Article History
First Nations and Metis People of Red River Settlement (pre and post Confederation) - Red River North Heritage
Via: Kavika • News & Politics • 12 Comments • 4 Likes • 2 months ago
“The People of Red River Settlement before Confederation. Red River Settlement was a colony built at the forks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers...”
A fascinating history of the Red River Settlement and the fur trade that dominated Canada, United States and Europe. Many consider the Red River Settlement to encompass parts of Manitoba, Ontario, Sask, ND, SD and MN. The Hudson Bay Company was a power entity of the time and actually owned...
Oregon tribe celebrates as court lifts decades-long hunting and fishing restrictions | Oregon | The Guardian
Via: Kavika • News & Politics • 11 Comments • 6 Likes • 2 months ago
“US and state acknowledge that 1980 agreement was 'biased and distorted' against Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians”
RFK Jr will cut prescription drugs and increase weed and psychedelics access | Trump administration | The Guardian
Via: Kavika • News & Politics • 16 Comments • 6 Likes • 2 months ago
“Trump's health department pick has expressed distrust of pharmaceuticals and attacked 'suppression of psychedelics'”
Battle of Seven Oaks The Final Battle of the Pemmican War
Via: Kavika • News & Politics • 30 Comments • 10 Likes • 2 months ago
“The Battle of Seven Oaks, or the Victory of the Frog Plain (la Victoire de la Grenouillere), took place 19 June 1816. The battle was a culmination...”
Happy Indigenous Peoples Day
By: Kavika • History & Sociology • 54 Comments • 22 Likes • 3 months ago
A day to celebrate the indigenous people of the America’s and for the Indigenous people to celebrate their culture/language/history and their resilience. For many of us it is also time to reflect on our ancestors and their lives and history. I am Métis, pronounced “may tee” Ojibwe and Cree. My...
Haitian Soldiers at the Battle of Savannah (1779) •
Via: Kavika • History & Sociology • 30 Comments • 10 Likes • 4 months ago
“The Battle of Savannah, Georgia, which occurred between September 16 and October 18, 1779, became one of the bloodiest battles during the American...”
In 2022 my wife and I visited Savannah and made it a point to visit Franklin Sq to view the monument. It is inspiring. The drummer boy in it later became the head of the Haitian army and then the president of Haiti. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDAGN5WO7-Q