Credit River Surrender
Credit River Surrender
Credit River Surrender
Provisional agreement by the Mississauga Nation to surrender 648,000 acres to the British in the Home District in consideration of a yearly sum of 522 pounds 10 shillings currency in goods.
Nation surrendering tract of land.
Treaty document.
Read More About This Relative
paper, ink, wax
10 doodemag, 1 crown seal
Description of Land Sold:
In consideration of 522 pounds 10 shillings province currency in goods at the Montreal price to be paid yearly by His Majesty to the Mississauga Nation, the Indians agree to surrender the following 648,000 acres of land:
A tract of land in the Home District called the Mississauga Tract, bounded southerly by the purchase made in 1806; on the east by the Townships of Etobicoke, Vaughan, and King; on the south-west by the Indian purchase, extending from the outlet at Burlington Bay, north forty-five degrees west fifty miles, and from thence north seventy-four degrees east or thereabout to the north-west angle of the Township of King.
Witnesses:
J. Givins, Superintendent of Indian Affairs
Wm. Hands Jr., Clerk, Indian Department
Wm. Gruet, Interpreter, Indian Department
Crown Signatories:
W. Claus, D.S.G. on behalf of the Crown
First Nation’s Signatories:
Adjutant
Weggishgomin
Cabibonike
Pagitaiquatoibe
Kawahkitahaquibe
Date document signed
Provenance
Canada, Indian Treaties and Surrenders from 1680 to 1890, 2 vols., (Ottawa: Queen’s Printer, 1891), 1: 47-48.
About This GRASAC Record
28 October 1818, Credit River Surrender, Library and Archives Canada, Indian Affairs, D-10a, Series A, Volume 1842, Reel T-9938, GAD REF IT 059, http://grasac.org/gks (heritage item id no. 2620, accessed [date]).
This record was created under the direction of Heidi Bohaker as part of a larger research project funded by an Aboriginal Research Grant titled ““Braiding Knowledges: Anishinaabe Heritage in Community Perspective”from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).
43.6511, -79.347
Location of Treaty Lands