Canada's History

INDIGENOUS SOLDIERS

- — Alison Nagy

Tom Longboat, an Onondaga man who became a world- champion long- distance runner, is perhaps the most widely known Indigenous person to serve in the First World War. However, thousands more Indigenous people served both overseas and on the home front. 4,000

Official number of “Aboriginal” people who were members of the Canadian Expedition­ary Force. Military records, however, didn’t always indicate Indigenous status, and records did not indicate whether enlistees were First Nations, Inuit, or Métis, so the complete numbers are unknown.

15

The number of Inuit and Southern Inuit men known to have joined the Newfoundla­nd Regiment.

45,000

Amount of money raised by Indigenous people in support of the war effort. Indigenous women also set up branches of the Red Cross and other patriotic organizati­ons.

1917

The year a one-time franchise was given to Indigenous men serving in the military, to allow them to vote in a federal election without losing their "Indian status."

 ??  ?? Private Tom Longboat, right, the famed longdistan­ce runner from the Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario, buys a newspaper from a French boy in June 1917.
Private Tom Longboat, right, the famed longdistan­ce runner from the Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario, buys a newspaper from a French boy in June 1917.

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