caused
1 . Siegal, B . Acc,. " lturation : Critical.
Abstracts . p. 221 .
1 8 .
the
Cree to reach a culturally
optimal period by permitting
the voluntary
and willing adoption by the primitive culture
of
more efficient and effective
methods for dealing with
the habitat . No fundamental
change in the non-material
Cree
culture
occurred, while improved
game exploitation techniques
provided a more reliable
food surplus which strengthened
the culture.
Rapid acculturation of the
twentieth century
Cree
caused by the conflicting
goals
of
numerous Cree and
Europeans in frequent continuous contact
built up stress,
confusion,
anxieties, tensions and frustrations among the
Cree who
were forced to adapt to the European way of life .
A
rapid disintegration of
the
old ways
and cultural identity
followed.
Cultural
Sequences .
In order to locate the
period of cultural climax of the
Cree, an interdisciplinary
approach is used which draws on
historical
sources and ethnographic facts
and examines the
sequences of Cree
acculturation. Wagner recommended
that :
First it is
necessary to. ,obtain as concise
a picture
possible of the native culture prior to contact
.
Secondly the
nature
of
the various contact agencies
must be determined. The third problem
will
functional
analysis of the present stage of
cultural process that
is resulting from the
. . . A knowledge of this intact process
as a
can only be gained by
following all three
be the
the
contact.
whole . . .
approaches. 1
The importance of the historical
documentation of the Cree
as
in
providilig this time perspective is
stressed Ly FIerskovits
1 . Beals, R.
"Acculturation. "
p.
387 .
That
all actual historical documents bearing
on
a
given
situation should
be
exhaustively
analyzed
goes
without saying . Especially in the case of contact
between European and non-European peoples will material
of
this
sort prove important in
indicating the
manner
and intensity of the contact
. . . .
The
light
such
materials
shed
on
changing
custom, the strictly
ethnological data that they can supply --since early
travellers -,,ere
far
keener observers than ethnologists
generally
credit
them with having been and the sense
of
sureness and,time depth afforded, are of the greatest
value. 1
In using historical sources documentary analysis and the
critical methods of
the
historian have
been employed.
Historical sources reflect and represent
the biases, Goals
and ethos of the time . The historian or observer who wrote
reports generally placed distorted stress on the factors
which
favoured
his
interests . For
instance,
Edward Umfreville
stresses the plight of the Cree Indian2 not necessarily because
they were maltreated during the fur trade period but because
he oppos(>d the fur trade charter of the Hudson Bay Company
and wished to launch an investigation into the validity of
their charter.
george
Simpson, Governor
of
the Hudson Bay
Company on the other hand, stressed the beneficial role of
the Company and its good works for the Cree Indian in order
to preserlye the Hudson's Bay Company's
charter.
Missionary
reports
tended to concentrate on the favourable role of
the
Church among the Indians and tended to paint exaggerated and
grotesque pictures of Indian drinking habits in order to
l . Herskovi_ts, % 1 . J . Acculturation : The_ Study
of Culture
Contact . p. 2'0 . See alsoPeals, R . "Acculturation
. "p. 392 .
2 .
Umfreville, Edward. The Presen
t State of Hudson Bay. p . 34 .
2 0 .
obtain
financial and political support. Popular novels
on the Cree tended to concentrate
on unique 'barbaric', 'prim-
as
itive,' or 'pagan' traits such conjuring or cannibalism
to
encourage the sales of books .
By using these methods, it is apparent that an
anthropological examination of
the aboriginal Cree followed
by
a
historical analysis of the Cree culture during the fur
tracing and later land settlement periods will reveal three
cultural
sequences which may be compared in terms of cultural
opti-mality.
Ecological Factors.
In
examining early records for a
description
of
aboriginal
patterns
of
culture the researcher must remember that
much
of what
might be considered aboriginal in the Cree
culture may actually
be
early stages of acculturation. It
is
also dangerous to describe aboriginal culture
by simply
recording the acculturated culture and
removing the influences
that are obviously of European
origin. These European
influences often permeate and alter many less obvious
aspects
of culture . A third approach to aboriginal study is
ecological,
a much abused term
which
here
is used to refer to the interact-
ion between man and the environment and
the external factors
that contril survival and population
density. Since
the goal of the Cree culture was an adaptation
to a sub-arctic
habitat to permit survival, ecological,
biological and
geographical influences are of paramount importance
in analyzing the characteristics of their pre-contact
culture. Vegetation areas,
reflecting the total
geographical
environment, determined
fauna
existence and activity.
This in turn determined for the pre-contact Cree such things
as
nutrition,
a factor
synergistic with the disease
environment. )
Similarly
climate
affected the need for
shelter, dress and agricultural
possibilities. Since
certain
aspects of the habitat forced a division of labour
and an organized response to the environment, it was an
2
active
integrated part
of
the
cultural system.
Although the habitat was a limiting factor on the
Cree culture with regards to population size, the Cree
culture altered the fruitfulness of the natural
setting through
such
technological developments as
bows
and arrows
.
A reciprocal relationship and a dialectic exchange between
the physical environment and culture was maintained,
based on the effectiveness
of the Indian technologv which
determined the size of the Cree population. Particular
relevance was assigned by the Cree to certain features of
the habitat and the culture moulded
itself to
exploit
these conditions to maximize life chances . Technological
elements of the
Cree
culture were more responsive to the
1 . Newman, M. T
.
"Cultural
Ecology in Nuclear
MesoAmerica. " 35
2 2
.
habitat than
other cultural aspects such as dance
and
religion. These
technological adaptations were consistently
undergoing
alterations to improve their
effectiveness at
increasing life chances in the
habitat. The simplicity of
non-material culture reflected the
total orientation of the
Cree society
towards exploitation of the environment.
The Native Group: --Origins,
- Archaeolocrv and Language
.
The remains of
the
upland glacial
lakes with their
fish, aquatic vegetation and
wildlife were natural gathering
places
for the early Archaic culture as shown by
finds of
flint arrowheads,
pottery, flint knives, scrapers and other
cutting tools
on
several
islands of Lake Abitibi. 1 The
early boreal
Archaic culture of North Eastern
Ontario
was
replaced by a
totally
new
cohesive and nomadic Woodland
culture which bore no relation to the preceding
Archaic
occupation . This new culture,
forebearers of the Cree
Indian, was identified by its
distinctive "dragged stamp",
corded or dentated stamped
pottery whose sherds have been
located in Abitibi Lake
campsites and dated circa 700 B . C.
2 .
Linguistic studies of words
for flora and fauna in
proto-Algonkin
indicate that the Woodland Indian
originally
For
archaeological reports see Ridley, 7
.
"An
Archaeological
Reconna: ~ . ssance of Lake Abitibi,
province of Ontario. "
P . A . XX71 . I, 1956 .
pass
im_ .
Ridley,
r
. "The Ancient
Sites
o - Lake Abitibi. " C. r . -T . LXTV. March. passim.
Ridley, Frank . "Archaeolog-,
. of Lake Abitibi,Ontario-
Quebec. " A. J . C.
Vol
. 2,
No.
4 .
passi
m.
Wright, J . V.
The Laurel Tradition and the 11iddle YToodlan_d
Period. p. 128 .
2 3 .
centered in the
Upper Ottawa Valley and the Sault Ste . Marie
area around
1,200 B
. C . and
in 900 B . C . gradually spread
1
North
.
It
has been hypothesized that there was a single,
universal proto-Algonkian language, which was spoken
throughout Northern Ontario.
One writer believes that
2
Swampy Cree approximates this
original Algonkian language .
To-day
the Swampy (Woods, or Maskegon, or ~Zuskeko) Cree
dialect, known as the "N" dialect, is heard from the Manitoba
North eastward through the
muskeg
and
forest covered lands
of Northern Ontario to James
and Hudson Bav. There are two
divisions, --the Winnipego-waq or 'Coastal Creel and the
Nutcimiu-iiu or
Southern Inlanders . 3 The Cree at
Moose Factory
are coastal and possess their own dialect of
Cree. Speakers of different Cree
dialects can readily
understand each
other
and
Howse, compiler of a Cree dictionary
found that
Cree was "the leading native language of
all
tribes
belonging to
the
British Settlements in North
4
America. It is the
language, indeed of a nation. . . . "
Father LaCombe has also noted' the universality
of
Cree
as the
spoken language of the fur trade th-oughout
North Western
Canada.
1 . Siebert,
F
. T . "The Original Hom_ of the
Proto-Algonkian
People. "
p
assim.
2 . Logan, R. The Cree Lanq_uage as i -'__Anvears to
Me. Also
Logan, R.
Cree Lanquago Notes. p. 1. 3 .
3 .
Skinner,
A.
Notes on
-
the
-
Laster
n
Cree. . . p .
1 .
4 .
Howse, J.
P
.
2 .
See also
_
a
_ . _.
s
_ __r
Introduction to ~'r
T
le,R. ADi
___
ctlonar
v of the Cree Lang-
uage.
given
to
the
Cree
by
the Nehethonuck. It
medium sized wiry men.
Cree
2 4 .
La langue
des
Cris
est
belle, riche et peut-etr_e
la plus facile de toutcs les langues sauvages de
1'Amerique du Nord.
On
peut dire que les Iris est pour
le Nord-Quest ce que le fran+ais est pour les pays
civilises . 1
The name "Cree" probably came
from Kenistinok, a name
is probable that the Sauteux name was
simpler, and was easily shortened to Kris, or Cree in
English.
The appearance of
the
Cree as
described by Ballentyne was of
Their jet black hair generally hangs
in
straight matted
locks over their shoulders, sometimes ornamented with
beads and pieces of metal. . . .
They
are . . .
wiry
men,
not generally very muscular in their proportions but yet
capable of enduring great fatigue. Their average height
is five feet five inches.
. . . 3
David Thompson added that the Cree were :
the Sauteux . The Cree called themselves
. . . of middle size, of spare make, the features
round,
or slightly oval, hair black, strong and lank
;
eyes
black and of full size, cheek bones rather high,
mouth and teeth good, the chin round
;
the
countenance
grave yet with a tendency to cheerful. 4
Aboriginal Population Characteristics .
Although no information is available as to aboriginal
population size and density, some information is available
on population numbers during
the
fur trade
period. The
constant nature of the climate and
; : he habitat suggests
1 . LaCo: nbe,
. Dictionnaire de la L_angue des Cris . p . XI .
2 . Loc Cit .
3 . Ballentyne, R. M .
Hudson Bay
. . .
p,
67 .
See also
Rev.
David Anderson. The vetin the B iy . p .
147 . Also
Rich.
(Ed. ) James Ishanti's Observations,_
.
. p . 79
. Ellis. A Voyage.
p .
181 .
_
4 . Tyrrell, J . B. (Ed. ) David Thonpson' s Nar
rative. . . p. 80 .
2 5 .
some similarities between the two time periods. The
Moose
River
Cree, unlike
the
Prairie Cree, lacked the
advantage of a large accessible food supply such as the
buffalo on the Plains, which permitted the development of
large Indian bands . Unlike the Iroquois their habitat
possessed a climate unfavourable for horticulture .
The
Cree were unable to grow or store maize, squash, and beans
for times of need. The lack of a large food surplus pre-
vented the development of villages, caused famine during
the winter months, and forced the dispersion of the population.
Although the Swampy Cree obtained food from a wide
variety of sol. irces, the crucial period for survival was
during the mid-winter months when
thev
often faced star-
vation.
During the winter,
ducks,
geese and other
migratory birds were absent. The thick winter ice defied
attempts to break
in
order to spear fish or net beaver
.
The
amount
of
meat which could
be obtained
from
a
thirty
pound beaver scarcely made the strenuous work worth the
time
as is
indicated by
Father
Le
Jeune, who
reported
that the Indians "all but starved on beaver. " Bear too were hard
1 . quoted by Leacock, Eleanor. "The ?4ontagnais-Naskapi
Band. " in Damas, D. ContributionE to Anthropology :
Band Societies . p.
3 .
2 6 .
to find in winter and
w: ; _- e dangerous beasts to attack with
primitive weapons. ' Even when they were killed, hibernating
bear were said to be so thin that they provided very little
sustenance
. Moose, the animal from which the most use was
made
and the most food obtained was by universal agreement
very difficult to kill. The winter ice prevented
the animal
from being killed while
helpless
in
the water, and the long
legs of the Moose permitted it to travel through snow at
great speeds . David Thompson noted that the watchful nature
of the Moose with its large sensitive ears and sagacity for
self- preservation made it difficult to approach,
while the
frightened Moose would travel long distances at twenty- five
to thirty miles an hour. 1
In 1770 at Moose
Factory a
trader complained that the Indians were starving because
Moose, usually common in the region, were scarce. 1
Kenogamissee Post in 1813 reported that
the
country was so
scarce
of hares, the usual diet of the Indians, that the
Cree
lacked meat to bait their traps and were dying of
starvation. 2
David
Thompson's
statement
that famine was
periodical
is generally supported by the Hi. ldson Bay Company Journals. 4
The animals are by no means numerous and only in suff-
icient numbers to give a tolerable subsistence to the
natives, who are too often obliged
to live
on very
little food, and
sometimes
all
but
perish with hunger. 5
It seems probable that ecological conditions which were
true during the
fur
trade period also influenced the level
of population during the
aboriginal
period.
Another factor, the difficulty of beainnina a fire
during
adverse weather
conditions, occasionally in
winter
1. Hudson Bav Connanv Archives . Feb. 6, 1770 . B135/a/48.
2 .
!bid. ,
12 May,
181 3 .
B175" a 95 .
3 . Ibid. , B124/a/8 .
4 . See also Ibid. ,
B135/b/5
.
5 . Tyrrell, J. B. (Ed. ) David
Thompson's Narrative. p. 110 .
Also Rich, E . E . (Ed.
An
injury to a key
hunter caused the death of. whole families
who had relied upon him and who were unable to procure
2
sufficient food for subsistence.
The
ability
of animals
at
avoiding hunters, the ecological
cycles of game, and the nature of the long cold
winters
all forced the aboriginal population
to
be widely scattered
and small
or
otherwise the limited food sources would
become quickly exhausted. In the eighteenth century the
Kaministika area possessed sixty
hunters
and
the
area
north
of
Nipigon had another sixty. 3
It is
also hypotlesized that there would be few Cree
in the Hudson
1 .
p.
1 3 .
2 . cf: . Hudson B ay Companv Archives.
1 824 . B 4 a
Ibid. , May 1 2, 793 . B l/e 6, and B 1 45/a/l.
3 . Morton,
A
. S. A History of
the Canadian West. . . p. 1 1 .
4 . Geographical B oard of Canada.
Handbook of Indians. . . p. 1 4.
2 9 .
Bay Lowlands because of the large amount of swam) and scarcity
of game
. During
the early fur trade when competing fur
companies sought to locate their posts as closely as possible
to
Indian bands, Hudson Bay Company posts
were
establish-~d
at the large
inland
lakes, because these areas represented
the
foci of Indian activities. Post locations consequently
offer a reliable clue as to
aboriginal
locations which
confirm ecological findings. The fur trade did not appear
to alter
the
aboriginal hunting regions of the Cree.
Social
Structure
.
The cyclical nature of animal resources and the harsh-
ness of the climate forced the Cree to adapt their culture
as
functionally as possible
for survival in their habitat.
In
social
organization David Thompson
wrote in the 1790's
that the Cree were "separated into many tribes or extended
families,'"1 while
one
hundred years later E . B.
Borron
found that the fur trade had not altered the extended band
structure
of
the Cree
.
He
reported that
the "Indians
are
not divided into bands, nor do they have any chiefs, --f
ties are the principal bond of union. " 2
These extended
families focused around good hunters, since
poor
hunters
stayed with family relations
who were good
hunters
or
starved. Cree family groups were functionally small to
1 . Tvrrell, J. B
.
(Ed. ) David Thomnson's Narrative. P. 78!
2 . Borron, E . B. Report on that Part of Hudson's
Bay_ . . .
1890
p. 75 .
game movements
.
3 0 .
fit the
scarcity of game in
the habitat, to permit rapid
mobility in search
of game and to
prevent the depletion of
game. Such
families were ideal
units suited for survival
in a
relatively wide area
which did not
produce a surplus
of
food
since they readily shifted
their location to follow
There is
some question as to
the definition of a band.
Speck's
classical definition was :
. . . a group
inhabiting a fairly
definite territory
with more or lessstable
number of families,
possessing
paternally
inherited privileges of
hunting within
tracts comprised
again within
boundaries
of
the
territory. ,
Leacock outlines the
multi-family lodge or tribe
as a group
with some ten to twenty
people. The aggregate of
several
lodge groups
was a winter band
with size ranging from
thirty-five to
seventy-five people.
The average band ranges
from
one hundred and fifty
upward to three
hundred. 2
During
the fur trade period
in the Moose River
basin the average
Cree
lodge
or
tribe possessed
ten hunters with women
and
3
children.
it was quite
essential that
"the hunter know every
beaver
colony
on the
estate
; the pine ridges where
the marten dwells, the labyrin-
thine mazes of wild
creeks, where the emigrant family of
wild
moose have taken up their
winter quarters; the signs
of the sky, the prints on
the snow; the mysterious sounds
of the
night. . . . " 1
Post
marital
residence was
ambi-local. Descent
was through the
husband. generally
stress was placed on
individual initiative
since
survival was to a great
extent a personal
matter
between the individual
and the environment.
Political Organization
.
Since the family
was the only really
functioning economic
and political
unit devoted primarily to
obtaining an
existence
from the land,
band organization
lacked any
powerful political or
social mechanisms
for control.
The
aboriginal band
was very loosely
organized and commanded
only a
weak sense of
allegiance and identity
.
Hunting and fishing were
individualistic
occupations depending
on individually
developed skills.
The political structure
of the Cree
reflected this
individualism, by its pronounced
egalitarian
structure.
A
chief was simply
a good hunter
who
earned the respect
of lesser hunters
. His
authority
was real in the
sense that his food
might prevent
other band
1 . Hudson Bay
Company Archives
. B99,1 a/17 . July
13, 1817 .
See also Glover. Ed.
Anc:rew ,_c
aham's
observations. . .
for
reference to murder
because of polygamy
. p.
2
3 3 .
hunters from starving. However,
he
had
no formal authority,
and
received
no formal recognition
.
During tI . e fur trade
this tradition continued. Most early writes
found tha- the
Chief gained obedience only through his esteem, and consequ-
ently there was no common authority to solve murders, only
private feud.
1
Spearing with a
fire hardened
stick was another aboriginal means to gain
such fish as sucker, pike, trout, whitefish and pickerel.
Once the fish was caught
it was dried on long poles laid
horizontally and supported
by vertical stakes . A supply
of fish was usually prepared for travel or for winter by
3
Gathering of berries and vegetables was a
common food
source
for
the Cree during the summer. Edible berries and
plants
included strawberries, raspberries,
blackberries,
blueberries, currants,
cranberries and gooseberries
.
Pine
1 . Hudson
Bay Company Archives . B135/b/6
.
2 .
Crown Land Report.
Ontario. 1900 .
p
.
47 .
3 . Henry, Alexander. Travels and
Adventures in Canada. p. 6; ' .
3 5 .
needles,. nuts,
acorns, and
the
inner barks of fir, larch,
spruce, and
poplar were also edible. Wintergreen, sunflower,
wild goats beard, nut qrass and a wide variety of other
1
plants and herbs could also have been eaten.
Wild rice
was
found along
the marshy
James Bay coastline, and less
frequently along the shores of interior lakes
.
Such rice
was harvested by beating with a stick into the canoe.
Trapping was an important aboriginal means
of
obtaining
meat. The wide varieties of snares, deadfalls and other
`traps reflected
an
integration of the technical culture
with the habitat. Snares were used only for animals with
heads
larger than their necks
.
Such animals included grouse,
rabbit, fox, lynx, moose, bear, weasel, mink and marten.
Beaver and otter could
not
be snared. The
oil
sack fluid,
Castore=, from the female beaver was used as a scent to
lure smaller animals to the snare. A wide varietv of snares
was known
to
the
:Moose
River Cree .
Spring Pole snares were used to lift the game out of
the reach of predators. The rabbit spring pole consisted
of a rawhi. de noose situated on a rabbit runway . The noose
was tied by a slip knot to a horizontal pole lashed between
two trees, to take the strain of the bent sapling. The noose
was jerked tight to lift the arjimal into
the
air.
David
Thompson
found that "on a fine moonlight
night the hares
1 . : Leechman, Douglas . "Edible Wild Plants. " F . & O. 1949 .
3 6 .
move. about freely, and
from
eighteen
to twenty are caught
in a right, but in bad weather three,
or
four
or none. . . .
oil
The zndians
would set as many snares as they needed for food.
Sometifiies a hundred would be checked in a single day.
Lynx
were caught with a choke spring pole. Rather than
one horizontal cross bar, two
were used
with
a
rawhide
noose
runn
: . ng between. When the slip knot was released, the lynx was
pulled by the sapling against
the horizontal bars, and was
strangled.
Anoi;her
type
of snare used the tossing
pole principle
.
A heavy pole was lashed
horizontally to a standing tree or
was supported by
a tripod arrangement. The heavy end of the
pole wa. s left free to exert
a
downward force
.
The
light
end performed the
same function as the sapling in the spring
pole
sure
. The
animal could be either freely tossed into
the aim, or
choked
by two choke bars.
A:
perch snare
was
used to catch birds. The bird was meant
to land on the wooden perch. The perch was so constructed
as to- fall out under the bird's
weight. The snare wire was
released by the removal
of
the perch, and the
snare cord
was jerked tight
to
entangle the bird's legs .
Clog
snares were used for heavy animals such as moose
or beair. The snare noose was not
jerked
tight by a
pole,
but
was tied to a
log
. When the animal walked into the
snare, the snare cord was tightened by the animals movement.
1 .
Tyr
. - ell. (ed. ) David Thomnson's Narrative. p.
44 .
movement_
37 .
The loa at the end. of the snare cord impeded the animals
A second type of trap was the deadfall . This tvDe of
trap
pe=itted a heave log
to fall on
the animal
to
crush
it against a second heavy loa on the ground. There were
a variety of deadfall triggers . A common one consisted of
a vertical piece of wood set on a small horizontal bait
stick. Four vertical stakes served as the fall log guide.
The
bed log
was usually
three
feet in diameter
and
the gall
log
was about ten inches thick.
Muskrat
pitfall
traps were also
used.
Here
a
hole
was
sunk in - the ground with a wall of stakes to prevent the
muskrat from climbing out.
To hunt geese
on James
Bay decoys constructed from
mud, and willow
blinds were
frequently used. Owls,
ptarmigan, and ducks also formed
important food sources
. 3
Food Preparation.
The.
harshness
of
the environment and
the
lack of
leisure
tine was reflected in
the highly functional
preparatioa ofE food.
Boiling was
accomplished in vessels
of birch
; or spruce
bark or
woven spruce roots,
sometimes
lined with
clay_3
These were
filled with water
and hot stones
were
placed in
the water.
Fish was baked by
burying it in the
hot ashes. Preparations
included
shaggamite, a fish
broth
which was served,4
and a favourite
dish was a mixture of
blood
mixed with half
digested food found
in a deer's
stomach
and . fermented .
Hearne noted it's
"agreeable acid
taste. "5
Birds were
boiled with
the feathers, and
then were
skinned and
roasted. 6
Muskrat
and rabbit brains
and the
intestines
of bears were
regarded as exceptionally
good.
During the fur
trade period, food
preparation
by the Cree
retained its
functional
unsophisticated
aboriginal char-
1 .
Swaine. An Account of
a Voyage. . _. p.
215 . Ellis.
A Voyage.
p. 185 .
2 . Skinner.
Eastern Cree. p.
29 .
3 . Tyrrell, Ed
. David Thompson's
Narrative. . . p.
116
.
4 . Rich,
E. (Ed. ) James
Isham's Observations
. . . p.
146 .
Also Swaine
. Op. Cit. , p . 58 .
5 . Tyrrell. (ed
. Hearne, S. A
Journey to
the Northern
Ocean.
p_
263 .
6 . Augustin,
L . "Indian Cooking
in Northern
Canada. "
Rod and run. p .
664 .
teristics.
Tools and Weapons.
4Q,
Sub-Arctic aboriginal technology
was well adapted
to
the available,
wood, rock and animal resources of the North.
The functional nature of the technology is apparent in
its
complete orientation towards survival,
tanning skins
for
warmth
in winter, creating means of travel for hunting in
summer and winter, and creating hunting weapons themselves
.
For cutting flint and bone blades were
used.
Wood
working
for canoes
was accomplished by knives, axes and wedges of
stone. Logs were split by driving
wooden wedges into the
trunks . Tanning for clothes was accomplished by
fleshing,
scraping and smoking.
rrows were
from willow, plumed with feathers and equipped with bone
or stone tips . 3
The difficulty
of
beginning a fire by this
method caused
the
Cree to
carry coals
or
fire with
them
in
the farm of a smouldering pole whenever possible. Fires
were seldom allowed to go out and
tinder was always carried.
The birch bark canoe was highly adapted to the habitat,
a land'. of lakes and rivers .
49 .
3 . Loc. Ci t.
4 2 .
along
the river banks and
to
watch for obstacles in the
generally
shoal waters of the northern rivers. The canoe
was
sufficiently light
that
it could be carried overland over
rough trails,
a
necessity because of
the
frequent waterfalls
and rapids. Yet'the canoe could carry heavy loads in
shallow water and be built and repaired from the birch
trees of the forest without special tools.
The bark for the canoe was peeled from the white birch
in the
Spring when the sap was running. Black spruce roots
provided thread to sew
the
bark. White cedar,
which split
easily,
was used for ribs .
This
wood
bends easily when placed
in boiling water.
Spruce
gum was obtained by girdling the
tree in spring, and gathering the resin
in
summer
. Trees
were felled with a stone axe made from chipping flint, asper
or quartz. The wood was split with a
maul and a stone wedge.
Drilling was by means
of
a bone awl or by a stone drill
point. , Rood was boiled in birch bark kettles into
which
hot
rocks were dropped
.
To construct
the
canoe
the birch bark was first sewn
together. The ribs were placed inside and held by moose hide
thongs. Vie bow and stem were then fitted. To tighten
the
bark the
planks were fitted under the
ribs as the final
stage. The
canoe
was then ready for launching . During
use, extra birch bark was usually carried since
repairs to
the canoe were frequent. l
1 . Adnev, E. T. Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of
North America.
passim.
43 .
Winter travel over deep snow in order to
hunt called
for a
specialized technology.
Snowshoes were essential since
the north=ern snow
was too deep to permit normal walking.
Ash, birch or tamarack were cut and
split. The
wood
was bent
by boiling so that the shoe was rounded at
the
fforetip
. The
two ends were tied at
the back. The shape of the snowshoe
differed depending on the condition of the snow. Narrow shoes
were used for hard snow while huge rounded
snowshoes were
employed for soft
snow. Soaked and stretched babiche was
`woven as
the filling. The size of the mesh again depended
on the density of the snow
.
The harder the
snow,
the wider
the mesh-i
For carrying supplies over the snow while hunting, two
types of transportation were
employe(' . In the woods with
deep soft snow, toboggans were employed. The toboggans were
constructed by joining
a dozen
staves together
with the
ends curved upward.
The toboggan was built no wider than
the snowshoe trail
so that
it would ride easily on the broken
trail. One hundred pounds could be dragged by the
hunter
.
on hard o. oen snow the sledge was employed. Sledges rode on
runners
which were
iced
with mud to slide easily.
During the
fur trade
period the less efficient Cree
practices involving the use of stone tools were
replaced by
1 . Farr,
C
. C. "The Snowshoe. " R . & G. 1903 . passim
.
Conuck. "Snowshoes : Their Real Use
in the North. "
Saturday Night. Jan. 2, 1909 . passim.
the use of iron implements . Such iron implements increased
the efficiency by-which the Cree continued their traditional
cultural practics involving building and using canoes,
snowshoes and toboggans . The
fur
trade increased the
ecological
adaptation
to
the habitat.
Housing. .
Housing was highly adapted to the habitat since its
mobile nature permitted the Cree to move easily to follow
the movements of
g
4 4 .
. Constructed
from common materials
easily obtained in the bush, housing took the form of a
tepee erected with twenty or forty poles
in a conical shape
and covered with brush, birch bark, or hides, sewn together.
Such str-uctures would hold twelve to fourteen people .
The
floor was
of
brush
and sometimes the ground was dug out for
six
inches. The design
of
the tepee permitted the central
fire to
provide both light and heat, while the smoke, vented
through a hole at the top kept out
insects,
and
permitted
the drying of clothing or smoking of food
hung
from
horizontal
poles six
or
seven feet from. -the ground. During the summer
the skin of the tepee could be raised along the bottom for
ventiliat
. ' _ on
.
An
alternative type of tepee, less common
along the Moose River was the dome shaped
tepee, constructed
over bent willow
saplings .
In - transport,
tepee frames were
left behind while four or five rolls of
birch bark rolls or
skins were carried along. I
During
the fur trade period
1 . Rich. (Ed. ) James Isham' s Observations . . . p. 88 .
Swaine. An Account
of
a
Voyage . . . p. 184 . Also Renison.
One Dav At
Time . p. 48 .
4 5 .
the
mobile nature
of the Cree
society symbolized by
the
tepee
continued unaltered
.
Dress
and Adornment .
Cree clothing
was highly
functional, providing
protection
from sub-zero
temperatures in
winter and insects
in summer.
Dress
material was tailored
and tanned skins.
Large beaver
or rabbit
skin blankets were
worn open at
the
sides .
Under
these, frocks which
reached to the
knees were common
.
Tailored moose
skin leggings were worn by the men with a
breech
cloth . There were
three pairs of
fur stockings in
winter; for the
instep, the ankle
and the legs to the
knee .
Footwear
consisted of soft
moccasins. In winter
large beaver
mittens,
caps and detachable
sleeves
were worn. 2
Moose
Cree
families
used rabbit skin
blankets and smaller boys
and
girls in
winter were
dressed in rabbit skin
coats. The
blankets were
made by twisting
strips of rabbit
skin into
strands or
rope . These strands
were fastened
together until
an eight or ten foot
rope was made,
They were then woven
diagonally through
each other-into
a blanket. The
blankets
were said to be
extremely warm.
Once weighing three or
four
pounds
would protect a person
in the severest
weather. 3
The Cree
construction of
such clothes was
notable for the
1 . Rich . (Ed. ) James
Isham's
Observations
. . . p. 186 .
Glover
. (Ed . ) Andrew
Graham's Observations
.
p
.
145 .
2 . Tyrrell.
(Ed. ) David T om-Dson's
Narrative
. . .
n
. 80 .
Ellis . A
Vovacte . . . p. 85:
Swine . An
Account of a
Voyage
. . . p. 162
.
3 . Hyndman,
H. R. "To Abitibi
with Prospectors
. "
R. & G. 1906 .
The Life Cycle.
4 6 .
lack of a long, complicated process
of
fabrication,
or
the need for much 'Exuipment or specialized materials . During
the fur trade, Cree constructed clothing often continued
to
be worn although the introduction of woollen blankets
simplified dressing .
During the warm summer months the Cree undertook some
R
simple artistic pursuits . Cree bodies were decorated by
tattoing
with
charcoal on
the breasts,
backs of hands, arms
and faces
with
such figures as birds, beast- ,, fish, or with
flourishes and plain lines . 1
Hearne noted
that
quills were in
great request among women who neatly painted and fancifully
worked
them
into leather skins. 3
116
.
3 .
Tyrrell. (Ed. ) Hearne, S. A Voyage to a Northern
Ocean.
p. 354
.
Also Mackenzie. Ibid. , p.
16 .
. 144 .
4 7 .
board, thirteen inches
wide, three quarters of an inch
thick,
and the child was held to the board by a rabbit skin.
Such. an arrangement gave the mother more time free
from child
care to
snare
rabbits, prepare
food and dress
.
skins for
clothing.
Very little
punishment was ever given to
the children since adults
exploited
the habitat individually and believed that their
children should exercise
responsibility for their own
3
survival at an early age .
With menstruation the
females
were put by
themselves
for
a. week
or more in
a small tent. 4
Ed.
(Ed
. ) Cp
. Cit. ,
p.
93 .
Tyrrell
(Ed
. )
Dav
id Thompson' s Narrative. . . p. 93 .
4 . Rich . Ibid. , p. 98 . Tyrrell. Ibid
. , p. 177 .
5 . Rich. IFiE. , p. 80 .
4
8 .
on a
man's skill as a hunter. Lahontan wrote
that the
young Indian would come into
the female tepee
at
night with
a glowing stick. "If she blows out the
light he
lies down
by
her,
but if she pulls her covering over her face he
retires. '
Such a practice
was
again
a
Cree adaptation to a
harsh habitat which placed a premium
on food
and
forced
mobility.
During
the fur trade period
this
life-cycle
of
the Cree remained virtually
unaltered.
Specialization.
The need for highly
developed skills essential
for
survival
forced a division of labour among
the Cree .
The
man
%as responsible for finding game and
killing it.
The woman's position was to
bring the carcasses home, to
prepare t;ie food,
pound meat, dress and decorate the
skins,
make tents and clothing, nurse and care for the
children and
1 . Lahcn'- an . :New Voyages to North
Pmerica. 1703 .
p
. 3 7 .
2 .
Tyrreli. (Ed. ) Hearne,
A Vovacae to the Yorthern Sea. p .
129 .
3 . Ellis. A Voyage to
Hudson'sBav
. p.
192 . Tyrrell . Loc Cit.
4 . Glover. __M-T. 7 Andrew Cra am s
Observations. .
p . l7.
Anderson, Rev
. D.
p.
. 48 .
4
9 .
finally to
carry baggage to the
next camping
location.
The women also
exploited the habitat by
catching
small game
through
fishing, snaring,
and deadfalls .
1
The individualistic
nature of the society was
apparent in the
women's status .
Generally as
Flannery has pointed
out the Cree
woman's
position was
fairly equal to the
man's in that she
had free
disposal of food
products, owned personal
property,
could
leave a husband who
failed
to provide her with food,
and
she undertook an
equitable share in
the division
of labour. 2
During the
fur trading period
trapping became
of increased
importance as
a male activity.
Family specialization
nevertheless remained
since the female
continued to skin,
stretch and dress
animal pelts as well
as other
traditional
activities .
Travel Patterns
and Techniques .
During the
aboriginal period
the Cree adapted
their
travel
patterns
to
the
movements of
the animals . Daily
travel
patterns included
dispersion into the
woods to hunt
for game
and to check
snares and weirs. 3
Monthly travel
patterns might include
occasional
movemnts to new
hunting
territories with
greater concentrations
of game . There
were
also seasonal
movements. During
the summer extended
family
1 .
Glover. (Ed. ) A
ndrew Graham's
Observations . . .
Q
. 177 .
Swaine. An
Account of a
Voyage . . . p. 211 .
2 .
Flannery, R. "The
Position of Woman
Among
the
Eastern
Cree. " Primitive
Man. 193 5 . passim.
3
. Dobbs, A.
An
Account
of the Countries. . . p.
41 .
5
0
.
groups would
gather
as
bands along the larger lakes such
as
Abitibi and Missinaibi
. During the late fall the groups
would break up into
families or extended families and return
tc' their
winter hunting grounds. Le Jeune' s
group
of
thirty
five split up in December
in order to hunt over a wider area.
Fur trade infomation
indicated that the Cree travelled
down
to James Bay for goose hunting .
This may be a later accul-
turative effect of Moose Factory
but ecological factors
suggest that the abundance of fowl
in
the
spring and fall,
combined with the ease of travel up and
down the Moose River
and its tribu' caries would encourage
seasonal migrations to
James Bay
for goose hunting during the aboriginal
period.
The fur trade
did
not
alter the daily and seasonal
travel
patterns of the Cree.
Travel techniques
involved extensive practice.
An
Indian had to
learn the methods of
handling
a
canoe, running,
poling and tracking
rapids, portaging and repairing
a canoe.
Graham
found
that
frequently the women were more
expert
at steering
the
canoe
than men, since the men normally
sat in
the
bow to hunt while the women paddled. 2
During
the winter
the
techniques of
snowshoeing and lighting
a fire
had
to
be mastered.
Anderson,
Rev.
D.
p.
147 .
4 .
Anderson, John. Fur Tracer' s Story . p. 57 .
remarked
Bay. p. 3 6 .
reason. . . . By and large the Crees were honest, orderly
and industrious people and this mainly because their
way of life
was
little
disturbed
by
the white man
.
Their honesty was remarkable. 4
5 4 .
cooking utensils, guns, traps and other items
which
were
left during
their
absence
but were "as safe as though under
lock and key. " 1 Many white canoeists reported
having
lost
guns and other
equipment
on
portages
and
having Indians
traveI after them for days to return these items
.
Honesty
was
essential
in,a
Sub-Arctic
habitat when the theft of
hunting weapons or a canoe could often mean death by
starvation. Such characteristics of the Cree appear to
be constant throughout the aboriginal and
fur
trading period
: as long as the Cree culture retained its close connection
with the habitat
.
Exchange, Finance and Property.
Ih the aboriginal
society there was no exchange medium
other than food in time
of
scarcity. There has been consider-
able debate over
the question
of
family
or
band hunting
territories. The debate centers on the question as to whether
the
family or extended family habitually
returned to a well
demarcated tract of land bounded by natural landmarks for
the winter months. Did the family possess exclusive
rights to
the game resources in this
area?
Was trespass
punished?
Cooper,
Speck, and Eiseley reject the view that
family hurting territories were the product of the fur trade
.
They suggest that family
hunting
territories were
aboriginal.
The territory
was
used to exploit small
game such as beaver,
1 . Report on the Ex-ploration and Survev of Northern Onta
rio
.
p. 64
.
5 5 .
and other non-migratory, sedentary animals .
By proper
organization of land resources, the Indians would mitigate
hunting insecurity through conservation and
exploitation of
resources on a sustained- yield basis. Radisson, for instance,
in
the
166Q's
found that
the
James Bay Cree who had never
2
before seen
white-men
were
practicing
beaver
conservation.
Bishop and Knight suggest what seems to be the correct
analysis of hunting territories, since they relate hunting
territories functionally to the abundance of food as a
determining factor
.
A growing population, depletion of
large game and dependence
on
small non-migratory game created
a
situation
which
led to the guarding of
the
food supplies
of
a demarked
territory. However,
the
return of
large
game
led to a decrease of territoriality. 3
During aboriginal
times
. huntins3 territories
probably
fluctuated
by
seasons,
or with the food supply. In general it is easier to hunt in
known.
terrain. It
is probable
that
although
the size
of
hunting territories fluctuated, some roughly delineated area
based on some natural feature would be possessed by part-
icular fanilies.
Acceptance of
Cooper's
and
Bishop's
arguments would
indicate that the impact of
the fur trade
on
family hinting territories of the Cree was minimal.
1. Cooper, T . M . "Land Tenure Among the Indians of Eastern
and Northern North America. " P . A. 1938 .
&
"Is the
Algonkian
Family Hunting System _Pre-Columbian
. " A. A. 1939 .
Speck, F. & Eiselev,
L.
"Significance of Hunting
Territorv
Systems of
the Algonkian Social
Theory. " A. A. passim.
2 .
146 .
3 . Bishop. "The Emergence of Hunting Territories. . . "
E. passim.
Knight. "A
Re-examination of
, Hunting
,
Trapping and
Terr-
itoriality. . . " in Leeds. The Role of
Animals. . . 1965 .
56 .
Supernaturalism and
Disease.
Them, is, a danger in using historical information
as a basis: for knowledge of aboriginal religion because
the Cree
frecruently
told
observers the monotheistic beliefs
that
Chri. stians wished to hear. Nevertheless there is
sufficient agreemlant among historical accounts to obtain
some
idea of"
Indian aboriginal
beliefs. The Indians
were
believers in Manito, a 13reat Spirit
who
had created the
visible world with all its inhabitants. There were smaller
Manitos or- inferior Angels who were responsible to him. Each
Manito was responsible for a separate natural object such
as animals, trees, or rivers . These Manitos were regarded
as the living realities of the forest while humans simply
occupied it. f
The religion of the Cree reflected their full time
pre- occupation
with
developing
survival techniques and
practices for dealing with their demanding environment.
Since the Indian lived in constant fear of accidents,
disease
or famine,, his daily life was - one long round of sacrifices
to
the uns,. aen forces
of
nature
. On
killing
an
animal the
Indian thanked the particular "1anito by throwing some meat
into the fire as an offering . He also left little gifts
for
the
spirit
" - and
various
rites
existed to
express respect
for the different 'masters' . Since the spirit of
the
1 . Teicher,. M Wind=go Psychosis. passim .
animal
lived on and
must not
be offended, particular
care
was exercised in the disposal of the bones, through burial
5 7 .
or
burning. Skinner
noted that at Moose
Factory
beaver
bones were always thrown
into deep
water to keep
them out
of the way of dogs so as not to offend the spiritua l
The Moose Factory Cree also held a ceremony after the killing
of a bear. Prior,to
the
killing, the Indian made
apologies
to
the bear spirit
.
After the bear was dead the Indian
retained a claw as a talisman . Part of the flesh including
part of the heart
was burned as
an offering. The head was
cooked and was passed
around
with the intestines . Everyone
but the
women participated in the ritual of eating. After
the feast the skull was
cleaned
and
painted. Eventually it
was
hung up in a tree in the forest. Most animal skulls were
2
placed in trees as offerings to the Manitos.
These
sacrifices were individualistic in nature and were
made by any hunter who wished
to ensure the good
will
of
the gods
and
the
success of
his
hunting
.
At the same time
sacrifices of bones and skulls were larqely symbolic in nature
and did not cause a drain on food resources or endanger
survival .
In the Indian spiritual rituals,
pictographs
may have
played a role . Throughout Canada and
on
Missinaibi Lake,
Little Missinaibi Lake, Abitibi Lake and groundhog Lake
l.
p.
25 .
2 . Skinner, A. "Bear
Customs of
the Cree. .
. " O . H
. S. P. R.
1914 . passim.
See also Jenkins. "Hunting Territory of the Abitibi
Indians. "
picto-raphs are
found. The sites
are generally on vertical
58 .
rock faces close
enough to the water to be
reached bv the
artist- . . A. permanent-stain,
iron oxide reddish pigment
was
used. . Scine of the paintings
are " . :-lieved to he between
150
and
500
1
years old
.
To cure disease a
conjuror
was hired, an Indian who
pretended
to Communicate
with Windigo. The Conjuror enacted a ritual with dancing
and shouting
which indicated
his
calling upon the spirits.
He
then played
juggling
tricks on the patient to suggest
to the patient that he had been
cured. Swaine for instance
described one example
where the Conjuror pulled hawk claws
4
and partridge feet from the patient, or so it appeared
.
1 . Hudson Bay Company Archives
. B70/a/4 .
2 .
Ibid
. ,
B186/e/1
3 . Ibid . ,
B70/a/2 .
Sept.
18, 1826 .
4 . Swaine
.
An Account of
a Voyage. . . p . 23 7. See also
Rich, E. (Ed . James
Is am s Observations. . . p.
98.
Tyrrell, J. B. Ed. ) Hearne. A Voyage
t
o
a Northern
Sea. p . 23 0 .
A failure to cure the patient was blamed on supernatural
powers
which were
too strong.
The conjuror often invented
reasons
for the illness . Hind wrote bf one conjuror who after
the
conjuring
announced
that he had discovered the reason
for Manitou's
anger. In a dream the patient had promised
an offering to Manitou, but had
neglected the pledge . The
1
penalty
was to pay double the amount to the conjuror.
Another ritual known as the Shaking Tent involved the
conjuror's
blackening his face and entering a very small
tent where
he
screamed, and shouted, and imitated animals
and birds. During the ritual the tent shook violently.
This
was believed to have been
caused
by the
spirits whose
animal voices
could
be
heard
.
The Indians outside maintained
a profound silence. The conjuror would then make predictions
.
His reputation was determined by the accuracy of the
predictions
. Although
certain
men in the Cree society were
generally known as conjurors, it was generally recognized
that'all Cree men possessed the power to undertake this role.
Scapulimancy, the art of divination through a study of.
such things as the meaning of cracks
which
appeared
in the
2
shoulder bone of a moose when heated, was also common.
The individualistic nature of Cree beliefs
were apparent in
the sense that each hunter
was
a
sh3,man and could make
1 . Hind, H. Y . Canadian Red River and Assinniboine
and
Saskatchewan
Ex- oefition.
1860 . p. i13 .
2 . Honigmann, J. The Attawapiskat Swampy Cree . p.
40 .
6 2 .
predictions which would better his chances for food. The
existence of aboriginal beliefs until the
arrival
of the
missionaries at Moose Factory during the 1840's, meant that
the
Cree religious beliefs with their functional orientation
towards
improving the
Cree
adaptation to the habitat remained
untouched and
unaltered by the Europeans of the early fur
trade.
The Cree did not
limit their medicine
to
conjuring
and religious
beliefs. Most Cree were aware of medicinal
characteristics of the flora in their habitat
which
possessed specific powers for curing a number of various
ailments,
illnesses and wounds . The Cree bartered for roots
and herbs, and used deer and buffalo fat and resin of trees
for wound: . Labrador tea
was
used for tea, burns,
scalds,
and as,
an
emetic. Common thistle was a styptic.
Cow parsnip
was used for tooth-aches, boils or to reduce
swelling. Fungus
was used
for a
styptic
or emetic. Wild onions served as
food. Large toothed
aspen
was taken for child
bearing
.
The
root of
the
wild strawberry
was boiled and drunk for
diarrhoea. The inner bark of trees was boiled, and
the
mixture dr-cnk for tuberculosis . green tamarack
was taken for
sore throat .
The twigs
of
the hazel
bush
were boiled, and the
liquid drunk for menses. 1
1 . Beardsley,
g . "`_Notes
on
Cree Medicines . . . " Papers of
the
Michigan
Academv of Science,
Arts and Letters,
Flexion, C. Some
Medicines of the Swampy Cree. . .
Canadian Pharmacy Journal. 1897 . Strath, R. ""2ateria
Medica, Pharmacy and
Therapeutica of the Cree Indians
. . . "
St. Paul Medical Journal. 1903
. Leach, F. "Indian
Medicine
Men and t
Heir
Remedies. " Moccassin Footprints.
1966 .
6
3 .
Sweat houses were constructed in a circular shape,
and were covered with skins . The treatment was used
for
febrile symptoms, chronic
rheumatism, headaches, fast
pulse and sore
muscles. l Lahontan reported that in addition
to sweating, the Cree drank large amounts
of broth, kept
themselves very warm, slept and drank
much
lake
water.
Indeeed
the Cree illustrated a truer understanding of medicine than
the early Europeans in their astonishment at
the European
practice of bleeding since they "considered
that life
sinks when the blood
is
taken out. "
2
Conclusion.
The
Cree
habitat was harsh
and challenging in nature .
Cyclical animal cycles made game difficult to find.
Sub-
zero
weather
and deep snow made hunting difficult while
the interrupted river systems challenged
transportation tech-
niques . The Cree culture developed
as a middle term between
the Cree and the environment
to adapt the Indian in a fun-
ctional way to the specific challenges
of the habitat. Most of
the characteristics of-the Cree- culture dealt with
the Crees'
'adaptation
to the habitat to permit the difficulties of the habitat
to be overcom(
and turned to advantage for the purpose of surv:_val.
The functional
adaptation of the resources for the exploitation
of the habitat
is apparent in the highly mobile tepee shelter
1 . Beardsley, G. "Notes
on
Cree Medicines. . . " p. 489 .
2 . Lahontan
. Ne
w
Voyages to North America. p. 50 .
6 4 .
constructed from poles and birch bark. The
birch
bark
canoe
and snowshoe permitted travel in search for game in
a
variety of climatic conditions
.
Boas
and
arrows
were
manufactured to permit large game
to be killed at a distance
while stone knives and bone tools permitted hides t( be
processed for dress to provide
the necessary warmth for
survival.
All Cree cultural traits
possessed another common
characteristic, the cultural practices
were individualistic
in nature and must be mastered by each individual to allow
for survival. Th s individualism was apparent in the extended
family social structure which depended on the ability of
a
few key hunters .
In
the
political structure every man was
his own master and refused to be dominated by a leader
since
each
man possessed
the
ability to
survive alone.
In religion each hunter
exercised the power
to
pacify the
gods
through sacrifices and to determine his will
through
conjuring or scapulimancy. No
religious hierarchy developed.
In technical culture all materials needed for survival could
be obtained by
the individual from readily reached sources
in the habitat, and trade
or
reliance on other
individuals
was unnecessary.
The
effectiveness
cultural adaptation
is
the Cree had integrated more
society to
replace less effective means of exploiting
the
of
the aboriginal Cree technology at
an indication of the degree to
which
efficient methods
into the
6 5 .
habitat.
This willingness
to
adopt the most effective
culture available. for exploiting
the habitat was to permit
the Cree
to adopt such European items as
the
copper kettle,
steel knife and hatchet, flint and steel,
and the musket
without a disruption of traditional cultural practices
.
It
was
the individualistic grasp of the value of such items
at improving Cree adaptation to
the habitat, and the rapid
acceptance of such items
which is indicative of the dynamic
changing nature of
the
Cree
culture . The alteration from
stone
to
an iron age culture by the Cree
altered the effect-
iveness with which the Cree exploited
the
habitat for game
but did not alter the basic orientation of the culture to
the habitat itself. Traditional Cree commodites
such as the
canoe, snowshoe
and tepee continued to be employed, but were
constructed with greater ease because
of European technology.
Chapter
III . Cultural Optimalitv and the Fur Trade.
Introduction.
6 6 .
The cultural climax of
the Cree was reached when the
material aspects 'of the Cree
culture benefitted
from
the
superior and more efficient technology
and material poss
essions of the Europeans
who
shared
congruent goals with the
Cree. The optimal period of their culture
existed while the
Crc-e
obtained improved commodities for
their adaptation
to the
habitat without an alteration in their life style
or identity . The length of
the
optimal period among
the
Cree is defined as the period of
time when the
Cree
was aided by the white man's material civilization
to adapt to their habitat without having a disruption of
their original life style.
For
the
climax of
the Cree culture to have been
reached a number of prerequisite conditions
needed
to
be
fulfilled.
The
perception of
the
European culture
towards
the resou~- yes: of
the
land of
the Cree must be' similar in
nature to the Crees'perception of these resources .
The
cheapest 5nd
most efficient exploitation of the resources
must neceFsarily require the preservation of the
specialized
and highly
developed skills basic to the
identity of the
Cree
culture. The exploitation of
the
6 7 .
resources
had to be voluntarily undertaken by the Indian
culture because of
their
desire
to obtain sophisticated
commodities which
would ease the burden
of
survival by
stre=thening the culture's adaptation to
the
habitat.
For the achievement of
these prerequisites
a
number
of other prerequisites were
essential. The common perception
of the resources must remain at
the staples level, involving
a sim-le harvesting of
traditional resources by the prim-
itive culture according to habitual
practice without the
necesfzity of the introduction of
new or more complex
processing methods.
Secondly, to preserve
the nature and identity of
the less advanced culture it must be
to the advantage of
the more advanced culture to employ specially trained and
skilled employees who understand and promote the traits
of the primitive culture, through
learning and using the
native
language and customs. At the same time the advanced
culture
must find it
to
its financial advantage to restrain
and discourage other
representatives of civilization who
have
<--
no
interest in the Indian culture or who wish
to
alter the traditional aspects of. that
culture
.
Thirdly, to prevent
the exploitation of the
primitive
culture by the advanced culture there must be some
type
of continuing
competition for the resources being
offered
by the less advanced culture to place that
culture in a viable
6 8 .
marketing situation. Provided
these conditions are realized
the
symbiotic relationship between the two cultures
will
strengthen
the primitive bv aiding its traditional
adap-
tation to the habitat through superior technology, while
preventing the
introduction of an identity conflict.
The optimal period
of
the Cree culture
occurred generally
between 1650 and 1900 . During
this period the above cond-
itions were fulfilled.
The Cree obtained a more effective
adaptation
to
their
environment and retained most aspects
of their traditional
culture
.
In the fulfillment of the
elements necessary for a cultural climax
or optimal period,
it
will be
shown
that the European perception of North
Eastern Ontario
was congruent with that of the Cree fur
trading interests. A history of the fur trade
will indicate
that European contacts with the
Cree were
limited
to a
special breed
of European
who was
highly familiar with,
understood and promoted the Cree customs
and wav of life.
The Europeans were willing to learn the
Cree language and
some adopted their
life
style.
At the same time the fur
trading companies
discouraged settlers whose perception
of the
land differed from the nomadic Cree, as well as
missionaries who attempted
to teach the Indians agriculture .
It will be demonstrated that the situation in which
Cree-European interaction occurred
placed the Cree
in the
dominant position. The
success of the fur trade
was
based
G 9 - .
on the
Creels
well developed
ability
to haunt, trap and skin
wild animals and
to
bring the
pelts to trading posts.
The fur trader's total dependence
on
the Indian carrying out
this function meant that the Indian became
a valuable, skilled
and useful labour force whose status was to
be
preserved
and perpetuated
. Consequently
the
fur trader constantly
sought the good will and cooperation of the Indian by
treating them with great
respect and fairness. Furthermore
continuous competition for Indian furs placed the
Cree in the
position
of having twc or more possible purchasers
for pelts .
These
furs of the Cree were
essential for the profit and
survival of competing trading
firms who were forced by
competition
to
cater
to the interests of the Indian by
offering high
quality trading merchandise and
competitive
prices
.
A study will also be made to indicate
that
the
European
need for the
Cree culture permitted the Cree to obtain
only
those aspects of the
European culture which eased the burden
of the
Crees' survival in the habitat, without affecting
other aspects of
their culture in any seriously detrimental
way. Since the fur industry did not
directly or immediately
involve the
processing of raw products into manufactured
articles or
require a radically new type of transportation
system throuqh the forest,
th
. ,
Cree did not become 'cottage
7 0 .
labourers,
nor did they
need capital, regulations, supervision
or
the adoption of
a new life style
which would have conflicted
with their
culture . The Indians
continued
to
catch furs
at their own
rates
and were
not subjected to control
foreign
to their
way of life.
The
industry
was one which emphasized
and
reinforced the nomadic
hunting and trapping ways
of
the Cree.
The History of the Fur Trade
in North Eastern Ontario.
Early
European perception
of the resources of North
America was symbolized by
Jacques Cartier in 1534 wi. o
traded
iron implements for Indian
furs on the gulf of
the
St. Lawrence.
The European fashion of
broad-brimmed top
hats, constructed of beaver
fur on felt, representing
wealth,
prestige and rank, provided a ready
and lucrative market in
Europe for Indian fur coats.
The high value, low
bulk
and weight, wide
geographical distribution,
cheap collection
and lack of capital necessary
for processing all made
the
beaver trade a popular and
lucrative business for
Europeans.
The non-migratory and,,monogamist
nature of the beaver encouraged
their extinction and a constant
rapid expansion of
the trade
to the North
and Westward. The
warri coats and tasty meat
of
the beaver had already
made the animal popular
among
the Algonkians, and their
aboriginal trapping
skills, their
sound knowledge of geography, transportation
techniques
and
mobility
turned the Indian into an
immediate labour force
Brunswick
Post.
1777-
1779.
New
Brunswic
Post,
1777-
1780
.
1870'x-1910'x .
0
T9aiscocramy
17F(,-179'-)
,
MIL95
Flyinq
Post.
1821---1914
Mattacgami
Post
1~21-
1924
.
Hudson Bay
Companv Posts,
North Eastern
Ontario .
K'nu
~r
amiss=~e
Fust .
1-794-
1822 .
Frederick
House
Post.
1785-1812 .
for obtaining and,transpc. L t: . inq the pelts .
The Cree of North Eastern Ontario were soon to come
into contact
with Europeans and their iron implements
during
the
seventeenth century.
The geography of Eastern
Canada led French explorers
northward and
westward along
the St. L awrenco ; Ottawa, and Mattawa Rivers and Treat
L akes towards the land of the Cree . Champla_. n in
his
early
trip up
the
Ottawa to the
Mattawa
and
French Rivers
had
nearly reached
the height
of
land separating the Cree from
the more southerly Huron and Ojibwa tribes.
With the introduction of guns to the Iroquois
by the
Dutch of the Hudson River,
the
resultant
wars
of
the
Iroquois
in Southern Ontario, confined the French to using the Ottawa
River as a route to L ake Superior, along
watersheds
closely
adjacent
to
rivers
of
the beaver rich territories
of
the
Cree.
The
Nipissing and Ottawa Indians
by
the
1650's
had come into close contact with
the French
end depended
upon their iron trading goods . These bands obtained their
pelts from
the
Cree of the
North
by trading used iron
implements
to the Moose River Cree in exchange for their pelts . 1
Such
trading probably familiarized the Cree of Japes Bay with
iron impl%ments ten to
fifteen
years before the arrival
of the first white man.
Jesuit missionaries, wintering among the Huron and
1 . Innis,
H.
A. The Pur Trade in Canada . D.
45.
7
2 .
and Ottawa
Indians, obtained heresay information of the canoe
routes
to the territory of the Northern
Cree. In 1654
Marie de 1'Incarnation
wrote of an Indian's reference to
"a very large river,
which empties into a great sea . . . . "
1
Father de Ouen and Father Druillettes in
1657 and 1658 were
the first to describe Indian routes to
James Bay. Two
routes were
by
the Moose River, for
Druilletei wrote that
"tha
Archirigouans, who live on a river emptying into the
fresh water sea of the Hurons, go in a few days to trade
with_ the
Ataouabouskatouck,
Kilistinons, / the Cree
who
are on
the seashore," and "the Nipisiriniens, /the
Nipis: : -ings, /
starting from
their lake, --which is
called Nipisin, . . .
reach the North Sea in fifteen
days;
that_
is,
their lake is distant therefrom perhaps a
hundred
and
fifty
leagues. " 2
A
map by Creuxius in 1660, incorporated
the information and showed a river to Lake Superior from
James Bay which could
have
been
the Missinaibi River, and a
river
from Lake Huron and Lake Nipissing to James Bay,
probably the Spanish to Biscotasi Lake, and-the Groundhog
and !4~attagami Rivers .
A
third
route, running from Lake
Timiskaminc{ through a
chain
of lakes to the
Abitibi River
and
James
Bay was not illustrated.
1. Marshal; ' . , Joyce. Word from New 'Prance
: The Selected
Letters of Marie de 1'Incarnation . p. 216 .
2 . Crouse, N. Contributions of the
Canadian Jesuits. . .
143
to
147 . See also Campbell, Rev
.
T .
J. Pioneer
Priests
of
North
America. p. 101.
During the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries
7 3 .
the English were using the second entrance to
the
land of
the Cree by Davis Strait and Hudson and James Bay. A series
of English
sea captains, Frobisher, Davis, Waymoutr, Hill,
Hudson,
James,
and Poxe explored Hudson
Bav but failed
to
perceive the fur resources of the interior boreal forest.
Consequently
the
Cree were uninfluenced by
the English during
this period.
Direct European
perception of the
fur resources
of the
land of
the
Cree and of
the value of the Cree Indian in
-xploitating these resources occurred in the 1660's.
Two French Canadians
?
Pierre Esprit Radisson and Medard
Chouart, Sieur des
Groseilliers in the summer of 1659
had journeyed to Lake Superior
where they met a party
of
Cree Indians who spoke of their lands
reaching "as
afar as
the
North Sea . " In his manuscript Radisson claimed to
have accompanied the Crees from Lake Superior northward on
a great river "to the seaside", and
described
the wandering
Cree
, dressed in beaver skins
in winter, as the best hunts-
men in America. 1
Thisawareness
of
large and
profitable beaver resources in the
interior boreal forest,
provided
strong economic incentive for further European
exploration and exploitation into the land of
the
Cree .
1. Adams,
A. T. The Explorations of Pierre Esprit Radisson.
p. 146.
7 4 .
The French government financed
a number of exploration
trips to
James Bay in the 1660's and 1670's . Father Dablon
and Eruillette attempted to reach James Bay
by
the Saguenay
River in 1661 but travelled only half wayl
By
the
1670's
many French fur traders or
coureur de bois were travelling
North down the Ruperts,
Abitibi and Missinaibi Rivers to
trade with the Cree .
Radisson and
Troseilliers, unable to obtain French
support to
finance a fur trading expedition,
excited
English
entrepreneurs into financing a
speculative fur trading
venture to James Bay in 1668 . The
success of the Nonsuch in
returning to England in 1669 with a
large cargo of Cree furs,
demonstratina the value of
the sea approach, turned a
dangerous speculative enterprise into a promising commercial
investment. Consequently a
English charter was granted by
Prince Rupert on
the
second of May,
1670, incorporating the
Hudson Bay Company. For perpetuity
the Company was granted
the trade, mineral, fishing and legal
rights
of
all the
2
territory drained by'Hudson's Bay. This bought the Cree
Indian
under the legal jurisdiction of the Hudson Bay
Company.
In
1671 Radisson traded
with the Cree of the
Moose
River for
their
beaver
furs and found that this river
system,
1 . Jesuit Relations .
Vol.
46, p. 179 .
2 .
See
C ap am, John. Minutes of the Hudson's Bay
Company
1671 --
1674 .
Introduction
& Appendix .
spreading its
tributaries like a vast outspread hand,
deep
into
the
beaver rich interior, offered many features
favouring the establishment of a
post .
The
wide estuary
and channels of the Moose River at its
mouth combined with
its islands
offered a suitable
site
for a harbour. The
location of the Moose
River at the south end
of
James
Bay,
between other large rivers made the
'_Moose River the central
entrepot location for
the James Bay Cree and other Hudson
Bay Company posts. The
widely spread !Moose River drainage
basin permitted
many different Indian bands to
travel
with
equal ease to the river's mouth
to trade . Finally the low
height
of land and the ease of transportation
from the Great
Lakes over the watershed
extended
the
hinterland of the Moose
River immensely.
For these
reasons the Hudson Bay Company made the Moose
River the site
of a post on James Bay, bringing the
Cree
into permanent contact with
the Europeans. A temporary
house
was built on a site about a mile
from the westerly
2
end
of
Moose
Factory Island. .
7 5 .
The Fur Trade : French--Enclish Conflict
.
The development
of
the optimal period
of the Cree
culture depended on
continuous competition among European
1 .
C
lapham,
J. Minutes of the Hudson's Bay Company
. . . p.
22 .
2 .
Morton, A. A History of the Cana
1an West
. . . p . 73
states
that
the first post was on Hays Island. Dawson, K . C. A.
The Moose
Fort Fur Post of 1673 . Unpublished
Report,
Dept
. of Lands and Forests
argues that Hays
Island
of
1673 is Moo: -e
Factory Island to-day.
7 6 .
traders which forced up fur prices and provided the Cree
with a choice of buyers . From'1668
to 1763 a continuous
conflict for the
furs of
the
Cree occurred between the
Hudson Bay Company and various French fur trading companies,
which
provided
these
conditions .
The establishment
of
English trading
posts on Hudson's
Bay and
the
succc~-,s of their trade for the beaver of the
Cree stimulated
French interest in the Cree at an early
date. At the official level Fath:r Albanel and Louis and
Zacharie Jolliet were
commissioned by the Governor of New
France to travel to James Bay
in
the 1670's
via
the
Saguenay
River "to invite the
Kilistinons, /the Cree 7 who are in
great numbers in the
vicinity of that Bay, to come down to
1
see us, as the Ottawas do. . . . "
By 1680
some 800
coureur de bois were estimated
to be trading out of New
France, building
small mobile posts 2t vantage points on
the Northern rivers
and providing
the
Indians with European
commodities
for beaver pelts? The knowledge
of
the tributaries
1 . Campbell, Rev. T. J. Pioneer Pri
ests of North America
. . .
p .
136 e
t
seq .
Rich, E.
E.
T e Hudson Ba-" Company. Vol.
I, p.
175 . Burgesse, J . A. "Joll-;
_et
on James Bay
. "
The
Beaver, 1947 . p .
14 ff. Rich, E . E. "Which Jolliet. "
TieBeaver , 1956 .
passim.
2 .
As described by Mackenzie, A. Voyages from Montreal through
the
Continent of North Fmerica .
p
. 2 .
3 .
Car
Minutes o
the
Vol.
VII,
p
. XLII .
7
7 .
of
the Moose River
system possessed
by
the coureur de b
ois
is apparent in Jolliet's map of
the
Moose
River
and
. Lahontan's
accurate
description of the Missinaibi River system
from
James
Bay
to
Lake Superior. 1
The effects
of
the
French
success in
obtaining
Cree
pelts were
felt by the English
early as 1670 . Gorst, a Hudson Bay
Company
trader at
Rupert
River complained at
this time that the French, who possessed
a post only eight days travel upstream from Fort
Charles, were
obtaining many Cree
furs to the detriment of the English. 2
The decision made
by
the French Governor Marauis de
Denonville to monolopize the trade for Cree furs on
James Bay
led to the capture of Moose Factory by
the
French military
v 3
commander
Chevalier De Troyes in the Sprinct of 186. From
1686 until the burning of Fort St Louis or Moose Fort in
1693, Moose Factory was operated
by French Canadian
traders
who conducted the fur trade
with some profit. Following
the
Treatv of
Utrecht
of
1713, which returned Hudson Bay
to the Hudson Bay Company,
French coureur de bois again
entered North Eastern
Ontario
to
com" :)ete with'the English
for the trade of the Cree . Governor . Kyatt of Fort
Albany on
the Albany
River reported that there were "Wood-runners up
1 .
3 .
2 .
as
Lahontan. New Voyages to North America. 1703 . p.
214 .
Caron, I . Journal e l Expedition du Chevalier de
Troyes . . .
passim
.
Also
Kenvon, W. A. and Tu:-nbu1 , J. R. The
Battle for James Bay.
Secondary
sources includeRich, E. E.
The'Hudson's Bav Company. p. 245 . Crouse, Nellis .
Lemoyne
d I erville, go1dier of
New
Francc- . p .
117 et seq .
Oldmlxon in Tvrreli,_~ ' j B . Ed. Documents
Re lating to
the Early History of
Hudson Bay. p . 386 . In 1681 there
was a post one day from Fort
Charles . See Taylor, E.
Copy-Book of Letters - Outward-. - 1680-87 . p.
28.
7 8 .
Moose River and also up the
Albany River who do
intercept
the Indians in their coming
unto us to trade. "
l
The
rate
of
expansion by the
French into the land of the Cree
is
illustrated by Paul Guillet who
enjoyed a license to trade
in
the Abitibi
region. In 1720 he employed
ore canoe and
three men. In 1722-23, he
employed two canoes and six men
.
2
In 1724 four canoes and sixteen men
were used.
Since the Cree
were in contact with the French in
the
Moose River uplands, they
avoided riskingthe
fog, wind,
ice,
. tides,
and shortage of water and food which
needed to be
suffered
in order to reach the English at
Fort Albanv by
a canoe trip on James
Bay. Consequently
in
1728
Willia" n
Bevan
surveyed the Moose estuary for the Hudson
Bav Com;Danv
and
in 1730 Moose Fort was re-establish>
. d by the English, "to
draw all the . . . Indians
that used to come to the Slude
to
trade, and also all the Sackemy Indians
which border the
mouth of the
Moose:" 3 Competition for Cree
pelts remained
since the French possessed a
post upstream on the Moose and
also operated posts on the lakes
at
the headwaters
of the
Mattagami, Abitibi and NZich'picoten
Rivers. 4
The effectiveness
1 .
2 .
Glover,
Morton,
R.
A.
Letters from Hudson Bav 1703
--40
. p. 82 .
S . A Histortr of. the Cain -
adian West . . . p. 157 .
3 . Glover, R. Op . Cit . , p.
123.
4 .
Voorhis, E. Historic Ports
and Trading Posts. -. . - p. 118 .
7
9 .
of the
French in
trading for pelts forced
the
Hudson
Bay
Company to penetrate inland.
Henley House was built upstream
on the Albany
River in 1744 .
The
Hudson Bay Compan,r versus the
'_forth West Companv.
The defeat of the French
empire in America by the
English in 1763
led to a continuation of
competition in the
James Bay region
bet_. een the Hudson
Bay Company and traders
from Montreal. From
1763 to 1821 competition for
Cree furs
continued at even
a more vigorous
rate than had been
exhibited
during
the early French-English
conflict. The Cree
obtained
an unparalleled market
for their pelts
and the range of
merchandise
which was offered
them was constantly improved
according to
their likes . The period
represented the
climb; of
competition.
From
the 1750's, the old Abitibi
and Michipiccten posts
were
occurr ed by free traders
. 1
As early as 1754
the chief
of
Moose Fort complained that
the "Peddlars" or free
trader
numbers
were increasing
and were trading with
the uplands Cree,
preventing
them from'reachinq
Moose Fort. 2
In 1761 the
chief
factor of
Moose Fort wrote in
his
-
,ournal that an Indian
had
traded all
his goods inland with the
Peddlars and had dressed
his whole family in English
manufactured cloth and some
French shirts and
- coats . 3
The factor
concluded his entry
1 . Voorhis,
E. Historic Forts
and Trading Posts . .
.
p
. 26 .
2 .
Glazebrook,
r. P . de T. Moose
Fort Journals. . . p.
XXI
3 . Hudson Bay Company Archives
. B13S/a/35 .
8 0 .
by stating that he had been
led to judge that the trade
coming
to "loose Fort had been ,
reatly intercepted. He
added
that the free traders could
leave either Montreal or
Quebec
as the ice broke, quickly arrive
above Moose Fort,
trade
their furs, and
return in the same
summer. 1
Such
independent traders were found trading
with the Cree in North
Eastern Ontario until the
early
1800's.
Reference is
made in the
Journals to
The post
burned
1 . Tyrrell, J.
B . (Ed
. )
Journals of Samuel Hearne and Philip
Turnor. p.
290
.
2 . Hudson Bay Company Archives . B135/b/5
.
3 . Hudson Bav
Company Archives. 19 August, 1777 .
B135/b/5
.
8 5 .
and
was subsequently
abandoned. by the Hudson Bay
Company in
1786.
In
7
I~81
the Hudson Bay Company
decided to increase
their_
geographical knowledge of
the Moose River basin
by
signing a 26 year old
surveyor, Philip
Turnor,
to
a five
P
year contract. Turnor
in 1781 surveyed
the Moose, Missinaibi
and
Michipicoten Rivers to
Lake Superior.
Although the route
was well known,
Turnor's survey was
undoubtedly the first
accurate
one of the river. Turnor
warmly recommended that
the post
on
Missinaibi Lake should be re-established
each
summer to stop
the Canadian progress
downstream towards
Moose Fort and to
secure all the
Indians "between it and
the Factory. "
1 He warned that a
Canadian settlement on
Brunswick
Lake would cut off
the flow of _furs to
Wap-
iscogamy House. 2
In
the same year, 1781,
Edward Jarvis,
chief
at
Moose
Fort,, wrote
the Governor and Committee
in London that the
Canadians had a
small house on the
Abitibi River. He added :
"we hear they trade very
hard with the
Indians, but being
on the spot is a
great advantage" since
the Indians pref'
the
closest trade. 3
Jarvis
recommended that a
Hudson Bal Company
settlement be located
towards Lake
Abitibi
1 . Tyrrell, J.
B . The Journals of Sam
uel Hearne and
Philip
Turnor. p.
301.
2 .
Loc.
Cit .
. Hudson bay
Company Archives
.
A.
11/4 4 fo. 120d .
8 6 .
to offer
competition. Consequently
in 1782 Turnor surveyed
the Abitibi River. In 1784 Turnor established
a post at the
junction of the Abitibi and Frederick House rivers since
this
location,
he
stated, was almost
in
the
centre of the
Abitibi Indians' hunting ground
. 1
Because
of
the
lack
of winter provisions, Turnor abandoned his "log tents" in
1785 and re-established Frederick House on
the
south-east
shore of Lake Waratowaha or Frederick House Lake. 2
This
post
was
located on a little sandy ridge
which
divided the
main
body of the Lake from
Barber's Bay.
3
Frederick House reported small returns for the trading
year of
1785-86
because
of Canadian traders
from a post
three days travel to the South who traded with the Cree on
all
the
rivers that led to Frederick House.
By 1788 the
Canadians had built two new posts near Frederick House, and
their men continually travelled
about
the
country in search
of Indian furs . 5
In 1788 a Hudson Bay Company post was established on
Brunswick
Lake and was called Micabanish House
.
Brunswick
Lake had the advantage
of
being large, a spot where Indians
gathered
to
fist. , hunt
and avoid
insects
.
The
lake was
midway
1 . Glazebrook. Moose Fort Journals. . . p. 223 .
2 . Ibid. , pp. 250-1 . Also Tyrrell,
-. _
B. (Ed
. )
Journals of
Hearne
and
Turnor. pp.
79, &
85 .
3 . Tyrrell. Loc . Cit
.
The
location
is
now
next
to
the Ontario
N
orthland Railway
bridge, two miles East
of
Connaught.
4 .
Hudson Bay Combanv Archives A. 11/45, fo .
72--72d.
5 . Ibid. , A.
11/45,
fo . 110--lied.
8 7 .
between Moose Factory and Michipicoten on the Missinaibi
River.
On
June 18,
1794 timber was cut
to build a
house two miles
from
the Canadian
post on
Abitibi Lake. 2
During
the summer
of 1794 Mannall
and his party
travelled
to
Kenoqcrnissi Lake to
commence a
house on the West
side,
about
six miles from
the entrance. 3
In early
1795 two
Canadians
passed Kinogamissee
Post on their
way to Martow-
agummick
or Mattagami to
establish a post
. The
new
post
was about one
and one half
days travel upstrean
from Kenogamissi
and
was located at the
head of a narrow,
crooked deep lake
with the same name as
the post. 5
Frederick House
Post continued to
be operated by{
the
Hudson
Ba,7 Company
as a result of a
new post which
was
6
constructed
there in 1795
by the Canadians
.
In 1796
Kenogamissi
Pcst
suffered heavy
competition for the
trade of
the Cree from the
Canadian post of
Sawewamir?cae,
three days
journey to
the South. 7
'4o~e, a Hudson
Bay Company
employee, established a
small post
at Michipicoten
.
An outpost from
Micabanish,
the
post
was auickly and
roughly
constructed. Moze
found that
the Canadians had attracted
most
of the local
Cree from
the area to
Sault Ste. Marie.
1 .
Hudson Bav Company
Archives
.
A.
6/15 , fo.
101 .
2 . Ihdd. ,
13135/a/81 .
3 .
Ibid . ,
399/a/l.
4 . IE?d. , 399/a/l.
Also B99/a/4,
fo. 41d.
5 .
Ihid
. ,
B124/e/1
. pp. 1--2,
4 .
6 . Ibid. ,
f135/b/24. fo. , 40 .
7 . Ib d. , B135/a/83
.
8 .
I ~. B135/a/94
.
9 0 .
In 1800 the
first reference
was made by the
Hud:~on Bay
Company
to Flying Post, a
Canadian post
situated
at
the
entrance of the
Mattagami River into
Flying Post or Groundhog
Lake. 1
George
Gladman at Moose Factory
in 1801
wrote that
the Canadians had established
a post above Old
Brunswick Post (Wapiscogamny)
at the mouth of the
Pivaska
River6 The Canadians
operated this post periodically
for
six years.
In 1802 the competition of
the North
West
Company at
Michipicoten
and the expense of transportinq
goods
325
miles from Moose Factory to
the Michipicoten
Hudson Bav
fos.
178--9 .
l . Hudson Bay
Company Archiv
s.
B235/e/30,
2 . Ibid. , B135
/a/8-
1 .
3 . Ib
d. , B135/a/87 .
4 . Ibzd. ,
B135/a/87, Nov.
24, 1800 .
5 .
T5'id
. ,
B99/a/7 . B135/b/27
.
6 .
IBid. , B135/a/88
. '
Company post led to a
withdrawal . 1
On
September 30th,
18o6, the
North West Company Post on Hazey
Island was
closed,
because of the North
West Company tranportation
costs
and the loyalty of
the Moose River Cree to the older
2
fur trading company.
day.
In
181_1 the Canadians were proving to
be better traders
than the
Hudson Bay Company men at
Abitibi and the Frederick
3
House posts.
An agreement
was reached with the North West
Company
whereby the older Company would
leave Abitibi Lake
provided the
Canadians left Frederick
House . 4 The Hudson
Bay Company would not
intercept Indians beyond
Long Portage
A
on the
Abitibi River while the Canadians would
not come
farther than Cochegee
. Abitibi Post was closed
by the
Hudson Bay
Company on July 10, 1812
while the Canadians
abandoned their post at
Frederick House Lake on
the following
5
During
1812-13, a massacre occurred at
Frederick House
Post which was to lead to its
-abandonment.
The
Kenoqamissi
Journal for October
26,
1812
noted the arrival of Alexander
Belly, the
Master
of
Frederick House who
delivered two hens.
1 .
Hudson
Bay Company Archives
. B135/a/90.
2 . Ibid3135/a/93
.
3 . Ibid. , A135/a/95 . Also
B135/b/30 .
4 .
Ibid . ,
B135/b/31 . pp. 8ff .
5 . a. ,
B135/b/31 . pp. 35--36 .
6 . The Frederick House Journal
does not exist for
this date
and all
information is from the
Kenogamissi Journal
.
Ibid . ,
L135/b/31 .
9
2 .
Belly
imr^ediately departed to
return to Frederick
House .
On March
18, 1813-Richard Good
at Kenogamissi Post
sent two
men to
Frederick House
. On "'larch 23, these men
returned
with
the news
that Frederick House
had
been
robbed and that
1 . Hudson
Pay Comnanv Archives
. B99/a/14
.
2 . !bid. , ?399/a/14
.
the three white
inhabitants could
not
be
found. The two
traders
f= ound the outer
door of the Frederick House
dwelling
building
torn off,'
while the inner
partitions of the
master's
apartment had been
knocked down and
the warehouse
and
food
cellar open.
European provisions
and guns were
. missing.
Two Indian
corpses lay in
the dwelling house
. 1
On
a later visit to
Frederick House,
the Kenogamissi
men located the
corpses of the three
white residents who
had been shot
as well as five
dead Indians.
i
t appeared
that the murderers
had laid in ambush
and shot all
the visitors
to the post
during the winter. Kettles
filled with oatmeal,
Elour and
pea soup indicated that the
Indians had lived at
the post
for some time. Belly
and his companions
were dressed
in the
clothes of their
visit to Kenogamissi and
obviously
had been
surprised by the
murders. Since the country
was
short of
. provisions that
winter and famine among
the Indians
was
common, it appeared
that starvation drove
the Indians to
the post
where they remained
and murdered all other
visitors
to
protect their identity.
2
9
3 .
In 1814
the
Canadian trade at
Mattagamy and Flying
Posts were
providing severe competition to
the Hudson Bay
Company
Post at Kenogamissi. About forty-three
hunters
traded at
Mattagami Post and the Canadians were obtaining
thirty bundles of fur yearly, a sizeable
amount. The Mattagami
buildings were in good
shape and consisted of three dwelling
houses
and a large store.
The Hudson Bay Company attempted
to intercept
this
lucrative
trade by establishing an outpost
near
Mattagami Post, thirty three
miles upstream from
1
Kenogamissi Post.
Major ?North
West Company hosts
in
the North
Eastern Ontario region
which continued to be used
by the
Hudson
Bay
Company included
Flying Post, Mattagami,
Abitibi, Timiskaming and
Michipicoten.
The
Decline
of
the Fur Trade.
With the coalition Flying
Post was taken over
and was
found to
possess two acres of potatoes,
six -or-seven head
of
cattle, and forty Indian
hunters. Flying Post
with its
four buildings and
a garden, was operated by
the Hudson Bay
Company
as an outpost of Mattagami
House. 3
1.
Hudson Bay Company Archives
. B99/e/3 .
2 . I d. ,
F. 135/b/42 .
3 . Ibicf. ,
B124/e/2 . pp. 2--5, 7, 10 .
9 5 .
In
1822 the Hudson
Bay Company abandoned
Kenogamm'ssi
Post in
favour of
Mattagami Post, which
became the chic{ post
of
the
Kenogamissi District,
tinder the jurisdiction of Moose
Factory. l
The
Southern District of Moose
Factory was extended in
1821 to
include Timiskaming
and Michipicoten. Fort Mich-
ipicoten became an
important Hudson's Bay Company
centre and
supplied
the interior post
on Brunswick Lake . The
Missinaibi
and
Michipicoten
Rivers during the ninteenth century
served
: as a
mail route from James Bay
to the Canadian post office
at Sault Ste . Marie
.
Fort
Timiskaming was to become
the
headquarters of
the Ottawa River region
and was operated
until 1888
when it was abandoned
in favour of Mattawa on
the
Canadian Pacific Railway .
In spite of
the legal monolopy of the Hudson
Bay Company
and its coalition
with the North West Company, fur
trade
competition for
Cree furs continued
. In 1822'Fort Timiskaming
was suffering from
competition by an American Fur
Trading
Company which had
established a post three days
paddling
distance
to the West . From
1824 to 1828, fur returns at
Abitibi, Mattagami
and Flying Post showed a
large decline
because of annual
competition by American
traders. 2
The
Ottawa River was a crucial
area of competition
. Easy access
1 . Hudson Ba
-,
Company
Archives. B99/e/3. fo.
1
.
Also B135/k/1 .
f
o.
2 . Innis, H. A. Minutes of Counc
i l, Northern
Department . p. LVI .
9 6 .
from
Lake
Timiskaming to Abitibi
Lake had led to
the steady
growth
of lumbering, trapping
and settlement in the area
.
In particular
the McConnell brothers
had commenced a potash,
lumbering
and fur trading
operation in the Timiskaming
region in the
1820's. l Similarly
settlement was growing
along the
north shore of Lake
Huron. Competition from
s
independent American
posts had reduced fur
returns from the
Cree who
followed canoe routes over
the height of land
from
Flying
Post to Biscotasi
Lake, and down the Spanish,
Mississagi, and
Whitefish River
systems
to
Lake Huron and
the American posts
at Mississagi and Treen
Lake.
2
Not only did the Cree
possess a market for their furs
with
independent traders
; but
thev also
found that the -
Tiudson
Bay Company posts
competed aqainst themselves
for their . furs.
Since
each post justified its
existence by the numbers of
furs
accumulated,
traders enticed
the Cree to their posts
with
bargains .
New Brunswick Post, for
instance, complained
in 1845
of
Indians who had deserted
their post to trade
at Michipicoten .
The traderwrote that "such
opposition between
the Honourable
Company's posts is certainly most
stupid and
awkward but
3
it accounts great losses to
the Company. . . . "
New
outposts continued to be
established by
the Hudson
Bay Company in the Moose
River dra~. nage to satisfy
the needs
1 .
^,albraith, John
S . The Hudson's Bav Company
as an Imperial
Factor,
1821- - 1359 . . p. 25 .
2 . See Wallace,
W. S . John McLean's
Notes . . . p. 10
. Borron.
Report
on that Part of
Hudson's _Bay . . . 1883 . p.
5 .
3 . Hudson
isa v
Com~
:any Archives.
July, 1845 . B70/a/19
.
9 7 .
of the Cree Indian and to meet further competition.
In
1865
a post
was established
at Matachewan,
to check
free
traders.
This post in 1866 became an outpost of Mattagami. '
Trade
continued to suffer from competition. An outpost during this
period was established at Night Hawk Lake, and was described
by Ontario's stipendiary magistrate, E . B. Borron, in 1889 . 2
During
the 1860's, %iattagami!s trade
improved owing to the
increase in beaver.
By
1900 this post possessed four
buildings; a factor's residence, a second house occupied
by an Indian, a general trading store, and a storehouse
.
A dozen tents or tepees indicated that
about
twelve hunters
were dependent on the post
.
During the early 1870's, the Hudson Bay Company rebuilt
a post on the east shore of Missinaibi Lake near the outlet
of the River. 4
-
During the 1880's the Canadian Pacific Railway was
completed, permitting easy access to Flying Post and ',Iattagali.
1. Hudson Bay Company_ Archives . A. 11/46
,
fos. 369d- 70 ;
B134 c/101.
2 . Borron, E . B .
Report
on tha
t Part of
Hudson's Bay. . . 1889 .
3 .
Niven, A. unpublishe11Diarv and vies,'. Notes. . .
1898 .
4 .
Schepanek,
'` Z . 7 .
"Trading Posts o- F
the "loose- nA. ichipicoten
Trade Routes . " Canadian reorxraphical Journal.
1971
. o .
69 .
5 . Hudson Bay Ccra- aan%r Archives . B135/q/51 .
fo.
4 ; B135/g/52 .
5
9 8 .
Because of
the
railway,
the Flying
Post
territory was
rapidly penetrated by traders who travelled into the region
when they heard that the
Indians had accumulated furs .
Two outpostswere established from Flying Post to deal
with
independent traders . One outpost
was "Root Post" about
twenty miles
nortri of Flying Post which watched an independent
post run by Murray's and
Loughrin's Company. The
second
post was built in 1890 to watch a "Mr. Whiteway," an
independent trader who had established a post two miles north
.
of
Flying
Post
on
the Indian trade routes.
In 1892 Kenogamissi. District was merged with the Lake
Huron District
while the Matachewan post was detached The
district
suffered strong competition by independent trar. ers .
Abitibi Post, too, was in a
similar
situation
since in 1898,
William Biederman,
a trader and lumberman, established an
independent
post on
Abitibi Lake. 2 By 1906 Flying Post was
in urgent need
of
repair
and was of somewhat minor import-
ance.
Mattag
ami Lake with its sandy beaches had become a
popular canoe route to
James Bay and the Ontario Department
of
Lands
and
wrests had erected a fire station near the post.
An Anglican Church had also been constructed and possessed
an unfenced cemetary
behind.
Some
twenty families were
l . Hudson Bay Companv Archives.
B235/3/30,
fos.
178-179 .
2 . Report on the Survey and Explora- --ion of Northern
Ontario .
passim. Also
Hyndman , H. R.
There
was also a
camp
of several hundred
Indians.
Brunswick House in 1895 consisted of seven buildings,
including a small Anglican Church
. Approximately one
hundred
Indians,
hunting
in
the
region, camped at
the
post
during
the summer.
The construction of
the Canadian
Northern Railway
in
1912
encouraged
the fur trade by bringing an influx of
petty traders who bought furs at
high prices
to
the advantage
3
of
the
Cree . Construction work in
such
railway
towns as
Gogama,
Peterbell, Chapleau, Missanabie, and Mattice
attracted the Indians from the woods . Consequently'in 1914
Flying Post Taas closed.
By
1920 rival stores had been
established in Gogama,
and Indians tended
to
trade there since
1 . Coutts, J .
"Exploring
Towards
Hudson Bav
. "
R. &
r;
. 1906, p, 883 .
2 .
H~rndman,
H,
R.
"To
Abbitibi With ProspectorsR,
& ". p.
435 .
3 . Fudson Bay Company Archives
.
Commissioner's Report on
the Fur Trade. nos .
17--21 ; A. R. from District Officers,
no. 2, fos 97--99 .
10
0 .
they had a selection of merchandise.
1
Company was informed that the post site would be flooded.
Consequently on 'March 17,
1924,
Mattagami Post was officially
closed
and gogama
became
the principal post of the region.
At roughly t'- e same time Brunswick Post on T-lissinaibi
Lake was closed in favour of railway posts at Peterbell and
2
Mattice. Abitibi Post was cloyed in favour
of
La Sarre.
The decline
of
the fur trade trade in the interior of
the
Moose River drainage basin was followed by a decline in
the importance of Moose Factory as a fur post. Moose Factory
1900 was
the headquarters of
the Southern Department of
the Hudson Bay Company and was widely regarded by the James
Bay
Cree
as the 'capital' of the region. One writer found that
Moose Factory :
must undoubtedly` be considered
the
capital .
The inhabitants
around the coast and in the interior look on a trip
to Moose in much the same light as tl-,, . e country
farme,~s in civilized life consider a visit to their
larger;t city .
In
North
Eastern
Ontario posts were located on Lake
Abitibi, Cochrane,
Cobalt,
-Matheson, Timmins and Moosonee
.
The Company fell
into
insolvency during the depression and was closed in
1936 . 2
From the establishment of Moose
Factory
in
1673
to
the decline of
the fur trade by the 1920's, a number
of
characteristics which favoured a
cultural climax of the
Cree
is
apparent.
The Europeans in the Moose River drainage
basin
were
fur traders whose livelihood
depended upon the
success
of the Cree's traditional
hunting, trapping and
nomadic way of
life. It was frequently charged
that "the
object
which the Hudson's Bay Company had
in view, was to prevent
the
Indians learning that there was another pursuit
whereby
they would soon become independent
of the Company, and
cease
to be their hunters. . . . " 3 Fur traders
did have a vested
1. Colter,
J . L. "Moose Factory To-day and
Yesterday. _ B . t0 .
2:. .
2 . Revillon 7rere. Fur Trapping in the North
. 1911 .
Furs fron.
Earliest Time . 1911 . Oldest Fur
House in the World
. 1 . 11. ,
3 . Report of
tie Select Cc7: mlttee on Hudson
Bav. . .
857.
Evidence gathered Tuesday,
26
May,
1857 .
1`
.
ineres in mainaining he saus
quo or he Cree
cu1ura11y
in order
o
preserve heir
1ive1ihood
Second1y he
Europeans rrom 16!. were in consan
conr1ic
wih
one anoher ror he rurs or he Cree
This conr1ic
rorced riva1 companies o compee
ror rurs by raising
prices, reaing he Cree
rair1y o
obain
heir 1oya1y,
and orrering he qua1iv
or rading goods and ypes demanded
by he Indians ~s ear1y as 16!`
Gors, wriing rrom Eor
Char1es had comp1ained
ha he Erench paid he Cree high
prices ror heir rurs and
ob1iged
he
Hudson ay Company
o 1ower he price or is
rading goods 1
The Hudson
ay
Company
radiiona11y araced he Cree by
sending Tndians
in1and o inrorm he Cree or heir high
prices ror rurs
~s cusomers he Cree cou1d simp1y
choose o rade a
he
pos or he Company which adverised
he highes prices ror
heir rurs Compeiion a1so rorced he
European raders
o be rriend1y wih he Cree,
o dea1 wih hem on a c1ose,
persona1 and rair basis, o 1earn heir
names and 1anguage,
and o orrer credi in imes
or need The Cree on1y raded
wih he
Company which appeared o
be a rriend or he Indian
Shou1d his rriendship
appear o be vio1aed by
he Company,
Cree Indians
wou1d rave1 1ong
disances o rade wih riva!
poss The means by which
he Hudson ay Company was
rorced
1 Tyrre11, J {Ed
ocumens Re1aing
o he Ear1y
Hisory or Hudson ay p
38!
10 3 .
to
maintain
the quality of
its merchandise
was apparent
during
the late
eighteenth
century conflict .
The Crees'
preference
for the strong,
light weight,
portable iron traps
which
were sold by
the North West
Company, led to a
decline
of
the number
of Crees
who were willing to
trade for the
heavier
Hudson Bay
traps which
frequently suffered
from broken springs
.
The Hudson Bay
Company solved
the difficulty
in 1800 by
copying
the
design of the North
West Company
traps . l
The Cree also
expressed
preference
for the fashion
of
the Canadian coats and
womens' jackets
. 2
Hudson
Bay
Company
traders also
complained that the
Canadians were
attracting
the Cree with
better powder,
flints, calico,
French cotton
shirts and
pointed blankets .
Indeed the
remainder
of
the North West
Company
goods were said to
be equal to
those of the
Hudson Bay
Company. 3
Consequently
the Hudson
Bay Company
improved
the quality of
their commodities
to
compete
with the North West
Company.
ISid,
B135/a/82 .
Jan.
12,
1795.
10
4 .
The Impact of
the Fur Trade on the Cree
Indian .
Types of Contacts
Between Euro
p
eans and the Cree
.
There
was a wide variation in the degree of contact
between the Cree and Europeans over
two hundred years .
Contact
between the Cree and
the Hudson Bay Company was
initially limited solely to
one European per post, the
Chief
Trader. Hudson Bay Company labourers were
hired
cheaply on
a
long term
contact, and these
men were
not
permitted to have contact with
the natives. 1
Rather
than
sending
Europeans inland, the James Bay posts sent
Indians
inland with gifts
to persuade reluctant tribes to trade
with the English
.
Trading itself was a highly formal event
which took
place through a hole in the fur post wall. After
1774
there was more frequent contact
by the Inr?ians with
the empl-
oyees
of
the
Hudson Bay Company because of
the
creation
of
1 . Joseph
Robson's testimony in Report from the
Committee
on Hudson Bay
.
1 749 . p.
215 .
2 . Taylor, E. , . R. Copy- Book
of Letters outward,
1680 to
1686
. p.
72
.
10
5
.
outposts, and small
mobile tent posts . However, trading was
still confined to the Chief Trader
at each
post
. With such
a situation there was little opportunity for the
accult-
uration of
the Cree
.
Contact
between the
Cree
and the
French and North
West Company employees was more frequent since these com-
petitors of
the
Hudson Bay
Company were widely scattered
through the hinterland. The coureur de bois and later the
voyageur with their nomadic
type
of life,
skills of
hunting
and trapping, and their possession
traders skills which
differed in
of Cree wives, gave these
the Cree culture itself. Their
concern
for
obtaining furs
caused th=eir contact with the Cree
to
be
based on
and good relations and reinforced the traditional
from
By the 1880's extensive paddling of supplies by
the Cree
and to inland
posts for
the Hudson
Bay Company led to
the indocrination
and
education of the Indian
voyageurs
.
E
. B. Borron reported:
The white servants and the natives work together, eat
together and associate together
on equal
terms .
Even
officers take part in the conversation and explain to
the Indians matters which they
would
otherwise know
nothing about . This association
on
their voyages and
at the posts, continued year after year for several
generations has had a very important influence on
the Indians as a means of education. The discipline,
the steady labour,
the
necessity of working together
for the attainment of a common object, are all cal-
culated to teach them valuable
lessons
. They
are,
too,
keenly
alive to the approbation
and
disapproval of
the-ir
-
officers and fellow voyageurs --a
powerful
incentive to
style very little from
familiaritv
Cree
culture
.
10
6
.
good, and equally strong restraint
from
evil. l
Clearly
such an education was one relating to the trad-
itional skills of canoe travel and wilderness survival.
The C:ree themselves in
the Moose
River
drainage basin had
no particular structure to direct their contact with the
whiteman_ There vas no development of the middleman
trading
system which Henry Kelsey had noted among the Cree of the
2
West coast of Hudson Bay.
The degree to
which competition
for furs
brought Europeans in search of the Cree permitted
all Cree, to trade directly with Europeans.
Chiefsbrought
Indians
to
posts, but did not trade for them. It was not
necessary- to be
Tought to a
post
by a Chief to
trade ,=and
many Indians came in singly .
The
arrival of
single Indians
to
trade was generally characteristic of the individualistic
nature of the Cree society, and permitted rapid diffusion
of the effective iron implements of
.
the Europeans .
The
native
reaction to contact with Europeans was
favourable since their cultural adaptation to the habitat
was
strengthened
. Furs which had formerly been useful only
for clothing now became of value to obtain many valuable
items which made hunting,
fishing
and cooking
simplier.
Made Beaver, the fur trade term of currency, was paid not
1 . Borron, E. B . Report . . . on that Part of Hudson Bav_ Belonging
to
the 'Province of
Ontario
.
1883 .
p.
40 .
2 .
Report -Fro- the Committee, Anpointed to
Enquire
into
the
State and Condition of
the Countries Adjoinina to iiucison's
Bav ant t_ e `trade Carried on There
. i749 . p. 280 .
not only for pelts
but also
for
hunting, and gathering
birch bark
for the Europeans or for carrying their supplies
and guiding . I
In overall
perspective an indication
of
the
cultural
climax or optimal period
of the Cree culture is apparent
in
the welcome extended to the Europeans as indicated by
F
the
relatively few incidents of violence
undertaken
in
opposition to the
Europeans
.
In 1813 Frederick House was
broken
into, and its three white inhabitants were murdered
.
This
act
was not directed specifically against the European
culture since the Indians
who visited the post during the
winter were also
murdered. 2
In
1832 the Hannah Bay Hudson
Bay
Company post was attacked and William Corrigal and- his
wife were murdered. 3
However
an
Indian and his wife at the
post were also
murdered. These were acts of random violence
caused by famine or insanity and were
not aimed against the
Europeans in particular
.
The overall success of the French,
the North West Company, and the Hudson Bay Company at living
in
small tents and posts inland among
the
Cree
f. or two
hundred
years
is
proof
:,of the Cree's acceptance
of
the European and
their desire to have trading posts near
their hunting grounds .
This observation is particularly true when it is realized
that the European traders seldom numbered over three to
a
10 7 .
1. Hudson
Bav Comnanv Archives . BI/a/11. 1805 . 6 fade Beaver
were paid for an Tndian canoe .
2
. Ibid. , B99/a/14
.
3 . ITid. , R135/a/145 .
post
and could be easily overpowered and murdered.
Clearly
the Cree found
European trading goods highly useful and
valuable
. At the same time the fur traders must have treated
the Cree fairly, since
their
reaction
was
not
that of a people
being exploited and abused
.
Situation in Which Acculturation
Occurred.
Patterns of Dominance .
10
8 .
During the fur trade period there was very little pressure
or force applied to
the Cree Indians to become fur trappers.
Trapping
incentives were internal within the Cree culture
itself. The Europeans did offer gifts to
demonstrate the value
of
European goods, but it was the Cree who voluntarily
directed their own activities along lines of fur
trapping
in
order
to
obtain useful European commodities. Since
the
Cree were by nature nomadic hunters and
trappers, and since
trapped animals could also be used for
food, European contact
reinforced
the Cree culture . The shift caused by European
contact
was internal within the Cree culture towards a
voluntarv increase in trapping and
decrease. i
n
hunting .
The Cree culture continued to
maintain its autonomous nature
with
its traditional internal controls and was consequently
capable oc the same growth and identity
which
it had
exhibited
in the past.
An
indication
of
the dominant position of
the Cree Indian
in the
trading structure is apparent in the
system of loans
109 .
or trust granted by
the Hudson
Bay
Company
to attract
the
Indians.
Gifts
and
trust for the Cree were cultural
attributes . .
Ilifts were linked with trust. The Companies gave
the
Ctee gifts so that they would take ^
it and continue
to trade with
them. lifts indicated fri<_
i. - o while the
word 'trust'
itself carried the connotat_
of the relationship
which. credit created. An example will
i'Llustrate the
relationship of
gifts
to
trust. Nannashish's son was unhappy
with the Hudson Bay Company since he did not obtain a
covetted coat as a gift.
He did want to trade for a
three
foot
gun. He would buy the gun only if the Company
showed its friendship
by
granting
the gift
of
. the coat. other-
wise he would refuse to deal
with the Hudson Bay Company,
and would trade
elsewhere. 1
Refusal
to trust
created problems. The Cree were unable to trap
good furs
in the summer. Consequently equipment
was
lent
in the Autumn
for winter trapping and was repaid by the
Cree
during the following Spring. Refusal
by
a Campany to
operate
l. Hudson Bay Comnanv Archives
. B135/a/90 . Sept.
14,
1
2 .
id . ,
b135/b 21 . 14 July, 1791 .
11
0 .
this way led to a loss of valuable Cree hunters
.
Abitibi
Post in 1796 found that all its trade was from trusted
Indians. It was limited to those Cree trusted in the Autumn
since other Cree traded with the competing Company. Had
the Hudson Bay Company trusted more, they would have obtained
more
furs, since , ' I
no
Indians visit us except those we trust. "
In 1800 at Abitibi Post it was noted that some of the Cree
were very much affronted because the post
had
no orders to
trust. The Cree reported that "they' d never bring the post
another fur. " 2
Trust was costly.
Brunswick
House
gave
him credit,
rather than "lose such
a valuable
1 . Hudson Bav Comn_anv Archives . April
3,
1802 . B75~
2 .
Ibid. , Sept
.
10,
. B1 /a/54.
112 .
Indian to the Company. " 1
The pattern
of
dominance prima facie may appear to
favour the European because of
his
superior technology and
the
dependence of the Cree
on
this technology. However,
this dominance, did not, in fact,
exist. Vigorous
and con-
tinuous competition had placed the Indian in the customer
position with a choice of buyers who offered European tech-
nology. The Indian was essential since
his
highly skilled
techniques for survival in the woods, his skill in building
and handl. irg canoes, and
in
trapping made him indispensable
as a collector of furs for
the
European
culture. Continuous
competition between companies forced these companies. to seek
the Cree and to yield to their requests in order to obtain
sufficient furs to cover overhead costs of the trade and to
obtain a profit. The Cree Indian was not in the position
of the
American negro slave, but rather should be seen in
the
light of a highly skilled artisan who was wooed with
great care and respect
.
Jean
Trudeau offers an
explanation for this phenomena1
All social
systems have
internal areas of tensions which become probable
sites of change. The Cree socio-cultural system
offered
insecurity
because of the constant need
for and the periodic
unavailability of food
. Release from these tensions and
insecurities of
life
in
a culture which traditionally adapted
the best
tools"' available to meet the challenge of the
habitat,
was a matter of
choosing
tools
which duplicated the work of
their old
tools in a more durable and efficient manner. Con-
sequently tension
release, efficiency and reward were import-
1. . Trudeau, Jean. Culture
Change Among the Swampy Cree India
p.
127:f.
114 .
ant factors in the acceptance of
the
trapping-trading
complex.
' The "cultural fit"
of the
new commodities
intro-
duced by the Europeans prevented the change from disrupting
the traditional sociocultural systems
of
the Indians.
The material items selected by the Cree culture are
easily discoverable
by
examining the inventories of any
Hudson Bay Company post. The items can
be
divided into three
catagories, items needed for survival, for adornment and for
consumption. Absolutely necessary items included
steel
knives, hatchets, guns,
flint, powder, kettles, chisels for
ice, iron. traps, snare wire, and fish twine . Items for
personal adornment were blankets, lace, linen, sashes,
hankerchiefs, combs, hats, beads, bells, shirts, shoes,
jackets and gimlets. Items for consumption included tobacco,
brandy and rum, tea, flour, and sugar. 2
These European commodities raised the Cree. standard
of living tremendously, as
is
demonstrated by. the rapid
adoption and dependence upon the survival items. European
cutting tools were sharper and more durable than those
traditonal stone and flint tools of the Cree. Iron axes
simplified the problem
of
cutting trees for the construction
of canoes or snowshoes. Tepee poles could be obtained with
1 . Trudeau, Jean. Culture Change Among the S-wampv Cree
Indian. p. 127
et
seq .
2 . Inventory,
Micabanish House
.
Sept. 3, 1789 .
Hudson
Company Archives. B145/a/l .
3 . These :words
used by
~ailay, A. G .
The
Conflict of European
and Eastern Algonkian Cultures . p. 10 .
greater ease and
wood could be choppped
for winter fires.
European
knives were more
effective for cutting up
hides
and for
cutting sensitive
triggers for deadfalls . European
kettles were
stronger, lighter and more
durable and capable
of
withstanding
heat than the aboriginal
birch bark cont-
ainers of
the Cree . Food
could be boiled with
_greater
efficiency and
without the problem
of sand and grit
in the
food from the hot
rocks used in
the older method of
boiling.
European weapons
such as the gun or
iron arrowhead permitted
greater
ease and success in
hunting and promoted
the hunting
of larger types
of game . Iron
arrowheads
and musket balls
penetrated large
animals such as
moose and bear much,more
deeply
than did flint and
simplified the problem of safely
killing such
animals at a distance.
Iron
knives and hatchets
were
much more
efficient
at
close quarters
in dealing with
these animals and
for butchering
the carcasses. The gun
greatly
increased the success of
the Cree in hunting
geese
which were
difficult to approach
and had to be shot
at a
distance.
. .
European awls also became very popular
among
Cree
women
who found
them sharper and more effective at piercing tough
hides than the older bones. Europen clothing
by the
early ninteenth century also
became
of
importance. David
Thompson wrote of the great advantage of woollen
over leather
1
. Bail-,
,y, A. The Conflict of European and
Eastern Algonkian
Cultures. p. 55 .
117 .
clothing.
The
latter
when wet stuck to the skin in an
uncomfortable
way and required care in drying to prevent
the leather from
becoming hard and brittle or burnt.
Woollen clothing
when wet was not uncomfortable and was
1
quickly dried with little
difficulty.
European consumption
items were also highly useful to the
Cree
and were prized. Sugar was demanded
by the Indians
because of
the quick
energy
it provided while on long trapping
trips. Tea
was enjoyed since it provided the only means of
. flavouring the water which the Cree were
forced
to
drink.
Flour provided a substance
which was easily stored
for
the
winter months for times of
famine . Flour was also an, easv
means of
carrying nourishment when travelling so that time need
not be spared for hunting. The increased adaptation to
the
habitat offered by these
items is most clearly exemplified
by the quickness
with which the items were seized upon. One
early
writer commented
Hatchets,
knives, scissors, needles, and a steel to
strike
fire with. These instruments
are now common among the
Indians . They all take these instruments from
the
Europeans' and reckon the hatchets and knives much
better than
those which they formerly made of stones
and bones . The stone hatchets of
the ancient Indians
are
very rare in Canada.
Kettles
of
copper or brass, sometimes tinned
in
the inside. In these
the Indians now boil all their
meat, and
they have a very great run with them-
2
1 . Tyrrell, J . B . (Ed . ) David Thomp; 3 on's
Narrative. . . p. 421 .
2 . Innis,
H
. A .
The
Fur Trade in
Cana(. a. p. 110 .
Cree of the late eighteenth century expressed their wonderment
that their forebearers had managed to survive without
these
items . Although
the
myth
of
the noble
Indian
has
suggested otherwise, it is apparent that the aboriginal
Cree faced great,difficulties and hardships which were
substantially lightened by the European commodities of the
fur trading period. The superiority of the European
trading goodscreated an optimal period in the Cree culture
by
permitting
a better
and more enj. oyable
adaptation to
the
habitat. The adoption of European goods was
an
indication
of
the dynamic nature of
the
Cree culture which integrated
innovations
which increased
the culture's effectiveness as
a buffer between the Cree and the environment. The nature of
the new cultural adoption was substitutive since there was
no alteration of the
basic
orientation of
the
Cree culture
towards the habitat.
Non-Material Culture.
Property and Marriage.
11
8 .
Changes of property
and marriage
pattefns- apparent in
the non-material culture were of
such a nature as
to
avoid
altering
the
Cree identity. Famine during the aboriginal
period had tended to create family hunting territories among
the
Cree. When beaver pelts became of economic value, the
land on which they
lived also became of
value. Harold
Demsetz explains that "property rights arise when it becomes
119 .
economic for those
affected by
externalities to
internalize
benefits and
costs. " 1 The
adoption of
the fur trade and
the
new
value associated
with beaver made
it economical
to en-
courage husbanding
in order to
plan
and
count
on rewards
and to prevent over
hunting of land
which occurred
when costs
F
were
borne by all.
Husbanding.
required the
ability
to prevent
poaching which
in turn created
socio-economic
changes .
The
concept
of property was
created, and was
associated
with hunting
territories. The
benefit-cost
possibilities
. of
preserving
the game, Demsetz
concludes,
exceeded the
problems
of cost of
internalization and
property and
cons-
ervation -
became a common
feature among the
Cree. 2 ^ The
Cree
were simply
adapting to new
ecological conditions
as
they had
consistently done
in the past. The
only difference
was that during
the fur trade
period,
beaver was the
principal
animal
conserved.
Territorial rights
were clearly
apparent - in the
Moose
River
basin by 1800.
The Abitibi
Post report
of
1824
wrote that the
limits'of the
territory which
belonged to
P
each family_ was
as well known by
their neighbours
as the lines
which
separated farms
are by the farmers
of the civilized
world. 3
The
Indians hunting
these territories
normally
1 . Demsetz. "Towards
a Theory
of Property Rights. " A. E
. R. p. 354 .
2 .
Loc. Cit.
3 . Hudson Bay
Company Archives.
Abitibi Post. 1824 .
Bl/e/2 .
12
0 .
left the young to
breed in order to
ensure a constant supply
of
beaver.
The freedom
of
the aboriginal
Cree to hunt
where they
wished continued to
be exercised
during the fur
trade .
The 1824 Report stated
that the poor
Indians had a
tendency to poach and
to prey on
their neighbours
"indiscrim-
inantly
destroying all before
them. " 1
Thus at
New Brunswick
House,
Mashaway, whose land
was not rich in
beaver, was
"inclined to
encroach upon
the lands of their
neighbours
where
the animals are
more
common . "
Ir In1829
one trader
wrote that he
had strongly warned
the Indians of the "im-
providity
of killing every
animal they meet
with, in passing
through
the hunting
ground of other
Indians . " 2
Later~in
1845
the Moose Factory Report
complained that an
Abitibi
Indian had
taken and killed old
and young beaver
from seventeen
beaver
houses which had been
left in preserve .
The writer
added:
. . . I need
not point out
the great injustice your
Indians
inflict
by thus persisting in
their depredations
. . . as well as
the still greater injury
they do to the
lands of
our Indians in
thus destroving old and
young
and consequently-ruining
our Beaver
resources. 3
The
Abitibi Indian was
required to urn over
the furs that
he
had poached.
This of course wou'_d not
have occurred
prior to 1821
when active competition
placed the burden of
1 .
Hudson Bay Company
Archives. B14`: /a/14
.
2 . Ibid. ,
B145/a/46 . 1829 .
3 . Ibid. , B63/a/4
. 28 Feb. , 1845 .
12
1 .
guarding hunting
territories fully
on the Cree.
Following
1821 the Hudson Bay
Company did aid the
Indians in guarding
their property, although
there seems to be no evidence
to support
Denig's statement
that the Hudson Bay
Company allowed
Indians to trap
only certain streams
at stated seasons
and
prohibited
successive hunting
of any one place
for two or
three vears.
1
The
Cree continued
to a limited extent
to
hunt
where they pleased
even during the fur
trading period.
Those Cree who did
adopt hunting
territories were reacting
to new ecological
conditions in
a
manner
very similar
to
their
aboriginal practice
of creating hunting
territories
in time
of scarcity to ensure
themselves a supply
of :meat.
The fur trade was
not responsible
for a radical
change
in
the perception of
land and property
among
the
Cree .
Intermarriage .
Intermarriage between
whites and the
Cree was an
acculturative feature
of the fur trade .
This poorly documented
phenomena
was an inevitable
biological result
of
the
influx
of large numbers of white
males among a
, mixed male and
female
native society. Whether
cohabitation
between whites
and Cree women was permitted
by the Hudson
Bay Company
probably
depended on the
individual Chief Trader
. Initially
all employees were
ordered "not
to converse, trade
or
traffic:
with
the Indians,
directly or indirectly,
on pain of for
1 . Denig,
E.
"of the
Cree or Knisteneau
. " M. H. S . B. 1952 . p.
56 .
feiting all . . . wages. " 1
Generally
Hudson Bay Company records carry little mention of inter-
marriage.
Exceptional incidents of white-Indian contact were
noted.
One
such
incident involved the murder in 1789<of a
Moose Factory man who had invited
an Indian and his wife
into the Company's sloop, made
the Indian man drunk, and
took advantage of
his wife
.
4
. .
3. Ibid. ,Julv,
1826 . B70
a/l
.
4 . IEid. , Oct.
21, 1789
.
B135/a/74 . (Moose Factory
. )
5 .
Carver
quoted by Skinner, A. Notes on the Eastern Cree
. . . p .
58.
Also (-,lover.
(Ed. )
Andrew 1-
: Y
raham's Observations. . .
p .
.
Henry, A. Travels and
Adventures
in
-
Canada.
p.
12 3 .
for the Master of an Inland Post
to keep
a
woman for "half
the Indians that
came to
the
House would offer the Master
their wife, the refusal of which
would give great offence
to
both
the man and his wife . . . . "
1
Cree women were particularly
popular with traders .
Harmon reported
that so
many North West
Company traders had
Cree families that their
numbers became a burden on the
Company. 2
Children of
mixed marriages
grew up with
Indian children
and adopted
the Indian
culture. There
was
little
discrimination
by the Cree
against half
breeds.
Mixed-blood
children who
were sons of.
prominent fur
traders
were
sometimes given
an education
in reading and
accounts
to become fur
traders
themselves. Their
ability with the
Cree
language remained
essential and
in either case
life
continued to
focus around trapping
and
trading
of
fur.
It is
difficult to discover
other traits
which were
introduced into
the Cree non-material
culture by
the fur
trade
.
;
Artificial
ranks and
distinctions were
carried on in
other
ways,
.
At
the death of
old Captain
Questal, a faithful
Moose
Factory Indian,
the Company
gave him an
impressive
buriaI with pomp
and ceremony.
A wooden coffin. _ was
con-
structed,
the flag was
lowered at half
mast and a gun
salute was
fired. 2
Such
artificial
distinctions were
essential
during a period of
competition wIien
-
it
was nec-
essary to gain
complete lovalty
of
the Cree in order to
obtain
their trade.
The rank
system was incredibly
successful .
The Indians were
eager to help
the Hudson's
Bay
Company in order to
obtain their
uniforms.
Consequently
1 .
Glover. (Ed. )
Andrew Graham's
Observations
. . . p.
317.
2 . Glazebrook
. (Ed. ) Moose
Factory Journals
. .. p.
207 .
the Cree on
to h t and trap
12 7 .
they
returned regularly each
summer to the hosts,
and, as
Umfreville
has noted,
attempted to pick
up
as
many Indians
on
the way, down the
River as
possible in order to
increase
their
self-esteem
. 1
This system of
ranks was not designed to
alter
any aspects of
the Cree culture
and simply spurred
at
greater
lengths . The system
of
ranks and uniforms
led to considerable
friendship
between
traders and
leading Indians.
One of the more
important trading
items among the
Indians
was
brandy
which was given as
a gift when the
Indians
came to a post.
As early as
1717 Thomas McCliesh,
a Chief_
Trader,
had pointed out :
F .
. . . I can have
more done towards
the encouragement of
the trade
in small furs
for a gallon of
brandy then
for forty beaver
in any other
goods in the . factory:
it
is become so
bewitching a liquor
amongst the Indians
.
. . .
2
In 1813
it was a common
belief that
liquor greatly encouraged
the Indians to
exert
themselves in hunting and in
paying
3
their
credits.
This criticism
1 .
Umfreville, E.
The Present
State
of
Hudson Bay. p.
5 7 .
2 .
Glover. . (Ed. ) Letters
from Hudson
Bav 1703-10,
p
.
48 .
3 . Hudson Bav_ C
omnanv Archives.
Abitibi Post. Bl e/3
.
4 . Ibid. ,
Bl e/2 .
5 . c~. Tvrrall,
J. E. (Ed. )
David Thompson's
Narrative. . . - n.
5 3.
12 8 .
was often opposed to the use of
alcohol
in
the great Lake
and St. Lawrence region rather than the more
regulated trade
in
the North.
Lahontan who was familiar with the Great Lakes
trade found the liquor of New France to be "murdering stuff",
"brew'd and
adulterated" in such a form that it "sweeps
off
f
men so fast, that one who has not seen the
fatal effects of
it can scarce credit'em. " 1 Certainly the fur trade companies
did doubly
It was
diluted liquor which was commonly sold.
In
North
Eastern Ontario injuries from drunken
bouts
were rare among the
Cree.
Rival
companies regulated the
liquor traffic to prevent injury among the
Indians and
to
prevent
an attack on a post by the Cree. With only
two
or three traders at an unfortified post, it was in the
traders
interest to watch closely the drinking of
the Cree.
Furthermore the relative scarcity
of
Indian hunters
made
each India. a hunter valuable for his annual fur catch. Fur
traders knew every
Cree of their district by name and the size
of
his
fur debt. The dependence
of the post upon
these
Indians caused the
traders to take care that their Indians
1 . Lahontan. New Vovages to North America. Vol. I, p. 47 .
12 9 .
would not
be injured. In
the following description of
the
fur trade, dated
1790,
during the height of the
Hudson Bay
versus the North West
Company competition,
these points
were still
important.
It cannot be
ascertained that much
evil has hitherto
resulted
frorp the
spirits distributed to Indians
by
the
voyagers
of this
country ; . . . . The Trade's
personal
interest and safety have
been the best security
aqainst
abuses.
It does not appear
that they have given
the
Indians more
Rum than was
necessary to prevent them
from
carrying
their
Furs to
a distant or
Foreign market,
nor has it
been customary to
make Rum an article of
Barter in the Trade .
Its use is rather
confined to
gift at feasts and
public talks, where care
is taken
to guard against
the evil consequences of
drunkeness
and
debauch. The traders
are sensible
that their most
permanent
interests are that
the Indians
be induced to
hunt, that they be
annually supplied
with necessaries,
ammunition, and clothing,
in exchange for the
Beaver
and furs
of their chase
. For, tho' Rum might
procure
the hunt of
a year, yet if
obtained only by its means
future industry
would cease . Murder
might result
and all its concomitant
evils . 1
Descriptions of
the effects of alcohol on
Indians are
numerous
and incredible
. There are several reasons
which
explain
the
highly coloured
prose . Many
descriptions were
deliberately
biased.
Missionaries such as
the Jesuits were
involved icn an
attempt
to
halt the fur trade
which interfered
with
their Christianization
plans by causing
the Indians
to travel in
the woods for most of
the year. Consequently
they used extreme,
rare and highly
exaggerated examples of
drunken bouts by Indians to
attack the
administration of
New France
which was pro-
~
-
. iting from the fur
trade . Their
1 .
Innis, H. A .
The Fur Tracle - in C
anada. p. 268 .
descriptions of bouts were eclectic from notable incidents
takem from a long temporal range, and did not suggest
every
day occurrences.
Secondly the nature of journalism with its focus on
the unusual tended to concentrate on Indian drinking
to
130 .
excite European emotions.
Death
of
an
Indian_
by
famine was
frequent
but
was seldom
noted, while a drunken Indian brawl
near European settlements was frequently recorded
by
jour-
nali_sts and seemed to receive attention in the records
which: survive to
this
day. Yet
white
drinking during the
same period was just as heavy but was seldom reported.
The
existence of heavy European drinking was apparent in the
order by the Governor of the Hudson Bay Company to Factors
to prevent immoderate drinking among European employees and
to
seize all brandy and
spirituous
liquor
not
belonging
to
the Company. I
Ibid. ,
131 .
common.
1
To gain
liquor, the Indian
needed to be a
good
hunter and only
efficient
hunters obtained sufficient
liquor to become
temporarily intemperate
Traders would
not give
gifts of liquor to
those Indians
who lacked furs
to trade.
Drinking bouts were
limited by the amount
of
liquor available to
one or two days once
or-Mice a year,
and the Ciee through
experience usually
removed guns,
knives, and
other dangerous
implements prior to
drinking
to
prevent accidents .
To obtain liquor, the
necessary
furs
had
to
be trapped. during
the remainder of
the year.
The
Indian
was also engaged
in a full time
activity of p. l . rsuing
game
animals for food
and had little
leisure time for
drinking.
1 . Hudson Bay
Comnany Archives.
B135/a/89.
2 . Harmon . Daniel.
A Journal of,
the Voyages. -
102 .
2
13
2 .
In material
culture, the
Cree did not suffer from
his
occasional
bouts, since
the Company kept
the Indian suppliec'
on
credit with the
necessities of
hunting ; --guns, flints,
powder and
knives . Since
fur trading companies
relied on
Indian furs, leaving
the Indian
without the vital
necessities
for trapping
was to defeat the
very nature of the fur
trade
and would
lose the loyalty of
the Indian to the
company.
Drinking
did not suggest
new behavioural patterns
for
the Cree,
for as Dailey
has pointed out
drinking in excess
was in accordance
with "eat-all"
feats where everything
was
eaten at once. 1
Dr. King
in
1857 suggested
some of the problems of using a bow to hunt
.
To make an Indian really a hunter with
the bow and
arraw, a deer stalker,
takes a whole life; you cannot
re-teach the
present generation; it takes a whole life
to learn to approach at
that distance the animal for
which the bow
and arrow came into use. 3
Prior to European contact, the
Cree were
highly
dependent
on a primitive technology for exploiting a harsh
habitat.
The introduction
of useful European trading items
enabled the
Cree to exploit this habitat far. more
effectively by improving
their success at killing and
trapping
game,
Europeans were
unable
to
exploit the
Cree
by
withholding necessary iron
commodities since competition made these items
readily
available
to the Indians from rival traders .
The Cree, having acquired
an iron technology from the
whites, developed skills in using this
techriblogy which
A'
enabled them to repair European
commodites and construct new
items
with
consid,:rable ingenuity.
Denig, for
instance,
wrote that the Cree had
made and acquired iron tools, and
1
. Tyrrell, J. B . (Ed. ) Hearne, Samuel
.
Journey
to a Northern
Sea. p. 308.
2 .
Tyrrell, J. B . (Ed. ) David Thomoson'
s Narrative. . .
p-
i13 .
3 . Report cf the Select
Committee on Hudson's Bav
. . .
1857 .
p. 315.
were repairing kettles and
were constructing tin cups and
other utensils
out
of old pans
and worn out sheet iron
buckets.
Some Cree, he stated, were tolerably good
black-
smiths, who could
repair a gun lock, cut a screw, make knives,
grates,
scrapers and other metal tools
. l
In effect
the
European culture introduced metal
which enabled the Cree
to improve their adaptation to
the habitat, and in
time
of need
to
make aboriginal instruments from iron
which were far more effective than the
original stone and
bone devices.
134 .
In
addition to the value of European technology,
the
_ >
Moose
River basin Cree benefitted from the Hudson Bay
Company
posts. They became a place of
refuge when starvation because
of
accident, illness, or game scarcity, appeared inevitable.
In the 1700's, the posts were stocked
with
extra
supplies
of oatmeal,
peas,
and
salted geese to feed starving Indians. 2
Post Journals frequently noted the arrival of
starving Indians.
"Two Indians
came
in
starving,_ supplied them with oatmeal,
.
.
3
peas, a. few salted fish --little brandy to
their
father. "
Another typical entry states : "Captain's
Questach's Family
in,
some starved, one poor fellow died. . . the poor
old
Captain
cried with
joy at
having reached the Port. " 4
1 . Denig
.
"Of
the
Cree or Knisteneau. "
M. H. S . B . 1952, T) .
62 .
2 .
Joseph
lZobson
. in
Report from the Committee. . . 1749 . ,r
. , . 216 .
3 . Hudson F3av Companv Archives .
Bl
a
4 .
4 . ;laze rcok.
Ed.
Such treatment
as this
provided the Cree with a security
which contributed
to the- . fu: - - trade
period as being culturally
optimal for the
Cree. .
Disease .
It i5 difficult
to argue that the
Cree reached their
cultural
climax during the
fur
trade by discussing
disease
since
no inforriation is available
as to aboriginal diseases
among the
Cree.
It must be
realized that many- diseases of
the Cree may have predated the
arrival of Columbus. "dany
epidemics among
the Indians which occurred
during the fur
trade period may also
have
period,. caused
by weakness
Sub- Arctic climate.
actually have
benefitted from better
health,
resulting from a bet-
occurred during the aboriginal
from malnutrition
and from the
During the fur trade the
Cree may
ter diet
due
to
their
improved ability
to exploit the habitat.
The Cree also had
the services of the doctors
of the Hudson
Bay
Company, who had developed
a practical ability at treating
wounds and setting
broken
bones
.
Now diseases
which did emerge among the Cree,
did not from
cultural viewpoint
alter the material or non- material aspects
1 . Hudson : Bay Company Archives .
Dec.
15,
1730 . B135/a/14.
laze coo . `Soose
Factory Journals. p. 183 .
136 .
of
their life
style. Disease was
regarded by the Cree
as
an
ecological pressure,
similar
to
famine, and not
related
to
the Europeans
. The detrimental effects
of disease
seem
to have been
offset by the new
technology of the Cree .
The lucrative
success of
the fur trade in the Moose
River
f
drainage
basin suggests that in
spite of reports of
the
horrors of
Indian epidemics,
Indian numbers
were not in
fact declining .
Numerous Cree
continued to trap pelts
and
to carry
them
to
?loose Factory on a
regular basis,
permitting
the Company to maintain at
a profit not
only a large
central
entrepot, but
also many small
inland posts which faced
vigorous
competition by rival
traders. Obviously
the numbers of. Cree
could not
have been declining to
permit such
competition to
be carried
on with profit.
It.
seems probable that
the large European
epidemics
which
.
swept.
the Treat Lakes and
Prairies were caused
by
the
frequent Indian contact
with Europeans
in those areas .
The large small
pox epidemic of the
mid-ninteenth century
4
for instance
emerged from the large
influx o"f American
settlers travelling
the
Oregon
and Mormon Trails to
the
Pacific. Few of
these epidemics appeared to
have reached
as far North as
the relatively
isolated Hudson
Bay
region
.
The
smallpox and venereal disease
that Lahontan
found in
the
late seventeenth century
around
the Great
Lakes was
never reported in
the Moose River
basin . l In
1776-
' : Lahontan New Voyages to
North Ame
rica. p. 46 .
13 7 .
1777
a
smallpox epidemic which struck the Northern Canadian
regions was again not mentioned in the Journals of Moose
Factory or the inland posts! Since
disease affected trading,
sickness among the Indians was normally
mentioned, and it
is doubtful
that the disease reached the Moose River
basin.
Umfreville described a smallpox epidemic on the Plains in
the 1780's. Attacking
the monolopy of the Hudson Bay Company,
Umfreville tended to exaggerate
the
effects of
the disease
by describing
dying
Indians
lying in hundreds.
Numbers
began to die on
every side ; the infection spread
rapidly;
and hundreds lay expiring . . . . Heads, legs
and :arms lay
indiscriminately scattered about. . . .
The very air became infectious
. Such has been the fate
of
many of the tribes. . . . Scarce
one
in-fifty survive
it.
2
Again Journals
of the Moose River region do not refer to
the disease. In 1795, however, there was reference to a
fatal sickness throughout the Moose River
area
which had
carried off some good
fur hunters.
a/83
.
4 .
Ibid
. ,
B135/a/145.
Tbid. , B80/e/3, & B124/a/2 .
down to Like Huron to
obtain government presents, obtained
were commcn among the Cree during the ninteenth century
4
an
epidemical disease, probably whooping cough
.
Generally
writers noted that dysentery,
distemper and venereal disease
138 .
while graham in particular saw tuberculosis as a
major
threat
. l
Hind wrote that smallpox epidemics occurred in
the West
in 1816
and
1817,
but these apparently were not
large enough to reach Northern Ontario. 2
In 1838 smallpox
was again
said
to
have
struck the
West,
but the Hudson Bay
Company was reported to have introduced vaccine . 3
It appeared that the Cree Indian of North Eastern
Ontario during the fur trading period was generally healthy
Many descriptions
of
epidemical diseases among
the
Indians
did not apply to the Moose River drainage basin, because of
the relative isolation of this area. One reqular visitor
to Moose Factory reported in 1857 that this region was'`
peaceful
and healthy
.
In the thickwood country they are more under our own
care, under our own eyes. . . . There are
no wars, there
is no loss of life arising from wars. There has been
no small-pox; the country has been healthy, and
the
means of living, if not abundant, have been sufficient
. 4
Disease seemed to have offered only minor
the Moose River Cree and did not alter
optimality of the fur trade era.
Conclusion.
difficulties to
or affect the cultural
Fisher has araued that one cannot draw a distinction
1 . Glover. (Ed. ) Andrew Graham's Observations. . . p. 143 .
Also Umfreville. The Present State of Hudson Bay. -? . 48 .
2 . Hind.
Canadian
Red R
iver and Assinniboine and Saskatch-
ewan Expedition . 1860 . passim.
3 . Denig, E .
"Of
the Cree. ~
r'l . H. S . B .
1952
.
passim.
4 .
Select Committee on the Hudson Bay Company, 1857 . p. 316 .
13
9 .
between
pre-contact normal
evolutionary
behaviour and post
contact acculturation
since fur
trade alterations
in the
Indian cultural
patterns were
voluntary and
followed pre-
contact
evolutionary lines. 1
The
Indians were
adapting
to
changed
ecological conditions
which made
beaver valuable,
rather
than being
forcefully directed
into acculturated
changes
attributable
to conscious
European intervention
.
This factor and the
presence of
some pre-requisite
conditions
permitted
the Cree culture to
reach an
optimal period
in
, its adaptation of
the Cree to
the habitat.
European rivalry
was one
pre-requisite for
cultural
optimality.
The geography of
North Eastern
Ontario
favoured
the cultural
climax of
the Cree by placing the
Cree
in
the dominant
marketing
position.
The
competitive
European rivalry
based on
the Hudson Bay
versus the St.
Lawrence access
routes which
emerged from
1670
to
182. 1
depended
upon the low,
ill-defined intervening
--'height of
land
between
the adjacent
drainage
basins
.
The effects of
this
geography
producedas a
primary theme of the-fur
trade, a
continuous
conflict between
Europeans for furs
. Ths conflictt
commenced between
rival nations,
England and France
and
expanded into
English competition
between rival
metropolitan
centres,
London, and Montreal.
Even following
1821 the Hudson
1 . Fisher,
A. D . "The Cree
of Canada. Some
Ecological an: '
Evolutionary
Considerations . "
W. C. J . A.
1969 .
ap ssim.
14 0 .
Bay
Company continued
to
compete with independent fur traders
in North Eastern Ontario.
The Cree were
placed
in
the dominant customer position
with the freedom to choose the buyer. Competition
forced
competing companies to consider the interests of the Cree
by offering high quality merchandise, trust, gifts and
competitive prices. Fur traders were forced to know
their
Indians personally, and to treat them
with
honesty and
fairness to obtain their loyalty. The continuous conflict
between Europeans tended to divert attention from a conflict
between Europeans and the Cree. Because European: : . were
competing
against themselves for furs they had little
energy
to alter the life style of the natives by introducing
such European traits as
Christianity, agriculture and school
education.
The characteristics of
the Europeans
in contact
with the
Cree fulfilled a second prerequisited for optimality.
European traders were highly skilled men with a knowledge
of the Cree culture and language . Since these men were
skilled in their craft as Indian traders they shared Cree
values and were adamantly opposed to any activity which
would destroy their fur trade careers or alter their way
of life. Consequently fur trar. e agriculture never grew
beyond large gardens, designed to supplement the dining
table
of
the fur trader with vegetables . One explorer in the
culture
to new material
14
1 .
1880's
wrote that
"farming in inland
posts is a rather
primitive and
unscientific type confined
chiefly to
the
potato as
the field crop. . . .
Little
attention is paid to
1
drainage,
none to rotation
of crops. "
The lack
of agric-
ultural
techniques among the
fur traders
themselves is an
indication of
the vigour they
expressed
in disputing
demands
by missionaries
for the Cree
to obtain
a settled
agricultural
way of life. European
traders,
being limited
in numbers
and widely scattered,
were prevented
by the Cree
nomadic
habits
from frequent contact,
while the
contact which
did
occur
re-emphasized
the aboriginal
characteristics of
the
Cree
culture.
The Cree were
encouraged to
continue to use
the
tepee, or the
tent, shelters
which stressed
mobility,
and
were not encouraged
to adopt
log cabins
which suggested
a sedentary
life.
There was no
fundamental
reshuffling of
the
elements of
the Cree
culture. The adaptation
of the
traits did
affect property
patterns
aboriginal
times. Changes
did not
as life
Pol-
but in
a wav
similar to
4
occur in such
aspects of non-material
culttire-such
cycles,
specialization of
labour, or
Cree psychology.
itical and
social
organization remained
fundamentally
Ecological
factors
which were
trade
retained
habitat
by hun'-
similar to pre-contact
.
predominant in Cree
life before the
fur
dominance.
The Crees adaptation to
the
fishing and
gathering
continued.
01
their
14
2 .
The common
orientation of both cultures towards the
fur trade meant that the Cree culture maintained
its auton-
omous nature and internal controls
.
The
Cree culture had
always introduced
innovations which had permitted better
human adaptation to the threatening
habitat for survival,
and
European material commodities were, in effect, simply
a cluster of innovations which
strengthened the culture's
relationship to the environment. Cree
cultural changes
were voluntary
and congruent with previously existing
patterns
rather than a rejection
of one
set
of patterns for another.
The
Cree's
chief
aim during the fur trade was to make
a . good
collection of fur, a practice congruent
with the hunting
of animals
for
food and furs during the aboriginal
period.
For this collection
of
furs, the
Cree required and received
no European education. A
symbiotic relationship developed
which
improved the Cree ability to survive
along lines
developed
by
the aboriginal culture, while the
Europeans
also benefitted.
1879 .
Robinson,
H. M
.
Fountain, Paul.
T
e : ,rea
Nort -,1es an
the Great Lake Region of North i\ Tnerica. Anderson, Rev. D.
The
Net in the Bav, . .
Ryerson, Rev
. John. Hudson's Bay
or a Misslonarv `lour. .
Proulx,
J .
B.
A la Baie
D
u7son. . .
Buc land,
Rev.
A.
R.
.
Batty, B. Forty-^',ao Years Pmonast the ?ndians and
Fs
}-imos .
Barnley, Rev. (7 . "Extract
of a l
Letter -From kloose T'actorv. "
British North America Methodist Wesleyan "-1anazine . 1841 .
14 7 .
wasteland. 1
In the
summer
the myriad mosquitos,
dreary, low, swampy,
landscape,
overcast skies,
and stunted scrubby trees
offered little
attraction
. Such a perception
stimulated little
interest
in European exploration
and development of Northern
Ontario
1
prior to the twentieth
century.
The
construction of the C',anadian
Pacific Railway
along the
infertile crescent of the
Canadian Shield on the
North
side of
the
Great
Lakes re-emphasized to
most travellers
the
view
of
apparent barreness and
the rocky nature of
the
land with its endless grey rocks,
scraggly pine and
r
blackened timber. 3
Settlers moving
northward- from Southern
Ontario
along the Ottawa River and the
rivers of the North
shore of
Georgian Bay, encountering
the rocky hills, lakes
and
impenetrable forest of the
Canadian Shield, desisted
from efforts to
enter and settle the land of the Cree
. 4
1 . See for
instance : Tyrrell,
J . B . (Ed. ) Documents Relating
to the Early
History of Hudson Bay.
Lahontan. New Voyages
to North
America. " Ellis, H. A Vcvage to
Hudson's Bay
y the
Dc bs, galley and Caliunta, In the'
'ears I7-T6 and
1747, For
Discovering the North ~ ^est Passage.
Clerk ot
the
California. An Account of a VOvacfe
for the Discovery
of a North West
PassacTe by Hudson's Straits, to
the Westerm
an
Southern Ocean or
America.
Uo_ bs, A. An
Account of
the
Countries Adjoining to Hudson's
Baw in the
Northwest
Part of America.
2 . Lahontan. New Vovaqes to
North America. p. 213 .
See also
Ballantyne, R. _Hudson's Day.
Wa_L~ e, W. S . (Ed. )
John
McLean's Notes of a Twenty
Five ;'ears' Service
in the
Hu
son's Bav Territory
.
3 . Hubbaard,
7 . Tie Transcontinental
Railways. "
Science , 1887
.
Anglican Church House
. Letterbook, John
Horden. SeQt
. 1889 .
Newnham,
S . The Babes in the
Woods. 1885.
4 . An Emigration
~ 3uice to Ontario. 1
80 . p . 13 .
14 8 .
Lack of knowledge concerning the land
of the
Cree
tended
to
re-emphasize its wilderness nature. Tile Ontario Department
of Agriculture in 1897, for instance,
asserted
that the
land
north of the Great
Lakes "has been scarcely touched by the
foot of the whiteman and then
only in rare instances by the
hunter and
trapper. "
1 This attitude in turn discouraged
the construction of access routes . Prior to the Canadian
Pacific Railway,
the
only
access
to
the land of the Cree was
from James
Bay by ship, or by a .
'
-monthly summer steamer
( from Sarnia which stopped at Sault Ste
.
Marie, "lichipicoten,
and Pic. 2 From
these points Indians and canoes could be
engaged to travel inland.
1899
.
O.
. D . M . A. P .
1900
p. 190 . Niven. "Survev of the Boundary Lane
Between Alqoma
and Nipissinq Districts
. "
O. L
. S. R. T . 1899 . Department of
Lands and Forests. Annual Renort . 1908 . p.
VI.
2 . Hunter, -I . "Before t e Cana tan Pacific
Railway and Now. "
Rod and gun, 1909 . passim
.
Also
Province of Ontario. Handbook
of Resources. p. 15 .
3 . Campbell, F. "Northern Ontario Post
Letters
.
from
Bishop Herder_
at
Moose Factory suggested that wheat grew
poorly. 3
4 .
2 . Report of the Select Commltt
o,_ AoT)
Ointed to
Receive and
o ect I nformation as to
the
Riqht of the
Hudson's
Bay
Cc7,Danv
under their Charter, the Renewal of
the License
of Occupatif-~ , n and
the
Character of
the Soi-_ and Climate
oofthe'~ errltcry and its Fitness for
Settlement. p. -J70 .
Also
p,
27,
, 400 .
3 . Anglican
Church
House. Letterbook of Bishop Horden.
Feb.
18,, 1587.
_
ourable and
the soil barren. 1
Such crops
indicated
on
a small level, Bell affirmed, what could happen
throughout
the clay belt region
. 3
The
contradictory nature of
such
reports provided no
clear,,perception
for the government of Ontario as to the resources of the land
of the Cree.
15 0 .
By the 1890's continued land and railroad surveys began
to
develop a
clearer
ccmcept
of the mineral and agricultural
resources
of
the region which differed radically from the
1 . Fleming , S . C. P . R. Report of
Progress
. . .
1874. p. 204.
C. P . R. Report on Surveys and Preliminary Operations of
the C. P . R
.
to
1881 . p. 44
et
seq. For criticism see Berton.
Pierre. The National
Dream. p. 373 . Hansard. 1880 . p.
1483 . , Hansard. Jan. 10, 1881 . p . 322
.
Hansard. 1
9
March,
1884. p.
965 .
2 . McOuat. "Report . . . on the Country
between
Lake
Temiscaman7
and Abbitibbe. " G . S . C.
A. R.
1872 .
p.
135 .
Cochrane, A. S . Field
'Motes, Moose Factory to Abitibi. No.
' 1165 . G. S . C . Bell, R . Report on an
Exploration in 1875,
between James Bay and Lakes Superior
and
Huron. " r. S . C
. A. R.
1875
. p. 339 .
Bell,
R.
"Report on
an Exploration of the
East Coast of Hudson's Bay. " G.
S. C
. A. R
. 1877-78. p. 7c.
Wilson. C. A. unpublished Field Notes
and Diary. G. S. C . 1881 .
6/9/81 .
of
the North
Eastern
Ontario
region was
symbolized by a belief
in Moose Factory
not as the
regional fur
capital for the Swampy
Cree, -but as
as a
tidewater seaport and
industrial centre
of an immensely
rich
hinterland serviced
by railways and
ships, smelting
local iron
resources with local
supplies of lignite
and
2
producing pottery,
brick, and
glass products.
The role
played
by the
Swampy Cree was not
suggested, but presumably
these entrepreneurs
would have
suggested that the
Cree would
1
1 . See Caron,j
. Journal de
1'Expedition
du"Chevalier de
Troves . . . p.
45 . On minerals
see Bell, Rohert.
"Report
on an
Exploration
in 1875 . " G. S. C.
A. R . 1875 . p.
326 .
Bell,
R. "Report on an
Exploration
Following
the settlement of legal jurisdiction in
1889, the
Ontario
government immediately appointed a Royal Commission on
Mineral
Resources .
Again E. B. Borron
and
Robert
Bell were ke!-,
witnesses as to the mineral resources of the land of the
Cree
.
The outcome
of
the Commission was the establishment of
the
Ontario
Department of Mines on March 4, 1891 under Archibald
Blue "to
aid in promoting the mining interests of the prov-
ince.
"3The third and fourth
annual reports of this department
presented detailed
and optimistic reviews of the resources
4,
of Northern
Ontario
.
Agricultural surveys of
North Eastern Ontario during
th-= _
1890's revealed that the land of the Cree contained immense
1 . Report of the Select Committee on the
Boundaries between
the Province of Ontario and the linoraanized Territories
o the
Dominion
.
1880 .
2 . Province of Ontario. Royal Commission on
?Mineral Resource!_ .
3 . Statutes of
Ontario
.
54 Victoria . Chapter 8, 1891 .
4 . Blue, A
A. R.
1894
.
Blue,
A.
O. D. '!1 .
A. R.
1895
.
15
3 .
areas of arable land, drained
by large rivers and covered
with timber.
The upsurge in the North American economy
since 1886, symbolized by
the expansion of the labour force,
capital and industrial output of
Toronto, had led to a rapid
2
advancement of European technology.
A technological break-
through in mechanical
and
chemical
pulping of wood, caused
by the
demand for huge amounts of paper to feed urban
news-
paper presses, made black spruce a
valuable timber for pulpwood .
Pulpwood depletion in
the United States was to put pulpwood.
on the
American tariff free list, turning the northern
forest of the
land of the Cree into a vast and lucrative
bonanza for the entrepreneur
who possessed capital totconstr-
uct pulp plants
near the resources. The position of the
Cree Indian,
lacking capital and business knowledge was
necessarily confined to the
position of unskilled pulpwood
cutters .
Related to pulpwood was the need to develop an
. energy
source
to run the mills . By 1900 the wide use of elec-
1 .
E. g. See Department of Crown
Lands .
The Algoma
District .
1884
. passim. Ogilvie, William. "Report of
r. xp oratory
survey
to Hudson Bay . " O. L. S . R. T . 1891 . Patterson,
J . A. "Nipissingt and James Bay Railway
Survev
. "
O. L. S . R. T .
1893
. p .
109 ff . Burwash. "Geology of the Nipissing-
Algoma
Line
. O. D
. M . A. R. 1896 . p. 177 . Niven, A. "Survey
of
the Boundarv Line Between Algoma
and Nipissing Distric'. - . "
O. L. S . R. T
. 1899 . p . 146 . Parks, William. "NIven's
Base
L ni
1873 . " O. D. M . A. R.
1900 . p. 142. .
2 . Nelles, H. V . The Pol_itics'cf Develobment. 'p.
92 .
3 . gross, P . The Development of a Forest
Policy. . . p. 15 2 et seq .
Gilmour
. The
Economic ,eegranhv of the Pulp and Paper
Industry in
Ontario
.
p
. 30
et sect .
tricity generated from
falling water turned the white
waterfalls of
the Moose River escarpment into an
and profitable power
build the
dams to harness the power source. Again
position of
the
environment was
universities were essential to
design, construct and
operate such
projects.
the centre of exploitation
1
Steel
Company .
and
reading the
on
the minerals
elopment through the
1 . Clerctue,
F . H.
An
Northern Ontario.
Thousand Files of
Last
Half-Century
1937 . passim.
15
4 .
resource waiting only
the
capital to
uneducated Cree in this perception of the
minimal since trained
engineers from
and one half
million dollars of ore by 1868 .
The
enormous
the
The third vision of the North
which emerged during
the late ninteenth century was
related
to
miring.
Copper
had already
been worked at tl,. e Brunce !dines from 184 6 to
1876, while Silver Inlet on Lake Superior
had_yielded?three
discovery of copper and nickel by
the Canadian Pacific
Railway at Sudbury in 1883 had
created an immense and
profitable
industry. The Helen Mine on Lake Superior
was
of
rich iron ore by the Algoma
Entrepreneurs reviewing these developments
w
reports of geologist Robert-Bell,
speculated
awaiting discovery in the interior
uplands
of the Canadian Shield.
This perception of mineral dev-
mining industry
again implied for the
Instance of In
d
ustrial Evolution
in
1900
.
cassim.
lacDouctall, J . B. Two
fold . ~.
I)obie,
James A. "The
LnNNorthern Ontario. "
O
. L. S
. R. T .
15 5 .
Cree culture a total disruption
of their old wav of
life in favour of
a permanently settled life style closely
regulated by time tables and externally imposed regulations
.
Such perceptions of the value of
the Northern resources
stimulated many
promotional plans for railways to James Bay.
1
Great
political pressure, levied on the provincial
government,
caused: the government in
1900
to
embark on a definite and
aggressive
policy of exploring the resources of Northern
Ontario by allocating $40,000 . for an
extensive land survey.
This
survey was aimed
at
discovering great new sources of
natural wealth in the land of the
Cree "to increase the.
2
industrial
wealth and the population of the country. "
The results of this report spelled out the end of
the
traditional nomadic hunting and trapping culture of
the Cree
'Monumental' in
its impact, the land survey revealed to the
Ontario government and to
the Toronto press a complete. , detailed
and accurate description of the resources of
Northern Ontario
. 3
In brief these resources "fully
justified the most sanguine
1 . Nipissinq
and James' Bay Railway. A Description of the
Country Traversed by this Railwav
Between Lake Nioi ssing
and James Bav_ . Also Bailey, J. C . A Svnopiss oL
tae
Hudson's Bay Railways . . . Also Re the James Bav Railways
.
Charlton, W. A
. Hudson's Bav Railwav via %Ilssai'lzoie . .
Charlton.
Special Report of
tl: e Oinal Directors of
the Sault Ste
.
Marie and Hudson's
Bav Railwav Co. 097 .
Patterson.
"Nipissing and James Bay Railway survey
.
Set,Tell, H.
"Transportation. " O. L . S. R. T. 1902 .
2 . Report on the Survey and Exploration
of Northern Ontario. 1900
.
p. I .
3 . cf : J. S> Dobie in
Speight, T. B. "An Old Timer's Backward
Look
. "
O. L. S. R. T. 1941 . p.
121
.
15 6 .
expectations in regards to the
natural
wealth and fertility
of
Northern Ontario. " The resources included:
a. tract of arable land north
of the heiuht
of land,
stretchinc from the nuebec
Boundarv
west across the
districts
of
Nipissing, Algoma, Thunder
3av,
comprising an area of about
24,500 square miles or
15,680,000 acres. . . .
The
soil is
clay o= loam,
nearly all suitable
for
farming purposes, and the region
is watered by
the Moose and its tributarL'es.
2
In addition there was a great pulpwood forest, in some
places one hundred
and fifty miles deep, and enormous res-
ources
of
waterpower.
ISO&1910
. Unpublished. Dept.
of
L. & F .
157 .
The settlement of
North Eastern Ontario following
1900
was very rapid. The region was regarded
as
a
panacea
for the crowding
and congestion of the big Southern
cities
such as
Toronto by permitting settlement
on
a
new bucolic
agricultural frontier
This frontier in turn was
seen as a
bulwark
agaj
. -ist the prosperity
of the rapidly developing
Prairies
since the clay
belt would retain Ontario's pop-
ulation.
The plethora of settlement
literature which emerged
between
1900 and 1930 stressed Northern
Ontario not as the
wilderness home of the
nomadic Cree and fur bearina
animals,
but rather as an unusually
fertile region with sixteen
million
acres
of
land for settlement, three
billion feet of
pine timber and nine million
dollars of pulpwood. 2
Denig
as
early as 1885 had suggested
that the coastal salt water
marsh of
James Bay possessed such
fertility that "the. poor-
est
kind of horse will fatten
if let run twentyrfive'to
thirty-five days
amongst these rushes. "
3
Father
Paradis, an
apostIe
of colonization, added
:
w
the grass, of these
prairies possess a pecular
essence and flavour
which imparts to milk and
butter
produced from the cattle
which
eat
it, an exquisite
taste, one which you
would seek for in vain in our
own climate. 4
1. Ellis, J.
H. "The Call of the Land. "
A
. I. R
. 1960. p. 11.
2 . Kirkpatrick. "Our Northern
Heritage. " 1906 . p. 112 .
3. Denig,
L
.
"Of the Cree. . . " M. H. IS. B
. 1952 . p. 44 .
4 . Paradis, C. A. M. From
Temiskamg i
o Hudson
Bav.
---
p. 38 .
See the Globe. Aug.
28, 1907 . Hopkins, C.
The
Canadian
Annual Review. 1912 . p. 321.
Englehart. "The Land of
TistTisk
r. ing 1911. p. 135 .
Combined
with
the theme of fertility was
a new perception
of the
climate as
unusually invigorating
in nature and well
suited for
agriculture. '
The abundance and
fertility of the
soil
combined
with the expanding
industrial economy of
Southern Ontario
and new
technology were all factors
which
created
the settlement push into
the Northern clay
belt.
There was
also the ' pull'
factor created by
settlers
at
the head of Lake
Timiskaming. Since the completion
of
the
Canadian Pacific
Railway in 1883, settlers
had travelled
by steamer
from Mattawa to settle
in the new towns of
New Liskeard
and Haileybury.
In 1901 the Ontario
jov4nrnment
had
sponsored a land
excursion to
the area, and by
1902,
with 3,500
settlers in the region,
strong
political pressure
was
exerted on the Ontario
government to place
the Cree on
reservations and
to construct a railway
to provide
year round
comrLiunication
.
1
With the
failure
of
numerous
private ventures to
raise
the capital
necessary' ' for
the, construction of a
railway
15 8 .
towards
James Bay, the
Ontario government
sponsored a rail-
way from North
Bay to Lake
Timiskaming in order to
exploit
1 . Generally
see Lawler, James.
The Temiscamincque
Countrv.
Its Soil, Timber,
Climate and
Agricultural ' ~ 5ossibil-, ties
.
1901
. passim. For
political pressure
see Journal or the
Legisla' _ive
Assemblv. 28 Jan. ,
1902 . Departnent o`
Crown
Lands.
innual Report.
1902. p. IV. Paradis
. From
Timiskaiii
nq to Hudson Ba-T . p.
38 .
The globe
,
^March,
1900 .
Mail~
In ten years
three hundred million dollars of silver were produced
from a region which the Hudson Bay Company and the Cree had
trapped for two hundred years
. 4
None of
this
money wealth
was exploited by the Cree who lacked the cultural perception
for this type of activity.
The mining camps of early Cobalt led to the mushroomed
growth of yhite towns: Cobalt in 1912, possessed a machine
fr
shop, foundry, wholesale supply company, three hotels, five
banks, five schools, six churches, a daily newspaper, elec-
tric street cars,
electric
lights, a telephone service and a
1 . T. & N . 0 . R. A. R. 1902
. p.
53 . Also 1904
. p.
38 .
2 . Dob J. A . "The Past Half-Century in
Northern
Ontario
O. L . S . R. T. 1937. p. 14 2 et sea.
3 . McRae, James . Call Me Tcmorrow.
p
. 88 .
Parks,
W. A. "Coba
t
Mineral Conditions . " Dnpire Club
Speeches. 1906-7. p . 184 .
4 . ac ougall, J. B. Two Thousand Miles of Gold. p. 49 .
growing rapidly.
16 0 .
population of
10,500 . 1 Haileybury
at the same date
was
connected to
Cobalt by an
electric railway
and was
equally well
developed. Other
agricultural towns were
The silver
discovery led to
extensive
exploration and
prospecting of the Cree
hunting grounds .
One canoeist in
1907
reported that "you
see little tents
in every direction
you wander
and in many
instances where you hardly
expect to
find a tent
squatter, you
may perceive
the signs of the
prospector's
hammer, pick
or shovel. " 2
The i: T. mense
publicity
given to 'North
Eas'arn Ontario
combined with
the large
profits of
the railway
resulted in its
renewed construction
northward to
exploit possible - deposits
of gypsum
and lignite.
The
decision of the
Laurier government to
construct the
National Transcontinental
Railway
from Monction to
Winnipeg
in 1903 opened the
central clay belt
for settlement.
This
railway
offered a natural
terminal for
the T. & N . 0 . ,
connecting
settlers along
the- National
Transcontinental
Railway with
the markets of Toronto.
By
1- 908 the T.
& N .
0 .
had reached the
National Trans-
continental Railway
and at the junction
lots of the
new town-
site of Cc,chrane were sold
. A minister
of Cochrane
in 1913
1 . Northern
Ontario, Canada
. Ontario
Department of Agric-
ulture. 1912
.
2 . Carrell, T' .
"Our Fishing
and Hunting Trip
in Northern
Ontario. "
Rod and Cun.
1907. p. 943.
commented that "the people of Cochrane are very
optimistic
and seem to
see visions and dreams of a great and prosperous
citv
."1
Rich coal deposits, oil prospects, and iron finds
"unparalleled in extent and economic value in Canada" laid
the
basis the Northland Post affirmed, to a great indus-
trial empire at . Cochrane.
1 6 1 .
Men and steam shovels will be
industriously working
the banks of the Missinaibi River and the Temiskaming
and Northern Ontario Railway extension will be kept
busy hauling
iron
ore
and
James Bay Coal to the blast
furnaces of the huge steel smelting works of Cochrane .2
As a result of these works "in a few years Moose Factory
will be as well known as Cobalt." 3
Th
-~ ,
_ _ Northland.
June-1 7,
1 91 0
.
3 .
1 b.i
. ,
1 91 0 .
16
2 .
the Cree
depended for their livelihood
.
The extension of the
Temiskaming and Northern
Ontario
Railway from Cochrane
to Moosonee on James Bay in
1931,
opening the
old fur trading capital
of Moose Factory to
casual
European visitors, was
undertaken partly
because of
the
all pervading optimistic
atmosphere of
the time, and partly
because of the Porcupine, gold
discovery which suggested
further discoveries .
The search for silver stimulated
by
the Cobalt discovery resulted
in a major gold discovery
in Whitney and
Tisdale townships near Porcupine
Lake in 1908 .
The gold discovery
proved to be immensely
profitable and by
1911 the region was
producing wealth at
the
annual
rAte
of $17 .
to
$18 . 00 per head
in Ontario. 1 A railway spur was
completed
to the region, and
such towns as Pottsville,
South Porcupine
and Timmins
rapidly grew.
By
1926 the
Hollinger mine . alone
employed
2,482 employees in Timmins. 2
Very few . Cree "Indians
were included in
these new cities. The Timmins mining
region,
leading gold
production in Canada,
maintained its pre-
eminence through the
1920's and 1930's.
The success
of Porcupine provided
a rationale for the
extension
of the railway, as
well a: ; the desire to end the
p. 130 .
1 .
Coleman, A. P .
"Ontario Mines and Mining
. " Empire Club
Speeches. 1911 . p. 162
.
See
also Innis,
H
. A.
The Mining
Frontier p.
350. Burrows, A. G . 'The Porcupine
Gold Area. "
1911 .
2 .
Burrows,
A. G . "The Porcupine
Gold Field. " O. D
. M. A. R. 1914
.
16 3 .
inland status of Ontario by developing a salt water ocean
port, and to develop hydro-electric and agricultural resources
.
An
optimistic and
spectacular romance of an agricultural
and industrial northern empire based on coal,
hydro-electricity,
gypsum, iron ore, oil, timber, fish and tourism was weaved
together by
promqters
from reports of geologists and surveyors. 1
In this tapestry the pattern did not include the
older fur
industry or a position for the Swampy Cree
since settlement
and the fur trade were
incompatible.
Actual
construction
of
the railway proceeded
to
James
Bay on a pragmatic basis . Island Falls was
reached in 1921
as part of an
agreement with the Hollinger Consolidated
Gold Mines Limited which
was constructing a hydro dam there.
Abitibi
Canyon, the scene of an,one million dollar hvdro-
electric
project in 1930, provided a second objective . The
railway was extended to Blacksmith Rapids in 1929 because
of
a favourable report on the lignite
resources located there,
and by 1931 James Bay was reached.
In the Spring
of 1932,
S, B, Clement laid out the
Moosonee townsite at the railhead. 2
The town
was advertised as being
the
base of supplies for
the development of Hudson Bay, the centre
of operation for
1 .
See Ellis,
S. C.
"Tames Bay
Surve" r,
1911"
T.
& ' _ d . 0 .
A . R,
1911
Kerry, J, "Proposed
T. & N. 0. Terminal on James
Bav. "
C, E . 1914, F. nnual
Reports of tl,e T . & N. a. Railway prom
1=0 describe the
route to James Bay.
Survevs include
Maquire, W. S. "Ah,itibi River Survey,, .
1919"
Northland. 1964 . Also
Annual Reports , Department of Mines
1920 et seq.
2, Lee, ,
. 6
" 1
.
"Southern
Ontario Linked With James Bav By_
Rail
. " M. T. 1933 . Northland Post . June 10,
1932
.
16 4 .
a deep sea and off-shore fishing fleet, and the centre of
pulp and
paper
and copper andiron mining industries .
Moose Factory, it was hoped, was to be transformed
virtually
overnight into a dynamic industrial centre.
In addition to constructing the Temiskaming and Northern
Ontario Railway,
the provincial government also constructed
a network of highways and colonization roads to precede
and
aid settlement of the
Clay
Belt. Slow and inefficient
development of roads to 1912 led to the North
and
North-Pest
Development Act, with
powers
to
allocate five million
dollars for public works and roads in the North. 2
The
Northern Development Fund under the Department of Northern
Development in 1926 added an additional five million
dollars
for roads . 3 By 1927 the first automobile drove
from Coch-rane
to
Toronto over
the newly
completed Ferguson Highway and
opened
the land
of
the
Cree to any casual visitor.
4
The
development of highways and. the automobile totally ended
the isolation of the Northland.
Next
to the fertility of-the land, the completion
of
a network of transportation routes was the most
important
factor in leading to and determinining the pattern of
1 . Montgomery,
Paul
. "Ontario's Newest North. . . " Saturdav
Night. July 18, 1931 .
2 . Ontario Statutes . 2 reorge V. Chanter 2 . See Dept. of
Lands and Forests . Annual
Report.
1913 .
-o .
88 .
3 . Ontario Statutes . 16 George V. Chapter 10 .
4 . Dept. of Northern Development. Annual Report. 1927 . p. 14
16
5 .
settlement
of the Clay Belt. In 1901 the census
indicated that
settlement
prior
to
the railway, was closely confined to
eight
townships which were accessible by a water trans-
portation
route along the Blanche River from
the
head
of
Lake Timiska'ninq . Population
did not exceed 500 in any
1
township and was generally
under 100 .
By 1911 the Nat' ,-)nal
Transcontinental Railway was under
construction and the
Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Rail-
way had
reached Cochrane, and a branch
line had reached
the mining camps of
Timmins . The settled townships
followed
the T. & N . O.
and N . T . Railways closely with population
density varying directly
with the distance from the
railway. Of
the settled townships more than ten mi1t~s from
the railway, 50% had fewer
than ten people,
and
the remainder
had fewer
than 50
people.
Of the townships directly on the
Railway,
10%
had a
population exceeding 500, 30% were
between 100 and 500, and 45% were
between 1 and 99 .
By 1921 the industrial development of
pulp
and
paper
4
mills and hydra-electricity
had caused rapid Population
growth
. Settlement ha-1 spread out from the
ZZational Trans-
continental Railway and the
Temiskaning and Yorthern Ontario .
Now 20a
By 1931 a
population of 5,000 was found in the region. A
similar
deal with the
Kimberly Clark Company led to the development
of the Spruce Falls Pulp
and Paper Company with large-mills
at Kapuskasing and Smooth Rock Falls.
Prosperous settlements
developed around these centres .
The
conditions essential for the cultural
climax'of
the Cree were by the
early twentieth century no. longer
being
fulfilled. The fur trade had continued
in the Moose River
basin as late as 1900 because
of the lack of exploration
caused by the Ontario boundary dispute,
a myth of the 'frozen'
2
North, the unfavourable
perception of the Precambrian Shield
and the difficulty of access. Rapid
expansion of the pop-
ulation of Southern
Ontario combined with industrialization
1 . Dept. of Lands and Forests. Ann
ual Report. 1912
.
p. Vi .
2 .
See Lower, A. R. M.
p.
15.
Paterson, "4 .
Carvea from
-
the- ?orzst,
p.
4 .
16 8 .
and
the development
of
mining,
pulp and paper and
hydro--electricity, was
to create a new environment in the
North for
geologists, surveyors and farmers. Unlike the
fur tradina perception of the fur resources of the North,
t
the new
vision
Cree
culture
. Settlement
was
to
destroy
the hunting and trapping
activities of the Cree and
ended the
possibility for a
nomadic
life
style. The
introducti(Dn of_Christianity to
the Cree
by the missionaries from
the 1840's was to
commence some
alterations in
the Cree religious
beliefs. European. . ,
education to
adapt the Cree to
the new industrial
society
was to
introduce coercion
as a means of forcing
the Cree
culture to
fit the new
tvpe
of habitat.
The legal structure
of the Indian Act
was to mould
traditional Cree band, patterns
to fit
the Canadian
Indian pattern.
The influence of the
conflicting cultural
goals between whites
and Indians
was to end
the optimal period of
the Cree culture by
disintegra-. _i
ng
the
traditional adaptation
of the culture
to the habitat
and by destroying
the Cree identity.
17 0 .
The Approach
,?f Settlement.
Its
Effects on TIappin# .
With the
comletion of the
Canadian Pacific
Railway
in
1885 and the invasion
of free traders,
geologists,
surveyors,
stipendiary magistrates
and sportsmen, Cree
contact
with Europeans
increased quickly. -his
contact
increased
more rapidly
with the construction
of the T. &
N.
0 . railway,
the discovery of
silver and z-old, and
the
completion
of the
Canadian Northern and
National Trans-
continental
Railways . At Moose
Factory the minister
wrote
in 1908
that the post
had been favoured with
the advent of
a score of
travellers, "tourists
seeking experience,
amateur
explorers
seeking material
for a book, and miners
sq,, oking
gold. "' By this
date because of
previous contact with
Europeans
100 of the 400 Cree
at Moose Factory could
speak
English. The
Moose Factory Cree were
clearly at the parting
of ways .
The effects of the
change were irmediate . -
George
Barnston,
a sportsman, noted
one effect of the
railways :
. . . As the
great civilizer,
the railway reaches
out,
game and animals
are taken for their
fur, their
means of
su- onort are driven
northward, and
with
them
~~
the remnant of
a race dying or
losing its identity
by absorption into
the mass of
society, . . .
as it encroaches upon
th-e_r hunting
ground. 2
The game was driven
northward, but
the Cree were not
immediately asst-ilated .
Instead they were
anxious to sign a
treaty
with th-3 Canadian
government. They
complained to tte
l. M. & K. M
. Vol. 5, 1908, 5
January.
2 . Isarnston, G. ` ~
dorthern Ontario C1
: noe Trip. " R. & G
. 1903 .
Nova Scotian
journalist Charles Tuttle during his visit to
Moose
Factory in the 1880's that "we want treaty money and
presents every year. . . . We have been robbed. We do
not ask
much only to be
treated as other Indians. " 1
Their wishes
were fulfilled in 1905 when, with the advance of the rail-
way, the federal government negotiated Treaty
Number 9 .
The area included 90,000 square miles between the height of
land, the Albany River and the Quebec-Ontario border
. A
present of
$8 . 00 per head and an annuity of $4. 00 per person
was
provided, these rates having been set by the Robinson
Treaty of 1850. A census was taken and reservations were
established at
Moose Factory, (500 Cree), Missinaibi. , . (100),
New Post (40), Abitibi Lake (400), Flying Post (100),
New
Brunswick (200),
and Mattagami (200) . 2
By the date of the treaty beaver had become
a rarity.
Steel traps,
poison bait and the liberal use of castoreum
for which "beavers have a curious infatuation, licking
everything touched by it
and . . . drugged into a crazy
stupidity by the very smell"3 greatly reduced beaver numbers
171 .
Geologist Parks in 1899 reported :hat
beaver was hunted out
in the New Post
area,4
while then-- :port of
1900 stated that
"beaver is
fast becoming an extinct animal. "
5
Flying Post
consistently reported a scarcity of
game, and
Dr
. Morris in
1. Tuttle,
Charles . Our
111
orthland. p. ?80.
2 . Treaty :io . 9, in T,`ririo
91,
4. Parks, W. "Tile
Surveyor
Kerr in 1?06
noted the rarity of beaver
along
the Mattagami River, and surveyors A. S . Code,2
Cavana and Watson,3 and Paul Fountain, also noted
the
absence
of beaver.
H .
W. Lyons in 1910 wrote after a canoe
trip that "beavers are now fast disappearing . Indians have
told me that the law against their destruction is not saving
them. Many dams
are
found .
. . all
broken or in
disrepair
. "
5
Stipendiary magistrate, E . B . Borron, had foretold that
when the country was opened by railways, protection of
Indian hunting
rights was essential,
or
the Indians would be
without a livelihood. 6
John
Harden, Bishop of Moosonee, complained that "our Indians
are very hard up ; not a day passes
but
som: -)ne comes begging
me to give them something to eat. George Flett came, in a
day
or two
ago and said he had tasted
nothing
for three
days . . . .
tr7
With
the
first world war, the bottom completely dropped
from the fur market and the'Moose Factory . Cree starved. 8
However during the 1920's prices rose rapidly to anew
height due to an increase in the 1)opulation wearing furs . 9
1 . Morris, Dr. R. T . "To Hudson Bay By Canoe
. "
R . &; G. 1907
.
2 . Dept . of Cro,. . rn Lands. Annual R: port . 1907 .
p
_
-
119
.
3 . Ibid. , p . 88 .
Fountain, Paul . The Great TTort',- ; -jest .
p
. 104.
5 . Lyons, 1-1 .
W
.
"'io
Moose
F--
. ctory~. & G. P-larch, 1910 .
6 . Borron, E . B . -~eoort on the
Ea
_in o
f
,loose
t; iver
. . . 1890,
p . 88 .
7 . 11orden, J .
Le
tter l3_)or;
.
Jung 2U, lod7 . iday 31, lbb7 .
8 .
Renison,
R.
'E-he
Day
! '{ A
Ti
ne,
p
.
94.
9 . Innis, 11 . A. 1he Fur '1F: d: , of C n<id~. . p . 23 .
17 3 .
Because of the high fur prices,
trappers flocked from the
railway lines northward. With
the completion of the Ontario
Northland
Railway to Moosonee and the commencement of the
1930 depression, trappers increased and
conditions insofar
as trapping was concerned,
became worse; The Royal
Canadian
Mounted Police Report for 1927 noted:
Foreigners of all
classes are
on
the move into the
north, ostensibly_ trapping and prospecting.
Many
of
them are of a shiftless, immoral type who create
trouble and. discontent among
the Indians . . . .
These
white trappers were single, transitory, and cleaned
out what fur r< sources remained before moving on. 2
The
Indians themselves, in
retaliation,
to
salvage the remaining
fur
abandoned their conservationist attitudes, andAbegan
to kill everyt}zing in sight .
James Dickson fog instance
complained that "the Indian travellers have a deplorable
ingrained habit of killing everything
they came across . . .
The Indian
has a lust for killing. He destroys everything
,
he sees,, male and female, calves, fawns and everything
else. " 3
This habit
was
one which
was borrowed from the new white
trappers
who,set the example on the basis. of` getting game
while "getting was good .
,4
A free-for-all
game exploitation
occurred in the Moose River basin
by the late 1920's . With
the depression
and the popular use of the seaplane, the
1 . Royal Canadian Mounted
Police . Annual Report . 1927 . p. 30.
2 . Laing,, H . IA . "The
Fur Trade Is Sick. The
: illustrated
Canad. : . an For~ s`,
-siiTi . ylUo
Sincicir
.
J. L .
Idea Hits the Trapline. '" F. &
O. ~ ? ay, 194 2 .
3 . Dick7on,
Jar
, . ,. s
.
In
a later survey, Sutcliffe
found that even
moose were rare and the amount of
furs
bought into
the Hudson Bay Company posts
was very small. 3
Similarly, " r7 . S . Dyer in 1928 and
Speight in 1930 saw few
moose, and
r, ported no beaver during a whole
summer spent in
the Moos,~
River drainage basin.
193 . -, .
Also Godsell,
P .
iy~
.
177 .
hundred year old Company policy of paternalism
and upset old
cultural patterns. The withdrawal
bought with
it
famine and
poverty to many Cree
l
One
Cree told W. A. Anderson:
. . . of the suffering in the old days when all the
credit
they
could get at the Company store was
from $5. 00 to 50 . 00 for
their annual outfits at
time when she forest was stripped of game . . .
Indians fled from the posts, . . . into the
forest
in
the hope. of finding a porcupine for food or to
chew the soft pulp of the yellow birch
bark to
stave off starvation
At Moose Factory, the Hudson
Bay Company laid off
4
destructive
. . techniques
for trapping.
a
Cree employees. Nevertheless
to suggest that actual starvation
occurred is
exaggerated. Willy Moore, an old Moose Factory
Cree Indian, found conditions
were not too bad on the island
during
the depression. Geese were caught as usual, and
were traded at the store
.
Fish was
plentiful
.
Clothes were
handmade. The arrival of the railway by 1932 bought with
it construction work for the Cree.
3
The poor
fur
situation nevertheless continued throughout
the 19304s. Even in 1936 in spite of the scarcity
of game,
white
trappers continued to_flow in, and use highly
Lately there has been an alarming increase in
the
number of : ,white trappers who are encroaching. . . .
White trappers
are
using portion
extensively, and
this illegal and vicious practice is becoming
a
serious menace to game conservation. . . . It
became
apparent teat failing special protection the Indian
trappers of the northern regions
would become
destitute -and indigent
0 . March,
1940 .
p
.
49 .
2 . Anderson, W.
A. Anel_
of
Hudson Bay
. . . . p.
12 .
3 .
Interview wi
i W.
June 1971 .
4 . Dept. of Ind: . lan Affairs. Annual Report. 1936. p. 13 .
178 .
Some-action was
taken for game preservation
lvihich
benefitted the Cree Indians .
In Alberta, traplines were
registered in 1927 .
In 1928 a Dominion-Provincial
Conference
approved
Indian trapping reserves
in principle. 1
In 1932
the Watts of
Rupert House pressured the
Quebec Government
into establishing a beaver
breeding Reserve between
Eastmain
and Rupert House' River. 2
Furthermore
by the 1940Ts a marked
advancement had been
made in enforcing
Indian registered traplines. .
. -Fur prices during the second
world war had"been
forced up to very high levels
since no
1 .
Annunl Report.
1936 . p. 16 .
2 . Anderson,
TW. ,
A.
Op . Cit . , passim.
3 . Sinclair, J. E. A~ i7w Idea
rIits the Trapline. " F. & 0.
1942. passim.
4. Dept. of
Indipn Affairs. annual ~ ' ,enort . 1942. p.
146.
5 . Ibid
. ,
1943 .
p
. 160. See also
Lunday, "Salvation of Our
Beaver. "
31
; -4
.
6. Bonnycastle.
R. "Tine Beaver and the Hudson Bay
Comp
.
F. & 0. 1938 . 61 .
17 9 .
Russian
furs were on the world market. 1
Beaver pelts
reached a high of $45, for a prime pelt in 1945
.
In 1946
the
Kesagami Preserve was trapped and 772 beaver were taken
and sold for $18,594 . 2
By
1951, 73,759 beaver pelts were
taken generally in Ontario as compared with
26,483 pelts in
1947,
and 18,OOQ
in
1929 . 3 This take was in accordance with
a beaver quota system adopted in 1947 . With high fur
prices,
registered traplines
and
quotas,
and productive beaver pre-
serves, by 1948 the Department of Indian Affairs exprc=
optimism as to the future of trapping.
. . . As the Indians become accustomed to adjusting
their hunting and trapping activities to
registered trapline systems beaver and r,uskrat
preserves, and other controlled fur conservaticdn
practices, returns will increase, the supply will
become more dependable .
During the 1950's and 1960's, trapping drastically
declined as a
full
time activity.
In
1971 less than 5 percent
of the Indian population at Moosonee and Moose. Factory trapped
as a full time winter activity.
Indeed
within a fifty mile
radius around Moosonee, only thirty traplines were
operated.
From these traplines, per trapper, there was brought in an
average of 9 beaver, less than 1 fox, less than 1 lynx, 6
marten, F, muskrat, less
than 1
otter, and less than
1
mink. 6
1 . Godsell. "War's Impact on the Northland. " F.
& ,
0 . 1940.
p
.
49 .
2.
Dept . o
f
Indian
Affairs
. Annual Retort
.
1940
.
3 . quoted in Forest and Outdoors . Au_ust, 1951
4 . Dept . of Indian Affairs . Annual Re~)ort . 1948.
5 . Inter-ie; -r witn the Dept . L. & F. Conservation
Offic-
',
Moosonee, 1971 .
6. Unpublished survey. Conservation Officer. i"ioosonee . 1971 .
18 0 .
Two circumstances
were principally responsible for this
decl-ne in
trapping. The first was the extremely low price
for
furs in the 1950's and 1960's . Small beaver pelts
in
1963 w, --, re
valued at about $3 . 00 or less, wh=1e the average
price was about $13 . 1 In 1971 the mean fur price at the
North
Bay fur auction was $11 per beaver pet, $30 . per
otter, $6. per mink, $25. for fisher, $8 . per
marten, $18
per lynx, $4
. per coon and $7. per wolf. 2
He
noted a Roman Catholic Chapel frame at Terai~i~ :3iing
and ~ :; Abitibi where many of the Cree wore beads and bowed
before a large cross . 3 At Moose Factory
Barnley established
a school for about 20 students and built a small chuych,4
Barnley preached the doctrines of Christianity but also
concentrated on
such
virtues
as
cleanliness and industry,
while attempting to discourage Cree polygamy. In general the
Indians were "much surprised" and "some interest was
excited. "
5
Barnley travelled the James Bay region, and the Mattagami
Post Journal indicates that he reached there on 16
March 181-14,
and taught Indian syllabics, a system of writing devised by
Wesleyan John West at York Factory.
J .
ri .
%
ethodism in the ~~I iddle ; Nest .
- . 34 .
3 . BarrilEy, G.
"Extract of a Letter"
':lOC: 4 S
T`
-Mazir_e ,
April 1, 1941 . Also Pugh, D. E . "First missionary at moose
Factory. "
T,. oose
Talk
,
June
15, 1971 .
4 . H. B. C . Archives . L135/a/145 .
5 . Barn lv.
On .
Cit . , p. 147.
6. H. B. C.
Arc,--lives .
18
4 .
of very few
symbols which were
written phonetically to
the
Cree language. As it was
unhampered by irregularities,
the system
could be quickly learned in half
a day and could
be
readily acquired by one
Indian from another.
Barnley
did not succeed in
printing the language with
a press,
although
he did print one work using
plaster of Paris . l
He
passed the system on to
his successor, John Horden,
who printed
numerous books in syllabics so that
by 1900
canoeists
wrote: "So general is their
knowledge of this
sign language that every
Indian camping-place and
every
point where
canoe routes diverge, become
local post offices,
where letters written on birch
bark . . . are left for
. the
information of following parties.
"2
The influence of
the Hudson Bay Company over the
missionaries was
enormous . Barnley departed
from Moose
Factory in 1847, perhaps
for financial reasons, but . -perhaps
also because he
had not exercised his influence
according
to
Company interests. Since the Company
owned the land on.
which the Church was' built,
brought supplies-from Europe
for
tr
the Church, and
controlled inland transportation,
missionaries
were dependent on Company support
. 3
1 . Pierce, Lorne. "Watt's
Catechism in the Cree Syllabic . "
The Northland . : ,larch,
1959.
passim.
2 . Peel, : -.
"low the Bible Cane to t?ze Cree. "
A. H. R . 1958 .
passim. See T'ic'nnis, U.
"
Report on the Winisk and
Att'vla-
pi_shat
Rivers
. '
_'
0 . S . C.
^ _
.
1909
.
n .
! ,'-7 .
Also
Shear
F. P . : ~ 3
y
` ;inter
wnd ;- ;ord. .
P
.
w.
3 .
Shearw~ _ter. Ibid . ..
p
. 48 .
Kerr. A . R . , Subsi
stence and
Social Orb--an ra;;ion of the
Runerts--f: ouseCree
p. 20
.
185 .
The Oblate Society, for instance, was
permitted by the
Hudson Eay
Company to preach at Moose Factory, but not to
settle there. Moose Factory was
first visited by Father
Lave
rlocnere, an Oblate, in 1846.
For instance,
following B
arnley's departure,
the
Chief Factor
at Moose Factory in
1848 was requested
to
baptize a dying baby of
a Cree not because
he wanted to "but
because
Amutcheway one of our
Indians appealed" to
the
Chief
Factor.
Clearly
Barnley had been partly
successful
at converting
some Moose . . Factory
Cree . Horden in
1851
admitted
that he had little
contact for any period
of time
with the Cree . "The
Indians depart for
their hunting
grounds in
the Fall, and it
is impractical to follow
.
,,,them,
as
they roam through
the country in search of
game, and
there are no
two families together. "2
Nevertheless Horden
established
a
school house
at Moose Factory and
agreed with
George
Simpson that :
I
have always
considered the Moose Station
as one of
the
most promising of the
Country, the population
and
half caste,
are orderly and intelligent
and well
disposed to receive
instruction. 3
4
Flying Post
on
the
other hand consisted of
"poor creatures
requiring
sympathy and instruction
moreso , perhaps
than any
others . . . . "4
In 1858 Horden
had finished
translation of
the Bible
and Anglican Prayer
Book into Cree syllabics,
and
a printing press,
which had been sent out
in 1854, was
used
1 . H. B . C .
Archives . B135/a/145 .
2 .
Horden,
J .
C: iur
c; - l
iv i
. ssion- ry Society.
Cl,
M5, p.
131 .
Horden.
July
21,
1854 :
. Ibid. ,
June 10, 1657 .
187 .
to
make 120 copies
of birch bark books . 1
These books
were
avidly read by
the Cree . Bishop
Anderson reported
that
" . . . they
wore their books
to the very last
degree ; and
when
away from the
minister they have
their own family
worship
night
and morning and have
their worship on
Sunday when it
comes round
.
,2
With
the completion of St .
Thomas Church in
1860, which is
still used today,
Horden obtained
a regular
congregation
. His Cree
sermons must have been
good since
a British
ship surgeon,
described the
service thus :
I was
struck with the
earnest way they
attended. . . .
When
the seats were filled
they sat dorm very
coolly
in the
passageways; the wom n and
children keep one
side
and the men the
other.
Indian burials
too were solemn,
according to the
AngYican
rites, and
the doctor who
witnessed a Cree funeral,
wrote :
" All looking sorrowful
after the service,
we all walked
to
the Churchyard
. . . . they put in
the earth in turns. . . . "
It
is significant
that in spite of inland
trips, Horden
found the Indians
superstitious as
late as 1870 . 5 With
a
diocese of
200 by 500 miles,
Horden was the
nearest clergy: Lam
a
within
600 miles.
Nevertheless Horden
in'1882 expressed
satisfaction
that " our success has
been very
great, and
except
in remote parts,
heathenism has been
almost entirely
supplanted by
Christianity. " 6
His
Church on Sundays
was
1 .
Ibid. ,
ClM5 .
Sept .
1854,
p.
13--
.
2. in Select
Comr-iittee on the HudE
on Bay Company. ,
1857 . n . 236 .
3 .
Smit ;
; bur-eon on
S': i. _ p
Prince Arthu-,
: . .
Unpublis'
: Ied diary--London to
McDse Factory,
June 13, 1857 .
4 . Loc. Cit .
5 .
Horden. Church TIssi
on-3 , . ry Society. M7,
A80. 1870 .
p
.
217 .
6 .
r;
oci
.
,r
z~
. cnof laic
Gospel
.
D58 .
Ai, : -
a
c`
p. ~
"a great
.sight crowded with Indians to its
Ltmost extent,
and there are few individuals
there who can_-ot take
intelligent part
in the service."
1
His con="irmation
classes
often included as many as forty-five
Indians who were
never absent
from class, and who viewed the ritual
with
deep
solemnity. 2
By
the 1880's Horden
boasted that "thee is scarcely
a
single triby
in
the whole of Moosonee who i-,: : 11 not
come into
immediate contact with either
myself or one of my cler7y."
3
Horden had succeeded in
training twelve native assistants
including
Rev. John Saunders who made an 0ibway
translation
of
Pilgrim's Progress .
Rev. John
Saunders --,,,,,-as an Gjibway,
born at Groundhog
Lake, and seen by Horden in 1860 .
Horden
schooled
him at Moose Factory, and Saunders became
a deacon
in 1876,. and
a
priest in
1879. From 1885 he worked from
his
Headquarters at
B
iscotasing and ran
churches at Mattagami
Post, Flying Post,
Chapleau, and occasionally -a.t
New
Brunswick
Post,, where
he was responsible for initial construction
of
the Church in 1892.
Fathex_Nedelec who visited Flying
Post
in 1892 reported
that Saunders had little success
among the
2.
3.
18
8.
Pollard, Rev. H. "Moosonee
and Its First Bishop." in
Canadi
an Churcz Magazine and Mission Ne~ ,- . June!,
1887. p . 276.
Society for
- on."
The Tvorthlard
.
1956.
passim.
Edvrards, B. K.
"Pilgrimage to Missanabie to
the Grave of
Rev. john Sanders." Northland,
Spring,
passim.
For
constrl.iction
o~ New Post Church see Bath
Chronicl_- .
.'30,
.1892. in
Horden also
was
aided by Rev. D. H.
Nevitt who worked
at Long Pdr-,
cage
House and New
Post on the Abitibi
River. 2
Before
his death
in 1893
Horden concluded
that the Moose Cree
were the "best
cared for portion
of the Indian
family in the diocese
and
among them
the greatest
spiritual results have
-
been-obtained.
Almost
all of them,
scattered over an
immense area, are
nominally, at least,
Christian:. . "3
In 1391
Rev. J. A. Newnham,
Horden's'8uccessor,
commenced
missionary
work at Moose
Factory. He
taught school
daily,
teaching the Cree
children to
read and write
in Cree syllabics
and in Er
;glish, and
occasionally some
arithmetic . 4
On his
inland visits Nc-
~Tnham reported
that the Flying
Post Indians
1 . in
Reni_son. One
Day At A Time.
p
. 32
.
2. Societ,t
for
t(-,e
: ooc
_-,anon of ~. ,':ie Gosn-l
. 1885 . p .
b29 .
t,b .
!
.
3vu.
J
3 .
in
Boom, T . C . B .
"Moose
;li
ssion en
James Bay. " The
1dorthland.
1951 . p.
128 . Also C:~n
a_di. an C:nurcrrran
. 19'(1 pa,si,! ,, .
Nec-;nham. Letter
Book. P . A. C .
1 ;IG29, 11 . 13 . p. 8 .
ordainpd
in 1899.
190 .
and Biscotasina Indians were
extremely backward
it
their
faith.
in his
canoe trip to Hudson Bray also reported
often as possible and responded vociferously. " Morning and
1 . Shearwood
. By Water and lord.
p
. 64.
2 . Scanlon, R" v.
Factory. . . " 1
,
oosc Tp1. 1~
June 2
5, 1970 .
--
. J. '" r A y1 . K . K. nua,ry, 10 0 6
.
11 . ibid . , . _ October,
190 5 .
that the natives delia lted in attending; church services as
evenin_; prayers
ara
commonly
observed in their tents . . . .
'e
Each
family,
he stated, possessen
pious objects, images,
crucifices, crosses, and received
the priests
on their knees . 2
C
3 . ron,
I .
" 'Di~ .
: 1 oitl.
&i-
en ranoc
. 1 1
~ . le
. ~
)
. 1 3
1 . 9M
.
p
. 69
3
M.
c, K_.
,
. July,
1 909.
4
. Slate
Gnzetteer. pas ,im.
the
old ideas repain?
19 2 .
which
Christian ideas
were
accepted, and influenced
Crec
behaviour, but it is
apparent that
by 1900
most Cren
were
nominally , at least, Christians . A second question i2
whether the
new concepts
were additive or
.
sub
St--I-tUtj-ve
to
tne abor!Zin-l Cree
reliZious beliefs?
To what cxteU 6id
Borron's experiences
in the Moose
River basin in the
1880's SuZgestod thKt Torden and the
Oblates
had not
ullminated
all Indiun nborigiorl
bViefs.
Borron noticK
their fear of the
insane, and their
practice of
murdering
the insane by thrusting
them. under the
ice at Moose
Factory . l
This fear
went back to their
belief in the evil spirl,'
WirdQo. Ontario
hind_ Surveyor
Ogilvie in 1891 also
reported this
fear and stated that
the Cree murdered
the
insane
by strangulation. "
Dr. Morris in
1907
found that the
Cree were still
hanging up skulls in
trees, a practice also
recorded at Moose
Factory and Abitibi,
in order to
propitiate
the
spirits of dead animals . 3
i,eith in
1912
saw a mad We
at Moose Factory win
was believed
to be
a conjuror
by the other
Crees . They feared
his power to
conjure them,
more than they
feared his
destructive freedom,
1,
Burron, E . B . Unort on
the B. Pla of
ifudsor Bqy. . . 1890.
2 . 07ilvie,
Lcratory
wurvcys . ,
p .
3 . Morris, A . "To Hudson
Bay By
P. 67.
See also
SkinQqr, A . "Notes on the
Eastern Cree . . . "
passim.
4. TuLtlu, Charles . Our
1
`
and ccmp1ied witn
nis demands fcr numercus materia1 cb
ect, . i
cf
va1ue Ine Mccse Factcry
factcr remarked tnat nis
Indians
wcu1d 1eave, sc qreat was
tneir fear cf ccnurinn 1
Leitn and Sninncr
bctn fcund tnat cn ki11inq
anima1s tne
C
cce ccntinued tc p1ace
tcbaccc in tne aws cf
triq. bear
and
deccrated tne sku11s,
wni1e
Sninne
r a1sc fcund tne
bear feast custcm
Aqain sucn practices indicate
veneraticn
fcr tne abcriqina1 spirits
Sa
indcn,
an
Cb1ate
p
i
i_vct
a,L
, tri
c eve
ins, , LcfJ
6furiny
- .
120 s, fcund tnat
tne Cree Indian tnere nad nct
yet, been
deep1y tcucned by civi1izaticn
since ne ccntinued tc be
tcta11y
enqaqed in a dai1y fiqnt fcr
surviva1
~
A+ I
Si 1 Indian est
aucurd nui enccure un
titre inccu1te,
trcssier, pcur ainsi
dire
1 a, b, c, de 1a
civi1
isaticn, etranz, er a 1 esprit
sccia1, ce1a est du
en
qrande partic a scn mi1ieu primitif
Aucurd nui
Ame i1
est retenu dans un vu1qaire
tnere K tnere,
1a 1utte quctidienne
pcur 1a vie materie11e
Cette
vie pcur 1ui cst si_
difficu1e qu e11e s empare de
tcutes ses enerqies et devient une
nantise Icus
ses effcrts tendent vers ce but
vivre I.n cette vie ,
c est 1a cnasse, 1a y5cne, tcut en
1ui At abscrbe
par
cette necessite ~
Inere are ctner
scattered examp1es cf
adnerence
tc
c1der
A
be1iefs Cccper fcund
tnat a fcct R C M - ccnstab1
e was
reqarded
witn awe by tne Indians
as a ccnurer, and ccn
sequent1y nc
Indians wi11 try tc escape
because. cf nis
1
maqic pcwer i
McAustin
in a survey a1cnq,
tne Missinai bi
River in
10. suffered tne
deatn cf cne cf nis
men
His eiqnt
1
LC\,
C K
A
, um
mcr
and
Winter cn Hudsc
n Fay p
51
2
It
_i d ,
-
51 A1sc C ~~a_r1nc1,
A`Fa,r Custcms
C \ S
- R
11-
Sa
indcn
. ,_
icnnaa1
12.
p
22
11 C cper, J_ 1ie,
f1.crtmrn
A1qcnquin Supreme
Feinq p 6.
Wdlan workers
quit,
work
and
it was impossibic
to obtain
other indians
to
replace
thcm because
or
their fear of
the
death.
I
Clearly
the Wee
retained some aspects
of thcir
old religious balinfs
into Mtwentieth century in spl&_~
of the
wor%
of
the misnionaries .
Non-material values of the
Cree
wore
not greatly
altered during t!
F
19 4 .
fur trade pAriod
because of the sub-
stitutive nature of thn Christian ruligion. The compariso-n
MGod and the devil
with Manitou and Windigo by thu Urn,_,
permitted an easy substitution of the concepts
. I n addition
the presentation
of faith and
salvation
as a matter strictly
between God and the individual
fitted with the indiv"I 'dualistic
type KCrua socicty
. Tne notion of the miLsionery and of
the
shaman both
fuifilled
for the
Crec the analogous role
of a bridge between this life and the
supernatural w6r1d.
Thus as Rousseau has noticed tho
indinns could retain thoir
old ways, with a
patina of Chrintlanity and call thcmnelve: ''
Christians .
2
I t is doubtful that
the fundamental dogmas and
the decline of the old shibboleths took plaUc until cot-n7 ) ul,_',ory
Al
education had been operating
for a generation.
The effects of the adoption of the
Christian roligion
because of its
similarities with aboriginal beliefs are not
ac pronouncud as might bn beliaved. Little
cultural As-
ruotion occurred anonj An Me
of
Noose
Factory From W. ,
1 . KcAuktin.
hap"M
vnd
Field Notes . . .
to teach
Cree: c lildrcn all year around .
At
Moose Factory,
hordcn in 1
SJO
beG%. t" 1 tt1c
first
small
boardingy;
1 .
Interview wit;K Rev
. Louttit, 01: ' it . Thomas AnClican Cnir" : .
19 6 .
school
for 2 or. .
10
select
Ktudents
who
were trained to enter
the cl cr}
y .
In
1905
a large boarding school was begun.
Although the building was burned in 1914, it was rebuilt a,
a residential school for
100
children. Wis school was
replaced by the Dent. of IndiRr Affairs in
1954
with the
240
pupil, 1 OO: E
The House
Factory Public School_ for local_ Cree was built in the early
1960's . 1
TM
ac
:}ol
in
IYl P posre2s 'd 1. u6
_ . . r 3
o1:
V
a
dormitory, school
house and outlying buildings
. Enroll-
ment was 24 children who were taught to take care of the
farm and garden, to saw wood, provide water and run errands .
I . . .
Girls
were taught
sewing
and mending . As the school was
Anglican "special attention was given to moral and rcli ious
training . "2
the Superi
. ntencient of
h
aducat
ori
.
r r r
;,
. 1.
p
" 'I . January, _i9OU .
Report. 1912, (Report
19 7 .
In
1932 tire
Indian boardin school~: . adopted the Ont~rrlo
curriculum, but ,;tres: > remained
or, domestic sciencE: : ~, manual.
trainini ,
the
us(:
of
tiic:
and
readi n ~ .
Assistance wa
.
- . pro,,- 1_d(- : d
for proniisin,
Indian. students to
erir,~: r ri_r. i;rl scr~ooL . - '
In
1
91
~~` 7
the Indian education pro~i ram
was fitted into the larger Canadian community throui ;h the
encouragement of Indian youth to attend non- Indian
public.
scilools . 2 Scholarships were offered,
and
an
adult education
Indians were established in major cities . 3
In 1966 a charter incorporated
the Moosonee Education
Centre, and set the
objectives as the conduction of , ,ud_ies
in eduCational, vocational_, recreational, social and
cultural needs of the residents of James
and Hudson' s - Bay.
The school offered courses
to the Cree in heavy equipment
and. preventive rna
: intenance, sewing, handicrafts,
building
construction
and academic upgrading. +
the later
l. . Dent . of 1i,id lari
1()32.
2 .
I' - d. ,
1T)_7 .
_
Li)ia. ,
I95~5 .
4. Jr1' c)r" r : atior)
provided by R . G. Fov: ler, Director, Moo;_onee
5
.
1' 7
7?_ . Northcrr) Collc = ;~: of Applied Arty; arid
;ccul'.urative, process clad
many compulsory
feature
;- , .
P;ducation, ('or instance, under the Indian Acts- was compulsory
from the are of 6 to 16 . 1'J it;h the arrivaa of a
comp
mechanical civilization education vras essential to adapt
t~- 1E
: Cr(,E - ,
to
rr{p
: i_d1y ch~it~t 1nt tcc ~noa.o_;a .c : , and to i_n: ;ti1.1
in hira work habits, motivations and conformance to ste - ,dy
routines in order to adapt him to the requirements of
t?ie
industrial society
. Ir,
ti)e process
edu(: ation w,,~ .; seen
by
4i1=iC i
)
.
' 4vCiltf~
.
t
cU.LtUY'~ ,1
1Ci~~Yli,1_t;y
Directiv,- - ~ ri~
l.r=i" d doi,- n for the Oblate Fat1lc rs Residential Scrjool: l.
: i_1'?
.1- 9 5 8 ,
for instance, aimed at the
assimilation of they
" rE ~c . 2
The
child was to be isolated as much as possible from alS
native background, ideally ti,.enty- four hours a day,
- - t~%" elve
montr: s a year
to prevent 'exposure' to tiiie lndiar. c~.il.tLre .
Upon graduation it was hoped that the young; tr: zns- cultural_
Indian would integrate into a non- 1
: ndian
c: o'rnr;
.urlity,
ard
19 8 .
would remain permanently settled away
from his community of
origin.
In
contrast the
1
awt;
lornc Report on Indian educ<ati.o11
has
Su=
~ c stt
d the aim of j';iviflt
ne le arne d se lf-
re liance and inde pe nde nce ,
and was give n
fre e dom to e at
what he
wishe d, to choose his
be dtime , to
e xplore his natural
surroundings
and. to le arn
physical skills .
Re wards
ye re
provide d for
conformity to the
traditional. Cre e value s such
as the use of the Cre e
language .
At the
age of six the Cre e
child was re move d from
his
pare nts and
was place d in a boarding
school . He re he was
force d to use the English
language and was
pre ve nte d from
spe aking
Cre e . The food and
e nvironme nt was diffe re nt,
and
stre ss
was place d on, survival in
a totally. _ diffe re nt and
fore ign socif'ty, which
se e me d ve ry comple x.
School, books
bore
little re se mblance
to the Indian way of
life , and bore
an anti- Tndian
bias symbolize d by
picture s of Indians
with
fe athe rs and storie s
of "massacre s"
of white se ttle rs .
1 .
Wintrob, R. M. F -
Sinde 7l, P . S . Educa
tion and Ne ntity
Confl
ict; Among Cre y, Yout'?
.
1968
. Chance , N.
""Acculturation,
r
Se lf- ide ntity, . ' -
and Pe isonolity Adjustme nt
. "
A. A . 1956 .
Also Hawthorne
. A Surve y o f Conte mpora
ry Indians
of Canada .
'Vol .
TT .
pp.
112
to
traditional
found their
Phi, l, lrrn themselves
mixed English
words
traditional chores.
20
0 .
Unlike
the traditional life, the
compulsory
routine of
scheduled events compelled
conformity and limited individuality.
1 1 confuFlon of self-identity resulted .
conscious
perception
feelings
towards
the regimentation of
school_ life
separation
from families, was followed by boredom
way
of life
and its inconveniences .
children
rebellious, disrespectful, and
b , ca?
; .
less
proficient
in
the
C , 1 ut
; 1 . , . nan
with C ree, and were hostile towards
If the child continued
his education
into
high school he was sent from the residential school
TherQ was no longer
a
of anc l s place in society.
Negative
and
with the
Parents
the
to"white"high schools
at
T
. immins or North Bay.
Suckaney, a Moose Foutory C ree, in
a
letter
reported the reaction ofmany C ree students
Secondary School. They missed hunting
into trouble with city
laws
.
With new freedom at school
enjoyed, but many students abused alcohol
the
student Otzrvive the transition and do
a process of assimilation
often occurred to
the youth ceased to identify himself with a
nomadic way of life . T"<e European marginal.
adopted whereby tou C rec: identified
himself as
white in an industrial soclc; ty
.
l. . Moo2 e Tqlk.
Fc
; b . 1 _5 ,
1 971 .
Edmond
in
Moose Talk
at the Earth Lay
and fishing, and ran
the social life
was greatly
and drugs . 1 , Should
well in high school,
the extent, that
trapping,
outlook was
a middle class
20 1 .
Sin , e
the
early 19001, ;
tr)r
educe
ti orml
accu ~ ttar'it : i_ v e
process
.
: as
occurred- at Moose Factory to the
extent t; lat
the
Tloosc Cree
are now 'European modified'
in
outlook.
T
1 :,
process
occurred not simply in the classroom
but from a. l_ l
1_ 97
0
1
J ; J
1 . 8 )
percc )t
;
0f
TAioose Cree possessed_
education pr, st grade
9,
yet the Moose
Cree liv ed in European
style houses, held 'European'
salaried jobs, and. were bilingual
in Cree and Engli: >
of, y11au: ii_ :
Syllabics used
in
ti; ( :
: cor; " nunity newspapers are
now int, er-
sptrrsed with frequent; English
words for many common iteirrs,
and few of the Cree youth are
said to be interested- _ in
learning the syllabic
code . The Cree language is
also
becorrinr
less used.
the
lrrd. i_ ~ J r) :;
not this
l
. if)terv ic -v , s
with Rev .
Louttlt, St . T'hornas Anglican Church
.
1 , , '~ nnE
Kinder-arten
tca. c ric~ r
Lit
t: ie
cf'nl. rr' .
1_ , o_ -v lell
P I )''I'),
prr. lcipal
or
the
1'" 1, , )o s ie
J o:
-in
_ K_ n_ ) ; )_ ton,
T~ 1oo
. > o))!~ e
lr) ;
ia. an~ Vr : i : L~ z % e, ( tid
ernploye ;
at
tit(
moo; : , ol1ce P o
; t ( J . L'l'ici
; .
bt; .
t,
202 .
generation but the next will. die,"
I
carries much truth.
the disappearance of the language the last
and
the strongest
cultural heritage which
has
blocked assimilation will have
passed . The approach towards education which favoured
schooling
for compotcnce in while society, rather that for
what i , left of ;Indian society,
is leading to rapid
integration.
O f,' 1 e
r
W:aite C ontact; AEenele .
The Legal S
tructure
in addition to
the
Hudson Bay Company,
the C urch a rA
the School
system, other
historical contacts of the the
1 900' s have included the establishment of a Royal. Canadian
Mounted Police outpost at Moose factory in 1 926, "toyc:ope
with conditions said to be
existing, among; the Indian. , of
that district . "2 Annual Rcport of the R . C . M. P . seem to
indicate little crime of a serious nature other
than -
occasional references
to drinking and wife- beating. , Today
.
the
R . C . M . P . post is still at Moose factory i;0t local.
juri:cdiction for most crimes is undo the O ntario
Provincial
Police stationed at 1 4oosonce, .
sue
editions o ' local papers, M_oe
Talk
and Ministikok
under
Court News .
a serious problem.
The
Addiction Research
Foundnt _on blames
Indian drinking on the Indian': ; marginal position and then
cxclunion by racism or
lack
of
education from tho white
culture
.
This interpretation ignores historical inform-
ation which reveals that Moose Factory
Indians
,
in the 1390 1, -;
drank "horrid drank "horrid berry wine" and "vile native beer" to become
drunk
. I
pf
P'q
to
obtain
white middle class status.
It is probable that, like early
fur
trail" drinkinn,
liquor
provided occasional relief from a
hard, boring routine
with liquor easily accesuibjq and
the escape has become easy, and is
often taken. Overcrowding of homes forces drunks
onto
street, and although the Indians may
not drink
more
than
white population, their problem is more obvious. . ,
With low levels of education, unskilled labouring jobs,
the major users of
jails and lockups.
of'deeper problem; , , are not remedied
the Cree often fail to understand
the nature or significance of the
Charge,
or fail
to care
.
Many Cree youth become frequent
repeaters with their names
reappearing
From time to
time
for convictions of identical
necessary
for survival.
relatively cheap today,
too
the
the
and drinking, Indians are
Crimes which are symptoms
rr
in criminal courts, where
olfences.
J
203.
1 .
U"
_ . h,
, ,
, o
>93
~ ,
wc
; ~ r
; ~
, ir
. ~
x~ t
~ r: ~ . 1C~ _--_} .
_~
. ~ ~ K
.
Iii .
Aug.
7, 1904 .
70I? i75
and' i he
L uw
tt
C: a ril! ( 1t !
L'J` ~ '1_-far(: ,
T` iov
1967
.
3 .
c-
f
:
Court
Rews in backissuesof Moose Talk or Mini
tikok.
20 4 .
The police
contact,
with the
Cree
of
the Moose Rivo-c
has
been important and significant in brinain3 to bcar tHe
white punitive force on thuse
who have not moulded thUr
character along lines
desired by the white society.
Other contacts with the Cree include the federal
Dupt .
of Houlth which. in the
late 1940's established Health
Services at Moose Factory.
Since 1942 health service,,,
at Moosonce have been h. andled by tar:
:
Roman
Catholics.
Tuday
government conLact with the Cree also 1noladus thr
:
Dept . of Indian Affairs which
maintains
an
office at Noose
Factory, and the Provincial Departments of Social and Family
Services and Child Welfare
which checks on complaints-of
neglect . The Department of
Lands and Forests also exercises
authority over traplines and fur quotas, as well as
Indian
fire fighters.
Social Organization .
As a number of anthropological studies of the Czee have
indicated,
1
the jrowth of government subsidies
and of
wage
k
labour altered the meaningful environment Yrom
adaptation
Al
to ecological habitat strictures to the
requirement
:
of wage
labour. While during the aboriginal and the . Cul trading
period, scarcity of Came forced mobility, a lack of material. .
posscssions, and
small
LKbal groups,
a regular
lncom,, ;
1 . KnEcrs, Edward . "Chniginn Suttlement
Patterns of the Crop
und
Ojibwa in Northern Ontario. " S. W. J . h .
1963
Trudeau,
.
Passim.
rudeau,
Jean.
Culture Chnnqe
Amohn the
'
ThC.
ei ,
ona_i
employment opportunities on James Bay as compared with the
year
round opportunities in inland
settlements near
the pulp
mills were apparent .
'
Ontario Northland Railway, and the Radar Base during the 1050's
led to the rapid development of the Cree
village
. Today
village integration at Moose Factory is complete, and employ-
ment follows the regular five or six- day week pattern.
Community activities are organized at a 150 member Cree
Misawaynikan Hall and
include binZ,oes,
dances, movies, clubs
and ; pE`C'. 1a1 social activities . ToE_'TE; is also a softball
:1 .
0cpri
; r,ient
of . ind :ian h
Cf< = i. :i
rU .
A
imual
Report- 1912
.
P . 0W. , 1924.
Political structure
20 7 .
league during the suNmer . The Courch provides the con0c
of much social activity,
and the Anglican
Church Auxiliary
runs a retail servicc for nandicrafts .
Al Mnoso2ee a Cree village has also developed . Dur!r,,,,
the 1 0. 00's conutcuction
of a radar base there, companies
offered many high paying jobs
for unskilled Crec labourers.
Crew from up the East and West coasts of James Day were
attracted to Moosone"
because of the readily available jobs .
Wits the
Mnison.
C, ne
My
At
Tin" t,
*
p
*
Co'-!
.
2 .
a
uviPu0
c_,TFr;Ta .
006.
Vol .
I T,
an d forn uli . e d
as
v o
: oarwd with the e arlie r fur-trade or aborigin al
pe riod
.
At
Mooson ue howe ve r, In dian -political structure re main s
We lame
l n di
, an
village
of 1, 0 0 0 at
Mooson e e ,
housin g.
un de r the
n di o1, Act
n on -pi i. l ; c n t.
20 9 .
Moosa I + ' story C . : "
21 0 .
is
locaWS-uth of
the
Moosonce business
section, and
P,
separated
from
the
town
by a small creek
which is
crossQ
by a one lane
bridge . W
village is composed
of somt
200
shacks which
arc built an the
proparty of the
Ontario
NorthiDnd
RAlway . Flany
of the indians
nru tr%nsicnts
fu . ,-,
along the james
Bay coastline
. Most Cree
there lack jobs
and
since they are
squatters
there is little
attempt to
organize the community
to establish
better communal
11vin
tArou,h
cummunel services or
sociul evunts
. OnL or Ln" !L
problems is their
marginal outlook.
Antonovsky
define=s
marginality as the
lasting contact of two
cultures with
on
culture being
dominant in power
and reward
potentialA in,
boundaries
separating the cultures
are permcnblc
and pormit
the less
sophisticated culture to
adopt the patterns
of the
dominant
culture, which
however are not
easily harmonized in
the less
sophisticated culture
. Nevertheless the
promise
of greater rewards
tends to lead to
5Wdisinlegra,ion
of
the one
culture in favour
of the style
of livinE of thr
olh~c.
Marginality
was origAnally
2pparent during--thc
fur trrdc
with
the
desire of the Cree
to obtain o
whit0clothing,
which were
at times
less efficient
than native furs
.
in
SocUl F- ~ rces .
19
56 .
21
1 .
copy the live
of the whites,
trying; to ent, to
dress to imitate: the civiliz"d. To arrive at thi,-,
ideal. , to resemble the whites, they dream of movie,
towards civilization about which they relate of the
marvels. Some of our Indians have: already made
trip
to civilization.
They
a. re con
>idered
an heroes,
superior to those around them
.
1
Thus
in the
190K
clc ction of Chief Michael,
a_ speech wnic
,.
i
dealt, with -his fadiliarity with white technology led to r~is
popularity
. 2
Indians
favoured were always
those with
greater familiarity and acceptance into the white culture,
Church, or today ownership of a car or snowmobile. -' With
the arrivalof civilization and numerous contact agents such
as teachers, nurses, government administrators and ' White
foremen, the
Cree
had
undergone
a
process of extensive inter-
action with the white culture. Features of the white culture,
principally
life. style and accommodation
were adopted.
Today
with typically European jobs, the European modified Moose
Factory Cree have outgrown their marginality JhrouSh
familiarity. At hioosonee, however, the Cree
have
mikratnd
from
isulpt& settlements to- the ' r. &
lkgad
' during
thl
past fif-
teen to twenty years.
Lack of
1 . S<
; indon .
_En
Missio
nnant
.
p
.
51 .
(translation mine) .
2
.
c_ u_ ra ra .
p
.
0-
-_
.
i)iinning
R. T' d .
Although oil
welfare,
the Moosonee Indians frequently purchase on time
symbols of'
white status such as cars, motor bikes and snowmobiles to
emulate the whites.
Such
expenditures sometimes lead t o
sF vE;ro d"I7rivation of nece sitLes .
C) Myte rial
Culture
1 . Technology and Exploitative Activities
From 1900 to 1911-0' s, Crce techniques connected At: i
trappin`, such as mobile dwellings, and lack o1' heavy
material
. possessions remained. predominant. Now tecKnolo- ;ical
developments of the twentieth century such as mill sa0n
lumber, nail , motors, high powered guns, canvas covered
canoe' s,
and
factory made snowshoes were popular and
. w1dQy
used by the Cree trappers . Yet while these devices increased
efficiency in trapping, they also reduced wolf-sufficiency
and
increased
capital
cost
necessary for trapping.
With the
radical increase in white
trapper
numbers during thq 1920' s
and
reduction of fur profits, tale Crec tended when possible to
look for work based on regular salaries . Until. the completion
of
th .
railway,
t cre was
a
high demand
for the Crce a:
voyageurs from the railhead to Moose Factory by tourists,
' .
surve,ors, Geo1o1A s, exp1orers, indian agen s and nanJ
Tnis demand forced Crce waies up One canoeis no ed JF
in `,` ne Cree woried a11 da, as guides for
$55 a ~1nW
and found neir own food
B, 96
nowever ne comp1ained
na ne,
c r
,c
emp1u,mei, i
, a :J,
W_
wno nad
woried
a Moose Eac or,, reca11ed na nere
was
mucn more wori for ne Cree a Moose Eac or, before ne n11wn,
come
nan af er
1ndians
were
emp1o,ed in ne iq;,c
Moose
Eac or, sawmi11s
and
ne1ped
in ne cons ruc ion
of
a11 ne bui1dings :ince mos of ne food was produced
1oca11, ne Cree p1owed and narrowed ne fie1ds, oo1,carc
of ne norses and
ca 1e,
cu wood, nau1ed wa er,
narves ed
ne na,, bui1 boa s and woried in ne b1acismi n snop
Tnere was a1so wori on ne snips of ne evi11on EAre and
Hudson Ba, Compan,, end in ne 1arge freign canoes wnicn
brougn mai1 Ad
supp1ies from
Cocnrane
~
Tne o,a1 Canadian
Moun ed
-o1ice epor
recorded na ' nere is no des i u ion
amongs nese peop1e
R
1
"
Rpc r
cn
ne __
Eisn and Eisneries
cr ne
W"Q C Oa cr daaes
a, "
`:
p
:
Q, cr indian
rrairs nna1 is pcr `-
R
:
21 5 .
1
.
i n i ~ , o < ~ n etw t
;Yt)r
o f
wxpl_o . ~ ;~ ~. ti . v ;J
acti v i ty wc:rc
:
E, ea_t .
Un ur,
. lly man y
Can adi an 1n di Nn s to day are an eco n o mi cclly
dc, prc
: sed
gro up si n ce Uwi r
i n creasi n g
n umbers hav e o ut-
stri pped mean s o f such
tradi ti o n al li v eli ho o ds as fi shi n g,
trn 9pi n g,
gui di n g
an d
han di crai 'ts . ThUr lack o f aducati o n
;. ,
, .
, Y?
.
co n fi den ce,
8. ~ '
. ~
;Y~ Cs
:~ s:~ 1. VCY2e
s
< .
~ an d bargai n i n g po wer
co mbi n ed wi th
whi te di scri mi n ati o n has led to po v erty
. 1
The VII-Den n i s
Co mmi ssi o n
, _ v po rted:
i '_' u 1 . uC. 1_ ti OYl, po v crQ,
an d lo t so ci al status Lo rd W,
rUai n the In di an po pulati o n
i n co n cen trated po ckets,
where these co n di ti o n s are
perpetuated an d wo rsen ed.
The
co n di ti o n o f the In di an ci ti zen i n
On tari o , i f'
measured
by co mmo n ly accepted yardsti cks o f
pro gress
an d. well-bei n g2 i s so po o r that i t
i s
almo st
i mpo ssi ble
to beli ev e . . . .
0 ,
. ,
Co n di ti o n s at Mo o se Facto ry are
far better than an i o n '
mo st In di an ban ds.
Av erage an n ul earn i n gs per capi ta
i n
1967 were
:x
;-', 2_5 6 . whi le an av erage o f $361 .
was earn ad per
perso n
per
mo n th wo rked. Ni n e
percen t o f the po pulati o n at
Mo o se Facto ry i s
emplo yed less than 2 mo n ths, -5 0 percen t
i s
emplo yed
less than si x mo n ths, whi le
35
percen t i ; emplo yed
mo re than
4
mo n ths. 3w So me
15 0 Mo o se Cree fami li es o btai n
regular emplo ymen t
at the Mo o se Facto ry In di an Wfai r s
ho spi tal an d i ts large heati n g plan t
. The Hudso n Bay Co mpan y
emplo ys Crees
as do es thu On tari o No rthlan d Rai lway, an d. Two
I3_ , y En terpri ses, a tran spo rtati o n fi rm.
In
the summer
1 . Hawtho rn e,
, 1 . 17 . A Surv ey o f Co n tempo rary Tn dl un s o f
C,
. .
:da
.
P )
.
1.
U.
2 . hall-Dn n n i . Rur)o rt quo ted i n To p i cal Quarterly Summer
19(l .
3 .
i i wtho rn n
d
. h . A
Surv ey o f the Co n tempo rary i n di n n s o f
21
6 .
amploymenL
is provided
opurating water taxis
botwecn QoowA&. . -
and Moose Unctory.
Other employment
is more individualistic
in nature
.
John Ulucboy
N'
Muose
Factory is an
excullcnt wood
carvur, a still sharvd
.
by few
others . Many of the Cree
women however
are actively
involved in the
production of such
handicrafts as
muklunkc,
gauntlets, headbands,
leather bags, moccasins,
vests .
and bead
work. Krt time
trapping provides
fur and nkin;- :
for such enterprise
.
At Moosonee the
employment situation
is radically
different
from Moose Factory
. As transients to
the TH''W
il
from up the
coast, these Cree lack
high school education
and
familiarity with
employment possibilities
in ti c: ragion.
With the completion
of the
major construction projects
of
the
1950's,
many Cree
without employment
have yewaihcd at
Moosonee
on the welfare
roll.
Some Cree
are however involved
in Nisku,
a local pulp
cutting oppration which
wmploy: d son, :
15
cutters .
Employment is also
gaincd fro? QaidinE
.
In 19YO
2,016 hunters shot
over 12,000 goose and
ducts and spent
over
$ 100,000 in the
process .
1
Same of this
money went to
Indian
guides .
Food and Food
PrannraLion.
In 1890 E.
B . Barron
wrote that the Cree
in the Muuz(i
River basin
:
I . Auus q T n1k
.
j,'- j- nu,- 1ry
197- 1- '
21 7 .
arc Cond of
flour
Arvin- ;acquirad a taste for it, a_
well no oatmcul . Some 10,000 barrels oC flour,
besides
biscuit and oatmual are brought out annually .
At Abitibi Qu Indianp cat 400 bags of flour annually.
A large quantity of tea is also used, A lbs, a ho . ` ' ,,'
per annum. 1-
Mropcan
foods were
highly
popular in the early 1900' s
because of thair case of
pruservation wbich allowed the Crw,~ :
to subsist ovef periods of bad hunting in winter . Hunigmann' s
analysis of food consumption in 1948 indicated a heavy
concert-
ration of canned food . ` An examination
of
foods
salis ti-doy as
cold at hoor~ Uctory compares
wit ;:
Wes in untarlu generally.
So great is the use of European
foods such as sugar, polished
rises, jams and
canned goods that it is true that some Cree
would shoot and sell a goose in order to buy a smallwaan of
Vickor otner canned meat . European
foods and the welfare
system today have
enabled the Cree to
remain
completely
aloof from dependence on game and other ecological rcstrictions
which had been so important only a century ago .
Dress .
J' hn ` ., orden in the
1850. 1s wrote
that the European style
of dress wvs,pniversal.
Rae reported in
the
late Y' ' 80' s
that :
A
They usually wore a blanket coat, a dark blue hood,
one or two ,%T ovan flannel shirts and lcZGings of a
strong blue, red or white
cloth . Toey carried a
Fire baa with pipe, tobucco,
flint,
and stool and
brimstone matches
. To balance this they carried
borron
.
J
-
: -;
. B .
Rkport on
the W
sin of
Eudson
my. . .
1890 . P . 75.
donigman, i. J .
foodwnys
in a
MusACE Community. 1948 .
DUSSIM.
Graat black
relt hats with down
turn`d brims
were also
common as were shnw1c,
gowns and petUconts
amanE the woNen,
2
Such dress was
standard until the
arrival of the railway
and
civilization in
1930
. The ease of
transportation
combinad
VU Lho rAlo U
the 1940's
nnd the expansion of
sales
in tnc Hudson's Bay
stores led to the
adoption of current
;
European
fashions among the Crce .
Wrist watches,
rings,
lipstick,
and perfumes
all began to
be used following
the
,
depression . Today among
the Cree
youth, many of
whom board
ir lorgcr northern
communities
such as Timmins
and North Bay
during the
winter, current
sub-culture fashions
are popular
including
flare pants,
bright shirts,
and the non-medical
use
of such drugs as
Marijuana and
L. S . D . .
AdoriCinal and
fur trading
customs which were
initially
abandoned in
favour
of
the
marginal approach
towards
identification
and imitation
of the
European
patterns of dross,
have beelre'
- placed today
by completu
assimilation of
the European
cultural trends
in
dress .
Housing.
21 8 .
a nmell . - . re
and shuuth
knife . Over the
s6ouldur
thoy wore a
powderhorn
and whot and
ball pouch .
The woman's
dress was
of blue cloth,
some 6 to
8 inc
Us Crom the
ground. LygElnEs
were orna-
mentnd with ribbon
or colourful
garLarings .
1
It is impossible
to
place an exact date as to
the transfer
Ape
.
Jnhn . "On tAw Conditions and
Characteristics
of ; some
oC thn Entive
Tribes U
the Hudson's Bay
Company's
Tnrr1Wr1P2
. "
1885.
R . S . A
. i . p.
485.
C: ,,, I
"
. , -; -, ( J ,
J! ~ ', .
7ohn
Aorden,
Missionary
Prh
VI no &Wnhrm,
Soph_ia . Br,,A) 6i, ;
~ E
! H~ VE7~ 00?
AW951
17-1 Id _00( F-
o
77717-_
21
9 .
of the C r e, ' e Indian
Pr om th, tohec to t 'WWEcabin . 1_ ? . t . h! ,
_ 18 90 s canvoo tents,
tepees, log t :nt ,
g tent fr %wn~
wer c all being used
.
Bishop , d~wnham
r epor ted t' h%t at Ii< en, -
Wctor y in the summer famili . - s slept in cotton
c7_ nv ? s mur qunc
tents,
and used their tents of iEwums for cooking and
day
use . The
mar quees wer e equipped with wooden floor s while;
the wigwams wer e
cover ed
with
cotton, bir ch bar ? ; . , old
bl. ^nkets or deer skins and wer e not ver y popular
. l-
Son
Hewnham, wife of the
Minister descr ibe=d the scene in 0 96:
The common outside the Mission windows is
dotted all
over. with the wigwams of the Indian families and the
.
smaller calico tents of the young men and ver y
pictur esque is the scene,
the smokey pots br istling
out of the top,
and
cover ed
helot. :
t~r ith
odd pieces` 0 1' ~~
canvas . . . with her e and ther e a sheet of bir ch bar k.
The 190 0
sur vey r epor t noted that hull-br eeds in the Moose
River
basin usually had huts or log houses, with a little:
par don of potatoes . 3 Tullblooded
Indians lived "in tent, ,
most
of the year ,
WAen
Gr ouping
ar ound. posts dur i. na the summer
months in the ear ly 190 0 ' s, tints wer e popular , and
Abi
. tii:> i
fl
Post
was
descr ibed
a
"liter ally
white with tents and swar ming
with men, women and childr en
and doffs, especially childr en
end dog, s . " 5
Bor r on
descr ibed one house with
a
good supply of poplar
cut and
1 .
1, i F wn
h
nm
Tattor book . Public Ar chives of C anada.
2
.
Mir
W2qds . p . 20 .
3 . Rn por t on
' _ ~
. ~0
11 , vjJ
22 0 .
rying Per t hp
fivPPIOCC, a
weather*
cock pbinted red on
c?
pole, numcrou2
trophies of bear, and deer and a permanent
substantial log
stage for noat . The 1900 Exploration
a : '
Eorthern Ontario Report
stated
that the Miss-shlb-a-gec
family
in 1900 had plnnt_: d
corn,
potatocs,
G
:
. nerally few of
the indians grcw gardens,
although it was common practice to construct swall wooden
houses in winter. Newnham found that in summcr the Indians
lived in strong cotton tents which
were
open to sunliEht
and
air but during the winter, the Indians who did not travc-1.
inland to trap crowded into little
log
cabins.
0
Fountain and
N
Workman found1 that these huts could be easily erectnd in six
hours and
were square
in shape
with no windows . - They were
1 .
Borron,
E. B . A R
: : port on the hudson
Bwy
Bnsin, 180"l . p . 3Y .
2 . RnnorL on the
Mulopation and Survey 7F`ff~
`L _rn
Ontario,
3
. Dickson,
J .
WNoring
HurUiCcn 0-,-,,te,r_1,o"
~. u,:
4, Kay, G . "T C Abitibi Q .
ion . "
O. I. N.
1904 . p . 110 .
5 .
TT77FcT_. 71 ` 1' v
rm,cr
int
of
p .
&)Ulltain.
Workman,
j .
culturyl A_
sourRs
of
- Auit1U
. " O. D . M . A. n . 1905 .
1907.
t Q "
"
Qgri-
noWd.
for
tanir
dirtin4ss. By 1910 IndiRns in
thn Lntorlor
of the Moose River basin near
Wcnowly constructed railway,-.
nearly all
lived in
houses;
or tuores . "
The D
partment of Indian Affairs ruportcd that :
The
Ronort attributed this
to school graduates who had been
to refuse
. . . Tn the older and
more densely settled districts,
II': odcrn influences are very noticcable
on
WE
reservcs.
Here the ope-room sWckn are fast disappearing and in
their place stands a good class of buildings with
shingled roofs,,
large windows and separate bad-room. . .
2
Vc ~onr thcir honor I`: !
: t,
clear and
coTfortnbi
22 1 .
"
0 very few now have the
live in old-style
houses and surroundings .
To the north at Moose Factory, although some houses
existed by 1915,3 tepees,
tents or log shacks were-still
common. Barnard complained during his visit
to the Loose
Fnetory camp that t everything is squalid, poor and in dis-
order
.
. . . If they
have any beds they are carefully concealed.
A
Curran in 1907 described one Cree shack at New
Post:
.
.
. 1,' 1v found that there was but one room v1solutely
devoid of furniture save a big box sLov?. On thc
floor in different places were heaped up piles of
dirty fur and
dirtier blankets ... Tne floor and
the walls were covered ,with filth, and
the windovi
and door casin9' s were chinked with scvaps of fur .
5
Tne win6ows were covered with dirty paper sacks. .
. .
Housing rapidly improved for the Cree at Moose Factory
with
the completion
Of
the
1905
Treaty Number 9 . A sawmill
was
1 . Dept. of Indian Affairs . A
. R.
1912 .
passim
.
Vid. ,
191K.
p . XIX
* cf Wil, J . "Econondc R' .
: sourccs of the Moose
River Basin. "
1904, p .
197 .
4. h . rnavd.
ii : rn Oi' itar_io
.
1903 . P. 354
.
5 .
Curran, W. T. C-nadn' s Vondurtul
horthUnd.
1901 . P.
320.
22 2 .
established at
Moosw Wctory
one
. aovurnmqU housing
constructed . Today tho M')0se
Factory band is comfortably
housed in
lnygc sinaln story colourful
framc houses
the Cren Have built
Wcmselves with novornmenL financinE.
styin is totally European with
oil bufnin-
heaters, plut-,',bin&, -Jectricity and such large appliancc,
~
-,
as stoves,
refrigerators and radios. Ware is regular
garbaqe collection . D -i
short, Moose Cree housing todwy
is SAMIlur to tAah or the middle CZ
. - : ) : 1
whit
; _
culturo .
At Moosonee
this stage has not yet been reached. Sinu!_ -.
the Moosonee Indians are not treaty Indians, governmuK
housing has not been provided. houses are small sky',-;
constructed fron available supplies, often
employing
; ;
. . =
: r_
paper, and cardboard. Conditions are
often extremely crowded
with one family sharing a bedroom. neat in provided by wood
stoves or coal oil burners,
and electricity in not
yet
universal .
;knt
for
these
houses is calculated on thu income
o
;
t
hu
mi1
404
_ eves
in the house, I
> > ,
un _
are
a1=
being made for ' h
c stasnment
of > eweroges and w.' .t. =r
works in
the
I !oosonec:
indian village .
The
transition from tepee to wooden
dwellings in Cry. c
:
._ Gi_ .her
uniform
nor
. apid .
now however that
the adoption of European
housing caused.
by the education of the Cree has,
in turn, caused many
acculturative effects.
Housing has strengthened
sotiol.
organization and the
political structure by the
establish-
ment of permanent villages. The
desire to accumulate
material_ goods
permitted by a permanent dwelling in
which
to house teem, has put pressure on the Cree
to obtain wnge
labour profitable enough
to afford such luxur: : A.
Cua_ kure .
TKc
:
Life Cycl,,:
22 3 .
The principal alteration
in thn Crew life cycle P%<7 ; .
introduction of Christian ceremonies
and practices, in the-:
1.
Lo VisitT_ _ ur afJN % Y U:
p.
G.
22 4 .
134 0's .
Marriage
under Christianity was arran`
. . d by the
youth involvod rather than
tho
parents and pre-marital scx
was 1
c
: rco,7 -. IC_c1
t? : pc
,
n.
The
T
. ~ e
old
pr~
: ,
J<'>
actica of
polygamy
diad our
Cnnerally
marriage occurred at a later age
in life than
during the fur trade period, because
of the necessity for
the Cree youth to establish
himself in a salaried position
.
The working period
of life was lengthened
and lightened by
the minimum wage and welfare, but presented
the male with
the challenge of fitting
into the structure of a comple=x
white society.
Old
age
was extended by the old age
pension.
Burial was Christian.
Specialization
Unlike the aboriginal
pActice based upon min as
hunters
. . x
who provided
for the group livelihood,
the arrival ofcivil-
ization permitted Cree women
to take such salaried
positions as
clerk and saleswomen
. In the sense= that women
could now earn
incomes
to provide for the family, t : '1^
man's role: had been
usurped . Troditiopal
duties performed by the Cree womcr
also
been eliminated or lightened
by
the
introduction of
European foods, clothing
and technology. Tic: role of the
male
has been disrupted
. Uhile formerly it was enough for
tai. -
:
nt subsidio
at the
22 5 .
to feed
ability, it is now nucessury -for
him to secure sufficinnt
funds to
provide manuNcturcd articles.
I
Thus albhou~.
specializaLion has to some
degree brokun down, thrre is
still pro2ourq on tile, mrK to
provide more for
the family
than during the 6rlier pcriod .
Tyavel Patterns
T: ~n romovaT of scological restrictions
and Yage labour rLmuvcd
Mnuenssity
travel seasonally in
search of
food.
until 1910 indicated a seasonal pattern of
agglomeration
posts in the summer and dispersion
to the trapOky.
in the
winter . ?
By living an the lokes, fishing would
praviW
while in the winter the
hunters and their
return to their
individual hunting territorins .
of the railway and tile:
establishmvnt 0'
The rnilway renuited
in the
and the
Nissbi
posts .
3
Ta(,,
new posts were built "on
the railways at Marre,
Cochrane,
Matt . CC, ntcrbell
and Gogam. a .
Indians
who could maintain
themselves
with employment in these
towns, did not havc to
lonve in tin wintur to trap
. The establishmcnt of
villages
on tho reservationc
and the resulting
social Me, made
food in summer
families would
Tne completion
reserves altered this
pattern .
closure of the old
Abitibb
fardly through his huntinn and Qwpp%,
,. -,
throucA
S C) '; '!
Exploration reports
1 . M
MoTp~on,
junn . One Crpc Indipna
OC
Nnrtn VsWn:
S
c
) ~
11
-Antchcwun
Nstory,
S oring, 195S .
p.
44
.
R . Poft on thn
of
horthurn
MUM.
3
f . (i(-T
U. do.
22 6 .
trappnrs less MIMSto
spend thu wintur in
solAude in
the woods . A tendency
Mveloped to commute to the Lrappin!, ,
tprritorics, for shorter
pcriods of time,
perhaps N WSO, U. i:
two . WAML
payments and salaried
positions have confirmed
the 00"rwtion of Crou Vi]
lwa: s an6 ramovad Kho necoaniQ
;
of spending the
winter in the bush . Today the
Chaplcau
District of the
Upartment of Lands
and Forests is CorceO
to
import Cr_ .. trappars to
fill empty traplines in thAa
ation
With civilization,
recreational patterns now followed
European patterns
. Community halls
offer bingoos, movies,
dances and
other European entcrtainment
. Children ploy
football
and bnseball . Drinking is
a common and aspnOMy
troublesome activity
.
Disease
The cause of Indian disease
in the late nincteAt"n
century was overcrowdinq and
Insanitary conditions,
mal-
nutrition caused
by
an
unbalanced
diet and heavy reliance
upon Europquqfoods,
and more
:
frequent
contact; with Me
influx
of Europeans who might
carry diseases .
W. T. Curran
in
1907
Pointed
to "closed, dark
unventilntcd houses, often
steeped in
filth and rubbish, the
accumulation from
years
of uou
without
unbalanced
diet and heavy reliance
upon Europquj,foods,
and moru frequent
contact; with the
influx
of Europeans who might
carry diseases
. W. T. Curran
in
1907
Pointed
to "closed, dark unventlintcd
houses,
often
steeped in
filth and rubbish, the
accumulation from yaars
tt l.
of use
without
~
he
U r es ha
c, CeouI 1ereo
he a e
bu C ,- r moe hem,
or Ch_:11~(
he
brush o he foor
Some
of
hem
1a e~ o be::2cc,aeo
for
ears,
ao
he
sech
, ::rr f s
uc1
ra
f
~o
ocr~~r~~" o_ FI~", I - o
o
rr~ I c,
c : :1(
1ur o oo
was
a
ma]or :facor of o sease
Furopr
qooos such as wh e four coa eo four mes ess
ur oa auc ha o be fouo a e fooos s]a~,
,,h
a rc,a Dr 1
,
r oore
:
a
sure of or, her o a~
fouo
ha a1 1 he 1o as exam eo showeo phs ca oefecs cau:, - ~o
b
a ac of am s
~,
B, h2 ao C Z
Cosequca
wa_
o
o
s
urpr :s p
c
~rrp~: ~~
1_ oro_
oe
1~~s
F"
' "
~ha o sease ra
(
~ ram pa
reporeo froq Moose acor ha W oopr~, CouFh "r,), ~ . ,
1"ca_r_fu _ o 1_cce,
ear
c:c:r 1o a
rra
: a~
:c F
:o
b
1 1)
111 oop q
Co.
,Sh
D eo 26 pc~opC _ , o: e ~cor ao
~ 5
a hbr "
1 D 1,5 a ser ous
prooqeo
ep oem c Wf
1
~~ ~"har
~: .1b_oo1~
Rub c
hrc (,~s
of
.~:o~
. ho
C ,r
,c , a
_~ur
ec R
o ce
~ua ,)erIor 1 _
1)
~ ,,
~ ' " ~,~rC, '
1 111111 1:11 11" ,r e 1 ,rF1Z
111R
1, : ,
Cr~ 1
F ,,,,,
D
1 1
" ,
~e
1~r : _o
,_ro
, ,1
o F
I~mc
"
_
,
B,
Fr or 11
f) ,e
, r
U uo,
r:c ,cuur~~:: _o
_ :r o,,~
h~_
ar
C
111
,_ ,
1( 2 p
cre
_1 o1~ r ~~CC r ~
,~
1o
_1) ) for
- C) :C 1, 1C
~ " o ),
_c
,
_~ c11
22 8 .
ln7luurza vUPWd
Ww Ind! uns . ~ W
'
sin in 1806) the
Ws=,
accurrea and thu number of duaths at Mooso
Factory almo st
doubled{;hp num5pr
of births,
with 17
dwaths . " Burro-
180 and
in 1889 also notedthnt hy couldnot
b=USP
of a W, uslas opi6cmic
ill:
Alcsinaibi. j Too swo!_ .
year Bishop jorann,
returning
lamented:
got guide. -,
Hoosc Factory from
Englon(~
by way of the Abitibi
River, saw scarcely
any Indians
an, ,
) , s Snd
many
havu
dloj~
: ' -
way;
for Way cannot stand
the diseases Europoons
urlq~
with
them--measles, whooRing cough,
diphtheria,
make short
work of them. them. i
Moose Factory was generally more
healthy than the inland
A-
posts but an
examination of the
gravcstOncs
reveals irequuU
draths of
childrnn and childbearinJ
mothers .
5
Mary
jonozoon,
an
early nurse at the Moose
Factory cottage hospital
in 1905,
Poundthat
"time
after
time I am
called
upon
to sce som(
: '
sick baby
. . . The mothers never seem
to know wbaL to' do for
them. "
,_ . r_
Moose River bps~_. ? 7 . An articl e in.
il r
Northl and l Northl and 'Post
for
1910 reuorted th:;t bncnuse of the disease,
" al l . over
Ontario'
: .
hinterl and
the Indian is
mel ting
away l ike the
snows of his forest home
.
They just
cough, cough," said
one ol d Indian,
In
1908- 9
the population
of Moose F , ;ctory was dr;creased by 100 from
influenza. 3 The Crce at New Post were
also
rapidly
succumbing
to the
attacks
of
consumption
and scro`i
. 'ulous diseases, and owing to the decreane
of pLrtrid
ge
and
X'abbit are sometimes at sore
straits for food.
.
Concern
for the welfare of the Cree led to the
es;tab. lish-
1 : : - cnt
of
n-
hospital
ai
Noose
F . ctory and
in
19, ')
1 1
Qur`T-
; ;'
found 14- s . Namnham, wire
of the Bishop, running a "small but
well equipped hospital" in the capacity
of a trained nurse. 5
The
Indian Affairs department in 1912 described the- hospital
as good
with "excellent equipment and room for six or eight
N- vertheless
such a small structunn was not
to handle tuberculosis victims and
the, physician
Transcontinental Railway predicted that
"tuberculosis is
the one factor which will ultimately exter-
minate the Indian race. "y
In 1930,
the
same- , year that
Constable Cowell discovered and treated smallpox at
Blacksmi_t12
patients.
equipped
for the
National
apids and Moose F actory, - the D~partmwnt of Hdian
Affairs
was praising the virtues of
the North:
1 . N: sbitt in D- , pt. of Crown Lends. Annual
Roport. 1906. p. 108.
2 .
Pynn,
Chas. "Our Northland
04p . "
A. V G. ,
190b.
P
. 723 .
3 . Y ' . ( ; Y . i4 . V<
. ;1_ .
V] F -
No. 3, J, ?ly, 1911 .
Aiso Skinner, A.
flo
es
on
the
f_; st rn_Crce pnssim.
li
.
Park-
1
is i. Qs7Q_-
lgoma
BB,
undary Line"
1899 .
p
. 186.
5 . 011,
J.
. . ",
1900 .
P
.
197
.
6. D
:
pt.
of Indian Ufairs.
Annual
Unort. 1912 .
7 . DE at. of Indian Hairs.
Annual R, port 1915 .
8. Wyell Can_ than ?inUntc
: d
Prinuq- 1
hnpo
x_t .
1930 .
p"
1'3
.
23 1 .
lop nPriodic visits
op
the
MOWSof thu
Dapa
rtmnnt oP lndi%n ANUrs, and their
instructionE on tho
care and cloonliness of
the body and an
general habits, the wide opcn
spaces,
exhilarating air and carerroo encr-
vating, nonchalant existence, are sufficiently
compensating factors to maintain
a
Kir
1
balance in the scales of life and
mortality.
Tne
MpnKnent
of indian Affairs
was aware of tuberculnnU--.
but could not
offer
treatment
during the
1 930's
or early
1 940's because of a lack of room in thu
:sanatorium
s and
lack
of funds for maintenance
of such institutions .
2
disease continued
among the Cree, and other diseases
developed . In 1 943 it was noted that
"venereal disease is
assuming even larger proportions
as a serious health problern
and a
menace among the Indian population . "3
This
was', . ,')
result of the railway and the influx
of population to t
north, and the flow of Indians
to the cities where they
picked up the disease
and carried it with them back to
tM
reservations
.
During the 1 940's Dr . F .
F . Tisdall undertook a number
of health studies and
as a result health services
were
4
1
improved
.
than
the national
avLrage .
A vaccination
policy
with Bacillus Calmatte-Guerin vaccinc
was undertaken. Tnis Vaccine
gave six times more favourable
chorc= of onrvivol in =inrectious atmorn
ations against diphtheria, whooping cough, typhoid, and
smallpox were
also
expanded .
By 1949 the Department of
National Health and Welfare declared that
"
she nati-ve
population is at least as well protected by these measures
as any other comparable group .
U4
In 1950
a one million
dollar,
135
bed hospital was completed at Moose Factory.
R-sourcgs
included a staff of
65,
including chest experts,
laborptory
technicians, X-Ray experts, madical- officers,
dietitians, and other less skilled staff .
BY 1952
an
extensive T. B . survey was being undertaken annually, and it
was reported,that Varked progress in the control of
T. B . "
had been made .
5
The death rate had
been reduced to 262 per
thousand or eleven times the
national
fiZure . By
1965 the
1. D pa rtment
of
Indian Affairs . Annual Report. 1946 . p . 224.
2 . Dcuartmgnt
of
Nationol denIth nna d0fure . Annual Report.
iq4q. p . iok
3 .
ihid . , igig . p . iok
4. GOT cit .
S . loia . , Q02 .
P. 35.
~ ;overnrn~ ~ r~ t,
rt : : cogs: i . t;i ( ) n
ob1_i ~ ; ?t : i
. on
to
see
t'ti at
no
1i ,d i . ) n
stffers morn
li ck
of medi cal -tt( _mti . on by reason of
to pay : i 'or i t" "Jas evi dori t ; . l The r
;ove>rtl~ n(. nt
d 41-d
not rc co-ni 7e, or accept
medi c<~
. 1
servi ce to tl) e
Itzd
_an .
f
IrnprovengF_: nt i n medi cal
faci li ti es and
i n
the checki ng
process has led to a conti nu al. i mprovement of the
general
level of rlealth aronE; Uhf_ Moose c . cf. ory C: f: -ee .
Jr ;ck
a.
11"'
1r
;?7~ ) : r
d. u r 111g
ti tle
1_9'0 1 s,
on
r?
r: i tU : 'i l
to Moose F . . story thi s su mmer was amazed
at the general
health of the chi ldren i ,. rho ";,ere si ckly, u ndernou ri sri ed,
and dyi ng of
T. B . "
du ri ng the 1Q20's. 2 There
an i mprovement i n mental health. Su ch mental
as hysteri a, lethargy and hallu ci nati on whi ch
by SaJrndon i n the 1920's, 3 have been
redu ced
nu tri ti on and hou si ng.
h,~ D. ve i mrprov( : : d health, whi le dcri tal ca - r; ; by
dent fi sts froi : i
Coc
lr ane
has
rc-: du ced -
once
seri ou s:
df_, nt,,l
dc: c : i y problf~ m.
4
Ii r,r1rovement , i n
h;: ,,-,,-,n 1nrr,?,. , sed
popu lat : i _on stati sti cs .
P t_ T) u lati on
233.
has al" been
di orders
-1ere descri be d
by
better
Welfare , refri gerati on and t. nc
In 1900 th( - _Lldi an bi rth rate was twi cc the nati onal
avcrrj. g( '
.
5
ofi rri provc~ d medLc', . ) . f<aci l. i ti es, '7a-nd
1
.
_?!) i ;l . ,
cam .
2.
Y vonn(
:
V c
. l~ c: rs
"T
. :
I Au rn of 1'
ad( : r Jaci ;"
=i .
~ i lY ldol7.
"1'. 1 ;
i 1tC). 1
I~ : L~ . 'O r( ( . : r v
i ~ 1?ri C]
;j
E717
Ga. eC
1'ri rni ti vc
p. 2.
Uc: 1l_ . XL, F
. :
: L . 8; Ju n( . .
~ . D _G) t, .
o. ' Nati onal
hri nu al i
; . post . 1. ,
. 26.
1971
period.
23 4 .
r-UtLion,
yoU
. t%1
to{111y
r~UfVJ-Vi
:
t0
rCtYC'i"1
~fl . s. i;Lir~Lt;f ,
F '
~ . Z1C~1 : ~21
Y: Uf!1=
b'-rs
a re on
c['
'U}-l c
ca n
br_
,
s een
In
t[l c' iiol l ovl in
T ie cora pa ris on ca n?~ot
ta ke into a ccount the fa ct tha t-1 0"O
fi~;UrC> incl ude onl y
trea ty l 1idi< rl s wl il C
the ea rl icY'
incl udes
a l l India ns .
D : creus e 1 . n
India n number- in. : ;uch
pl ces
a s F l ying Pos t
ha s been ca us ed by the s T iift 01' C!-ee
to nea rby
communities . T he
grea tes t increa s e ha : , occurred
in the
l a s t
twenty yea rs
a s
a res
: 1)l t
o: '
goveil . : Da c a t
a nd mcdicra 1 ca re which
ha s l es s ened dopendenco on
v=,_ rl _ ,r,hl
ecol ogica l fa ctors . ' India ns
toda y a re fa r-iiea l til ier L nd
more, nuia crous tha n durin-; the a borigina l
or ea rl yfur tr: '~_ d n
l . Sel ect
Committee on the
Huds on Ba y Compa nv.
1857. p. 317.
2 . Linguis ti
c a nd Cul tura l
Affl ia tions of Ca na dia n
India n
Ba nds . p.
12 .
2
1_ 970
1
Mr,os e F a ctory
85`7 180 1,055
Ab it. i. b i x_ 857
350
58
T 1c,,r
B-
. uns wicl c. 1857 150
198
Pos t
j . 881,
31-}_
)l 8
1 " i . a t+4~7~%
908
. 1_ uJ
200
139
Mis s ina ibe
}. 906 62
~r7
Cl ia pl ca u Cree
37
235 .
C c 1 on
'C'Ais examinc Lion
of the Crec c ulture in the Mouse
River
Rued partic ularly Pt Moose
F _c tory and Wo ;onee ov4r
thro question
of
tha
future
bec ome a port
of
and
totally
indistingui
: hnble from the white c ivilization?
rapid
speed of ac c ulturation tends
to suggest that this ' : : ill_
Tac hnologi
c al development in the
nc ~ s . . ~ been too rapid
for the
traditional
the
Cree c ulture during the last two
gone-
ever inc reasing
speed of this rate of c hange
the isolation essential for
the surviv<! of
In
transportation alone, not
has
the
European industrial soc iety built
the plane:
but the c hange has diffused to suc " l
an
settlements
suc h a > Mao;one. : now have
tri-weekly sc heduled airplane flights at
moderate
Not only
have the steam sand internQ
4
developed but
these inventions have
basin,
the last 1 00 year. - has raised
of the Cr
: c c ulture .
probably
b a the c ase .
European
soc iety
adaptation of
rations . The
rapidly
ended
the
old
C . " u
c ultura .
the last '( '0
years,
extent that remote
Wil1 it
rates .
c ombustion engiaz Wen
spread - to the
extent
bringing 32,000 tourists
only,
dur1 n
that a daily train visits I " Znosonec ,
per summer . Presently under c onstruc tion to
Moosoneo is an
automobile road
whic h will open the settlement to the
c ars
of moA peopi . :
in I?
rth l` - uric a .
In less
than seventy
yenr
n,
tec nnolo
_
: r
in trNnnsportntion has turned Nurt
iern Ontario
from an isolated hinterland
to c popular tourist region .
Ti c 1 . c nsed domnnd > for resourc es
for an industrial
an, .
i -tv
236 .
caused Port5urn
Ontario to Mporc0. lcd
into pulp
1, Ne
concessions, criss-crossed by roads,
scattered with forms,
and studded with mining
venture; . A white:
population,
exploding
in numbers as compared to Indian
ex. punsion, has
widely
populated tnt, aboriginal hunting
grounds of t_ln Once,
and holds jobs in Mw
industrial plants .
The effects
of this rate of change in
white technology
and the
incrcca_, J in. white population
hws
already
destroyed
t: 1' : ( ; : . . , ft . -, y
nU. ,:
culturc
which
existed
only one
U='
generations ago .
were establishnd
a
, oF~= : t, 1~ai, tho Crce would bv
:cc; ;n:,
and
skilled pcopla,
suitable as a labour
. new
industrial
mechanized
vision. The means by
which
Cree ware
transformed into this
labour force:
ware
thr-,
. _
~
g . z
in
tK
.
C
ruc
fur-trading
culturp .
The first change was
the: destruction of the
CreE
trapping
livelihood, which occurred
with the influx of
competing white
trappers, the depletion of
furs, and the
insecurity
of life based on
fluctuating fur prices.
The
fur bearing animals
have increased in
numbers since
the
1940' s, but
trapping is now unattractive
. The popularity
of
easier, more lucrative
salaried means of
livol ihood has
,
replaced
the fur trade culture.
. I, zc. second
-
~ :~c a:r~~ ; of cnnnZc
,
in the Cree culture
was through cduc-tion. C
:)mpu1, sory
attendance at schools run by . the
Church and
later by the
government Carcod
the learning of the
English language,
taught skills
:-which were essential for
the, new type of
society. B . cause of the
educNtional process,
skills
earlier culture arc being
forgotten as is the use
of
7 un
;u< < e ngon ; soma younEur Cree
.
i_ . Eli. ) i n t
23 7 .
sedentary
force for tip, .:
th-.
and
of the
the We
23 8 .
s(dnntbry and largcr tribal associations . Ton
government,
Aded villngc
integration in n numbcr of ways . Housing
was givun nssistancc. The governmont promoLud
an artIPU!"I
political
ntructurn based on the cluction of a cidef and
councillors, LKAY
fornign to thu ~borjgjnnl qnd fur
trading Cree society. The government also
introduced such
services as welfare,
family allowance and old vgc
pensions,
which cempnted village ties by
making the nomadic trwlinc,
KAno lonner
nacassary for 3urvIvA. Local schooU,
churches, and local social
events, as well as other sorvices
such as medical care tended to tighten
peer ties in the
village while increasing village integration
to the - eAtent
that the
Cree village at Moose Factory today is undertaking,
community services and profit raising
projects .
Throughout the transition, Cree society has
remain,- ;d
open to change
. The desire of the Crea to obtain the
benefits of white civilization,
and their admil5tion
for
the white way of life has led to the rapid abandonment A'
the Cree aboriginal
culture in favour of the material life-
style of tho Europeans . With
opportunitins for salaried
employment during the last
thirty ycars, most Ccee in North
Eastern Ontario 4%ve succpedcd. in obtaining
full- time salaried
positions for at Tenst part of the year . European jobs have
enoblcd the C~cp to purchase Eqroponn
tuchnoloqical inventions
most aptly symbolizod by the snowmobile . Europunn fooK nLv- ,
also become incrensingly popular to thp extent that
common
23 9 .
aboriginal and fur trade moNls
such an beaver and goos(-,
are
now often repInced by conned meat . Dress
today is
European style, with the result
that co: tly European
clothing styles are
followed
closely .
Acusing and
th( :
vccumulation and usp of Eurappan mutcrial
objects also
rapidly fall into the European
pattern following 1900 .
Tric Ylon-material culture
of the Cree also showed an
increvoinS imitation of the European style .
The life cycl(, ,
nnyrud tr~ Aufopunn chvracturistics
in its extension of th,
date of marriage
in life, the increase in working life, and
ths lengthening
of the life span. Family specialization
of the fur trade culture was broken
down to some extent
as were seasonal travel
patterns . Recreation today has
followed the
patterns set by Europeans, especially
witi-)
reliance on liquor.
With such similarities between
the present day Croc
and European cultures, there
is a difficulty in terming
the Cree a
'European modified' culture,
rather than an
assimilated one
. ThQ Cree culture
is
'Europcan
modified' in
the sense that as a group their
achievement of the Europunn
culture, is below that
of the national average . hi_
rginality
in t5c
sense of poverty and racial
discrimination against
the Cren for certain positions also
tended to prevent complet,, -,
assimilation .
Chapter V. The Conclusion
.
24 0 .
The optimal period in culture is the period when
it meets and benefits from the technology of a superior
culture which shares congruent
goals with the weaker culture.
The optimal
period is identified culturally by improvements
in the material adaptation of the primitive culture to
impinging forces of
the habitat
without a
decline in
cultural self-identity. The Swampy Cree of the Moose
River have been used to provide a concrete and specific
example of this thesis.
The question as to
the
existence
of
an optimum
period
in the Cree culture raises some questions. The term
optimum, for
instance, suggests
a
certain time period,
while many traits extend through
time,
so that while
certain periods were optimal for certain traits they were
not optimal
for
others. While the aboriginal period was
not troubled by European
disease, aborigines did face
frequent periods of famine and
debilitating sickness.
During the fur trade period European disease was a problem,
yet European technology
eased the burden of survival
.
The use of the word optimal with referer-: = ~ to culture
must raise the question of
the definition of culture
.
Cree
culture was
defined as habituated patterns of beh-
4
24 1 .
aviour by
the Indians who
interact with one another more
than thev did with outsiders
. The
purpose of the Cree
aboriginal culture was to adapt the Cree to the habitat
to permit survival. The habitat in turn integrated the
culture
by forcing co-operation and division of labour .
The Cree culture was dynamic in that it could adapt to
a changed habitat by integrating material improvements
into
the
culture through a tension and reward process.
The optimal period was one in which the society was
most successful in using its habituated patterns of
behaviour for survival while its social. interaction.
remained fundamentally similar to those of the
past . During
fur trade, the aims of the more sophisticated culture
complemented the Cree culture, and intensified and improved
the
Cree
ability to survive
without the introduction
of
distorting elements . The Cree dependence on ecological
factors which integrated Cree society by stressing tradit-
ional patterns
of behaviour remained
.
The new material
culture of survival, adornment and consumption commodities,
eased life because European articles were more durable and
efficient, European foods could be preserved for times of
famine, and European luxury items created enjoyment.
Voluntary change, limited European contacts, and directed
contact which re-emphasized the aboriginal cultural char--
acteri. stics resulted in
a
slow
moderate
alteration in the
24 2 .
Cree culture . Non-material culture was not fundamentally
changed
since alcohol and disease did not alter the
adaptation to
the
habitat or change patterns of
interact-
ion. Beliefs, identitv, survival patterns and the inter-
action of the Cree culture remained very similar during
the fur trade period to aboriginal times, while
the
white
culture had lessened the difficulty of Cree
survival.
With the arrival of civilization, beginning with the
missionaries
in the
1840's,
but radically
speeded up by
the commencement of railway construction in 1902, Cree
contacts with whites and their acculturation was greatly
increased. Contact was made with the police, governmeAt
administrative
officials,
work foremen and
fur trappers
.
For the first time changes were introduced into
the
Cree culture which were not voluntary on their part, but
which were externally imposed by force .
These
changes
.
distorted and clashed with the traditional culture because
they altered the meaningful environment from the Cree focus
on ecological factors and the habitat, to a new and conf-
licting dependence
on
wage labour, business cycles, and
the need for skills, education and the use of the English
language . While the Cree were well adapted
to
the role of
fur trappers and could accept the infusion of a new
material culture which improved their_
adaptation to
the
habitat, they could not re-orient themselves from strictly
24 3 .
ecological factors to
a
highly
complex and technical way
of
life implicit
in
the
modern industrial society
.
Their
adaptation was
slow, painful, replete with anxieties and
frustrations
. Dominance patterns were altered so that
the Cree appeared not
as equals with the whites but as
undesirable competitors. New factors such as time
schedules, and regular_ attendance, combined with
insecurity
and tensions
caused by a lack of education and skill, lei
to
the
desire to adhere to the old culture. Yet the high
cost of capital equipment for trapping and the
low price
for furs made this impossible.
Furthermore the mass
media, particularly
catalogues, radios, television and s"
magazines as well as European education and white
contacts,
had created a desire among
the
Indian
for the European way
of life. Wage labour has led
to
the disintegration
of the
traditional culture resulting in the rise
of Indi,. an "'
villages, the
decline in family organization, and
psych-
ologically in the creation of a white
marginal outlook .
9'
Indians who could id
entifv themselves closely with Euro-
peans through acquaintances with Europeans
and the adoption
of European tastes in foods, clothing
styles, music,
housing
and beliefs, received the most status among
their
peers. To-day even this marginal outlook is being
replaced by complete
assimilation .
24 4 .
The
Cree culture
which could absorb changes which
correlated with its basic ecological orientation
and which
had maintained patterns of soc. 1 -L~_ interactions based on
use of habituated norms, reached
a point
of
disintegration
when the basic cultural norms were no
longer viable in
P
the
new white civilization. Interactions were not limited
solely to the Cree culture
but were expanded during the
twentieth century to include
the Europeans. The habituate?
ways
of existence became so similar to the broader Euro-
pean culture, that traditional traits and interactions
have disappeared since such traits are no
longer relevant
to- day in an industrial societv. By 1 950 this point h'6d
been reached at loose Factory.
It
is clear that Indians to- day with the modern advan-
tages of
houses, controls
for
disease and regular income
would have no desire to return to the past.
However,'- the
present day could not be termed optimal from the point
of view of. the traditional__ Cree
culture, since the Cree
4
culture has disintegrated. It was originally based upon
tf
ecological factors which have now lost their importance.
The optimal point in their culture
would have
to
be
placed during a period when the ecological
basis
of
the
culture was still apparent, while the material culture
was such as to permit the best possible
exploitation of
the habitat along traditional lines.
This period
could
be
24
5 .
located anywhere from 1670 to 1900 .
The concept of optimality for the dealings
of a
primitive people with the white man, and defined as a
period
of
time when the
aborigines have sufficient of the
white man's material
civilization to ease the burden of
R
survival, but not yet enough
to
disrupt
their way of
living, has been shown to be a useful approach for
analysis
if examined through an examination
of cultural goals, and
cultural change. Tn spite of the difficulties of optimal
traits which do not
coincide in time, the difficulty of
pinning an
exact time for the disruption and disintegration
of a culture and the problems of defining
what was actually
optimal_, it is
clearly apparent that an examination of the
cultural goals and interaction of a simpler and a more
sophisticated culture can be usefully
done
.
The congruence
of the goals of the European fur traders with the
goals
of the fur hunting
and trapping Cree created an- optimal
period
for the Cree culture, strengthening their
orientation
towards survival by trapping, with the resultant
streng-
thening of habituated
patterns of behavioural and social
interactions .
Civilization reoriented their meaningful
environment
from the pursuit of game to wage labour
and
in
doing
so destroyed their culture's ecological
adaptation
and made
their skills as canoeists
and trappers anachroniF`. (
This marked the
intensification of a process of disinteg-
ration of their culture until the point was reached
where
the Cree looked on
the
white civilization as their own .
24 6 .
Critical
Bibl. ,~of r,
aphy.
246a.
Secondary
There are on1--M t. : : ro anthropological works
which
relate to the
drainage
area diroctly south of James I ?
: ` T.
Leonard Yason The Swammy
Cree:
A
St,
"it'
in
Acculturatidin has pre, -nted
a
usef ul survey of
acculturation of the Cr: : o gen(: rally, but the book is rather
light on
historical inf ormation. A good survey of ecological. f actors in
this
Sub-Arctic near
the Moose River basin on the Cree is of f ered by Rolf
Knight's Fcolo : '
cn
. l Factor
w
in
t? - ,= = Changing Econoln andSocial Orr an-
ization Among the RuperHouse Cree. Unf ortunately Knightts inf ormation
as to the introduction of certain
technological goods such
as
the steel
trap
is f requently placed c; '. ; too late a date. Trudeauts thesis
Culture
Chon,the Sw= Cree I ndian is unpublished but is available
on microf ilm f raa the National Libraxy. The
thesis
is
on cultural.
change at Winisk caused by wage labour created by the Dew Line Radar
Base construction and illustrates intense acculturativel change in a
short period of time.
For
Cree
technology during the aboriginal period.
the most = -; ? lete anthropological summary is to be f ound in one of
slier ax-ticles, Etho r^c
deal
with the f ur
trade in
the Moose River. The later
period af tim" 1870 is to be f ouzxl in part in
S. A. Pain. The? 1ayo_rrth.
A
f inal and very usef ul book which relates indirectly to the Moose
River basil- , is Science, History and Hudson' s
which of f ers
a
wide
range
of articles on all. aspects of the reg_` _on.
Pr' Sources.
1 .
Published Travel Ac: -oumts on the Fur Trade.
There are
a
number of good traveller accounts which describe the
Cree I ndians around Hudson's Bay in the 1700ts. Although
the Jesuit
Relations are the earliest published source the Jesuits did not
pene-brate into the l"1oose River basin. The travel] ,-rs who did usually
came
by ship. James
I sham in
1743
wrote a chapter on the Cree. I n
1746 an
expedition f rom England to discover the North West Passage
wilt ered
at
York Factory
and
two
books emerged
with inf ormation on
the Cree. The Clerk of the ship Calif ornia believed to be Swaine uoote
one boos and Elli_s wrote another
and
both were published in 1746.
I sham wrote
a
cri. tiaue
of Ellis' work.
One
other book, written by
Arthur Dobbs
was written totally f rom secondary sources
since Dobbs
never reached the Bay.
- - - 1 .
. LM,
and
from 1 679 to 1 684 .
this period
is undoubtedly the most interesting and
valuable
of
all the Moose
Factory archival,
material .
The unpublished,journalsm of the Hudson
Bay
Company and the letters
to or from Hudson Bay are found in section B
of
the Hudson
Bay Company
Archives, located in
Ottawa on microfilm and available courtesy of the
Hudson Bay Company. These records are restricted, and
a
letter
of permission is needed from the H. B. C .
archivist .
Church Hi. storZ.
24
6b .
There are a number of travel accounts by missionaries to 3 " Loose
Faotory which include reference to the Cree Indian.
Sheanr tent s By
ti1 ater and Word provides
a general description of the travels of Rev
.
N errnham
from Moose Factory during the
1 890ts
.
The Oblate Fathers also possess Roman Catholic records of their
activities
at
inland posts. These records have been published by
Father Carriere .
Exploration.
Exploration
by the provincial government
has left a wealifi
of
information on the Moose River basin, much of which contains ,rising
reference to the Cree, particularly their health
and
accomodation .
This information is located' in the Ontario Department of
1 iine reports
which began in 1 891 . and continue yearly thereafter . (cf: List of
Publications. Vol .
I,
1 891 to 1 965 . )
This
su^Vey was.
responsible for the _ f_ . nitial
Ant:hropos .
, n, . A
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
American
Anthropologist .
A
. A
. . A C . . . . . . . . . F . . Annals
of the Association
of A-~eric<, . n
Geographers .
A. C . R . . . . . . . . . .
. . .
Al roma
Central.
Rr
: ilway.
,
Act
.
7co. . . . . . . . . .
Actual ite Economique.
American
Eponomic Review.
A . H . B . . . . . . . .
. . . . .
Alberta Historical
Review.
A. I . R . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ACricultural Institute
Review.
A. J . C
. .
.
. . . . . . . . . .
Anthropological Journal of
Canada. , ,
A . J . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Anerican Journal
of Sociology.
A . R . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Annual Report .
B . G . S .
P
. . . . . . . .
. . .
Bulletin of
the Geographical Suciety
of Philadelphia
.
.
C . C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Canadian Churchman.
C . C .
C . . . . . . . . . . . . . Canadian
Church Chronicle .
. . . . . .
. . .
.
. . Canadian
Church WaGazine~ and. Mission
Nears .
C . T-, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Canadian Engineer
C . F . I, i . . . . . . . . . . . . . C
-nadian F orestry Mqgazine
.
C . F . N . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Canadian Yield
Nnturalist.
C . C . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
. .
Canadian Kographer.
C
. G . J
.
.
.
. .
.
.
. . . . . . Canadian
Cpographical Journal.
C . II .
A . A. R
. . . . . . . . .
canadl. an Historical
Association,
Annual. Report .
24
8 .
C . D . 8 .
. . ^
. . . . . ,, .
. ,
. , . . Curzadiao /IistoziczI BovievY,
C,I . I . ,,, . . . , .
.
. , . , . . , . .
Canadian Institute, Transactions .
C . J . . . , . . . . . . , . . . . . , . . , . Chambers Journal .
C . J . A
. S
. . . . . . .
.
. . . . , . , . ,
Canadian
J
:c/roaI of AaricuIturaI
Ocioncc
.
Voadlau
inurnal
of Earth Sciences .
Canadian Magazine .
Canadian Mining Journal.
Vuadi:zl KdicaI A^soclatinn
'
' ~ " ~ ~ ' /
CaDadiau Pacific RAilway.
Canadian Review of
Sociology
and
.
C,J . K,P,S . . . ,^ . . . . , . ^ . . ,
C . M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . , . , .
C
. DJ
. i
.
. . . . . . ^~ . . ,, . , . , . "
C^L. P . J . , . . . . , . , . . . . . . . .
C . I' ,] { .
. ,
. .
. ~ ,
. . . . . .
. . . . ^
C . R,S . A . . . . . . ^,, . . . , . . ^"
Anthropology.
C,T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Canadian Transportation.
C . D . /\ , . . . . . . . , . . .
.
.
. ,
.
. .
Catholic University of A4erica .
C,W
. , . ^ . . , . . , . . . , . ,, . . . .
Canadian Welfare .
D . D . . . . . . . . . , . , . . . . . . . . . Dental Digest,
D,R. . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .
DoIhouoi:
Review.
-
'
-
B, . , . . . , . . . . . . . ^, . . , . , .
. Ethnology.
} I
. /l
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Economic
Analyst .
~
lI,J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Economic Journall
`
' '
Ip, B .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Frederick House .
l7 . P . . . . . . . . . . .
' ,
. . . . . . . . .
Financial
Post .
F. Oc O . . , . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . Forest and Outdoors .
G,B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Geographical Bolletin.
G . H . . . . , . , . . ,
. . . ,
.
. . . . ,^
GooarupUicaI Dcniuvv .
O . 3 . C,, . . ,, . ,, . . . . . . . . , . Geological
Survey of
C . oado
.
I i . I > . C . . . . . .
.
. .
. . . . . . . . .
f . 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
.
.
J . G .
. . I
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
J . P
. l ? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Journal
of Pol i ti cal Qonomy.
J . ' > . A . . . . . . . . . .
Y--
Rc E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Fl ai l
and
Empi re .
Mattat-, ragummi ng . . . . . . . . . Mattagami House .
M. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
M
. H . S . B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
M. K . M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
M. T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
N . M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
N
. P .
.
. .
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
.
N. T . . i 1 . ' ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
0 . A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . .
f f
O. D. M. A . R . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
24 9 .
Udson Bay
Company.
Human Organi zati on.
Journal of Geography.
Moccasi n Footpri nts .
Mi ssouri Hi stori cal Soci ety, wi l t, i . n.
Moosonee and Keewati n
Hwi l bag.
Monetary Ti mes .
Nati onal
Museum.
Northl and Post .
Nati onal . Transconti nental Rai l way.
Ontari o
Archi ves . . ,
Ontari o Department
of Mi nes,
Annual
Report.
O. E. R . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ontari o Economi c :Revi ew .
O
. F . W . R . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . Ontari o Fi sh and Wi l dl i f e Revi aw.
O
. G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ontari o C :oaraphy.
O. i 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . O:gtari o
hi story .
0
. H . S
. 1 1
. R . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Papers
and Records .
O
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ontario
Lgnd Surveyors, R , cords
and Transactions .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ontario
N-rthland R ailway
.
P . A . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
P :nnsylvani. a u. Archaeologist .
P . A . C . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .
Public Archives
of C- nada .
f . L. . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Primitive L~nEuages .
Quarterly
.
R ,, )d
and
Gun.
R avue de Geograp'Vo Alpine .
R oyal Ontario
Museum.
Psychiatry .
P-i. .
laggumey. . . . . . . . . .
Night Hawk Lake .
StlC~ l,~a~~. ~,~,
v
Sc
. . .
.
. .
. . .
. .
. . . . . . . . . . . .
Science
Q . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . .
.
. . . .
} . 1 .
G
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
R . 0 . I li . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . .
.
P . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
.
. . . . .
. .
Scientific
Agriculture.
Social Forces .
Scottist Geographical Magazine.
S. G . Q . B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Societe de Geor
raDbie de Q;Cebec . Bulletin .
S . A . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
.
. .
. .
SY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
S. G. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
T. S . . . . . . . .
.
.
. . . . . . . . . . . .
25 0 .
Saskatchewan History.
S
.
H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
S .
N
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
,
. . . . .
Saturday Night.
SE
. J . I . . . . .
. . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Syouth Eastern
Journal of Anthropology.
SW . J .
A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Snuth Western Journal
of Anthropology.
T.
& 1 ,,1 . 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
R wilway.
Temiskaming
Speaker.
T. B . S . C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Transactions of the R oyal
ocipty
of
Canada .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . United Empire.
t;ot
;rj tic). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick House .
W . J . C . A
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Western Journal
of
Canadian
. . ~
~~~
. :polo
Y
PActualite Economique
.
hariculturyl Instituto
WVIPW.
Albertn
Aistoricol R. vipw.
A. ~ : erican
Anthropologist.
American Economic
Rcview.
American Journal of Sociology.
o
r thr P
,
roontior of Pn-vwn
mour9phyrs .
Anthropologica.
Anthropological Journal of Unada.
Anthropolos.
All
Tne Arctic (Arctic
Institute of North America
. )
B . N . A. Topics .
The Beaver. (Quarterly,
The Hudson Bay Company
. )
Bulletin of the Geographical
Society of Philadelphia
.
Unadian Church
Magazine and Mission News . (Angliceh)
Canadian Churchman.
(Anglienn)
Canadian Club, Addresses . Montreal,
Wronto, Ottawa. (hAnuQ
Canadian
Engineer .
Canadian Field
Muralist.
Conadian FormY17, Magazine.
Canadian Geographical Journal .
Conadlan Googranher.
StoricnI Review.
innadian
Wnndian
25 1 .
Pcriodical nnd
Newspapers
C , ) n - , ~ c ? . i _ a r .
I_ r l"t : i 1111t(
: ,
C ~ , n a di ~ zn
Jou
r n a l_
of
C , ~ n ~ zdi r n J~: ) ur n a l of Ea r th
'c ~ i c ~ n c
<~ s
C , : n a di : ~ Jour n a l of
E; - , o
n omi c a n
d foli _ ti _ r. a l Sc i en c e.
C <^n a c
i a n ~ , V: di c a l' Assoc i a ti on ,
Jour n a l .
C a n a di a n Tli i n i n , Jour n a l .
C a n r Adi ~ ~ n : Etevi . e~ s; of Soc i ology a n d
An thr opology.
1', ; por ta 4-
i on .
C a n a di a n
Welfa r e.
C ha mber 's Jour n a l .
The C la y Belt .
Sc _ F . n c es .
An n ua l Repor ts .
of Pr a c ti c a l Sc i en ^e.
25 3 .
F i u mrm Or ;ani z~~ti on .
Hydro
Nc , t. , :
.
Jc )=Urna1 of Commerc e .
Jc )u rnal of Gc ograohy .
Jou rnal of
E"'onomy .
Li ppi nc ott' s I i , : ~;azI n
c; .
Mai l and
re .
Bri ti sh North Ameri c an
W,
, -
1eyan
i - : rose F:. - story
p. , ti per .
Soc i ety, Bu lleti n.
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Mi ssou ri Hi stori c al
Moc c assi n F ootpri nts . 'fhe Hu dson Bay Company,
Monetary Ti mes .
Moose Call . 1965ff Moose F ac tory paper.
Moose Talk . 1968ff Moosonee paper .
Moosonee and
Kr- , ewati n
Mai lbag. 1898ff
B~3y Mi ssi on newsletter, monthly.
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.
Contri bu ti ons of Antnropc loc , y,
Bu lleti ns .
_ .
Ti i e North.
Ti le Northland . (Pu bli c ati on bf the Di oc ese- of Moosonee .
(?- reekly 1_ 910 ff . Coc hrane paper
. )
Ontari o Arc haeology.
Ontari o F c or>omi _ c Revj evg.
F i sh
and
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r; :
orr~an~
- ly
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P
: p(
, rs
and Rec ords
.
~1
Northland Post .
OI t=)_ r
i o
Ontari o
O'1
1, , r. Y'
:
Lo
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I ~- I egr^ z : i _ nc .
1. 8!- 10- 1
( )t7 .
Northern Servi c e.
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Sas'iatchcwan
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1 ,=nd
; ,l . ) rv(
-%
,Tors.
") ort
; :
;
~: ncj
` f r
~ ns'tct,ion; ; ,
1 89
"
~ f i .
Pc
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Arch<'c'oJ3ul l ctin f or t'r1 E '
SO ci. ety of
P : : nnsyl vanirArchaeol o,-
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.
Pc il ~ l . Livc+
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(C : - ith. ol ic
University of
h: ner: icr. .
`
i
-
I'r
,
O ,u7 _rt(: rl y.
(Publ ication of the T'd() rtri: L~ ,nd Tran. ,p or- 1 l
Revue Cie Geo rap hie: A. ip ine
.
Rod
and
Gun
and Motor Sorts in C<
:. _nada.
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Royal
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Science
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A
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.
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Social Forces.
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,
,
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c
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. )
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JY
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-
t
-
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i .
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