Treaties are legally binding agreements that established relationships, rights, and responsibilities between Indigenous nations and European settlers. Ontario is home to 46 treaties, covering most of the province.
Treaties provide a framework between Nations for living together and sharing the land traditionally occupied by Indigenous peoples. Legally binding agreements, treaties set out the rights, responsibilities and relationships of First Nations and the federal and provincial governments.
Although many treaties were signed more than a century ago, treaty commitments provide the foundation for ongoing co-operation and partnership between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. Historically, treaties originated between the British or the French and the Indigenous populations were peaceable agreements that represented mutual understanding, sharing, trading or aid. Later, treaties were signed with the purpose of Indigenous surrendering land to the Crown, however, the Indigenous people really did not have an understanding as to what they were giving away. Through miscommunication and the lack of land ownership as an Indigenous concept, most of the province had been ceded by a treaty by the time of the Canadian Confederation.
Treaty rights are protected by subsection 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 and often address the creation of reserves for the exclusive use of First Nations, and their rights to hunt, fish and trap on provincial Crown lands.
Today in Canada there are approximately 70 treaties between 371 First Nations and the Crown. The treaties represent the rights of more than 500,000 Indigenous people. Ontario is covered by 46 historic and present-day treaties, which were signed between 1781 and 1930.
To learn more visit the Treaty Teaching and Learning Document