Spuzzum First Nation


Spuzzum First Nation is a Nlaka'pamux First Nations government located near Spuzzum, British Columbia. It is a member of the Fraser Canyon Indian Administration, one of three tribal councils of the Nlaka'pamux people. Other members of the Fraser Canyon Indian Administration are the Kanaka Bar, Skuppah and Nicomen First Nations.
The Spuzzum First Nation reserve community and offices are located at Spuzzum in the lower Fraser Canyon, near the Alexandra Bridge and about 10 miles north of Yale.
Other Nlaka'pamux governments belong either to the Nicola Tribal Association or the Nlaka'pamux Nation Tribal Council.

History

The chief of the Spuzzum in 1858, Kowpelst was one of the first to work Hill's Bar at the onset of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush and was considered a "friendly Indian" during the Fraser Canyon War of that fall between the American miners and the upstream Nlaka'pamux of Camchin. He was appointed as a magistrate by Sir James Douglas During the Fraser Canyon War, a few thousand miners from bars farther up the canyon thronged at Spuzzum in terror of the upstream Nlaka'pamux, and some villages and food caches of the Spuzzum people were destroyed by armed parties of miners coming up from Yale, even though relations with the Spuzzum were considered friendlier than with their Nlaka'pamux kin farther upriver.

Reserve lands

Spuzzum First Nation has sixteen different reserves ranging greatly in size, and totaling. The largest two stand on the West Bank of the Fraser River near the mouth of Spuzzum Creek.
NameHectares
Chapman's Bar 102.80
Long Tunnel 52.60
Long Tunnel 5a35.90
Papsilqua 216.60
Papsilqua 2A27.70
Papsilqua 2B20.30
Saddle Rock 932
Skuet 64.70
Spuzzum 1125.30
Spuzzum 1A126.50
Spuzzum 746.10
Stout 847.90
Teequaloose 37.70
Teequaloose 3A60.40
Yelakin 426.80
Yelakin 4A64.70
Combined area648

Spuzzum people

Chief Harold W. Bobb was elected as Chief on 04/12/2016.
Diana Stromquist was elected as councillor on 04/12/2016.

Treaty Process

Demographics

The 1878 Reserve Commission census found 237 people living in Spuzzum and neighbouring villages. The 1881 census listed only 146 people, but the number is dubious since that era would likely have been the community's peak population. Other estimates places the Indigenous population at the time around 400.
As of September 2015, the community had a registered population of 274, though only 46 lived on reserve.

Economic Development

Social, Educational and Cultural Programs and Facilities