Wahnapitae First Nation
Wahnapitae First Nation is an Anishinaabeg First Nation in the Canadian province of Ontario. It is located on the Wahnapitae 11 reserve on the northwestern shore of Lake Wanapitei, a semi-enclave bordered by the city of Greater Sudbury to the north and west. The band is a signatory to the Robinson-Huron Treaty of 1850.
History
The name of the First Nation comes from the Anishinaabemowin name for Lake Wanapitei, Waanabidebiing, meaning "that place where the water is shaped like a tooth" and refers to the shape of the lake from above. In 1850, the band became signatories to the Robinson Huron Treaty as "Tagawinini and his Band".The band's Chief, Tahgaiwenene, was one of three indigenous representatives selected to address Governor General James Bruce and Crown representative William Benjamin Robinson during negotiations at Garden River First Nation. Children of the band were sent to Jesuit day schools at Wiikwemkoong First Nation, which later became the Spanish Indian Residential Schools in 1913 until their closure in the 1960s.
Demographics
For statistical purposes, the First Nation is part of the Greater Sudbury Census Metropolitan Area (CMA). In 2025, The First Nation had a population of 799 with 104 living on reserve at Wahnapitae 11.Economy
Hiawatha's Restaurant and Marina, formerly Rocky's, is a long-established restaurant in the community with five cabin rentals. A nurse practitioner clinic, the Norman Recollet Health Centre, opened in 2019, and a sound stage was completed in 2025.The First Nation has also signed mining agreements with Vale Canada, Glencore, and KGHM. For postal delivery and telephone exchange purposes, the First Nation is considered part of the nearby Greater Sudbury community of Capreol.