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The Fort McKay Métis Nation: Frontispiece

The Fort McKay Métis Nation
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table of contents
  1. Half Title Page
  2. Frontispiece
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright page
  5. Contents
  6. Preface
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Introduction: Steps Toward a Fort McKay Métis Community History
  9. 1 Early History of the Fort McKay Métis: Origins to 1899
  10. 2 Fort McKay, Treaty, Scrip and the Immediate Aftermath: 1899 to 1920
  11. 3 The Bush Economy and the Registered Trapline System
  12. 4 Land Tenure in Fort McKay: “Split Our Very Identity into Two”
  13. 5 A Community Turned “Upside Down”: Fort McKay’s Response to Extractivism
  14. Epilogue: From Community to Nation — The Evolving Relationship between the Métis Nation of Alberta and the Fort McKay Métis Nation
  15. Appendix: The Fort McKay Métis Nation Position Paper on Consultation and Self-Government
  16. Notes
  17. Bibliography
  18. Index

Black and white photograph:a small settlement area along a riverbank, identified as Fort McKay. In the foreground, two men wearing hats are seated on an uneven grassy terrain, looking towards the buildings and river. To the left, several wooden structures with peaked roofs are visible, including a couple of tents. These buildings are situated close to a dense forest of tall, slender coniferous trees. The Athabasca river runs parallel to the settlement, framed by the wooded landscape. The sky appears overcast, lending a subdued atmosphere to the scene.

Fort McKay, Circa 1920. Karl Clark, Provincial Archives of Alberta, A3517b, PR1968.0015.

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