-
Ignace Tonené (1840 or 1841 – 15
March 1916), also
known as Nias or by his
Ojibwe name
Maiagizis ('right/correct sun'), was a Teme-Augama
Anishnabai chief...
- Gold in the area was
originally reported in the late 1800s by
Chief Ignace Tonené of the
Temagami First Nation. He
staked a
claim near the
north arm of Larder...
- in the area was
originally reported in the late 1800’s by
Chief Ignace Tonené of the
Temagami First Nation. He
staked a
claim near the
north arm of Larder...
-
Chief Tonene Lake (previously
Tournene Lake and Lac Tournene) is a lake in the
Timiskaming District of Ontario, Canada.
Chief Tonene Lake is
located in...
- (stolen). No
action was
taken on his report.
Chief Tonene Lake was
named in his honour.
Chief Ignace Tonené would go on to help form
Beaverhouse First Nation...
-
military commander Pierre de Troyes.
Former Temagami First Nation chief Ignace Tonené was
buried near
Mount Kanasuta after his
death in 1916. In contemporary...
- was
succeeded by his son
Ignace Tonené in 1878, who was
succeeded by John Paul who died in 1893,
leaving Ignace Tonené in
power until 1910 when he gave...
-
Magnetic Anomaly, a
buried geological structure that is egg shaped.
Ignace Tonené,
former chief.
White Bear (Wabimakwa) List of
islands of Lake
Temagami Temagami...
-
location around 1900 by Teme-Augama
Anishnabai chief Ignace Tonené.
European settlers stole Tonené's claim to the ore and
started small-scale mining. Production...
- Gary Potts,
former chief.
Ignace Tonené,
former chief.
White Bear
Forest Bruce W.
Hodgins and
James Morrison,
Tonené,
Ignace Archived 2022-05-17 at the...