Robert Smallboy

Last updated

Chief Robert (Bobtail) Smallboy (7 November 1898 - 8 July 1984), Cree name Keskayo Apitchitchiw, was a community leader who brought national attention to problems faced by urban and reserve Indians when he "returned to the land" with followers from troubled Canadian Indian reservations. [1] He was born while his parent s were "in transit" through the Peigan Nation, SW of Fort Macleod, Alta on 7 November 1898, en route to his father's home in what was to become the Rocky Boy (now "Stonechild") Reservation in Montana, named after Bobtail's paternal grandfather. Bobtail spent his formative years there, long enough to speak Cree with a noticeable Chippewa accent. During the first world war, the Smallboys were among the last to settle on their allotted reserve at Hobbema in central Alberta, a Treaty 6 nation now known for its rich oil and gas reserves. [2] Smallboy became a hunter, trapper, farmer, and eventually chief of the Ermineskin Band from 1959 to 1969. In 1968, to escape deteriorating social and political conditions on the reserve, he moved to a bush camp on the Kootenay Plains. He attributed the alcoholism, drug abuse and suicide that he saw in his community to an attempt to live a modern lifestyle on the reserve rather than "The Indian Way". [3] Accompanied by approximately 125 people and with help from other elders he moved his community. Despite factional splits, the return of many residents to Hobbema, and the group's failure to obtain permanent land tenure, Smallboy Camp persisted into the 21st Century as a working community used as a retreat by Plains and Woodlands Indians from western Canada and the US. [4]

Contents

Smallboy received the Order of Canada in 1979. [5]

Early life

Smallboy was born in 1898. He was named Keskayo (Bobtail) by his famous maternal grandfather of the same name. However, "Bobtail" was shortened to "Bob" and later expanded in the popular press to "Robert." An Order of Canada Certificate and Medical Scholarship established in his honour are both in the name of "Robert" Smallboy. He also took his father's Cree name Apitchitchiw (Small Boy") as a surname. To add to the confusion, he was never baptized; so when a baptismal certificate was required for his wedding to Louisa Headman in 1918, he supplied his younger brother's certificate in the name "Johnny Smallboy". The records of Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows Church show the name "Bob" typed as an insertion in a different typeface; so he was also known as "Johnny Bob Smallboy." [6] Thus, Smallboy was descended from two great chiefs of the Cree Nation in Alberta and Saskatchewan as well as the chief of the Chippewa-Cree in Montana: Big Bear and Bobtail on his mother's side and Rocky Boy on his father's side. [7]

Smallboy Camp or Mountain Cree Camp

Smallboy became Chief of the Ermineskin Cree Nation in 1959. He led a delegation to Ottawa after becoming a chief. He used this opportunity to address the problems of his people with the Canadian Government and even with Pope John Paul II in Rome, [8] laying out such issues as a need for more land, unemployment, the breaking down of family units, rampant alcoholism, child neglect, and children were performing poorly in school. There was great loss of pride, dignity, religion, and social order, he said. This left people with little meaning in their lives. However, his pleas for help fell on deaf ears. As oil development and modernization engulfed his reserve, Chief Smallboy was saddened by the increasing use of alcohol and drugs, his people's loss of language due to television and their movement away from traditional rituals and medicines.

As oil revenue increased, people gave up farming. Meanwhile, domestic disputes, suicides and traffic deaths increased dramatically. Chief Smallboy could only find one solution and that was to take his followers away from this harmful environment and to embrace a more natural way of life. Based upon the principles of his forefathers, he made a decision to abandon the Ermineskin Reserve for the future of his children and grandchildren and for a good, peaceful life for them in a place far from the what he regarded as the evil influences of the modern world. [9] In the summer of 1968, Chief Small Boy, together with Simon Omeasoo, Lazarus Roan, Alex Shortneck, and some 140 followers left the Ermineskin Reserve. They established a camp in the wilderness of the Kootenay Plains near the Rocky Mountains. They pitched a large council teepee, twenty tents and (eventually) a portable classroom. They had no intention of reverting to the role of nomadic plains men, but sought isolation, while at the same time providing an acceptable level of education for their children. [10] Chief Smallboy was adamant in maintaining the integrity of his camp and successfully avoided government efforts to close it down.

The camp was an inspiration to other Indigenous people in Canada and the United States and became a centre for learning about Cree Spiritual life. While there were disagreements and breakaways, Chief Smallboy was the undisputed chief. Smallboy camp was constituted under the Pearson administration and led directly to Smallboy and his followers abandoning their reserve at Hobbema and moving to the Kootenay Plains. ‘The treaty process had been a fraud,’ Chief Smallboy declared, this land has not been ceded to queen Victoria. The collected chiefs who signed Treaty Six in 1876 and Treaty Seven in 1877 had no idea what land they were giving up. The undeveloped crown lands east of the Rocky mountains, where he then residing, had not been included in Treaty Six or Treaty Seven. The Federal Government sees the camp as occupying crown land. [11] But David Thompson had recognized that the Kootenay Plains and the mountains, including the Columbia Ice Fields, were Sacred Indian Land. Despite the inclusion of that strip of land, as the anomalous panhandle of Treaty Eight, signed away by tribes a thousand kilometers away, it remained sacred Indian land. It would be occupied by Smallboy‘s Band and any Indian who chose to follow. [12] Thus it was that in 1968, Chief Bobtail Smallboy pitched his tent along with another dozen tents and tee pees on the Kootenay Plains North of Abraham Lake.

In 1970s the Smallboy Camp split into two, one – third of the membership following Joseph Mackinaw to the Buck Lake Region, within the boundaries of Treaty Six. The 1970s death of Simon Omeasoo and Lazarus Roan led to a number of their relatives returning to Hobbema. The remaining members of the "Smallboy Band" retained their status in the Ermineskin Band. They were not deprived of their share of the oil royalties that occurred in 1970’s & 1980's and this gave each member of Ermineskin Band, man, woman, & child five hundred dollars a month. Smallboy had initially taken his band to the foothills to help alleviate poverty; however the Ermineskin band soon became the richest band in the land, partly because of Smallboy's negotiations with big oil companies prior to his leaving Hobbema. [7]

Legacy and Artistic Tributes

In 1996, Tony Isaacs of the Taos, New Mexico based label Indian House Records traveled to the remote location of the Smallboy Camp to make sound recordings. [13]

Visual artist Joane Cardinal-Schubert created several artworks related to Smallboy and the tragedy of his death. [14] [15] Cardinal-Schubert also wrote a poem about Smallboy's death. [16]

In 2005, Fifth House Books and Fitzhenry and Whiteside published Chief Smallboy: In Pursuit of Freedom, by Dr. Gary Botting, a long-time acquaintance of the Chief.

Kisiko Awasis Kiskinhamawin in Mountain Cree Camp

The Mountain Cree Camp School was established on the Smallboy Camp in 1967. The school was not recognized by the province of Alberta or the Federal Government until 2009. Starting in 2005, Alberta Education started negotiations to establish a program with the school. In 2009, a formal agreement was struck by Alberta Education for the Edmonton Catholic School Board to provide educational support to the school. [11]

Death

On a visit to Banff in the winter of 1984 Chief Smallboy, who suffered from diabetes, went for a walk in 20 below weather, and became disoriented: he could not find his hotel. Since he did not speak English, he was turned away from several hotels and was forced to stay the night outdoors. He suffered frostbite in his feet, which eventually turned gangrenous. He was treated at Wetaskiwin General Hospital, where he was refused the right to burn purifying sweetgrass. [17] He pleaded to be returned his Camp, where he died on July 8, 1984 [18] [16] After being smudged with a sweetgrass braid by his son, Joe, outside his cabin, he reached down and patted the soil. "Good land," he said. "Good land." His final words. [19]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cree</span> First Nations peoples in Canada and northern United States

The Cree are a North American Indigenous people. They live primarily in Canada, where they form one of the country's largest First Nations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Big Bear</span> 19th-century Cree chief

Big Bear, also known as Mistahi-maskwa, was a powerful and popular Cree chief who played many pivotal roles in Canadian history. He was appointed to chief of his band at the age of 40 upon the death of his father, Black Powder, under his father's harmonious and inclusive rule which directly impacted his own leadership. Big Bear is most notable for his involvement in Treaty 6 and the 1885 North-West Rebellion; he was one of the few chief leaders who objected to the signing of the treaty with the Canadian government. He felt that signing the treaty would ultimately have devastating effects on his nation as well as other Indigenous nations. This included losing the free nomadic lifestyle that his nation and others were accustomed to. Big Bear also took part in one of the last major battles between the Cree and the Blackfoot nations. He was one of the leaders to lead his people in the last, largest battle on the Canadian Plains.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rocky Boy's Indian Reservation</span> Indian reservation in United States, Chippewa Cree

Rocky Boy's Indian Reservation is one of seven Native American reservations in the U.S. state of Montana. Established by an act of Congress on September 7, 1916, it was named after Ahsiniiwin, the chief of the Chippewa band, who had died a few months earlier. It was established for landless Chippewa (Ojibwe) Indians in the American West, but within a short period of time many Cree (Nēhiyaw) and Métis were also settled there. Today the Cree outnumber the Chippewa on the reservation. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) recognizes it as the Chippewa Cree Reservation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Assiniboine</span> First Nations people native to the northern Great Plains of North America

The Assiniboine or Assiniboin people, also known as the Hohe and known by the endonym Nakota, are a First Nations/Native American people originally from the Northern Great Plains of North America.

First Nations in Alberta are a group of people who live in the Canadian province of Alberta. The First Nations are peoples recognized as Indigenous peoples or Plains Indians in Canada excluding the Inuit and the Métis. According to the 2011 Census, a population of 116,670 Albertans self-identified as First Nations. Specifically there were 96,730 First Nations people with registered Indian Status and 19,945 First Nations people without registered Indian Status. Alberta has the third largest First Nations population among the provinces and territories. From this total population, 47.3% of the population lives on an Indian reserve and the other 52.7% live in urban centres. According to the 2011 Census, the First Nations population in Edmonton totalled at 31,780, which is the second highest for any city in Canada. The First Nations population in Calgary, in reference to the 2011 Census, totalled at 17,040. There are 48 First Nations or "bands" in Alberta, belonging to nine different ethnic groups or "tribes" based on their ancestral languages.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Treaty 6</span> Treaty between the First Nations and Canadian Crown

Treaty 6 is the sixth of the numbered treaties that were signed by the Canadian Crown and various First Nations between 1871 and 1877. It is one of a total of 11 numbered treaties signed between the Canadian Crown and First Nations. Specifically, Treaty 6 is an agreement between the Crown and the Plains and Woods Cree, Assiniboine, and other band governments at Fort Carlton and Fort Pitt. Key figures, representing the Crown, involved in the negotiations were Alexander Morris, Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba and The North-West Territories; James McKay, The Minister of Agriculture for Manitoba; and William J. Christie, a chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Company. Chief Mistawasis and Chief Ahtahkakoop represented the Carlton Cree.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Enoch Cree Nation</span> Canadian First Nation

The Enoch Cree Nation #440 is a First Nations band government in Alberta, Canada. Members of the Nation are of Cree ancestry and speak the Plains Cree dialect of the Cree language group. The band is a signatory of Treaty 6 and is a member of the Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations. The chief of the Enoch Cree Nation is Cody Thomas.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Willie Littlechild</span> Canadian politician

J. Wilton Littlechild, known as Willie Littlechild, is a Canadian lawyer and Cree chief who was Grand Chief of the Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations and a member of Parliament. A residential school survivor, he is known for his work nationally and internationally on Indigenous rights. He was born in Hobbema, now named Maskwacis, Alberta.

The Sweetgrass First Nation is a Cree First Nation reserve in Cut Knife, Saskatchewan, Canada. Their territory is located 35 kilometers west of Battleford. The reserve was established when Chief Sweetgrass signed Treaty 6 on September 9, 1876, with the Fort Pitt Indians. Chief Sweetgrass was killed six months after signing Treaty 6, after which Sweetgrass's son, Apseenes, succeeded him. Apseenes was unsuccessful in leading the band so chiefdom was handed over to Wah-wee-kah-oo-tah-mah-hote after he signed Treaty 6 in 1876 at Fort Carlton. Wah-wee-kah-oo-tah-mah-hote served as chief between 1876 and 1883 but was deposed and Apseenes took over chiefdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fort Pitt Provincial Park</span> Historic trading outpost and provincial park in Saskatchewan, Canada

Fort Pitt Provincial Park is a provincial park in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Fort Pitt was built in 1829 by the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) and was a trading post on the North Saskatchewan River in Rupert's Land. It was built at the direction of Chief Factor John Rowand, previously of Fort Edmonton, to trade for bison hides, meat and pemmican. Pemmican, dried buffalo meat, was required as provisions for HBC's northern trading posts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maskwacis</span> Unincorporated community/Hamlet in Alberta, Canada

Maskwacis, renamed in 2014 from Hobbema, is an unincorporated community in central Alberta, Canada at intersection of Highway 2A and Highway 611, approximately 70 kilometres (43 mi) south of the City of Edmonton. The community consists of two Cree First Nations communities – one on the Ermineskin 138 reserve to the north and the other on the Samson 137 reserve to the south. It also consists of an adjacent hamlet within Ponoka County. The community also serves three more nearby First Nations reserves including Samson 137A to the south, Louis Bull 138B to the northwest, and Montana 139 to the south.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ahtahkakoop Cree Nation</span> First Nation in Saskatchewan, Canada

Ahtahkakoop First Nation is a Cree First Nation band government in Shell Lake, Saskatchewan, Canada. The Ahtahkakoop First Nation government and community is located on Ahtahkakoop 104, 72 kilometers northwest of Prince Albert and is 17,347 hectares in size. The community was formerly known as the "Sandy Lake Indian Band", a name which is still used interchangeably when referring to the reserve.

The Indian Association of Alberta is a province-wide First Nations rights organization. It was founded by John Callihoo and John Laurie in 1939, after splitting off from the League of Indians in Western Canada.

Ermineskin Cree Nation also known as the Ermineskin Tribe, is a Cree First Nations band government in Alberta, Canada. A signatory to Treaty 6, Ermineskin is one of the Four Nations of Maskwacis, Alberta's largest Indigenous community.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Constantine Scollen</span> Irish Roman Catholic priest

Father Con Scollen OMI. was an Irish Catholic, Missionary priest who lived among and evangelized the Blackfoot, Cree and Métis peoples on the Canadian Prairies and in northern Montana in the United States. He also ministered to the Ktunaxa people (Kootenay) on their annual visits to Fort Macleod, from British Columbia. Later he worked among the indigenous peoples in modern-day North Dakota and Wyoming, then Nebraska, Kansas, Illinois and Ohio.

The Iron Confederacy or Iron Confederation was a political and military alliance of Plains Indians of what is now Western Canada and the northern United States. This confederacy included various individual bands that formed political, hunting and military alliances in defense against common enemies. The ethnic groups that made up the Confederacy were the branches of the Cree that moved onto the Great Plains around 1740, the Saulteaux, the Nakoda or Stoney people also called Pwat or Assiniboine, and the Métis and Haudenosaunee. The Confederacy rose to predominance on the northern Plains during the height of the North American fur trade when they operated as middlemen controlling the flow of European goods, particularly guns and ammunition, to other Indigenous nations, and the flow of furs to the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) and North West Company (NWC) trading posts. Its peoples later also played a major part in the bison (buffalo) hunt, and the pemmican trade. The decline of the fur trade and the collapse of the bison herds sapped the power of the Confederacy after the 1860s, and it could no longer act as a barrier to U.S. and Canadian expansion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maskwacis Cultural College</span> First Nation-operated college in Alberta

Maskwacis Cultural College (MCC) is a private post-secondary institution within the Four Nations of Maskwacis, Alberta, Canada. MCC offers programs from basic adult literacy, two-year college diplomas, to university transfer programs.

Saddle Lake Cree Nation is a Plains Cree, First Nations community, located in the Amiskwacīwiyiniwak region of central Alberta, Canada. The Nation is a signatory to Treaty 6, and their traditional language is Plains Cree.

The Montana First Nation is a First Nations band government in Alberta, Canada. It is a Treaty 6 government. Formerly the Montana Band of Indians, it is one of four First Nations in the area of Maskwacis.

The Little Pine First Nation is a Plains Cree First Nations band government in Saskatchewan, Canada. Their reserves include:

References

  1. Gary Botting, Chief Smallboy: In Pursuit of Freedom, with a foreword by Hugh Dempsey (Calgary: Fifth House, 2005), pp. 54, facing 76, 212.
  2. "Ermineskin Cree Nation". The Canadian Business Journal. 2014-08-28. Retrieved 2017-09-28.
  3. Botting, Chief Smallboy: In Pursuit of Freedom, p. 194
  4. McCardle, Bennett. "Johnny Bob Smallboy".
  5. The Office of the Secretary to the Governor General. "The Governor General of Canada".
  6. Botting, Chief Smallboy, pp. 54-55. See, for example, The Canadian Enclopedia, under "Johnny Bob Smallboy"
  7. 1 2 "Chief Robert Small Boy".
  8. Botting, Chief Smallboy, pp. 181-82)
  9. Ross, Jane; Kyba, Daniel (2 March 2016). The David Thompson Highway Hiking Guide – 2nd Edition. Rocky Mountain Books Ltd. ISBN   9781771600910 via Google Books.
  10. "Edmonton Catholic Schools".
  11. 1 2 "Edmonton Catholic Schools". www.ecsd.net. Retrieved 2017-09-28.
  12. Botting, Chief Smallboy, pp. 209-210.
  13. "smallboy camp -".
  14. "eMuseum". alberta.emuseum.com. Retrieved 2017-09-28.
  15. "Homage to Smallboy: Where Were You in July Hercules – Works – eMuseum". artcollection.uleth.ca. Retrieved 2017-09-28.
  16. 1 2 The Writing on the Wall The Work of Joane Cardinal-schubert. Sharman, Lindsey. Univ of Calgary Pr. 2017. ISBN   9781552389492. OCLC   987284085.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  17. Botting, Chief Smallboy, pp. 199-201
  18. nurun.com. "Indigenous Ingenuity".
  19. Gary Botting, Chief Smallboy: In Pursuit of Freedom, p. 202.