Treaty 9

"James Bay Treaty" redirects here. For other uses, see James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement.
The James Bay Treaty (Treaty No. 9).

Treaty 9 was an agreement established in July 1905, between the Government of Canada in the name of King Edward VII and various First Nation band governments in northern Ontario. One First Nation community in the bordering Abitibi region of northwestern Quebec is included in this treaty. It was also known as the "James Bay Treaty," since the eastern end of the affected treaty territory was at the shore of James Bay. Additional signings of First Nations, or adhesions, were conducted in 1906. Further adhesions involving the Ojibway and Swampy Cree tribes were completed in 1929 and 1930.

Treaty 9 Challenge

According to journalist Ron Grech (2011-01-07), the personal diary of Daniel MacMartin who was the Treaty commissioner for the Government of Ontario when the agreement was signed in 1905, written more than 100 years ago but rediscovered by historians at the Queen's University archive, triggered a legal challenge for mining access on First Nation lands. MacMartin's diary suggested "First Nation leaders may have been misled by government negotiators as they were signing Treaty No. 9, says Murray Klippenstein, legal representative for Mushkegowuk Council."[1]

Timeline

List of Treaty 9 First Nations

By signatories

Osnaburgh signing
first Fort Hope signing
Marten Falls signing
Fort Albany signing
Moose Factory signing
New Post signing
Abitibi signing
Matachewan signing
Mattagami signing
Flying Post signing
second Fort Hope signing
New Brunswick House signing
Long Lake signing
Big Trout Lake signing
Windigo River signing
Fort Severn signing

Winisk signing

later adhesions

Alphabetically

Documentary film

The treaty is the subject of a 2014 documentary film by Alanis Obomsawin, entitled Trick or Treaty?[3][4]

See also

Further reading

References

  1. Ron Grech, The Daily Press (7 January 2011). "Treaty challenge". The Sudbury Star. Sudbury, Ontario and Timmins, Ontario.
  2. Mushkegowuk Council (8–10 September 2010). ASKI NANA GA CHE TA WIN "Caring for the Land" (Report).
  3. Ravindran, Manori (10 September 2014). "TIFF '14: Revisiting history with "Trick or Treaty?"". Reelscreen. Brunico Communications. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  4. Ahearn, Victoria (3 September 2014). "First Nations doc maker Alanis Obomsawin mourns loss of Trick or Treaty? star". The Canadian Press. CBC News. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
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