Duncan's First Nation Explained

Band Name:Duncan's First Nation
Band Number:451
People:Woods Cree
Treaty:Treaty 8
Headquarters:Brownvale
Province:Alberta
Main Reserve:Duncan's 151A
Reserve:William McKenzie 151K
Area:24.261
Pop Year:2019
On Reserve:144
On Other Land:2
Off Reserve:182
Chief:Virginia Gladue
Council:
  • Jennifer Testawich
  • Keith Lawrence
Tribal Council:Western Cree Tribal Council
Website:duncansfirstnation.com
Footnotes:[1]

Duncan's First Nation is a First Nation in northwestern Alberta, Canada. It operates as an Indian band under the Indian Act representing a community of Aboriginal Canadians, in this case from the Woods Cree ethnic group. The band became a party to Treaty 8 with the Canadian Crown on July 1, 1899. Indian reserves were surveyed for the band in 1905, but the reserves were not confirmed by Order-in-Council until 1907 (eight parcels) and 1925 (two parcels). All but one reserves (

  1. 151A
) were later surrendered to the Canadian government in 1928. One of them,
  1. 151K
, was later returned to the band in 1965.[2] The two remaining reserves are #151A, located west of Peace River, Alberta and #151K, located in the McLennon/Reno area, southeast of Peace River. The two reserves comprise a total area of, and the majority of the population lives on #151A. In 2012, the band had a registered population of 269, of whom 142 members living the band's reserves.[3]

In the 1970s, Duncan's First Nation joined a regional council with several other bands, the Lesser Slave Lake Indian Regional Council. In 1998, however, the band withdrew from the Lesser Slave Lake council and formed the Western Cree Tribal Council along with Horse Lake First Nation and Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation, and remains a member.[4] Duncan's is also a member of a treaty council, the Treaty 8 First Nations of Alberta.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: First Nation Detail. August 20, 2019. Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada.
  2. iportal.usask.ca/docs/ICC_CD/Duncans%20First%20Nation/pub/eng.pdf
  3. Web site: Site C Clean Energy Project. Fasken Martineau. BC Hydro.
  4. Web site: Western Cree Tribal Council - About Us . 2014-05-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140502005454/http://www.westerncree.ca/about.html . 2014-05-02 . dead .