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Land, Indigenous peoples, settlers, and today’s communities.

Since time immemorial, Ancestors of the people called K’ómoks today consisting of the Pentlatch, Ieeksan (eye-ick-sun), Sasitla (sa-seet-la), Xa’xe (ha-hey) and Sathloot (sath-loot) people have been the caretakers of this land, which they called the “Land of Plenty.” This Land of Plenty stretched from what is known today as Kelsey Bay in the north, down to Hornby and Denman Island in the south, and included the watershed and estuary of the Puntledge River, also acknowledging that these boundaries and place names are colonial constructs.

The K’ómoks First Nation refer to the lands between the bays of Comox and the Beaufort mountain range as the path between, it was a travel and trade route to the Alberni corridor and a connection to the indigenous communities on the western side of the island.

Land agreements included the 1884 Settlement Act stripped these lands for its caretakers. At the Museum we acknowledge that we are a colonial created institution, and I would like to thank Charlene Everson, Emily Shopland and Violet Williams for guiding the museum in early discussion on what reconciliation could mean for our organization and how we could create actionable steps; in maintaining a positive dialogue with a forward focus, sharing contemporary K’omoks narratives, and incorporating First Nation languages where they felt it appropriate. Their time and guidance helped us gain insight and learn how to best support their voice in our museum’s walls. This is an ongoing process and we have so much more to learn.

Collection Item
Community

Fifth Census of Canada, 1911

Type:

Date: 1911

History

This page of the census shows the Mitchell Family on lines 32 to 38. By 1911, it seems the family had already lost their patriarch as the mother, Margaret, is written down as the head of the household and no men of the house are mentioned. She had three sons and four daughters. Her youngest was less than a year at the time. By the 1921 Census, the household shrunk down to two sons, William and Matthew, and two daughters, Beatrice and Jemime.
Historical census publication digitized in 2009 and 2010 by Statistics Canada.

Description

This is a page from the fifth Census of Canada, 1911, page twenty-one.

Item Details

  • Archival Reference: CS98-1911-PDF
  • Author: Ottawa : [Dept. of Trade and Commerce, Census and Statistics Office], 1912-1915.
  • Credit: Copy courtesy of Library and Archives Canada at https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item/?app=Census1911&op=pdf&id=e001935698

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