Quebec canada indian tribes

    • [DOC File]OTTAWA INDIANS

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      They wanted the Indians' land. Pontiac was the most famous chief of the Ottawa Indians. In 1763, he led a number of Indian tribes in an attempt to drive the British from their lands. They destroyed nine out of eleven British forts in the Great Lakes region. The Indians could not defeat the strong British forts at Detroit and Pittsburgh.


    • [DOC File]The French and Indian War - Ms. Kimball's Class

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      Quebec was the French headquarters in Canada. The French thought that they were safe in their fort high on a cliff, surrounded by easily defensible plains and the sea. Instead, British troops somehow climbed the 300-foot-tall cliffs in the dark of night, and the French awoke to see the enemy lined up for battle outside the fort.


    • [DOC File]The Duel for North America, 1608-1763

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      The focus might be on the reasons for the early French successes (particularly the alliance with the Indians) as well as the reasons for the eventual British triumph (superior numbers, resources, leadership, and strategy—especially in the Battle of Quebec). reference: Francis Jennings, Empire of Fortune: Crowns, Colonies, and Tribes in the ...


    • [DOC File]Canada’s First Nations: The Legacy of Institutional Racism

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      It recognized the Indians tribes not as independent Nations, but as Nations living under Crown protection and thus the seeds of Indians as wards of the State were sowed. From the time of the Proclamation, the Crown negotiated treaties with the Indian Tribes and Nations across Canada, British Columbia and Quebec being the notable exceptions.


    • American Indian Culture of the Northeast

      The cultural area of the American Indian Northeast extends from the province of Quebec in modern-day Canada, through the Ohio River Valley, and down to the North Carolina Coast. The Northeastern landscape is dominated by the Appalachian Mountains, which include rolling hills and prominent peaks.


    • [DOC File]Ch

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      Quebec . Samuel de Champlain . Huron Indians . Iroquois tribes . Robert de La Salle . Pages 110–116. King William’s War . Queen Anne’s War . Treaty of Utrecht (1713) Acadia . War of Jenkin’s Ear (1739) George Washington . Fort Duquesne . Fort Necessity (1754) French and Indian/Seven Years War (1754–1763) Albany Congress (1754) Gen ...


    • [DOC File]WordPress.com

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      on March 17, 1840 in Dalesville, Quebec, Canada at the Dalesville Baptist Church. He was a farmer from Lachute (5 miles from Dalesville) and Mary Loggie's father had a 200 acre farm just about 3 miles west of Dalesville on range 9, lot 14. Mary was born and died April 15, 1847 in Lachute, Quebec, Canada. #[6] They had three sons:


    • [DOC File]First Nations Child Welfare in Quebec

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      Aboriginal Child Welfare in Quebec. In 2006, there were 55, 955 registered First Nations people in Quebec; representing approximately 9% of the total Canadian First Nations population and 1% of the total Quebec population (Statistics Canada, 2006).


    • [DOCX File]Reis' Native Studies 30

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      INAC defines the term as: “Indian peoples are one of three groups of people recognized as Aboriginal in the Constitution Act, 1982. It specifies that Aboriginal people in Canada consist of Indians, Inuit and Métis. Indians in Canada are often referred to as: Status Indians, non-Status Indians and Treaty Indians.”


    • [DOCX File]www.cbsd.org

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      Took the New York frontier, Quebec (the heart of French Canada), and Montreal. ... General Amherst, the new military governor of the western region, proposed that his officers infect Indian tribes by distributing infected smallpox blankets _____ resulted in an epidemic that spread with great speed ...



    • [DOCX File]mrnelsonsclass.com

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      By that time France had established a strong relationship with a number of Indian tribes in Canada and along the Great Lakes, taken possession of the Mississippi River and, by establishing a line of forts and trading posts, marked out a great crescent-shaped empire stretching from Quebec to New Orleans.


    • [DOC File]United States Department of State - CBD

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      Natural resources damages can be sought by “trustees,” those federal and state governments and Indian tribes appointed to protect, manage and restore natural resources. 43 C.F.R. 11.14 (rr); 15 C.F.R. 990.30


    • [DOCX File]www.paulding.k12.ga.us

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      By that time France had established a strong relationship with a number of Indian tribes in Canada and along the Great Lakes, taken possession of the Mississippi River and, by establishing a line of forts and trading posts, marked out a great crescent-shaped empire stretching from Quebec to New Orleans.


    • [DOC File]ANSWERS - Cengage

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      15c. Correct. Although the Quebec Act (a reform measure that applied to Canada) and the Coercive Acts (laws designed to punish Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party) were in reality unrelated, the patriots perceived a link between the two and pointed to both as further evidence that Parliament was conspiring to destroy colonial rights. See ...


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