"Speech or Manuscript (possibly Annie Cameron) nd, about Lucy M. Baker."

Image of 7. Next
 
Database ID27401
InstitutionSaskatchewan Archives Board
Fonds/CollectionLucy Margaret Baker fonds
File/Item ReferenceF-375-12
Date of creationn.d.
Physical description/extentone folder; 3 mm of textual records
Number of images7
Historical noteThis fonds includes records created and collected by Lucy Margaret Baker, the first missionary from the Women's Missionary Society of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, served Aboriginal people in the Prince Albert area starting in 1878. Baker taught at mission schools in the Prince Albert area in the 1870s and 1880s. Baker and her friend and assistant, Annie (nee Cameron) Kirkby, were also missionaries and teachers at a mission school at a Sioux reserve called Makoce Waste ("the good land") in the late 1890s and into the early years of the new century. Records of Lucy M. Baker include: correspondence, speeches, reminiscences, mission school reports for Makoce Waste reserve, 1897-1902, photographs, clippings, a diary, a published memoir of Lucy M. Baker, contracts and receipts for mission buildings and fire wood. The fonds also includes records about Lucy M. Baker, by identified and unidentified authors.
Scope and contentThis file contains a handwritten manuscript, probably by Annie Cameron, about Lucy M. Baker in Makoce Waste Indian Reserve. In the story Lucy hosts a prayer time with the Indians, and together they pray for rain so their crops will germinate.
Restrictions on accessThere are no restrictions on access.
TypeArchival
Primary MediaTextual documents
Specific document typesCorrespondence
Provenance Access PointBaker, Lucy Margaret 1836-1909
Language of materialEnglish
Treaty boundariesTreaty 6
Cultural regionSubarctic
NamesBaker, Lucy M.
Cameron, Annie
SubjectChurches -- Presbyterian
Missions and Missionaries
Culture -- Literature/ Storytelling
Religion -- Christianity
Speeches and addresses
Date Range(s)1920-1929
1900-1909
1910-1919
Permanent Link https://digital.scaa.sk.ca/ourlegacy/permalink/27401