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The Gwich'in
(briefly)
by
Jean-Luc Pilon
NOGAP Archaeologist
Canadian Museum of Civilization
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Introduction
There were no chroniclers of Gwich'in history in the Northwest Territories. Instead, such written sources as do exist for the first century or so following the first recorded contact between the Gwich'in and Europeans are indirect in nature. The task of extracting useful anthropological and historical knowledge from these writings becomes the ethnohistorians art.The sharing of information and knowledge in traditional native North American societies was achieved primarily through oral transmission: stories, explanations, descriptions were recounted, listened to and passed on from one generation to the next. As we near the end of the twentieth century, this cycle has been seriously threatened and undermined. There is a great urgency to record what remains.
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Distribution
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Traditional Economy
The forested environment of the Gwich'in offered a wide range of resources from which to draw sustenance, tools and shelter. Theirs was very much a mixed economy with fish, waterfowl, and both small and large game contributing to the larder as these became seasonally available. It might be argued that some resources, by their seasonal abundance, were of critical importance, such as the salmon fishery along the Yukon River and caribou in the Old Crow Flats. Tsiigehtchic elders have recounted how spring fisheries could make the difference between life and death after a particularly long and meagre spring. Animal bones found in southwest Anderson Plain archaeological sites clearly indicate that caribou was a major species hunted at all times of the year. In fact, a number of sites appear to represent specialized fall caribou hunting localities.
First Descriptions-Early Contact
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The Fur Trade
While a trading post was established near present-day Fort Good Hope early in the XIXth century and even at the edge of the Gwich'in territory for a short while (1823-27), a permanent Euro- Canadian presence on Gwich'in lands did not occur before the establishment of Fort MacPherson in 1840. While there is no doubt that the establishment of Fort Good Hope and especially Fort MacPherson signalled the full participation of the Gwich'in in the fur trade, the break with the past was not immediate. For instance, in 1870, Father Jean Séguin wrote to his sister in France that refusal by the Fort MacPherson traders to advance the Gwich'in hunters guns and ammunition forced them to spend the winter hunting with bows and arrows. Throughout Séguin's writings, which comprises two typed and bound volumes, it is clear that caribou hunting and fishing are critical to the involvement of the local native people (Hare and Gwich'in) in the fur trade.In the first half of the XIXth century, one of the principal trade goods much sought after by the Gwich'in were beads. These had taken on a very powerful role in Gwich'in society and functioned as a highly-valued prestige item. Only once the traders' supply of beads had been exhausted were other items traded for. Oddly enough, with the single exception of the site at the Flats at Tsiigehtchic, beads are extremely scarce on archaeological sites of the southwest Anderson Plain. Perhaps this is a true measure of their value.
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The Modern Period
Although the Gwich'in were active in the fur trade throughout the XIXth century, they remained on the land, shifting territories in response to the abundance of fur bearers and food animals. It was not until the beginning of the XXth century that people began to settle at what would become the communities of Tsiigehtchic and Fort MacPherson. These localities had basically been summer gathering places with religious and trading functions. The presence of American whalers at Herschel Island and the later Yukon Gold Rush also added a police function to Fort MacPherson.Perhaps the most dramatic changes came about in the early part of the present century with the building of a hospital and a residential school in Aklavik. The substitution of some of the educational and health functions previously carried out within families and local residential groups likely marks a watershed of proportions even greater than any which might be imagined as a result of first contacts.
During the twentieth century contacts increased with the "outside" world. There was both an increase in the number of non-Natives settling or working in the lower Mackenzie Valley and a growing presence of government agents. This culminated with the establishment of the town of Inuvik, whose avowed purpose was to bring the south to the north.
Through all of this, the processes of change was controlled from without.
During the 1970's and 1980's new positions were established and these
culminated in the signing of the Gwich'in Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement on April 22,
1992. The future, as uncertain as it might be anywhere else, at least has
the potential of being shaped, to a greater degree, by the Gwich'in themselves.