Lac La Ronge Indian Band
The Lac La Ronge Indian Band is a Woodland Cree First Nations in northern Saskatchewan. It is one of the ten largest Cree band governments in Canada, the largest First Nation in Saskatchewan, with the administrative centre located in La Ronge.
History
La Ronge & Stanley Mission Band of Woods Cree Indians became a signatory to the Treaty 6 on February 11, 1889, signed by Chief James Roberts. In 1900, Peter Ballantyne was allowed to separate from the La Ronge and Stanley Mission Band to form the Peter Ballantyne Band of Cree Indians, the predecessor to the Peter Ballantyne Cree Nation. In 1910, the La Ronge & Stanley Mission Band split into two entities: Amos Charles Band of Cree Indians and the James Roberts Band of Cree Indians. In 1950, the two bands amalgamated and became the Lac La Ronge Indian Band, the current legal name.Reserves and communities
Reserves
Lac La Ronge Indian Band's land-base consists of eighteen Indian reserves, some containing one of six communities:- Bittern Lake 218 —
- Four Portages 157C —
- Fox Point 157D —
- Fox Point 157E —
- Grandmother's Bay 219 — — containing the community of Grandmother's Bay
- Kitsakie 156B —
- Lac la Ronge 156 — — containing the community of La Ronge
- Little Hills 158 —
- Little Hills 158A —
- Little Hills 158B —
- Little Red River 106C — — containing the community of Little Red River
- * originally
- * in 1935, additional reserved
- Little Red River 106D —
- Morin Lake 217 — — containing the community of Hall Lake
- * originally
- * in 1973, additional reserved
- Old Fort 157B —
- Potato River 156A —
- Stanley 157 — — containing the community of Stanley Mission
- Stanley 157A —
- Sucker River 156C — — containing the community of Sucker River
Communities
- Lac La Ronge — on Lac La Ronge 156
- Little Red River — on Little Red River 106C as well as Montreal Lake Nation's Montreal Lake 106B Reserve
- Hall Lake — on Morin Lake 217
- Morin Lake — on Morin Lake 217
- Sucker River — on Sucker River 156C
- Stanley Mission — on Stanley 157
- Grandmother's Bay — on Grandmother's Bay 219