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Whitefish Island

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Country
  
First Nation
  
Batchewana Ojibways

Website
  
www.batchewana.ca

Population
  
0 (2011)

District
  
Time zone
  
EST (UTC-5)

Province
  
Designated as world heritage site
  
1981

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Official name
  
Similar
  
Sault Ste Marie Canal, St Marys River, Sault Ste Marie Internatio, Soo Locks, Canadian Bushplane Heritage

Whitefish island walk


Whitefish Island is an island in the St. Marys River, just south of Sault Ste. Marie, in Ontario, Canada.

Contents

Map of Whitefish Island, Sault Ste. Marie, ON, Canada

History

It was an ancestral fishing station to the Anishenabek of the Great Lakes region for over 2,000 years. It was reserved for the use of Chief 'Joe Sayer' Nebenaigoching and his band in the Robinson Huron Treaty, 1850 with the British Crown.

In 1895 it became part of the west side of the Sault Ste. Marie Canal.

After it was taken in a series of expropriations from 1902-1913 for railway purposes, it became a park in the Parks Canada national inventory. The island was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1981.

A land claim was filed in 1982 by the Batchewana Indian Band, of the Batchewana First Nation of Ojibways, for the 22-acre (89,000 m2) island. After years of unsuccessful negotiations, hereditary Chief Edward James Sayers Nebenaigoching occupied the island from 1989 until the claim was settled in 1992. 3.5 million dollars in damages were paid to the tribe, and the island was returned to Indian reserve status in 1997.

References

Whitefish Island Wikipedia


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