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future generations.
REPORTS - NCTR
The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) makes available here digital copies of important and relevant reports for Survivors and their families, researchers, media and the public.REGION: QUEBEC
NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. CHAPLEAU (ST. JOHN’S) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. CRANBROOK (ST. EUGENE’S) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people.KUPER ISLAND
NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL HISTORY For a period of more than 150 years, First Nations, Inuit and Métis Nation children were taken from their families and communities to attend schools which were often located far from their homes.More than 150,000 children attended Indian Residential Schools. Many never returned. The first church-run Indian Residential School was opened in1831.
COQUALEETZA (CHILLIWACK HOME) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. RED DEER INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL Red Deer Industrial School opened in 1893 in what was then the District of Alberta. Located three miles west of Red Deer, Alberta, on the opposite bank of the Red Deer River, it was the first Methodist residential school to operate in the area. CHRISTIE RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Accessing and viewing records within the NCTR Archives may be a traumatic experience for Survivors and their families. If at any time you feel the need to speak with someone, a national crisis line is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. NCTR - NATIONAL CENTRE FOR TRUTH AND RECONCILIATIONNATIONAL RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL MEMORIAL REGISTERNCTR NEWSMAPRECORDSARCHIVES The NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe forfuture generations.
REPORTS - NCTR
The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) makes available here digital copies of important and relevant reports for Survivors and their families, researchers, media and the public.REGION: QUEBEC
NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. CHAPLEAU (ST. JOHN’S) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people.KUPER ISLAND
NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. CRANBROOK (ST. EUGENE’S) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL HISTORY For a period of more than 150 years, First Nations, Inuit and Métis Nation children were taken from their families and communities to attend schools which were often located far from their homes.More than 150,000 children attended Indian Residential Schools. Many never returned. The first church-run Indian Residential School was opened in1831.
FORT WILLIAM (ST. JOSEPH’S) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. RED DEER INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL Red Deer Industrial School opened in 1893 in what was then the District of Alberta. Located three miles west of Red Deer, Alberta, on the opposite bank of the Red Deer River, it was the first Methodist residential school to operate in the area. ALBERNI RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Accessing and viewing records within the NCTR Archives may be a traumatic experience for Survivors and their families. If at any time you feel the need to speak with someone, a national crisis line is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. THERE ARE RECORDS AND TRUTHS THAT REMAIN TO BE RELEASED These records are part of the five million records that the TRC, and subsequently the NCTR, received. The archives at the NCTR are the heartbeat of the Centre and are intended toREPORTS - NCTR
The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) makes available here digital copies of important and relevant reports for Survivors and their families, researchers, media and the public. FORT WILLIAM (ST. JOSEPH’S) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people.MCKAY (DAUPHIN)
NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. ST. MARY’S (MISSION) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. CHRISTIE RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Accessing and viewing records within the NCTR Archives may be a traumatic experience for Survivors and their families. If at any time you feel the need to speak with someone, a national crisis line is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. JOUSSARD (ST. BRUNO’S) RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Primary Name(s): Joussard (St. Bruno’s) Location: Joussard, AB. Religious Entity(ies): Catholic. Operating Dates: 1913 -1969. The St. Bruno’s boarding school (also known as Joussard) was started by Roman Catholic missionaries in 1913 at Joussard, in what is nowAlberta.
MORLEY (STONY) RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Primary Name(s): Morley (Stony) Location: Morley, AB. Religious Entity(ies): Methodist United Church. Operating Dates: 1922 -1969. From 1880 to 1908, Methodist missionaries operated the McDougall Orphanage and Training Institution on the Stony Reserve near Morley, in what is now Alberta. MOUNT ELGIN RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Primary Name(s): Mount Elgin (Muncey) Location: Munceytown, ON. Religious Entity(ies): Methodist United Church. Operating Dates: 1867 -1946. The Mount Elgin school in Munceytown, in what is now Ontario, was established in 1850.GROLLIER HALL
Accessing and viewing records within the NCTR Archives may be a traumatic experience for Survivors and their families. If at any time you feel the need to speak with someone, a national crisis line is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. NCTR - NATIONAL CENTRE FOR TRUTH AND RECONCILIATIONNATIONAL RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL MEMORIAL REGISTERNCTR NEWSMAPRECORDSARCHIVES The NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe for future generations. The NCTR was created as part of the mandate of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). The TRC was charged to listen to Survivors, their families, communities and othersREPORTS - NCTR
Reports listed here were issued or created by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). These digital copies can be accessed or duplicated at no charge from the NCTR website. All reports are in the public domain. Full print copies of the TRC reports can beREGION: QUEBEC
Sept-Iles (Maliotenam) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’speople.
CHAPLEAU (ST. JOHN’S) Chapleau (St. John’s) Chapleau, ON - 1907 -1948. Religious Entity: Anglican. The Chapleau residential school operated from 1907 to 1919 north of the town of Chapleau, ON. In 1920, a new school opened at a site south of Chapleau. In 1908, an Indian Affairs inspector said that seven of thirty-one children at the school had died in a three-month RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL HISTORY For a period of more than 150 years, First Nations, Inuit and Métis Nation children were taken from their families and communities to attend schools which were often located far from their homes. More than 150,000 children attended Indian Residential Schools. Many never returned. The first church-run Indian Residential School was opened in1831.
CRANBROOK (ST. EUGENE’S) Cranbrook, BC - 1890 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. The Kootenay or St. Eugene’s residential school opened in 1890 just north of Cranbrook, BC. The first school was replaced with an industrial school in 1912. An Indian Agent reported in 1935 that, as a result of poor food, overwork, and sickness, he had to force parents to send theirKUPER ISLAND
Kuper Island, BC - 1890 -1975. Religious Entity: Catholic. The Kuper Island School on Kuper Island near Chemainus, Vancouver Island, British Columbia opened in 1889. Students set fire to the school in 1896 when holidays were cancelled. A survey carried out in that COQUALEETZA (CHILLIWACK HOME) Coqualeetza (Chilliwack Home) Chilliwack / Sardis, BC - 1889 -1940. Religious Entity: Methodist United Church. Methodist missionaries opened a day school at Coqualeetza, BC in 1886. The following year, they added a residence for boarding students. A new school, built in 1889, burned down in 1891. Starting in the 1920s, the school beganteaching
RED DEER INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL Red Deer, Alberta - 1893-1919. Religious Entity: Methodist. Red Deer Industrial School opened in 1893 in what was then the District of Alberta. Located three miles west of Red Deer, Alberta, on the opposite bank of the Red Deer River, it was the first Methodist residential school to operate in the area. While the school wasroughly the same
ALBERNI RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it to: Email: NCTRrecords@umanitoba.ca. Phone: 204-480-1091. Toll Free: 1-855-415-4534 (North America) Fax: 204-474-7533. Mail: National Centre for Truth and NCTR - NATIONAL CENTRE FOR TRUTH AND RECONCILIATIONNATIONAL RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL MEMORIAL REGISTERNCTR NEWSMAPRECORDSARCHIVES The NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe for future generations. The NCTR was created as part of the mandate of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). The TRC was charged to listen to Survivors, their families, communities and othersREPORTS - NCTR
Reports listed here were issued or created by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). These digital copies can be accessed or duplicated at no charge from the NCTR website. All reports are in the public domain. Full print copies of the TRC reports can beREGION: QUEBEC
Sept-Iles (Maliotenam) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’speople.
CHAPLEAU (ST. JOHN’S) Chapleau (St. John’s) Chapleau, ON - 1907 -1948. Religious Entity: Anglican. The Chapleau residential school operated from 1907 to 1919 north of the town of Chapleau, ON. In 1920, a new school opened at a site south of Chapleau. In 1908, an Indian Affairs inspector said that seven of thirty-one children at the school had died in a three-month RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL HISTORY For a period of more than 150 years, First Nations, Inuit and Métis Nation children were taken from their families and communities to attend schools which were often located far from their homes. More than 150,000 children attended Indian Residential Schools. Many never returned. The first church-run Indian Residential School was opened in1831.
CRANBROOK (ST. EUGENE’S) Cranbrook, BC - 1890 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. The Kootenay or St. Eugene’s residential school opened in 1890 just north of Cranbrook, BC. The first school was replaced with an industrial school in 1912. An Indian Agent reported in 1935 that, as a result of poor food, overwork, and sickness, he had to force parents to send theirKUPER ISLAND
Kuper Island, BC - 1890 -1975. Religious Entity: Catholic. The Kuper Island School on Kuper Island near Chemainus, Vancouver Island, British Columbia opened in 1889. Students set fire to the school in 1896 when holidays were cancelled. A survey carried out in that COQUALEETZA (CHILLIWACK HOME) Coqualeetza (Chilliwack Home) Chilliwack / Sardis, BC - 1889 -1940. Religious Entity: Methodist United Church. Methodist missionaries opened a day school at Coqualeetza, BC in 1886. The following year, they added a residence for boarding students. A new school, built in 1889, burned down in 1891. Starting in the 1920s, the school beganteaching
RED DEER INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL Red Deer, Alberta - 1893-1919. Religious Entity: Methodist. Red Deer Industrial School opened in 1893 in what was then the District of Alberta. Located three miles west of Red Deer, Alberta, on the opposite bank of the Red Deer River, it was the first Methodist residential school to operate in the area. While the school wasroughly the same
ALBERNI RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it to: Email: NCTRrecords@umanitoba.ca. Phone: 204-480-1091. Toll Free: 1-855-415-4534 (North America) Fax: 204-474-7533. Mail: National Centre for Truth and THERE ARE RECORDS AND TRUTHS THAT REMAIN TO BE RELEASED These records are part of the five million records that the TRC, and subsequently the NCTR, received. The archives at the NCTR are the heartbeat of the Centre and are intended toREPORTS - NCTR
Reports listed here were issued or created by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). These digital copies can be accessed or duplicated at no charge from the NCTR website. All reports are in the public domain. Full print copies of the TRC reports can be FORT WILLIAM (ST. JOSEPH’S) Fort William (St. Joseph’s) Fort William, ON - 1885 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. This school started as a Roman Catholic orphanage and school on the Mission Indian Reserve near Fort William. In the 1880s it started to receive funding from the federal government.Destroyed by
MCKAY (DAUPHIN)
McKay (Dauphin) The Pas / Dauphin, MB - 1914 -1988. Religious Entity: Anglican. While this school had the same name as the Anglican School in The Pas, it opened 20 years after The Pas school burned down and should be seen as a separate school. It originally operated as an elementary school, but additional dormitories were built in the 1960sto
BISHOP HORDEN HALL (MOOSE FACTORY) Bishop Horden Hall (Moose Factory) Anglican missionaries established a boarding school at Moose Island on Hudson Bay in the 1850s. In 1905 the Bishop of Moosonee converted his former residence into a residential school. In 1914 that school (named Bishop’s school) was destroyed by fired and replaced with the Moose Fort school.CAREERS - NCTR
The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation is an organization where you can build a career and make a difference in your community. For more information on Careers at the NCTR or at the CHRISTIE RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it to: Email: NCTRrecords@umanitoba.ca. Phone: 204-480-1091. Toll Free: 1-855 MANITOBA – NATIONAL RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL MEMORIAL REGISTER Select a school below to view the names of the children who died at or went missing from that school. A National Residential School Crisis Line has been set up to provide support to former students. This 24-Hour Crisis Line can be accessed at: 1-866-925-4419. Assiniboia(Winnipeg)
LA TUQUE RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it to: Email: NCTRrecords@umanitoba.ca. Phone: 204-480-1091. Toll Free: 1-855-415-4534 (North America) Fax: 204-474-7533. Mail: National Centre for Truth and MOUNT ELGIN RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Primary Name(s): Mount Elgin (Muncey) Location: Munceytown, ON. Religious Entity(ies): Methodist United Church. Operating Dates: 1867 -1946. The Mount Elgin school in Munceytown, in what is now Ontario, was established in 1850. NCTR - NATIONAL CENTRE FOR TRUTH AND RECONCILIATIONNATIONAL RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL MEMORIAL REGISTERNCTR NEWSMAPRECORDSARCHIVES The NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe for future generations. The NCTR was created as part of the mandate of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). The TRC was charged to listen to Survivors, their families, communities and othersREGION: QUEBEC
Sept-Iles (Maliotenam) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’speople.
CHAPLEAU (ST. JOHN’S) Chapleau (St. John’s) Chapleau, ON - 1907 -1948. Religious Entity: Anglican. The Chapleau residential school operated from 1907 to 1919 north of the town of Chapleau, ON. In 1920, a new school opened at a site south of Chapleau. In 1908, an Indian Affairs inspector said that seven of thirty-one children at the school had died in a three-month CRANBROOK (ST. EUGENE’S) Cranbrook, BC - 1890 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. The Kootenay or St. Eugene’s residential school opened in 1890 just north of Cranbrook, BC. The first school was replaced with an industrial school in 1912. An Indian Agent reported in 1935 that, as a result of poor food, overwork, and sickness, he had to force parents to send their FORT WILLIAM (ST. JOSEPH’S) Fort William (St. Joseph’s) Fort William, ON - 1885 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. This school started as a Roman Catholic orphanage and school on the Mission Indian Reserve near Fort William. In the 1880s it started to receive funding from the federal government.Destroyed by
COQUALEETZA (CHILLIWACK HOME) Coqualeetza (Chilliwack Home) Chilliwack / Sardis, BC - 1889 -1940. Religious Entity: Methodist United Church. Methodist missionaries opened a day school at Coqualeetza, BC in 1886. The following year, they added a residence for boarding students. A new school, built in 1889, burned down in 1891. Starting in the 1920s, the school beganteaching
MCKAY (DAUPHIN)
McKay (Dauphin) The Pas / Dauphin, MB - 1914 -1988. Religious Entity: Anglican. While this school had the same name as the Anglican School in The Pas, it opened 20 years after The Pas school burned down and should be seen as a separate school. It originally operated as an elementary school, but additional dormitories were built in the 1960sto
SARCEE (ST. BARNABAS) Sarcee Junction (T’suu Tina), AB - 1892 -1921. In 1892, Anglican missionaries opened the Sarcee Boys’ Boarding School (also known as St. Barnabas’s) on the Sarcee Reserve in what is now Alberta. A 1908 the government survey declared the building “unfit for school purposes.”. It became increasingly difficult for the school torecruit
FORT VERMILION (ST. HENRI) RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it to: Email: NCTRrecords@umanitoba.ca. Phone: 204-480-1091. Toll Free: 1-855 LEJAC RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL If at any time you feel the need to speak with someone, a national crisis line is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it NCTR - NATIONAL CENTRE FOR TRUTH AND RECONCILIATIONNATIONAL RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL MEMORIAL REGISTERNCTR NEWSMAPRECORDSARCHIVES The NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe for future generations. The NCTR was created as part of the mandate of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). The TRC was charged to listen to Survivors, their families, communities and othersREGION: QUEBEC
Sept-Iles (Maliotenam) NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’speople.
CHAPLEAU (ST. JOHN’S) Chapleau (St. John’s) Chapleau, ON - 1907 -1948. Religious Entity: Anglican. The Chapleau residential school operated from 1907 to 1919 north of the town of Chapleau, ON. In 1920, a new school opened at a site south of Chapleau. In 1908, an Indian Affairs inspector said that seven of thirty-one children at the school had died in a three-month CRANBROOK (ST. EUGENE’S) Cranbrook, BC - 1890 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. The Kootenay or St. Eugene’s residential school opened in 1890 just north of Cranbrook, BC. The first school was replaced with an industrial school in 1912. An Indian Agent reported in 1935 that, as a result of poor food, overwork, and sickness, he had to force parents to send their FORT WILLIAM (ST. JOSEPH’S) Fort William (St. Joseph’s) Fort William, ON - 1885 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. This school started as a Roman Catholic orphanage and school on the Mission Indian Reserve near Fort William. In the 1880s it started to receive funding from the federal government.Destroyed by
COQUALEETZA (CHILLIWACK HOME) Coqualeetza (Chilliwack Home) Chilliwack / Sardis, BC - 1889 -1940. Religious Entity: Methodist United Church. Methodist missionaries opened a day school at Coqualeetza, BC in 1886. The following year, they added a residence for boarding students. A new school, built in 1889, burned down in 1891. Starting in the 1920s, the school beganteaching
MCKAY (DAUPHIN)
McKay (Dauphin) The Pas / Dauphin, MB - 1914 -1988. Religious Entity: Anglican. While this school had the same name as the Anglican School in The Pas, it opened 20 years after The Pas school burned down and should be seen as a separate school. It originally operated as an elementary school, but additional dormitories were built in the 1960sto
SARCEE (ST. BARNABAS) Sarcee Junction (T’suu Tina), AB - 1892 -1921. In 1892, Anglican missionaries opened the Sarcee Boys’ Boarding School (also known as St. Barnabas’s) on the Sarcee Reserve in what is now Alberta. A 1908 the government survey declared the building “unfit for school purposes.”. It became increasingly difficult for the school torecruit
FORT VERMILION (ST. HENRI) RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it to: Email: NCTRrecords@umanitoba.ca. Phone: 204-480-1091. Toll Free: 1-855 LEJAC RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL If at any time you feel the need to speak with someone, a national crisis line is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL HISTORY For a period of more than 150 years, First Nations, Inuit and Métis Nation children were taken from their families and communities to attend schools which were often located far from their homes.More than 150,000 children attended Indian Residential Schools. Many never returned. The first church-run Indian Residential School was opened in1831.
215 INNOCENT CHILDREN Survivors and their families deserve answers today. The below article contains sensitive information. The National Residential School Crisis Line is available for COQUALEETZA (CHILLIWACK HOME) Coqualeetza (Chilliwack Home) Chilliwack / Sardis, BC - 1889 -1940. Religious Entity: Methodist United Church. Methodist missionaries opened a day school at Coqualeetza, BC in 1886. The following year, they added a residence for boarding students. A new school, built in 1889, burned down in 1891. Starting in the 1920s, the school beganteaching
KUPER ISLAND
Kuper Island, BC - 1890 -1975. Religious Entity: Catholic. The Kuper Island School on Kuper Island near Chemainus, Vancouver Island, British Columbia opened in 1889. Students set fire to the school in 1896 when holidays were cancelled. A survey carried out in that FORT WILLIAM (ST. JOSEPH’S) Fort William (St. Joseph’s) Fort William, ON - 1885 -1970. Religious Entity: Catholic. This school started as a Roman Catholic orphanage and school on the Mission Indian Reserve near Fort William. In the 1880s it started to receive funding from the federal government.Destroyed by
RED DEER INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL Red Deer, Alberta - 1893-1919. Religious Entity: Methodist. Red Deer Industrial School opened in 1893 in what was then the District of Alberta. Located three miles west of Red Deer, Alberta, on the opposite bank of the Red Deer River, it was the first Methodist residential school to operate in the area. While the school wasroughly the same
MCKAY (DAUPHIN)
McKay (Dauphin) The Pas / Dauphin, MB - 1914 -1988. Religious Entity: Anglican. While this school had the same name as the Anglican School in The Pas, it opened 20 years after The Pas school burned down and should be seen as a separate school. It originally operated as an elementary school, but additional dormitories were built in the 1960sto
BISHOP HORDEN HALL (MOOSE FACTORY) Bishop Horden Hall (Moose Factory) Anglican missionaries established a boarding school at Moose Island on Hudson Bay in the 1850s. In 1905 the Bishop of Moosonee converted his former residence into a residential school. In 1914 that school (named Bishop’s school) was destroyed by fired and replaced with the Moose Fort school.CAREERS - NCTR
The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation is an organization where you can build a career and make a difference in your community. For more information on Careers at the NCTR or at the MORLEY (STONY) RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL Residential School Survivor Support Line: 1-866-925-4419. If you wish to know more about any of the names in this register, please fill out the. Third Party Inquiry Form, and send it to: Email: NCTRrecords@umanitoba.ca. Phone: 204-480-1091. Toll Free: 1-855-415-4534 (North America) Fax: 204-474-7533. Mail: National Centre for Truth andMenu
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It’s not just a part of who we are as _SURVIVORS_ – it’s a part of who we are as a _NATION_. _ – The Honourable Murray Sinclair_ Honouring and preserving residential school truths for all time, forall of Canada.
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ABOUT NCTR
The NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe forfuture generations.
The NCTR was created as part of the mandate of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC). The TRC was charged to listen to Survivors, their families, communities and others affected by the residential school system and educate Canadians about their experiences. The resulting collection of statements, documents and other materials now forms the sacred heart of the NCTR. The NCTR Archives and Collections is the foundation for ongoing learning and research. Here, Survivors, their families, educators, researchers, and the public can examine the residential school system more deeply with the goal of fostering reconciliation and healing. Read More Contact Us > _“_Ka-kí-kiskéyihtétan óma, namoya kinwés maka aciyowés > pohko óma óta ka-hayayak wasétam askihk, ékwa ka-kakwéy > miskétan kiskéyihtamowin, iyinísiwin, kistéyitowin, mina > nánisitotatowin kakiya ayisiniwak, ékosi óma kakiya > ka-wahkotowak._”_> Cree Proverb
NCTR NEWS
All News for Survivors News for Teachers News for Researchers CONCERTED NATIONAL ACTION OVERDUE FOR ALL THE CHILDREN WHO NEVER CAME HOME FROM RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS Published on Jun 02 2021 Joint News Release From the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation and the Indian Residential School History and DialogueCentre …
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215 INNOCENT CHILDREN Published on Jun 01 2021 Survivors and their families deserve answers today. The below article contains sensitive information. The National Residential School CrisisLine is …
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NCTR RECEIVES INTERNATIONAL AWARDS AND CANADIAN ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Published on May 19 2021 Every Child Matters: Reconciliation through Education has won the intermedia-globe Gold Award and The Special Award “Hand in Hand”from …
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SurvivorIntergenerational SurvivorFamily member of a SurvivorEducatorAcademicStudentAllyRather not sayYOUR RECORDS
The NCTR is your Centre. The stories and records cared for by the NCTR are a crucial part of the shared history of Canada. Understanding these truths is a vital foundation for the future. Our mandate ensures Survivors and their families have access to their own history while preserving their truths for all of Canada, for alltime.
We provide a safe, trusted and accessible home for all the documents, materials and former student statements collected by the TRC during its mandate. We are also home to a growing collection of other documents and materials related to the history of residential schools, their legacy, and the ongoing efforts of Indigenous peoples to revitalize and restore their diverse cultures and traditions. By incorporating Indigenous perspectives, values, laws and protocols, we are creating something new — we are striving to decolonize the archive and be built on principles of respect, honesty, wisdom, courage, humility, love and truth. THIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING.VIEW YOUR RECORDS
------------------------- Explore, learn and engage through the archives of the NCTR — the spiritual heart of the Centre. Discover the vast collection of public documents, photos and reports created, co-created or collected by the TRC as well as our growing archive of more recent gifts.Start Your Journey
PRESERVE YOUR RECORDS ------------------------- Preserving and sharing the records and history of Canada’s residential school system is a sacred obligation. The NCTR is a safe and secure space for Indigenous histories and other materials for Indigenous communities. We invite Survivors, their families, and others whose lives have been impacted by residential schools to continue to share your truths and experiences in any form you wish. Share Your ExperienceACCESS YOUR RECORDS
------------------------- We make more than five million records accessible while respecting privacy and cultural protocols — the materials and level of access vary depending on who is making the request. Understand the RecordsPrevious
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MEMORIAL
The National Student Memorial Register was created to remember and honour the children who never returned home from residential schools, now and into the future. The NCTR is continuing the work begun by the TRC to identify as many of these children as possible. This sensitive, essential part of our collective journey of truth and reconciliation has been guided by Survivors and Indigenous peoples from coast to coast to coast.Learn More
BROWSE THE NCTR SHOP Order copies of the _Calls to Action_ booklet, Orange Shirt Day t-shirts, and a variety of NCTR merchandise featuring our logo and its visual message of healing, truth and reconciliation.Shop Now
RESEARCH
We respectfully promote and advance research in areas related to the legacy of residential schools. Academic and community-based researchers can access material held in the archives as well as contribute to the living legacy of the NCTR. Through an evolving research model rooted in the cultures, values, laws and protocols of Indigenous peoples, the NCTR is helping assure residential schools and their legacy are studied, understood, andremembered.
Discover Research at the NCTR NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. NCTR’S SPIRIT NAME – BEZHIG MIIGWAN, MEANING “ONE FEATHER”. Bezhig miigwan calls upon us to see each Survivor coming to the NCTR as a single eagle feather and to show those Survivors the same respect and attention an eagle feather deserves. It also teaches we are all in this together — we are all one, connected, and it is vital to work together to achieve reconciliation. Chancellor’s Hall, 177 Dysart Road, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg__ 1-866-925-4419
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