Background on Louis Pictou
The Pictou family were prominent members of the Bear River Band of the Mi'kmaq nation in Nova Scotia during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Notably, Chief Benjamin Pictou (1830-1931) of Lequille, N.S., lived for over a century, witnessing the evolution of the Mi'kmaq economy from hunting, fishing, and trapping to include guiding and attempts at agriculture. He was listed in the anthropologist, Frank G. Specks' study, Beothuk and Micmac (1922) as having a hunting allocation near Sporting Lake, southwest of the Bear River. Eight of Pictou's children survived to adulthood and numerous grandchildren followed.
Mi'kmaq is among the few languages indigenous to North America to have developed a writing system prior to European arrival.
Scope of collection
This undated and as-yet unidentified manuscript is written in the Mi'kmaq (Micmac) writing system and contains at least two texts, written dos-a-dos. A loose page laid into the front of the manuscript includes records of the births and premature deaths of Joseph William Pictou (1909-1910) and Joseph St. Clair Peters (1907-1909) and a possible ownership inscription dated 1903 of Mrs. Sarah Ann Pictou, Indian Hill [Reserve], Bear River, N.S.
Although the extended Pictou family appear to be involved in the provenance of the manuscript, its precise authorship remains uncertain. The name Sarah Ann Pictou coincides with a daughter of Benjamin Pictou (1862 or 1864-1959), however the inscription clearly notes her as Mrs., suggesting someone who married into the family, whereas Benjamin's daughter was married Joseph Fossie well prior to 1903. An accompanying newspaper clipping from approximately 1930, but undated, indicates that the manuscript was owned by Louis Pictou, who may be the son Chief Silvi Joseph Pictou and grandson of Benjamin. In the article, Louis is identified as an "Indian guide" on the Bear River, and states that the manuscript was written by his "ancestors."
Written on printed lined paper and bound in with red cloth-covered boards, the appearance of the manuscript is consistent with a date from the latter quarter of the nineteenth century.
Administrative information
Search terms
Subjects
- Indians of North America--Nova Scotia
- Micmac Indians--Manuscripts
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