Medicine Man to Missionary: Missionaries as Agents of Change Among the Indians of Southern Ontario, 1784-1867Part of a thesis prepared at University of Toronto. Through missionary and government reports, letters, and diaries of the period, the author traces the movements of various Indian groups and analyzes some of the elements involved in the change from relative independence to isolation in reserve communities. |
Contents
Early Missions and the Conversion of the Mississaugas 10 222 2227 gun 0 2 2 0 | 10 |
Mission Work Expands | 23 |
Religious Beliefs and Practices | 49 |
Copyright | |
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Medicine Man to Missionary: Missionaries as Agents of Change Among the ... Elizabeth Graham No preview available - 1975 |
Common terms and phrases
acres Alnwick appointed aries bands baptism baptized Bay of Quinte beliefs BNA Provinces Brant British built Canadian catechists changes Chippewa Christian Church of England Clair Colborne Colpoy's Bay communities converted Copway council Credit Delaware described drunk England Company England Company missionary England missionary English Fairfield farming Francis Bond Head Givins Grand River Grape Island groups head chief houses Indian Department Iroquois John Lake Scugog Lake Simcoe land live Lugger Manitoulin Island Medai medicine Methodist mission Methodist missionary missionary reported Missionary Society Mississauga Mohawks Moravian missionaries Moraviantown moved Mud Lake Muncey Munceytown Munsees Newash Ojibwa Oneida Owen Sound Peter Jones religion religious reserve Rice Lake roles Roman Catholics Sarnia Saugeen Sawyer schoolteacher settlement sick Sir Francis Bond Snake Island social southern Ontario Spirit success Superintendent surrender taught teach teachers Torry Tyendinaga Upper Canada village visited Walpole Island Wawanosh whiskey women Zeisberger