Peguis (ca. 1774 – 28 September 1864)[1] was a Saulteaux chief, who moved from the Great Lakes area (near Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario) to Red Lake (now in Minnesota), then arriving in what is now southern Manitoba in the 1790s.[2]
Peguis | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1774 |
Died | September 28, 1864 |
Other names |
|
Title | Chief |
Relatives | Tommy Prince (great-grandson) |
In 1817, he signed the first treaty (Selkirk Treaty or Treaty No. 1) with Lord Selkirk, granting land along the Red River to the Selkirk settlers. In 1840, he was one of the early western First Nations converts to Christianity and was given the baptized name William King; his children adopted the surname "Prince". He and his people had helped both the Hudson's Bay Company and the Selkirk settlers; indeed, without Peguis' help, the Selkirk settlers might well have starved.[3] However, by the 1850s, he had become concerned at illegal settlement by European migrants on traditional lands. He was sometimes called Cut Nose since his nose had been injured in a fight in 1802.
His name is commemorated in the name of Peguis First Nation, Chief Peguis Trail (Winnipeg Route 17), and many organizations, place names, and institutions of Manitoba.
See also
edit- Tommy Prince, his great-grandson, Canadian hero of World War II
- William Prince, his descendant, 21st-century Canadian singer-songwriter
References
edit- ^ Thomas Thorner, Thor Frohn-Nielsen (ed) A few acres of snow: documents in pre-confederation Canadian history, University of Toronto Press, 2009 ISBN 1-4426-0029-2, pg. 291
- ^ Donna G. Sutherland, Peguis: A Noble Friend, Chief Peguis Heritage Park Inc., 2003, ISBN 1-55099-137-X
- ^ Lucille H. Campey, The Silver Chief: Lord Selkirk and the Scottish pioneers of Belfast, Baldoon and Red River, Dundurn Press Ltd., 2003 ISBN 1-896219-88-8, p.105