Please note: All records are located at 2440 Broad Street in Regina, Saskatchewan. Catalogue updates are continuing. Contact us to learn more about accessing our records.
Records of the Canada Department of Indian Affairs, Black Series (Record Group 10) at the Public Archives of Canada. Only documents relating to Saskatchewan are available. Includes alphabetical index.
"The Indian policies of the United States and Canada" - U.S. soldiers killing Indians in their encampment and Canadaian trader displaying his wares to Indians in presence of Indian commissioner. From Canadian Illustrated News, July 22, 1876.
Drafted by Wiseman, Del. & Sc., item is a map of the northwest showing old and new routes of the Canadian Pacific Railway, telegraph lines, Indian reserves, and text on Indian districts and Métis settlements. Item also includes a table of distances.
Item is an image showing First Nations chiefs being presented to the Governor General of Canada (Lord Aberdeen) at the Canadian Territorial Exhibition held in Regina.
Canadian North-West Historical Society Publications journal (Vol. 1, No. 5, 1929) featuring the article entitled, Fifty Years on the Saskatchewan. Includes three parts: The Trail from England to Red Pheasant's Reserve, Battle River 1876-1878; Indian Life in the First Years of Reservations 1878-1883; and A Period of Agitation and Conflict Including the Activities of Poundmaker, Big Bear, Riel, and Fateful Events of '85.
The Invader Responsible for the death of the Patriot Louis Riel. A compilation of correspondence and petitions of the Huron Tribe of Lorette who were organizing a convention to be held in Ottawa in 1944 for the purpose of reviving their rights and liberties, and assuring them their independence which they felt their race merited.
History of Indian Administration in Canada, written by T.R.L. MacInnes of the federal Indian Affairs Branch at Ottawa, Ontario. A journal article reprinted from the Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science (Vol. 12 No. 3, August 1946).