| Prince
of Wales Northern Heritage Centre
Located in Yellowknife, on the
north shore of Great Slave Lake,
the Prince of Wales Northern
Heritage Centre is dedicated
to preserving the heritage and
culture of the Inuit, Inuvialuit,
Dene, Métis and non-aboriginal
peoples of the Northwest Territories.
Among the Centre's permanent
exhibits of Dene and Métis
artifacts is a replica of a
Dogrib caribou skin lodge.
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People
of the Portage
Much of the present-day culture of the Slave
River region owes its existence to an unusual
geological landmark. The broad, terraced
belt of granite that cuts across the Slave
River below Fort Smith, just along the border
of Alberta and the Northwest Territories
is responsible for creating a series of
four violent rapids in the midst of the
river's course.
These rapids -the Cassette, Pelican, Mountain
and the darkly named Rapids of the Drowned-presented
an insurmountable obstacle to commercial
river navigation, and the most significant
roadblock on the main gateway to the Arctic.
At the same time, however, this barrier
became the foundation of a busy trading
centre and an enduring northern community.
Growth of Fort
Smith: For centuries, First Nations
tribes had bypassed the rapids on their
way to the hunting grounds of the Peace
and Slave River deltas. When fur traders
began to infiltrate the area in the early
19th century, the ancient trails became
a well-established portage. In the 1870's,
the Hudson's Bay Company built outposts
between the 30 kilometre stretch of treacherous
water, and people of the Cree, Chipewyan
and Métis, some already resident
of nearby Salt River, gravitated to the
new transportation hubs.
In the communities of Fort Fitzgerald to
the south and Fort Smith to the north, aboriginal
workers found employment on the boats that
carried furs and other goods along the Slave
River waterway, as well as on the loading
docks and along the portage route. The advent
of steam-powered craft also created a need
for local wood-cutters.

Fort Smith N
A : N79-004:0156 |
A Village Endures:
Fort Smith's reign as the commercial centre
of the long portage lasted almost an entire
century, until a southern rail link to Hay
River in 1968 ended barge operations on
the Slave.
In the meantime, however, the village had
been bolstered by the early establishment
of a Catholic mission, a medical centre,
and a Royal Canadian Mounted Police detachment.
It had also benefited from successive "rushes"
through the area to the gold fields of the
Yukon and Yellowknife and the oil projects
of Norman Wells. When Wood Buffalo National
Park was established in 1922, Fort Smith
became its administrative centre. An all-weather
highway to Hay River now links the village
to the south by road.
Today, Fort Smith is based on an economy
of federal, territorial and aboriginal government,
along with education, tourism and forestry.
The ancient portage trails are poised to
become a part of the Trans-Canada Trail
system, continuing along the Slave River
to Fort Resolution and the shores of Great
Slave Lake.
Beadwork,
Tufting and Quilling: Exploring
the Northern Arts
Traditional Dene clothing, snowshoes, birchbark
baskets and drums, Métis paintings
and carvings, and a fascinating array of
aboriginal handcrafts reflect the distinctive
sub-Arctic culture. Moose hair tufting and
Dene quillwork are among the most exacting
skills still practiced by northern artisans.
Quillwork, made with porcupine quills dyed,
flattened and sewn into elaborate patterns,
is often found on moccasins, vests, jackets
and gloves. |