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Bridging Two Peoples

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Story of Dr. Peter E. Jones, who was one of the first status Indians to obtain a medical doctor degree from a Canadian university. As secretary to the Grand Indian Council of Ontario he conveyed th...
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  • 01 June 2012
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Bridging Two Peoples tells the story of Dr. Peter E. Jones, who in 1866 became one of the first status Indians to obtain a medical doctor degree from a Canadian university. He returned to his southern Ontario reserve and was elected chief and band doctor. As secretary to the Grand Indian Council of Ontario he became a bridge between peoples, conveying the chiefs’ concerns to his political mentor Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald, most importantly during consultations on the Indian Act.
The third son of a Mississauga-Ojibwe missionary and his English wife, Peter E. Jones overcame paralytic polio to lead his people forward. He supported the granting of voting rights to Indians and edited Canada’s first Native newspaper to encourage them to vote. Appointed a Federal Indian Agent, a post usually reserved for non-Natives, Jones promoted education and introduced modern public health measures on his reserve. But there was little he could do to stem the ravages of tuberculosis that cemetery records show claimed upwards of 40 per cent of the band.
The Jones family included Native and non-Native members who treated each other equally. Jones’s Mississauga grandmother is now honoured for helping survey the province of Ontario. His mother published books and his wife was an early feminist. The appendix describes how Aboriginal grandmothers used herbal medicines and crafted surgical appliances from birchbark.

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Price: $32.99
Pages: 270
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Imprint: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Series: Indigenous Studies
Publication Date: 01 June 2012
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781554586332
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
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Over the past few decades, developments in biographical writing have demonstrated that the boundaries separating biography from history have been somewhat artifical and, often, unhelpful demarcations. Particularly when the biographer's subject is an individual from a less powerful group, biography can provide an important window through which we can glimpse their engagement with larger social, political, and cultural structures: the negotiations, accommodations, compromises, and confrontations that arise as individuals make their way in various worlds. In many ways, Allan Sherwin's study of Peter Edmund Jones does just that.... Sherwin has crafted a clearly written, well-researched narrative of Jones' life, a complex mix of opportunities and achievements and, especially in his later years, disappointments and failures. The biography also sheds light on the dynamics of Indigenous-settler relations in nineteenth-century Ontario, a presently somewhat under-explored area.
Allan Sherwin is a professor emeritus of neurology at McGill University, where he taught and practised clinical neurology. His research laboratory helped develop techniques to measure anticonvulsant drugs that greatly improved the therapy of epilepsy. Allan Sherwin’s clinical practice included work at a clinic responsible for the health of a First Nations community, which led to an appreciation of Indigenous traditions.

Table of Contents for Bridging Two Peoples: Chief Peter E. Jones, 1843–1909, by Allan Sherwin
List of Maps, Tables and Illustrations
Foreword | Donald B. Smith
Preface
Acknowledgements
Chronology of Dr. Peter Edmund Jones's Life
1. Peter Edmund Jones’s Origins
2. Medical Education
3. Country Doctor
4. Pride in His Heritage
5. Active Critic of the Indian Act
6. Aboriginal Rights Advocate
7. Canada’s First Aboriginal Publisher
8. Federal Indian Agent
9. The Later Years
Appendix: Effective Herbal Therapies of Aboriginal Women
Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Index