Bonaparte Indian Band


The Bonaparte Indian Band a.k.a. Bonaparte First Nation, is a member band of the Shuswap Nation Tribal Council of the Secwepemc people.

Indian Reserves and communities

The band's main community is on the Bonaparte Indian Reserve No. 3, located comprising 704 ha., usually known as the Bonaparte Reserve, between Cache Creek and the terminus of Highway 99 at the Hat Creek Ranch or Lower Hat Creek, Some band members work as guides, interpreters and wranglers for the Hat Creek Ranch, which is a heritage museum/restoration of a roadhouse of the Cariboo Wagon Road and had been the homestead of Donald McLean, former Chief Trader at Fort Kamloops and one of the combatants and casualties of the Chilcotin War of 1864.
Other reserves are:
  • Lower Hat Creek 2, 31.6 ha., on Hat Creek between Marble Canyon and that creek's confluence with the Bonaparte River.
  • Grasslands 7, 207.6 ha., at McLean Lake, in the Trachyte Hills northwest of Cache Creek
  • Hihium Lake 6, 31.6 ha.
  • Hihium Lake 6A, on north shore of Hihium Lake near NE corner of Hihium Lake Indian Reserve No. 6, 2.10 ha.
  • Hihium Lake 6B, on south shore of Hihium Lake, near its east end, 2.0 ha.
  • Loon Lake 4, 24.6 ha., at Loon Lake
  • Mauvais Rocher 5, 40.2 ha., on the Thompson River to the east of Ashcroft
  • Upper Hat Creek 1, 835.3 ha., on Hat Creek to the southeast of Marble Canyon and north of the locality of Upper Hat Creek.
The reserves were created when the government of the Colony of British Columbia, without negotiation or consent of the First nations, and without legally extinguishing First Nations claim to the land, established an Indian reserve system in the 1860s.

Population

The Bonaparte Indian Band are also called the Stuctwesemc in Secwepemctsín, which means "people of the Valley". Band population is 815, with 584 living off-reserve.