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Talk:Glebe Farm 40B

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"Not a reserve"

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This Glebe land is not an indian reserve
The terms contained in the Proclamation of 1763 continued to apply to the Grand River lands even after these lands were surrendered to the Crown by the Mississauga and after Haldimand permitted the Six Nations to assume occupancy in 1784. Haldimand in effect created for the Six Nations a granted reserve, which is one of several categories of native-occupied lands described by Brian Slattery. Slattery notes that the Proclamations restrictions on the transfer of native lands applied to any and all lands that were reserved to natives, including granted reserves. He adds that all forms of native lands are covered by one or other of the Proclamation provisions. See Brian Slattery,
Understanding Aboriginal Rights, Canadian Bar Review, vol. 66 (1987), pp. 727-783 at 771-773
Sally Weaver, The Iroquois: The Consolidation of the Grand River Reserve in the Mid-Nineteenth Century, 1847-1875 in Rogers and Smith, Aboriginal Ontario, p. 183.
https://hssh.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/hssh/article/download/4704/3898

FUNgus guy (talk) 04:28, 26 November 2018 (UTC)[reply]