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20AU4576hdrw Little Pays Plat River-SharpenAI-Motion

Little Pays Plat Creek & the Main Line CP Railway Bridge . Looking out into Lake Superior

 

The people of Pays Plat have occupied the north shore of Lake Superior since time immemorial. The first recorded document of the area and its people was in 1777, when a fur trader named John Long passed through and noted that it was a flat area between two mountains. This is how the name Pays Plat – or ‘flat land’ – came about. The people who lived in the area called it Pawgwasheeng or ‘where the water is shallow’. During the 1850’s, Colonial government negotiator William Robinson established a series of treaties on the watersheds of Lake Huron and Lake Superior. These treaties were drafted to reduce the conflict between European settlers and the Indigenous peoples who inhabited this region, and to open land for exploration and settlement.

 

The people of Pays Plat did not sign a treaty. Based on oral history, while Ojibwa Chiefs from across the north shore signed the Robinson-Superior Treaty on September 7th, 1850 in Sault Ste. Marie, the people who would later settle in the region of Pays Plat were out hunting at the time. They only became aware of the treaty in 1883 when the Canadian Pacific Railway came to the area to build the railroad. The people of this region were allotted a single square mile of reserve land to live on, around the right of ways that were carved through the land.

 

Since 1883, the community of Pays Plat has had numerous developments across its traditional lands and its allotted reserve. The right of ways for the highway and hydro lines cut across the community, and since the early 1990’s the community has been involved in a Land and Larger Land Base claim to deal with this issue. An Agreement-in-Principle was signed in 2009 on adding lands to the reserve. Drafting of the final agreement is underway.

 

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Uploaded on October 6, 2020
Taken on August 7, 2020