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Misipawistik Cree Nation

Misipawistik Cree Nation
Misipawistik is located in Manitoba
Misipawistik
Misipawistik
Coordinates: 53°09′36″N 99°14′01″W / 53.16000°N 99.23361°W / 53.16000; -99.23361Coordinates: 53°09′36″N 99°14′01″W / 53.16000°N 99.23361°W / 53.16000; -99.23361
Country  Canada
Province  Manitoba
Government
 • Chief Harold Turner Councillors- William Ferland, Yvon Ballantyne, Heidi Cook  ; Federal riding
 • Prov. riding Swan River
Area
 • Total 16.97 km2 (6.55 sq mi)
Population (2011)
 • Total 716
 • Density 42.2/km2 (109/sq mi)
Time zone CST (UTC-6)
Postal Code R0C 1E0
Area code(s) 204

Misipawistik Cree Nation (Formerly "Grand Rapids First Nation") is a Cree community in Northern Manitoba. "Misipawistik" in the local Cree language means "Rushing Rapids", which was once a historical Canadian landmark before the construction of the Manitoba Hydro-electric Dam in the late 1950s.

MCN is located near Grand Rapids, Manitoba, 400 kilometres North of Winnipeg, Manitoba, and is accessible via PTH 6. It is situated at the mouth of the Saskatchewan River as it runs into Lake Winnipeg. Misipawistik Cree Nation has one reserve (Grand Rapids 33) with an area of 1852.30 hectares and is governed by a chief and three councillors. The current Chief is Harold Turner. It is a member of the Swampy Cree Tribal Council with offices in The Pas.

MCN is a Cree-speaking community in Northern Manitoba, Canada. The people of Misipawistik are largely ancestral descendants of indigenous Cree peoples who have populated the Canadian Shield region of northern and central Canada for 10,000 to 35,000 years. Cree peoples had been migrating to the area during the summer seasons for thousands of years prior to establishing a year-round settlement with the advent of the North American fur trade. Cree and Mixed families would continue to follow their seasonal cycles well into the latter half of the 20th century.

Many famous Canadian figures would pass through Misipawistik on the way through to Western Canada as transportation at the time relied heavily on waterways prior to the late 1800s. Notably, Pierre La Vérendrye would travel through and open up Fort Bourbon in 1741. By the late 1700s, Misipawistik would already be fully immersed in the North American Fur Trade. The area was considered a crucial point in the Fur Trade endeavour as most water-bound routes into the Northwest converged at this site. It was during this era that Misipawistik would become a year-round settlement for both Cree and Métis families as the Fur Trade would provide the economic means for some families to reside in the area year-round.


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