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Nigigoonsiminikaaning First Nation, formerly known as the Nicickousemenecaning First Nation and as the Red Gut First Nation, is a Saulteaux First Nation band government who inhabit the banks of Rainy Lake of the Rainy River District in Northwestern Ontario, Canada. As of January, 2008, the First Nation had a population of 290 registered people.
Rainy Lake Bands of Saulteaux. Couchiching First Nation, Fort Frances, Ontario; Naicatchewenin First Nation, Devlin, Ontario; Nigigoonsiminikaaning First Nation, Fort Frances, Ontario — formerly known as the Nicickousemenecaning First Nation and as the Red Gut First Nation.
Couchiching First Nation had early residences in the Wasaw area north of Frog Creek/Frog Lake. This area was highly regarded in the busy 19th-century forestry and wild rice harvests. After 1909, flooding impacts and expropriation of land for the railway and highway forced the community to move south of Frog Creek and along Sand Bay (south of ...
Seven Generations Education Institute is an Aboriginal-owned and controlled post-secondary institution, co-founded by the ten bands in the Rainy Lake Tribal area in 1985. . The ten bands are: Big Grassy, Big Island, Couchiching, Lac La Croix, Naicatchewenin, Nigigoonsiminikaaning, Ojibways of Onigaming, Rainy River, Seine River and Mitaanjigami
Rainy Lake 26A is a First Nations reserve on Rainy Lake in Rainy River District, Ontario, Canada. It is the main reserve of the Nigigoonsiminikaaning First Nation . The population was 158 in the 2021 census.
Rainy Lake 26B is a First Nations reserve [1] in Rainy River District, Ontario, Canada. It is one of the reserves of the Nigigoonsiminikaaning First Nation. References
Gakijiwanong Anishinaabe Nation (formerly Lac La Croix First Nation) (Ojibwe: Negwaakwaani-zaaga'igan) is a Saulteaux First Nation band government who reside in the Rainy River District of northwestern Ontario, Canada, along the Ontario-Minnesota border. It is approximately 200 km northwest of Thunder Bay, Ontario. As of January 2008, the First ...
The First Nation have reserved for itself two Indian reserve tracts: . 3 hectares (7.4 acres) Long Sault 12 2,267.1 hectares (5,602 acres) Manitou Rapids 11 With the "Rainy River First Nations Land Settlement Agreement", some of the former reserves and other lands within the First Nation's Customary Use Area lands are made available to have either additional lands set in Reserve or have the ...