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Vintage-Views Antique Prints and Maps :: Antique Maps :: North America :: United States :: PRINCE ALBERT AND LANDS SURVEYED IN MANITOBA IN 1886

PRINCE ALBERT AND LANDS SURVEYED IN MANITOBA IN 1886
PRINCE ALBERT AND LANDS SURVEYED IN MANITOBA IN 1886
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PRINCE ALBERT AND LANDS SURVEYED IN MANITOBA AND THE FAR WEST IN 1886 ,Antique Historical Relief Map

PRINCE ALBERT AND LANDS SURVEYED IN MANITOBA AND THE FAR WEST IN 1886

MORLEYVILLE SETTLEMENT AND THE ALLOTMENT OF THE SURVEYED LANDS

LANDS OF THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY and LANDS BELONGING TO THE STATE, SCHOOLS, AND HUDSON BAY COMPANY

1893 WOOD ENGRAVED HISTORICAL MAP

Antique Topographical Map

BACK TO BACK PRINTS

CLOSEUPS

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It had long been the desire of George McDougall to open a mission among the Stoney-Nakoda and Blackfoot people of southern Alberta. Numerous factors had, up to that time, prevented a missionary effort, but by the early 1870s, McDougall felt the time was right. By 1873, a smallpox epidemic and famine had devastated the area's Morley MissionAboriginal population and alcohol and despair had weakened much of the community. As preparations for treaty negotiations began, a tribal council was held at the Pigeon Lake mission with both John and George McDougall present. At this meeting the Stoney-Nakoda people and missionaries agreed to the mission on the Bow River. The Morley mission would not only serve the Aboriginal people and oppose the whiskey traders, but also afford an opportunity to establish a more permanent relationship with the Blackfoot Nation. Morley MissionEstablished during a period of discontent among the Aboriginal population, the Morley mission was received with mixed feelings. Many welcomed the arrival of the missionaries, hoping they would help combat the ravages of liquor and offer some relief from famine and war. Others among the tribe, however, were less receptive and kept their distance.

Prince Albert is the third-largest city (after Saskatoon and Regina) with a population of 41,640 as of 2001, in the province of Saskatchewan, Canada. It is situated more-or-less in the centre of the province on the banks of the North Saskatchewan River. The city is known as the "Gateway to the North" because it is the most northerly major centre as well to its being situated where the agricultural prairie of the south meets the forested and lakeland areas of the north. Prince Albert National Park, located just 50km north of the city, has a huge wealth of lakes, forest, and wildlife.The first white man to come through the area that is now Prince Albert was Henry Kelsey in 1692. The first establishment in the area was a trading post set up by Peter Pond, which the area is now named after (1776). James Isbister, an Anglo-Metis employee of the Hudson's Bay Company settled on the site of the current city in 1862. He farmed there until 1866, and had been joined by a number of families who called the site Isbister's Settlement. He later moved back to Prince Albert and lived out his remaining days there. The community was founded in 1866, by Rev. James Nisbet, a Canada Presbyterian Church minister who came to establish a mission for the Cree, who named the community after Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, in honour of the deceased 1861 husband of Queen Victoria. In 1884 Honore Jaxon and James Isbister were involved in the movement which brought Louis Riel back to Canada. In the Northwest Rebellion of the following year, Prince Albert Volunteers bore the heaviest casualties of the fighting at the Battle of Duck Lake, and surrounding settlers took refuge with the North West Mounted Police in a hastily improvised stockade at Prince Albert fearing an attack by Gabriel Dumont which never came. After the Battle of Batoche, Major General Frederick Middleton marched on to Prince Albert to relieve the town. 1885 also marks the year that Prince Albert was incorporated as a town under its first mayor, Thomas McKay. In 1904, the settlement was incorporated as the city of Prince Albert, then named after Prince Albert Victor, father of the Prince of Wales (the future King Edward VII).

 

Approximate Image Sizes : 4 1/2 X 2 1/2 inches

Approximate Image Sizes : 4 1/2 X 3 inches

Approximate Overall Size: 7 X 10 1/2 inches

Scale : 1: 13,000,000

Scale : 1: 350,000

CONDITION: BOOKPLATE INTEXT MAPS - Excellent Condition. Map Image is clean, clear, sharp with beautiful detail. As scanned. BACK TO BACK MAPS .

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