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         Manitoba History:     more books (100)
  1. A History of Manitoba: Gateway to the West
  2. New Peoples: Being & Becoming Métis in North America (Manitoba Studies in Native History, Book 1) by Jacqueline Peterson, Robert K. Thomas, et all 2001-06-15
  3. Short History of Manitoba by Whitcomb, 1982-08
  4. Night Spirits: The Story of the Relocation of the Sayisi Dene (Manitoba Studies in Native History) by Ila Bussidor, Ustun Bilgen-Reinart, 1997-10
  5. The Orders of the Dreamed: George Nelson on Cree and Northern Objiwa Religion and Myth, 1823 (Manitoba Studies in Native History, 3) by Jennifer S. H. Brown, 1988-03
  6. Ojibwa of Western Canada: 1780 to 1870 (Manitoba Studies in Native History, No 8) by Laura Peers, 1994-10-15
  7. A Very Remarkable Sickness: Epidemics in the Petit Nord, 1670 to 1846 (Manitoba Studies in Native History) by Paul Hackett, 2002-11
  8. Battling for a Better Manitoba: A History of the Provincial Liberal Party by Jon Gerrard, 2006-01
  9. The centennial history of Manitoba by James A Jackson, 1970
  10. Bibliography of Northern Manitoba (Manitoba studies in native history) by R. Enns, 1991-02
  11. Social Democracy in Manitoba: A History of the Ccf-Ndp by Nelson Wiseman, 1986-12
  12. Let Us Rise: A History of the Manitoba Labour Movement by Doug Smith, 1984-11
  13. Indian European Trade Relations in the Lower Saskatchewan River Region to 1840 (Manitoba Studies in Nature History, 2) by Paul Clifford Thistle, 1986-09
  14. Essays on wheat: including the discovery and introduction of marquis wheat, the early history of wheat-growing in Manitoba, wheat in western Canada, the ... kitchener, and the wild wheat of Palestine by AH Reginald 1874-1944 Buller, 2010-09-04

1. Library: Canada Facts: Manitoba
manitoba history and People. History. The nomadic Assiniboine Indians were among the first inhabitants of Manitoba.
http://library.educationworld.net/canadafacts/mb_history.html
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Canada Facts reproduced from the Education Canada Network Home Library Canada Facts ... Manitoba / History Area Map Quick Facts Location and Land History and People ... Government Manitoba: History and People History The nomadic Assiniboine Indians were among the first inhabitants of Manitoba. Other aboriginal nations, including the Cree and Sioux came from the east following herds of caribou and bison on their seasonal migrations. Unique to Canada, the northern parts of Manitoba were settled before the south. Europeans searching for the fabled 'Northwest Passage' first reached Manitoba through Hudson Bay in 1612. In 1690 -1691 Henry Kelsey, a Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) clerk explored Northern Manitoba from Hudson Bay to near the Pas on the Saskatchewan River. Later, in 1733 La Vérendrye led a party from New France that explored the Red and Winnipeg rivers and built several outposts in the area that is now Winnipeg. In 1731-1771 the HBC built Fort Prince of Wales at the mouth of the Churchill River. The French captured the Fort in 1782. In 1783 the HBC constructed Fort Churchill at the mouth of the Churchill River, it remained in continuous use until 1933. Throughout the seventeen and eighteenth century French Canadian voyageurs in birch bark canoes and couriers du bois "runners of the woods" continually traveled the rivers and forests west from New France in search of new sources of furs. Their trade and social connections with the aboriginal peoples led to the founding of a new Canadian nation, the Métis (peoples of mixed Aboriginal and European blood). The Métis, often connected with the North West Fur Company in its competition with the Hudson's Bay Company, established trading posts and small settlements across the west, contrary to the wishes of the HBC. One of their chief trading and wintering areas was at the heart of the Red River country where the Red and Assiniboine rivers meet. Here they established a headquarters and small riverfront farms.

2. Travel Manitoba: Manitoba History - A Timeline
A brief history of the development of Manitoba 1013000 BC - First evidenceof nomadic hunters entering Manitoba from the south-west.
http://www.travelmanitoba.com/quickfacts/mb_history.html
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A brief history of the development of Manitoba: 10-13000 BC - First evidence of nomadic hunters entering Manitoba from the south-west. Developing grasslands in south provided abundant hunting territory. 4-5000 BC - Origins of forest dwellers in eastern and northern Canadian Shield. Necessary diversification in lifestyles developing due to demanding environment. Approximately1500 BC - Evidence of Alaskan nomads (Early Inuit descendants) passing along shores of Hudson Bay. Approximately 500 BC - Evidence of early trade among early peoples. Copper from Lake Superior, pipestone from Minnesota, shell from the Gulf of Mexico, volcanic glass from Wyoming, flint from N. Dakota. Approximately 1100 AD - First indications of agriculture. Native Manitobans seeded corn along the banks of the Red River, north of Winnipeg. - Changing climate hampers growth of native corn varieties. Natives gradually return to hunting, fishing and trapping.

3. MHS Manitoba History Journal
Did you know? Dalnavert is open for birthday parties. manitoba history Journal. Manuscriptsubmissions for publication in manitoba history are most welcome.
http://www.mhs.mb.ca/info/pubs/mb_history/index.shtml

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Manitoba History Journal
Manitoba History has been published twice a year since 1980, when it replaced the Society's previous publications Transactions and Manitoba Pageant . This journal is devoted primarily to an examination of Manitoba's past. Its articles are well-researched and documented; its subjects are varied and interesting. Some issues have a regional focus such as "The North in Manitoba History"; others examine a theme such as the role of women in the province's history. Manitoba History combines articles of scholarly interest with articles and reviews of popular appeal in an attractively-designed format. Manuscript submissions for publication in Manitoba History are most welcome. They should be sent in care of the journal editors to the MHS Office . Contributors are requested to refer to a set of guidelines prior to submission. A subscription to Manitoba History is provided to all MHS members.

4. Personalities In Manitoba History
Personalities in manitoba history. The following biographies of notablepersonalities in manitoba history are in Adobe Acrobat format.
http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/people/index.shtml

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Personalities in Manitoba History
Some of the following biographies are in Adobe Acrobat format. You will need free Acrobat reader software to view them. It can be downloaded from the Adobe web site Andrew Baird
A Presbyterian Minister and instructor in church history at Manitoba College, Baird was MHS President from 1893 to 1895. Charles Napier Bell
Bell held a number of jobs in the Winnipeg business community, but he is perhaps more well known as a long-serving President of the Historical Society, and a dogged preserver of documents from Manitoba's past. George Bryce
Reverend Bryce was MHS President twice, from 1884 to 1887, and from 1904-1913. He wrote widely on a range of topics, including several books and articles on Manitoba history. William Alfred Burman
An Anglican priest, William Burman worked among aboriginal people of the West and had a keen interest in botany and horticulture, which he taught at St. John's College in Winnipeg. William Clark
Clark was the Chief Factor of the Hudson's Bay Company when he served as President of the MHS from 1897 to 1899.

5. First Days, Fighting Days: Women In Manitoba History
First Days, Fighting Days Women in manitoba history. First Days, FightingDays Women in manitoba history. Kinnear, Mary (Ed.). Canadian
http://www.saskpublishers.sk.ca/programs/websheets/firstday.shtml
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First Days, Fighting Days: Women in Manitoba History
First Days, Fighting Days: Women in Manitoba History
Kinnear, Mary (Ed.). Canadian Plains Research Center, 1987. ISBN 0-88977-047-6 English Language Arts
  • communication challenges equality Canadian voices
Life Transitions
  • ethics managing change decision making relationships
Social Studies/History
  • human rights conflict politics culture change
Native Studies
  • family life education social life
Arts Education
  • social issues photography change time periods
Physical Education
  • social behaviour self-concept cultural awareness
Reading level: Grades 10-12 and Teacher Resource Annotation An in-depth look at the role women played in Manitoba's history. First Nations women such as Little Mary provided excellent care for the children of many Euro-Canadian families. Frances Beynon, Alice Blackburn, Nellie McClung, and Anne Buller are highlighted in the struggle to address equality. Insights into the role of journalists, office workers, church workers, garment workers and domestic service workers give the reader an opportunity to learn about contemporary women's issues. The introduction includes a summary of all the chapters. Notes at the end of each chapter provide information for further reference. The

6. Manitoba History: Manitoba Agricultural Hall Of Fame
Red Fife had now replaced the beaver which had drawn the fur traderswestward to begin Manitoba's history. Wheat was to remain the No.
http://www.mts.net/~agrifame/histormb.html
MANITOBA AGRICULTURAL
HALL OF FAME

The History of
Agriculture in Manitoba
Prepared by Morris Deveson
February 28, 1995 Agriculture settlement and farming in Manitoba is really not very old, and is young by world standards. Historians like Grant MacEwan, W.L. Morton, J.H. Ellis and others have documented and recorded development over the years. Two aspects of our agricultural development make history particularly interesting, first the rapid progress in technology and secondly the people who made it all happen. The first recorded Agricultural immigrants in Manitoba were the Selkirk Settlers, also known as the Red River Settlers, who arrived in 1812 and settled near the junction of the Red and Assinboine Rivers, sometimes referred to as the District of Assinboia. These first agricultural settlers arrived by boat via Hudson Bay with little more than the clothes on their backs. They were forced to live off the land, with some help from the fur traders and natives, who really did not make them very welcome. This was fur country. It is hard to believe, in 1995, that Lord Selkirk, who Grant MacEwan called the founder of agriculture in Western Canada, was repeatedly told by both foes and friends alike that his scheme to farm in Western Canada was an adventure in folly, assured only to failure. Fur traders said, "this is fur country. What stupidity to expect settlers to succeed in this land of ice and snow. The country is doomed to external sterility." This was 1812, only 183 years ago.

7. Electronic Journals - Manitoba History
Comments or Problems?manitoba history. ISSN 02265044. This titleis available to current University of Saskatchewan faculty, staff
http://library.usask.ca/ejournals/full.phtml?issn=0226-5044

8. Manitoba: History And Politics
History and Politics. The history of Manitoba began along Hudson Bay. Lyon'swas the only oneterm government in manitoba history.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/world/A0859468.html

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History and Politics
Hudson's Bay Company Manitoba was explored and posts were established by the French as well as by the British; their rival claims were resolved when England's conquest of Canada in the French and Indian Wars was confirmed by the Treaty of Paris in 1763. Scotsmen took over much of the French fur trade, organized the North West Company , and challenged the monopoly of the Hudson's Bay Company. A crisis came when the earl of Selkirk established the Red River Settlement at present-day Assiniboine in North West Company territory. The resulting violence deterred colonization until the merger of the two companies in 1821. From then until 1870, when the Hudson's Bay Company sold its vast domain to the newly created confederation of Canada, that company was in sole control, and settlement of the area increased. Riel Agricultural settlement in Manitoba proceeded slowly, but when the railroads came (1870 and 1881), they provided access to grain markets on the Great Lakes, and during the 1880s the population doubled. Manitoba's area was enlarged in 1881, and in 1912 it was given its present extension to Hudson Bay. The depression of 1913 and the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914 ended this period of prosperity, during which Winnipeg had served as a great transportation center. With the completion of the Hudson Bay Railway to Churchill in 1929, however, the province was in a position to use the shorter sea route eastward.

9. Legislative Electronic Publications -- Largest Health Capital Project In Manitob
LARGEST HEALTH CAPITAL PROJECT IN manitoba history GOES TO TENDER Project toImprove Patient Care, Technology, Infrastructure at Health Sciences Centre.
http://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/press/top/2002/10/2002-10-10-04.html
FRANCAIS October 10, 2002 LARGEST HEALTH CAPITAL PROJECT IN MANITOBA HISTORY GOES TO TENDER
Project to Improve Patient Care, Technology, Infrastructure at Health Sciences Centre
Premier Gary Doer today announced the tendering of the redevelopment of critical services programs at Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Centre (HSC), a project that represents the largest-ever health capital project in Manitoba history. Doer said the total project, estimated to cost more than $100 million, is a significant investment in the province’s health sector and will:
  • enhance the quality of health care and help address issues such as access to state-of-the-art equipment and emergency room efficiency; provide cutting-edge equipment and facilities that are critical for the recruitment and retention of health care professionals; and add to the revitalization of the core with more than $100 million in capital improvements.
"The Critical Services Redevelopment Project at the Health Sciences Centre is the largest, most comprehensive single investment ever made at a hospital in Manitoba, and is part of our ongoing plan for rebuilding health care in Manitoba," said Doer. "The new facility will include state-of the-art medical equipment and will feature several elements of hospital care that will be among the most complex in modern medicine." HSC is the largest teaching hospital in Manitoba and is the province's dedicated trauma centre. The Critical Services Redevelopment Project will address significant shortcomings in the physical plant, particularly in the emergency departments, operating rooms, intensive care units and other critical services areas.

10. Historical Services
Family History Heritage Buildings manitoba history. Family History Census Records.Church Records. manitoba history. A Brief History of the Hudson's Bay Company.
http://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/historical.html

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Historic Resources Hudson's Bay Company Archives Legislative Library of Manitoba Archives of Manitoba
Genealogists, historians, archaeologists, students and interested laypersons all benefit from the department's work to preserve Manitoba's heritage whether in print, images, as artifacts, or sites and buildings . The Archives of Manitoba's Genealogical Guide and the Legislative Library's Library's heritage collections are major research tools. The Hudson's Bay Company played an important role in Canada's Canada's history; consequently its records and documents are a national treasure for the human and natural history of western and northern Canada
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Manitoba History Family History Census Records Church Records Preservation Services (caring and restoring family photographs, records) Frequently-Asked Questions Genealogy A Genealogical Guide To the Archives of Manitoba - Explains how census records, church records, crown land records, court records, education records, immigration records can be used for family research.

11. Brandon Manitoba History
Children (4) Lorne H, Stanley, Louisa, Russell. (info taken from History of Manitobaby Prof. Geo. (taken from History of Manitoba by Prof. Geo. Bryce, 1906).
http://www.kenora.net/manitoba/towns/brandon.htm
Brandon Manitoba
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Mayors of Brandon

Thomas Mayne Daly 1882; 1884 James A. Smart 1885-1886; 1895-1896 Alexander C. Fraser 1888-1899; 1901-1902 Andrew Kelly 1890-1891 Dr. John McDiarmid 1892-1894; 1899-1900 Ezekial Evans 1897-1898 Robert Hall 1903-1904 John W. Fleming 1905; 1906-1911; 1912; 1913 Stephen E. Clement 1907-1908 Henry L. Adolph 1909-1910 Cater, H.W. 1915-1918; 1934-1937 A.R.McDiarmid 1919 George Dinsdale 1920-1921 E. Fotheringham 1932-1933 F. H. Young 1938-1943 L. H. McDorman 1944-1945 Frank T. Williamson. 1946-1951 James Creighton 1952-1955; 1958-1961 Dr. Stuart Schultz 1956-1957 Stephen A. Magnacca 1962-1969 W.K. Wilton 1970-1974 Elwood C. Gorrie 1975-1977 G.D. Box 1978

12. Newdale Manitoba History And Genealogy
by the Newdale Historical Society in 1970, to celebrate Manitoba's centennial. (Newdaleis in the Rural Municipality of Harrison.) This history has many short
http://www.kenora.net/manitoba/towns/newdale.htm
Newdale Manitoba We have a copy of Newdale: 1870-1970, published by the Newdale Historical Society in 1970, to celebrate Manitoba's centennial. (Newdale is in the Rural Municipality of Harrison.) This history has many short family 'biographies', as well as information about Newdale businesses, schools, etc, and some maps. I'd be happy to do lookups. M. Diane Rogers, Burnaby, British Columbia, B.C. diane_rogers@bc.sympatico.ca Home

13. CyberSpace Search!
SEARCH THE WEB. Results 1 through 2 of 2 for manitoba history.
http://www.cyberspace.com/cgi-bin/cs_search.cgi?Terms=manitoba history

14. Manitoba History
manitoba history. ID, Title, Subtitle, Author, Date, BookID, Copies. 6,First Days Fighting Days, Women in manitoba history, Kinnear, Mary, 1/1/87,1.
http://thewomenscentre.tripod.com/data/Manitoba_History_1.html
Manitoba History ID Title Subtitle Author Date BookID Copies The Great Human Heart A History of the Manitoba Women's Institue Friesen, Printers
First Days Fighting Days Women in Manitoba History Kinnear, Mary
Planting the Garden An Annoted Archival Bibliography of the History of Women in Manitoba Kinnear, Mary; Fast, Vera
Perspectives on Women in the 1980s
Turner, Joan; Emery, Lois
Rural Roots A Book of manitoba facts Various Authors
Out of the Shadows a bibliography of the history of women in manitoba Various Authors
Manitoba History Women in Manitoba History Various Authors
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15. Culture Canada: History - Manitoba
Search. Where You Are Home Provincial and Territorial Information manitoba history.Manitoba. Government of Manitoba. Sport manitoba history Source Sport Manitoba.
http://culturecanada.gc.ca/chdt/interface/interface2.nsf/engdocBasic/21.4.9.html
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Brief History of the Development of Manitoba

Source: Travel Manitoba Canada Genealogical Guide to the Provincial Archives of Manitoba
Source: Manitoba Ministry of Culture, Heritage and Tourism Historical Services
Source: Manitoba Culture, Heritage and Tourism Historical Sketches of the Swan River Valley
Source: Canada's Digital Collections History - Winnipeg
Source: Winnipeg's Official Web Site Hudson's Bay Company Archives - Provincial Archives of Manitoba
Source: Manitoba Ministry of Culture, Heritage and Tourism Introduction to Genealogical Research for Aboriginal People Source: Provincial Archives of Manitoba Louis Riel, the Red River Rebellion of 1870 and the North West Campaign of 1885 Source: National Archives Manitoba - Canadian Confederation Source: National Library of Canada Manitoba - Origins of the Province's Name Source: Natural Resources Canada Manitoba Genealogical Society Source: Manitoba Genealogical Society Manitoba Heritage Network Source: University of Manitoba National Archives of Canada - Addresses for Genealogical Societies and Provincial/Territorial Archives Source: National Archives Ni'Ithinimuk, My People: A Visual Record of Northern Manitoba's Cree People

16. UNC-Chapel Hill Libraries: Journals In Electronic Format
SEARCH RESULTS FOR manitoba history Go to main ejournals search page Manitobahistory Expanded Academic ASAP Via InfoTrac - NCLive Holdings 9/22/2001
http://eresources.lib.unc.edu/ejournal/exacthandler.php?titlewords=Manitoba hist

17. Manitoba History: Level 3 Social Studies

http://palc.sd40.bc.ca/palc/Quiz/social/manitoba-2.htm

18. Ask Jeeves: Search Results For "Manitoba' S History"
Popular Web Sites for Manitoba' S History . 1. Russell, manitoba historyPages These are stories written by the pioneers who lived them.
http://webster.directhit.com/webster/search.aspx?qry=Manitoba' S History

19. Manitoba: History And Politics
manitoba history and Politics. The history of Manitoba began along HudsonBay. Lyon's was the only oneterm government in manitoba history.
http://www.slider.com/enc/33000/Manitoba_History_and_Politics.htm
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    Manitoba: History and Politics Hudson's Bay Company propriety over all the lands draining into Hudson Bay. This vast area included the present-day province of Manitoba, then occupied by the Assiniboin, the Ojibwa, and the Cree. The company established a trading post at Port Nelson and soon extended its operations south to the strategic Red River valley. In 1717, Fort Prince of Wales was built at the mouth of the Churchill River (rebuilt in stone 1732-71, it is now in Fort Prince of Wales National Historic Park). Manitoba was explored and posts were established by the French as well as by the British; their rival claims were resolved when England's conquest of Canada in the French and Indian Wars was confirmed by the Treaty of Paris in 1763. Scotsmen took over much of the French fur trade, organized the North West Company , and challenged the monopoly of the Hudson's Bay Company. A crisis came when the earl of Selkirk established the Red River Settlement at present-day Assiniboine in North West Company territory. The resulting violence deterred colonization until the merger of the two companies in 1821. From then until 1870, when the Hudson's Bay Company sold its vast domain to the newly created confederation of Canada, that company was in sole control, and settlement of the area increased.
  • 20. Library & Archives
    such as Applied Arts, Archaeology, Astronomy, Botany, Education, Ethnology, Fundraising Development, Geology, manitoba history, Museology, Physical Science
    http://www.manitobamuseum.mb.ca/mu_lib_arch.html
    Museum Home General Information Gallery Tour ... Register On-Line
    As part of the Museum's Information Services the Archives were established 1994 to enable access to records from the province's museological beginnings in the early 1900s. The collection uniquely describes the foundation of this institution in 1932 and of the provincial museum community, and also consists of documentation of organizations that the Museum housed and/or established. The papers contain important documentation of historical, scientific and ecologically-based research, and consequent programming activity in Manitoba.
    The Library and Archives are open Monday to Friday from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM. Photocopying facilities and microform readers are available. Researchers, students, Museum members and the public are required to call (204) 988-0662 or email the library to set up an appointment before visiting. Unfortunately, we are unable to offer borrowing privileges to these individuals.

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