The Cypress Hills : The Land And Its People

Hildebrandt, Walter, Brian Hubner

Saskatoon, 1994

By Purich

$12.50
Shipping Information
Details

Card covers, 136 pages, 6x9 in, [15.5x23 cm], B&W photographs.

Condition

An aged price sticker adhered to the back cover.

Notes

Text on the back cover reads "Walter Hildebrandt and Brian Hubner explain why the Cypress Hills - a 2600 square kilometre plateau straddling the Alberta/Saskatchewan/US border - were an important gathering place for Aboriginal Peoples for thousands of years, and why the Canadian government did not want them there. The Indians and the Metis came because game and lodge pole pine were plentiful. Buffalo abounded and the authors describe all aspects of the buffalo hunt from spiritual preparation to the final kill. Fur traders and wolfers came to - mostly from Montana - and with them clashes between different worlds leading to the 1873 Cypress Hills massacre. That event brought the North-West Mounted Police and led to the building of Fort Walsh in the Hills. It was in the Hills that Chief Sitting Bull and the Dakotas sought refuge after defeating Custer at the Battle Of Little Big Horn. While the NWMP worked to maintain peace, they also helped disperse Aboriginal Peoples from the area. ..."

ISBN

1895830028