Matsqui people explained

The Matsqui people ('''Máthxwi''')[1] are a Aboriginal group located in the Central Fraser Valley region of British Columbia, Canada. Their band government is the Matsqui First Nation, a member of the tribal council. The core traditional territory of the Matsqui stretches along the Fraser River from Crescent Island to Sumas Mountain, and southward beyond the Canada-United States border.[2] Today the band administers four reserves and has a population of 225 (which has been steadily growing over recent decades).[3] Their original language is Halq'eméylem.[4]

Transformer stories

Ancient legendary stories (known as sxwõxwiyám in the Halq'eméylem language) reveal the ancestors of the current Matsqui people to have occupied Matsqui territory from time immemorial. Like other Sto:lo communities, the Matsqui collectively inherited traits (or "gifts") from their shared legendary ancestors. Sto:lo sxwõxwiyám describe how the Matsqui tribe was founded by a man named Sk-Elê'yitl who, along with his son, was transformed into Beaver by Xá:ls the legendary transformer. Beaver was responsible for ensuring that the sockeye salmon were available to all of the Sto:lo communities on the Fraser River, and was the first to bring fire to the Sto:lo people.

Another sxwõxwiyám explains the origins of a large transformer stone on the eastern edge of Aldergrove Regional Park. Known to the Matsqui as "Méqel" (Halq'eméylem for "nose"), the stone was created by Xá:ls after witnessing a man who started sneezing when enemies were drawing near. Xá:ls was so impressed with this talent that he permanently transformed the man into the stone nose.

History

The Matsqui are closely related to the Nooksack people in Washington, and are notable as one of only two Sto:lo groups that were historically bilingual in the Halq'eméylem and Noocksack languages. Their bilingualism has much to do with the nature of Matsqui territory, which features a system of trails, streams, and lakes that connect the Fraser River to the Nooksack River in Washington. The word "Matsqui" (Máthxwi or Mathexwi) itself may be derived from máth, a root plant that grew in the large, easily traveled marshes that were once abundant in the Matsqui Prairie area.[5] The word "Matsqui" means "easy portage."[4]

Settlements

When the smallpox epidemic spread through Matsqui territory in 1782, its survivors likely consolidated their numbers in the settlements that were the most rich with resources and more easily defended against the coastal raiders. In 1808, the explorer Simon Fraser traveled down the Fraser River and recorded a village that may have been located at Matsqui. Estimating the population to be about 200 people, Fraser also took note of a massive longhouse, "640 feet long by 60 broad [...] under one roof."[6] Near the end of the nineteenth century, anthropologist Franz Boas recorded the name of a village on Matsqui Main Indian Reserve 2, "Ma'mak'ume [Mómeqwem]," and noted that this was one of two Matsqui villages.

Reserves

In 1860, surveyor William McColl established a reserve for the Matsqui at Mómeqwem. Amounting to 9600 acres, the Matsqui reserve was the largest reserve ever to be established in south coastal British Columbia. Within a decade, however, shifts in colonial policy worked to drastically reduce the size of reserves across the colony. In 1867, the Matsqui reserve was reduced to 80 acres, just 8% of the original allotment.

In 1877, an American named Ellis Luther Derby began illegally constructing a dyke at the Matsqui Main reserve, where the majority of Matsqui people lived.[7] Because the Matsqui relied on seasonal flooding to access important hunting and gathering sites, the imposition of the dyke on the reserve significantly disrupted their ability to access key parts of their traditional territory. Nonetheless, in 1879 the Joint Indian Reserve Commission conceded that Derby would be allowed to "keep the Dyke which goes through the Reserve fenced."[8]

Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the nearby construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway (1885) and a spur line to Washington (1892) had opened new agricultural markets to the east and to the south. Around this period, the Matsqui—whose historic economy was by now severely disrupted—adopted agricultural and horticultural activities on their reserve—keeping cattle, sowing crops, and planting orchards—alongside historic practices like fishing. The remnants of the orchards—apple, plum, cherry, and pear trees—are still visible at Matsqui Main Reserve today.[9]

By the early twentieth century, the government had expropriated significant portions of Matsqui Main Reserve for the BC Electric Railway (1910), Canadian National Railway (1915), and Glenmore Road. When the McKenna-McBride Royal Commission came to Matsqui in 1915, they recorded a population of forty people living in eleven homes. The following year, the Indian Agent responsible for Matsqui reported that the population—now thirty six—was rapidly decreasing due to tuberculosis. The commission also received a testimony from Chief Charlie Matsqui. Chief Matsqui protested that the borders of his reserve had been significantly curtailed since 1860, and impinged upon by the BC Electric and CNR railways, without due compensation.[10] The Chief's testimony reveals how the Matsqui may have understood these impositions and merits quoting at length:

Work and education

The arrival of miners and then thousands of settlers into Matsqui territory had devastating impacts on the Matsqui community. Most of their natural resources (forests, fish, wildlife, and lands) were being used and regulated by newcomers, their children were being taken to residential schools, and adult men and women were relegated to finding wage employment in only a few industries.[11] But over the past century there has been remarkable improvements in Matsqui people's education attainment, success in lowering unemployment and finding ever more meaningful jobs, and now there are initiatives showing the success of Matsqui people in the field of business and self-governance.[12]

Throughout the twentieth century, Matsqui have engaged in various kinds of employment on and off reserve. The income gained from such activities helped to supplement traditional practices like harvesting, hunting, and fishing, and more recent ones, such as raising cattle or growing potatoes. At the beginning of the century, the Matsqui often found work in fish canning facilities or hop yards. Later, Matsqui logged and planted trees, and harvested cascara bark on Three Islands reserve. They also found work picking berries in the Fraser Valley and on Bainbridge Island, Washington.[9]

Many Matsqui children attended St. Mary's Indian Residential School in Mission, where they sometimes encountered abuse and mistreatment. One of the apparent consequences of the school among the Matsqui was the steep decline in Halq’eméylem speakers between 1863 and 1965, the years the school was open.[9] Today, most Matsqui youth attend public school in the Abbotsford School District. The Abbotsford School District currently delivers cultural awareness programming in accordance with partnerships that have been worked out with the Matsqui governing body and the neighbouring Sumas First Nation.[13] Matsqui students' education success rates have been steadily improving over the past generation.

Later developments

At the beginning of the twentieth century, most Matsqui people lived on the hill at Matsqui Main Reserve, where they were able to tend to their orchards and escape seasonal flooding. Later, however, as the dyke system improved, the Matsqui people increasingly began to move their houses to lower ground.[14]

Many Matsqui homes were flooded during the 1948 Fraser River flood. Matsqui member Joan Silver remembers the dyke breaking: "I remember seeing my Aunt Helen's house [...] I don't know how many days it was. All you could see was [...] their chimney."[9]

In 1995 and 1996, many of the old orchards at Matsqui Main Reserve were leveled when the band leased a portion of the reserve to a sand and gravel extraction company.[15] The area of the extraction is now relatively flat, and covered with thin, deciduous trees.

Part of the Matsqui Main Reserve is accessible to non-members via the Greater Vancouver Regional District Trail, which runs through the reserve and forms part of the larger Trans Canada Trail.[16]

In the summer of 2015, Matsqui completed the construction of a new Community Complex, complete with an Administration Building, Health Building and full size Gymnasium.

The previous Matsqui Sumas Abbotsford Hospital site (1953-2008), which is about 8 acres located at 2179 McCallum Rd, was turned to the Matsqui First Nation in 2008. Current application for a rental apartment has been submitted.[17]

Indian reserves

Today the Matsqui First Nation administers four reserves:

Notes and References

  1. Galloway, Brent. (2009) Dictionary of Upriver Halkomelem. https://escholarship.org/content/qt65r158r4/qt65r158r4.pdf
  2. Web site: Carlson. Keith. Danyluk. Stephanie. Dunlop. Andrew. Todd. Matthew. Davidson. Melissa. Osmond. Colin. ‘For We Are The Real Owners of the Land From Time Immemorial As God Create Us Indians in This Territory’: Historical Land Use, Territory, and Aboriginal Title of the Matsqui People. Regulatory Documents. National Energy Board. July 12, 2015.
  3. Web site: Matsqui First Nation. Matsqui First Nation. Matsqui First Nation. 27 August 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160204014319/http://www.matsquifirstnation.com/. 4 February 2016. dead.
  4. Web site: Matsqui . British Columbia Assembly of First Nations . Prince George, British Columbia, Canada . August 22, 2022.
  5. News: Mills . Kevin . Historic land-transfer agreement in works between District of Mission, First Nations, province . June 26, 2020 . Mission City Record . Mission, British Columbia, Canada . August 22, 2022.
  6. Book: Fraser. Simon. Lamb. W. Kaye. The Letters and Journals of Simon Fraser, 1806-1808. 2007. Dundurn Press. Toronto. 9781550027136. 123.
  7. Web site: Joint Indian Reserve Commission. Minutes of Decision, Correspondence and Sketches, Vol. 1, March 1878 to January 1879. Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs. July 12, 2015.
  8. Web site: Joint Indian Reserve Committee. Minutes of Decision, Correspondence, and Sketches, Vol. 2, February 1879 to September 1879. Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs. July 12, 2015.
  9. Malloway, Mary, Chief Alice McKay, Joan Silver. Interview with Tenille Campbell and Jesse Robertson. Stó:lō Research and Resource Management Centre Archive. Sardis, BC. May 14, 2015
  10. Web site: Royal Commission on Indian Affairs for the Province of BC. New Westminster Agency Testimonials, 1913-1916. Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs. July 12, 2015.
  11. Keith Thor Carlson and John Lutz, "Sto:lo People and the Wage Labour Economy," in Carlson ed., You Are Asked to Witness: The Sto:lo In Canada's Pacific Coast History, (Chilliwack: Sto:lo Heritage Trust, 1997)
  12. See for example, https://www.for.gov.bc.ca/haa/Docs/Matsqui_FRO.pdf
  13. See, for example, http://www.sd34.bc.ca/sites/default/files/Aboriginal%20Enhancement%20Agreement_09JUN22.pdf
  14. Julian, Louis, Chief Alice McKay, Joan Silver, Brian Tommy. Interview with Tenille Campbell and Jesse Robertson. Stó:lō Research and Resource Management Centre Archive. Sardis, BC. May 28, 2015
  15. Malloway, Mary, Chief Alice McKay, Joan Silver. Interview with Tenille Campbell and Jesse Robertson. Stó:lō Research and Resource Management Centre Archive. Sardis, BC. May 19, 2015
  16. Web site: Matsqui Trail Regional Park: Management Plan. MetroVancouver.org. Metro Vancouver.
  17. Web site: MSA Hospital Site.
  18. Web site: Profile of First Nations with Interests in the Region. Metro Vancouver. July 12, 2015.