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Treaty Five is a treaty between Queen Victoria and Saulteaux and Swampy Cree non-treaty band governments and peoples around Lake Winnipeg in the District of Keewatin. [1] [2] Much of what is today central and northern Manitoba was covered by the treaty, as were a few small adjoining portions of the present-day provinces of Saskatchewan and Ontario.
Treaty 3, the Northwest Angle Treaty was signed in 1873 by the Lake of the Woods Saulteaux. Treaty 4 was signed in 1874; Treaty 5 (The Lake Winnipeg Treaty [5]), 1875; and Treaty 6, 1876. [43]: [255] E Treaty 6 signed 1876 and Treaty 10 signed 1908 negotiated land claims with the more northerly portions of Keewatin. [43]: [249]
The remnants of a former Hudson's Bay Company fort near the banks of the Nelson River; the company's principal inland depot for the fur trade and the site where Treaty 5 was signed in 1875 Pantages Playhouse Theatre [37] 1914 (completed) 1985 Winnipeg
The largest city nearest this community is Winnipeg, located approximately 400 kilometres (250 mi) to the south. The Southeast Resource Development Council is the Tribal Council affiliated with this First Nation. Poplar River is part of Treaty 5 Adhesion, signed on 20 September 1875. [3]
The Bloodvein First Nation is a First Nations community located on the east side of Lake Winnipeg, along the Bloodvein River in Manitoba, Canada. As of 2019, the community had a population of 1,176. There are many caribou, bears, wolves, bald eagles, lynx, owls, and various species of fish in the area. [3]
When the Opaskwayak people signed Treaty 5 on in 1876, [6] the federal government agreed to give timber rights. In 1904, the band opened a sawmill on Mission Island on the Saskatchewan River. Soon after, the band surrendered their land on the south side of the river, and in 1908, moved its sawmill to the north side.
Treaty 5 (1875 and 1908) in the central and northern regions; Treaty 6 in the northern region; Treaty 10 along northwestern Manitoba; The Dakota Nations (Birdtail Sioux, Sioux Valley, Canupawakpa, Dakota Tipi, and Dakota Plains) are not signatory to any treaty with Canada, though their land is considered reserve land under the Indian Act. [2]
The First Nation is a signatory to the 1909 Treaty 5 Adhesion. Bunibonibee Cree Nation has offices in Oxford House, Manitoba . The registered population as of August 2013 was 2,892, of which 2,424 resided on their own Indian reserve .