Pre-Colonial History

Since time immemorial, the Secwépemc people have lived in this territory. It has always been Secwépemc territory. It has been said that they have always lived here. They have had disputes over territory boundaries but never gave them up to any other nation. The Secwépemc Nation is the largest Salish group in the Northern Interior. In the south central region are four nations: St’at’imc (Lillooet), Nlaka’pamux (Thompson), Syilx (Okanagan), and Secwépemc (Shuswap).

6500-2000 BCE

Secwepemc people migrated into the land after the last Ice Age.

6500 BCE -1793 CE

Secwépemc people develop a relationship with the land and become a self-determining nation.

Archeological sites date back 5,000 years. There is evidence of ancient human habitation in the Xatsúll area dated 4,300 years old. There are land markers throughout the Secwépemc Nation. Which include pictographs at Mahood Lake in the Canim Lake Band traditional territory. The markers were created by Coyote and the Creator to remind the Secwépemc of responsibilities and how they must behave.

There is no written history before contact (when europeans first came to explore Secwépemc lands). All historical stories were passed down through oral history. Stories passed down from one generation to the next. Everything known before contact has been told for generations for thousands of years.

It was estimated there were approximately over 10,000 people living in the territory when Europeans first stumbled upon Secwepemcúl’ucw. The Secwépemc territory is approximately 180,000km2. The territory is extensive and has a variety of environments, such as: mountains, plateaus, rivers, creeks, semi-arid, etc. At the time, there were 32 bands of people living throughout the territory. Each independent of each other but united in culture, belief, and language. You will learn more about the structure of families in the “People” section of the website.

A lot of the pre-contact history is described in the “Way of Life” section of this website as well. Please look there for a more detailed lifestyle of the Secwépemc people.


Colonial History

In the late 17th Century, The Secwépemc people came in contact with the European fur traders. As they began exploring Western Canada. Alexander Mackenzie met Secwépemc along the Fraser River in 1793. He provided gifts of tobacco and glass beads to establish good relationships as he traveled through the regions to ensure safe passage from one territory to the next. Simon Fraser made his journey with Xatsúll Chief Xlósem through the Secwépemc territory to St’at’imc territory. The Indigenous people provided knowledge, skill, food and clothing to these explorers to ensure their survival.

1763 CE

Royal Proclamation from Great Britian states that Indian land must be bought before it can be settled.

1793 CE

Alexander Mackenzie of North West Company meets Secwépemc people near Alexandria.

1808 CE

Simon Fraser of the North West Company travelled down the Fraser river and met Secwépemc people from Xatsúll (Soda Creek).

The Secwépemc people have an arduous history of European intrusion on their traditional territory. The Secwépemc population declined as a result of colonization. Smallpox and influenza reduced the population by a large margin, even wiping out whole communities. The assimilation policy forced in Indigenous communities by the British and Canadian governments deteriorated the Indigenous-European relations. Resources were taken from the Secwépemc with little or no compensation. The Secwépemc People known by non-Indigenous as the Shuswap, comprised of 31 bands in South Central British Columbia, Canada.

1827 CE

Whooping cough epidemic is reported by furtrader Archibald MacDonald

1842-1843 CE

Diphtheria epidemic is reported in Kamloops by furtrader John Tod

1858 CE

Colony of British Columbia is declared at the same time the Gold Rush starts

1862 CE

Smallpox epidemic is reported

1867 CE

Canada becomes a country.

If you click the button below, you will see that 14 of the 31 bands went extinct. The few people that survived the pandemics went to live on a different reserve closest to their home. They were adopted by the people they went to and survived as a member of whichever band they went to. You may also notice that most of the bands that went extinct were in the Northern part of Secwépemc lands. This was because there were no doctors close by to help.


Post-Colonial History

Secwépemc existed before British Columbia declared itself a colony and before Canada became its own country. Secwépemc land title predates the existence of Canada. The very notion that people existed here before Canada existed means that Secwépemc consider themselves Secwépemc first and a Canadian second. Canada has not had a true relationship with First Nations’ across Canada. It is more of an ownership than a reciprocal relationship. To this very day, according to Canada, First Nations’ people are not actual human beings. They are declared as an ‘Indian’, a ward of Canada that cannot govern itself. Canada did this to make claiming land as crown land and therefore, Canada. Beyond the timeline of events, we will go over how Canada prevented any First Nations’ person to legally claim anything for themselves. Canada created laws to assure their own rights and title were not threatened by any First Nations’ person or group.

Starting with the Royal Proclamation of 1763: The Royal Proclamation is a document that set out guidelines for European settlement of First Nations’ territories in what is now North America. The Royal Proclamation was initially issued by King George III in 1763 to officially claim British territory in North America after Britain won the Seven Years War. In the Royal Proclamation, ownership over North America is issued to King George. However, the Royal Proclamation explicitly states that First Nations’ title has existed and continues to exist, and that all land would be considered First Nations’ land until ceded by treaty. The Proclamation forbade settlers from claiming land from the First Nations’ occupants, unless it has been first bought by the Crown and then sold to the settlers. The Royal Proclamation further sets out that only the Crown can buy land from First Nations.

So there was a protocol to follow by the time Europeans arrived in what is now British Columbia. However, due to the process being long and expensive, governors decided it best to just create laws that prevented First Nations’ from being able to win any case set against the government. Hence, Canada decided to create the Indian Act in 1876. One important fact, is that it was written in the British North American Act in Section 92(24) the federal government was assigned responsibility for all “Indians and lands reserved for Indians”. Before the Indian Act was passed, all First Nations’ were forced to live in small lands appointed by the governor. A lot of the reserves made up around 2% of their traditional lands, while the rest of the land was being given to settlers. First Nations never were compensated for the lands taken by or sold to settlers. Then in 1890, Canada partnered with the Church, and opened residential schools across the country. One was created in Kamloops and another opened near Williams Lake. There is a whole section of this website devoted just to this part of history.

1763

Royal Proclamation from Great Britain states that Indian land must be bought before it can be settled.

1867

Canada becomes a country.

1876

Indian Act is passed.

The focus will be more on how Canada stifled a people from becoming viewed as human beings. The Indian Act was established in 1876. It is a Canadian federal law that governs in matters pertaining to Indian status, bands, and reserves. It has been a perverse, invasive, and paternalistic law that authorizes the Canadian federal government to regulate and administer in the affairs and daily lives of registered Indians and reserve communities. This authority has ranged from overarching political control, such as imposing governing structures on First Nations’ in the form of band councils, to control over rights of Indians to practice their culture and traditions. This legislation was created for the purpose of subjugating one race – First Nations’. The Indian Act enabled the government to determine the land base of these groups in the form of reserves, and even to define who qualifies as Indian in the form of Indian status. Here are the basic points in the act:

  1. Canada defines who is an “Indian”. If you are defined as an “Indian”, you have “Status”. Not all people who identify as First Nations are Status Indian under the Indian Act. The following list are some rights entitled to “Status Indians”:
    • granting of reserves and the rights associated with them
    • an extended hunting season
    • less restricted right to bear arms
    • some medical coverage
    • more freedom in the management of gaming and tobacco
  2. The Indian Act made enfranchisement legally compulsory. Under the Indian Act from 1876 until 1955, Status Indians would lose their legal and ancestral identities (or Indian Status) for a variety of reasons, especially if they were women. If a “Status” woman married a non-First Nations man she would lose their status. They would no longer be eligible to live on reserve land and have access to band resources, likely not become a member of the band again, be involuntarily enfranchised, losing her legal Indian rights, and her children would lose their rights to ever become a “Status Indian”.
  3. Rename individuals to European names
  4. Create Reserves
  5. Force enfranchisement on any First Nation admitted to university
  6. Impose the “band council” system
  7. Denied First Nations the right to vote
  8. Create permit system to control First Nations ability to sell products from farms
  9. Restrict First Nations from leaving reserves without permission from Indian Agents

The Indian Act has had a number of amendments since 1876 but is still, for the most part, unchanged. It is unchanged because there were more strict policies put in effect then redacted after World War II. The Act is administered by Indigenous Services Canada (ISC) and Crown-Indigenous Relatioins and Northern Affairs (CIRNAC), formerly Indigenous and Norther Affairs Canada (INAC), formerly Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC), formerly Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development (DIAND), and formerly Depeartment of Indian Affairs (DIA).

Canada hired ‘Indian agents’ who were, for the most part, watchmen or police for the government to assure the laws were being followed. They were initially hired to be a liaison between the First Nations and the government. Although First Nations thought he was hired to bring their greivances to Canada, he was only there to assure that Canada’s goals were being reached.

The Indian Act is a part of a long history of assimilation policies that intended to terminate the cultural, social, economic, and political distinctiveness of First Nations peoples by absorbing them into mainstream settler and Canadian life and values. Keep in mind that the Indian Act was not party of any treaty made between First Nations peoples and the government. The sole purpose of the act was to assimilate and colonize First Nations peoples.

JOHN A. MACDONALD, 1887

“The great aim of our legislation has been to do away with the tribal system and assimilate the Indian people in all respects with the other inhabitants of the Dominion as speedily as they are fit to change.”

1884

The “Potlatch Law” comes into effect, barring any First Nations people to gather in any large group.

1894

Indian Act stipulates compulsory school attendance to Industrial Schools for First Nations children.

1920’s

Section 141 was added to the Indian Act. The hiring of lawyers and legal counsel by Indians was now illegal.

This potlatch law is a prime example of how oppressive Canada was. This law also exhibits the resistance of First Nations’ and their ability to adapt. In 1884, the federal government banned potlatches under the Indian Act, along with other ceremonies, such as the sun dance.

Many First Nations’ held potlatches and/or other ceremonial gatherings despite the ban, they did so in discreet locations and times. If they were caught, all attendees of any potlatch would go to jail for unlawfully more than what was recommended, months and months.

Communities were severely impacted by the restriction of ceremonies, facing a legacy that continues to this day in for the form of lost cultural practicies, traditions, and oral history.

In 1894, a provision was added that it was compulsory for all First Nations children to attend Residential School. There were two industrial schools built in traditional Secwépemc territory. One in Kamloops, and the other near Williams Lake just a few kilometers off the T’éxelc (Sugar Cane) reserve. This was another major cause for loss of cultural practices, traditions, and oral history.

First Nations people were starting to become organized politically in the 1920’s. Organizations began to to persue land claims therefore the government added ‘Section 141′ to the Indian Act. This provision outlawed the hiring of lawyers and legal counsel by Indians, barring First Nations’ from fighting for their rights through the legal system. Eventually, this law strictly prohibited any gathering of First Nations’ people that looked like they were conspiring or having a ceremony with a penalty that resulted in jail. This law was a significant barrier to political organizing to fight or argue that these laws were wrong.

After World War II, Canadian citizens were shocked by the treatment of the Jewish by the Nazis, which made them aware of human rights. The holocaust and apartheid systems were designed from the treatment of First Nations by Canada and the church. Read that previous sentence again. Canadians, not the government, recognized that First Nations were the most disadvantaged in the country. First Nations war volunteering was among the highest in per capita. When you see that they were putting their lives on the line for a country that did a lot of wrong, it will definitely make you think twice. A veterans benefit package for those who fought in World War II was created for soldiers upon their return was created. However, First Nations soldiers would not be eligible due to the Indian Act status of not being human beings. A package would include a parcel of land, a veterans retirement package, along with some other things. If a First Nations soldier wanted these benefits, he would have to give up his “Status” and become enfranchised to Canada.

In 1951, Canada revised the Indian Act. The more oppressive sections were amended and taken out. It was no longer illegal for Indians to practice their customs and cultures. They were allowed in pool hall and to gamble. Indians were allowed to wear ceremonial dress off-reserve without permission. They were allowed to hire legal counsel. Women were allowed to vote in band councils.

These amendments were created to move away from having Indians as wards of the state and have them become contributing Canadian citizens. However, these changes only made the Indian Act almost the same as when it was created in 1876.

In 1969, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau proposed a policy that ended the special legal relationship between First Nations and the Canada, and also dismantled the Indian Act. This is called the “White Paper” policy of 1969. This white paper was met with opposition from First Nations leaders across the country and sparked a new era of First Nations political organizing in Canada. This document recognized that First Nations were the most marginalized people in Canada. However, the white paper proposed to just erase the history, erase the people, and erase the Indian Act, erase Canada’s federal responsibility to First Nations, and erase any existing treaties. Canada’s federal government wanted to push this responsibility to provincial governments and to the people they marginalized. In other words, Canada took responsibility for First Nations, told them they were not fit to take care of themselves and therefore said they were wards of the state, then told them they can’t do what they did for thousands of years, cannot speak their own language, cannot go to court for their right to argue the system, also took all children away and put them in abusive schools, not give them the opportunities to become people, and then say, “We want you to be a Canadian”. Who would want to become a citizen of a country that wronged your people in so many ways?