British North America 1763-1867
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Indigenous artifacts from the Vatican collection return to Canada
5 minute read Preview Monday, Dec. 8, 2025First Nations sue over oil-rich land
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025Decades-long fight to repeal discriminatory second-generation cut-off rekindled on Parliament Hill
8 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025Fenians fancied a Manitoba foothold
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022Map-based history of Canada a marvel
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 28, 2017Uncovering Canada’s Arctic sea battle
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013Hardship, history live in rock of ancient fort
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Jul. 13, 2013Canadian political culture grew out of War of 1812
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 16, 2012Precedent-setting Treaty 1 case wraps up
4 minute read Wednesday, Mar. 4, 2026A precedent-setting trial that wrapped up in Winnipeg’s Court of King’s Bench at the end of February has called for a court to determine, for the first time in 150 years, whether the value of Treaty 1 annuities is subject to an increase after being frozen at $5 per person since 1875.
Festival du Voyageur and the modern fur industry
4 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026Festival du Voyageur, which wrapped up its 57th annual run this past weekend, is hard to pin down.
It is Western Canada’s largest winter festival and francophone event. It celebrates Indigenous history and culture. It used to hold staged gunfights or “skirmishes” and a casino.
It can be easy to forget that Festival du Voyageur is at its core a celebration of Canada’s fur trade history. Without the fur trade, there would be no Canada as we know it. Among other things, it was the engine of French settlement in North America and gave birth to the Metis Nation. At the same time, the fur trade had profound and lasting negative impacts on Indigenous communities and devastated local populations of beavers and other animals. Any event that commemorates a history as deeply contentious as that of the fur trade — especially one that draws tens of thousands of people each year — must do so responsibly.
Festival du Voyageur agrees.