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Frank Arthur Calder

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Preceded by
  
Frank Arthur Calder

Succeeded by
  
Al Passarell

Role
  
Politician


Name
  
Frank Calder

Spouse(s)
  
Tamaki Calder

Resigned
  
1979


Born
  
August 3, 1915 Nass Harbour, British Columbia (
1915-08-03
)

Died
  
November 4, 2006, Victoria, Canada

Education
  
University of British Columbia

Political party
  
British Columbia New Democratic Party, British Columbia Social Credit Party

Frank Arthur Calder, (August 3, 1915 – November 4, 2006) was a Nisga'a politician in Canada, the first First Nations person to be elected to any legislature in Canada.

Contents

Frank Arthur Calder Frank Arthur Calder Wikipedia

Born in Nass Harbour, British Columbia, Calder was the first Indian to graduate from the Anglican Theological College of the University of British Columbia. Mr. Calder was an hereditary chief of the House of Wisinxbiltkw from the Killerwhale Tribe. He died November 4, 2006 at an assisted-living home in Victoria from the effects of cancer and recent abdominal surgery.

Political career

In the 1949 British Columbia election, Calder was elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. He was elected in the riding of Atlin where he continued to serve until 1979. Calder represented BC's Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (which later became the New Democratic Party of British Columbia).

Calder was appointed cabinet member in Dave Barrett's government in 1972 and became BC's first aboriginal cabinet minister. In 1973, police found him in a consensual situation involving a female companion, alcohol and a car parked in an intersection. He was arrested but not charged and was fired from cabinet. In 1974 he was defeated by Joseph Gosnell in his bid to be re-elected as president of the Nisga'a Tribal Council.

In 1975, Calder crossed the floor to join the Social Credit Party of British Columbia and was re-elected. In 1979, however, Calder lost his seat to the NDP candidate, Al Passarell, by a single vote. Calder and his wife had both neglected to vote.

Fighting for treaty rights

Calder is famous for the court case titled "Calder vs. Attorney General of British Columbia", which was argued by Thomas Berger. By appealing the case all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, Calder established that Aboriginal title exists in modern Canadian law. This decision had national and international reverberations. In addition, it was the basis of BC's Nisga'a treaty.

Before the Calder Case, there was no clear process for negotiating Canadian land claim settlements. Calder clarified which lands were negotiable (40% of Canada's land mass) and which were not. After the case, Canada developed a land claim policy to guide negotiations. He continued to fight for Nisga'a's treaty rights as recently as 2000.

Calder founded the Nisga'a Tribal Council, the first tribal council established in B.C. Calder was its president for 20 years until 1974.

Honours

  • 1987 - Made an Officer of the Order of Canada.
  • Awarded the Aboriginal Order of Canada.
  • 1996 - National Aboriginal Achievement Award [2]
  • 2004 - Awarded the Order of British Columbia.
  • References

    Frank Arthur Calder Wikipedia