Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Canadian residential school system was also introduced for the Cold Lake First Nations. The children had to attend residential schools like Onion Lake or Blue Quills Residential School. The legacy of the schools on aboriginal people of today has been referred to as a "collective soul wound." [8]
Cold Lake 149 is an Indian reserve of the Cold Lake First Nations in Alberta, located within the Municipal District of Bonnyville No. 87. [3] It is 26 kilometers east of Bonnyville . [ 1 ] In the 2016 Canadian Census , it recorded a population of 671 living in 208 of its 222 total private dwellings.
Cold Lake 149B is an Indian reserve of the Cold Lake First Nations in Alberta, located within the Municipal District of Bonnyville No. 87. [3] It is south of the Beaver River, a short distance northwest of the city of Cold Lake. [1]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cold_Lake_First_Nation&oldid=551078951"
Cold Lake 149C is an Indian reserve of the Cold Lake First Nations in Alberta, located within the Municipal District of Bonnyville No. 87. [2] References
Alex Janvier was born on Le Goff Reserve, Cold Lake First Nations, northern Alberta, on February 28, 1935 [3] of Dene Suline and Saulteaux descent. [4] At the age of eight, he was sent to the Blue Quills Indian residential school near St. Paul, Alberta, where the principal recognized his innate artistic talent and encouraged him in his art.
During the first couple of years of the settlements being established, the main purpose of the settlements was to improve the living conditions for the Metis groups in the settlements. [4] The management of the settlements was supposed to be based on a constitution, elections, and board meetings so that the people and the local government could ...
The city of Cold Lake is located on the south-western shore while the Cold Lake 149A and B Indian reserves of the Cold Lake First Nations are on the western and southern shores respectively. Cold Lake House was a trading post built by the Montreal traders in 1781 near present-day Beaver Crossing, Alberta, south of Cold Lake.