Langley Centennial Museum
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Object Description
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Object Name
Transparency, Slide
Object ID
2017.048.062
Title
First Nations people speaking to each other during the Township of Langley's 125th anniversary celebration.
Date
20 Jun. 1998.
Description
Colour slide of three First Nations people speaking to each other at the Fort Langley National Historic Site during the Township of Langley's 125th anniversary. They are likely from Kwantlen First Nation. On the left is a woman wearing a white woolen blanket as a shawl and a cedar headband; she is looking to her right. In the middle is a woman in a brown fleece jacket, looking to the man on her right. The man on the right is wearing a red sweater and holding a Hudson's Bay Company blanket in his left hand. Behind the three are other people standing and walking; there is a white tent in the background.
People/Subject
Fort Langley National Historic Site
The Hudson's Bay Company established Fort Langley in 1827 in present day Derby Reach Regional Park. It was moved upriver to its current site in 1839. The Fort was run as a provisioning station and farm. The Company moved out of the Fort in 1886. From 1888 into the 1920's the Mavis family ran a farm on the land. In the 1920s the Fort was recognized by the federal government's Historic Sites and Monuments Board, though by that time only one building remained. The land was purchased and from 1931 until 1958, the Native Sons operated a museum on the site. In 1955, the Fort was declared a National Historic Site. A few years later more buildings were reconstructed and much of the collection was moved to the Langley Centennial Museum. Today the Fort is run by Parks Canada.
Native Peoples of North America
q̓ʷɑ:n̓ƛ̓ən̓, Kwantlen First Nation
'Kwantlen' translates to tireless runner. Kwantlen Traditional Territory extends from Richmond and New Westminster in the west, to Surrey and Langley in the south, east to Mission, and to the northernmost reaches of Stave Lake. The Kwantlen People have lived on this land since time immemorial.
The Kwantlen First Nation are an Indigenous group, mainly located on McMillan Island in Fort Langley. Prior to European contact, their main village was Sqaiametl, where New Westminster is today, but they moved their main settlement to Fort Langley after the Hudson's Bay Company established a fort there. The Kwantlen traded with the Fort. As Canada came together, the Kwantlen peoples' importance in the country diminished, and their affairs were turned over to an Indian Agent. Modernly, the Kwantlen have seen a cultural resurgence after times of displacement and cultural loss, as well as economic growth through their business group, Seyem' Qwantlen. Their current hereditary chief is Marilyn Gabriel. The Kwantlen are culturally a Stó:lō people, though they operate as an independent nation. They speak the Downriver dialect of Halkomelem (hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓, or Hun'qumi'num). There has been a renewed focus on teaching and learning hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓, one of the ways Kwantlen is reclaiming their culture.
Township of Langley, 125th Anniversary
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Argus v4.4.2.32 - Langley Centennial Museum