Districts of the Northwest Territories

Districts of the Northwest Territories

The vastness of Canada's Northwest Territories (spelled 'North-West Territories' from 1870 to 1905) meant that for much of its history it was divided into several districts for ease of administration. The number and size of these territorial districts varied as other provinces and territories of Canada were created and expanded. The districts of the Northwest Territories were abolished in 1999 with the creation of Nunavut territory and the contraction of the Northwest Territories to its current size.

Contents

North-West Territories pre-'districts'

The North-West Territories were administered as a single entity, with no districts, from 1870 to 1882.

In 1870 Canada gained control of the Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory from the Hudson's Bay Company. That same year, a small piece of Rupert's Land was formed into the province of Manitoba, but the rest of the area was merged and renamed the North-West Territories. This region included the vast bulk of Canada's present day landmass and covered an area about the size of western Europe.

In 1876 the North-West Territories contracted in size when a large area of 590,932 km2 (228,160 sq mi), between Manitoba and Ontario and along the entire west coast of Hudson Bay, was established by Canada as a territory named the District of Keewatin. This autonomous territory is not to be confused with the 'districts' which would later be created within the North-West Territories.

In 1880 the Canadian Arctic Archipelago was ceded to Canada by the United Kingdom and this land was added to the North-West Territories.


1882

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As the southern part of the North-West Territories became populated, four districts were created in 1882 for ease of administration; unlike Keewatin, these areas remained a part of the North-West Territories, and thus were formally called provisional districts[1]:

1895

Canada-1895.png

In 1895 the northern portion of the North-West Territories was divided into four more internal districts for ease of administration.[2][3]:

  • The District of Franklin was made up of the Arctic islands.
  • The District of Ungava was made up of what is today northern Quebec
  • The District of Yukon was made up of what is today the Yukon.
  • The District of Mackenzie was the rest, stretching from the Yukon border in the west to the Keewatin border in the east, and containing none of the islands.
  • The District of Athabasca expanded and covered the northern half of what is today both Alberta and Saskatchewan.

1898

The North-West Territories shrunk in 1898 when the Klondike Gold Rush necessitated the conversion of the District of Yukon into the autonomous Yukon Territory.

1905

The North-West Territories experienced significant adjustments in 1905:

  • The Districts of Alberta, Assiniboia, Athabaska, and Saskatchewan were reorganized to form the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan.
  • The original independent territory 'District of Keewatin', which had shrunk considerably from its 1876 size as large portions of its area had been converted into the expansion of Manitoba and Ontario, gave up its autonomy and became a district within the North-West Territories.
  • A small eastern portion of the (now) defunct Districts of Saskatchewan and Athabaska were added to the District of Keewatin.
  • A portion of the District of Mackenzie was added to the District of Keewatin.
  • The hyphen was removed from North-West Territories, so that the area was now named the Northwest Territories.
  • The Northwest Territories now consisted of the Districts of Franklin, Ungava, Mackenzie and Keewatin.

1912

The Northwest Territories experienced further attrition in 1912:

  • The entire District of Ungava was converted into the northern expansion of the province of Quebec
  • Most of the District of Keewatin was converted into the northern expansion of the provinces of Ontario and Manitoba.
  • The Northwest Territories now consisted of the Districts of Franklin, Mackenzie and Keewatin.

The three remaining districts continued to be used for a number of decades, but as control over the territory was moved from departments of the federal government to a centralized government in Yellowknife, they began to have far less use. Although the Districts of Franklin, Mackenzie and Keewatin continued to appear on many maps, the governance of the Northwest Territories was divided into four administrative regions: Inuvik, Fort Smith, Keewatin and Baffin. A fifth region, the Central Arctic Region and subsequently called the Kitikmeot, was later carved out of the Fort Smith Region.

1999

In 1999 the Northwest Territories was reduced to its current size - and the notion of the 'districts' was abolished - with the creation of the Canadian territory of Nunavut. The former District of Keewatin, most of the Arctic Islands of the District of Franklin, and a northwest portion of the District of Mackenzie now form Nunavut, with the remainder of Franklin and the majority of Mackenzie forming the current version of the Northwest Territories.

See also

Notes

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