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Cranberry Portage

Cranberry Portage
Cranberry Portage is located in Manitoba
Cranberry Portage
Cranberry Portage
Location of Cranberry Portage in Manitoba
Coordinates: 54°35′10″N 101°22′38″W / 54.58611°N 101.37722°W / 54.58611; -101.37722Coordinates: 54°35′10″N 101°22′38″W / 54.58611°N 101.37722°W / 54.58611; -101.37722
Country Canada
Province Manitoba
Rural Municipality Kelsey
Area
 • Total 8.31 km2 (3.21 sq mi)
Population (2011)
 • Total 572
 • Density 68.8/km2 (178/sq mi)
Time zone CST (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)

Cranberry Portage is an unincorporated community recognized as a local urban district located in the Rural Municipality of Kelsey, Manitoba. It was an important part of the pre-European contact trade routes of the Cree and Assiniboine peoples. Long before the fur trade with the Bay and during the Fur Trade, this location was used as a campsite and portage between Grassy River, at the head of a number of well-used routes from Hudson Bay, and Lake Athapapuskow, which connected to the Saskatchewan River system. Once on the Saskatchewan routes were open through the prairies to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.

The area has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Archaeological digs on Lake Athapapuskow revealed pottery, arrowheads, and other artifacts which were at least 2,500 years old and indicated regular habitation by the "Shield Archaic Culture", who hunted caribou in the area as far back as 7000 years ago. They were eventually supplanted by the Woodland Cree who were nomadic hunters in this region.

The site of Cranberry Portage has been an important portage route linking the Grass River and Saskatchewan River watersheds for at least 2,000 years. The first European believed to have used that route and reach Lake Athapapuskow was the fur trader Joseph Smith in 1763. In 1774, the explorer Samuel Hearne paddled up the Grass River to Cranberry Portage and into Lake Athapapuskow en route to establishing Cumberland House. This route became an important part of the North American fur trade, known as the "Upper Tract". It was abandoned by 1800 in favour of the Nelson River and Hayes River routes. In 1806, explorer and surveyor Peter Fidler recorded the main waterways of his Cree partners in the notable "Cha Chay Pay Way Ti’s Map of the Waterways of a Part of Northern Manitoba", Cranberry Portage is clearly marked on it.


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