Relatives/Heritage items
Displaying 2081 - 2100 of 4694 Relatives
Browsing allows you to see all the records for relatives and heritage items in the GKS. You can also search by material made, and/or filter by nations. To search by material made, type the material's name, by example 'leather', in the box below and click “Apply.” You can select multiple nations from the dropdown list by pressing “Ctrl” (on PC) or “Command” (on Mac) and clicking, then select “Apply.”
This is a photograph of Tom Longboat of the Onondaga nation, one of the fastest Canadian and international marathon runners in the world in the decade preceeding the First World War. He won the Boston Marathon on April 19, 1907, at the age of 19
This is a watercolour portrait of Thouhama or Sweet-Grass, the wife of an Onondaga chief.It is by Henry Bowyer Lane and was painted in 1846.This painting is in the Peter Winkworth Collection of Canadiana.
Chiefs of the Mohawk Indians residing on their reserve in the County of Hastings, Midland District surrender two plots of land to the Crown for a church and glebe to be used by the Protestant Episcopal Church.
This is a portrait print of Shahwundais, Rev. John Sunday, a converted Chippeway Chief, by W. Gush. It is in the Peter Winkworth Collection of Canadiana.
This is a portrait photograph taken in 1845 of Kahkewaquonaby, the Reverend Peter Jones, a Mississauga Ojibwa chief. He carries a pipe tomahawk and wears a ceinture fléchée.
A single strand of blue glass beads, on cotton thread. Used as a trade item by the French during the fur trade era of the 17th and 18th centuries. Collected by Dr. Oronhyatekha; acquired by the ROM in 1911 from the Independent Order of Foresters.
The Mohawk Indians of Tyendinaga, in the County of Hastings and Midland District, surrender to His Majesty 27,857 acres of land laying in the Township of Tyendinaga. The lands, once disposed of by His Majesty in trust for the benefit of the Mohawk Indians.
In consideration of an annual payment of 450 pounds in goods, the Six Nations Indians surrendered unto the Crown 33,280 acres of reserve lands in Mohawk Township, County of Hastings. See IT076 - Original or Duplicate Surrender, IT077 - Original or Duplicate Surrender
This is a portrait of Paccane, a Miami chief, a print by Mrs. Elizabeth Simcoe done in 1793/94. It was copied from an original by Henry Hamilton, governor of Detroit.
This is a daguerreotype portrait of Maun-gua-daus (or Maun-gwa-daus), George Henry, chief of the Ojibwa Nation of Credit (Upper Canada) and interpreter employed by Indian Affairs. It dates from c 1846-1848.