In 1952
archaeologist Thomas E. Lee discovered
Sheguiandah on the island, a
prehistoric site. During excavation, he found
artefacts of the
Paleo-Indian and
Archaic periods, dating at least to 10,000 BC and possibly to 30,000 years ago. Popular interest in the finds was so high that it contributed to Ontario's passing legislation in 1953 to protect its archaeological sites. A team performed excavations again in the early 1990s, applying new methods of analysis from botany and other scientific disciplines. They concluded the site was at least 9500 years old, making it one of the most significant in Ontario. Manitoulin means
spirit island in
Anishinaabemowin (
Ojibwe language). The island is considered sacred by the Native
Anishinaabe people, who identify as the
"People of the Three Fires." This loose confederation is made up of the
Ojibwe,
Odawa and
Potawatomi tribes. The North Channel was part of the route used by the French colonial
voyageurs and
coureurs des bois to reach
Lake Superior. The first known
European to settle on the island was Father
Joseph Poncet, a
French Jesuit, who set up a
mission near
Wiikwemkoong in 1648. The Jesuits called the island
"Isle de Ste-Marie". In addition, the Five Nations of the
Iroquois began raiding the island and area to try to control the
fur trade with the French. As part of what was called the
Beaver Wars, the Iroquois drove the Anishinaabe people from the island by 1650. According to Anishinaabe oral tradition, to purify the island from disease, the people burned their settlements as they left. The island was mostly uninhabited for nearly 150 years. Native people (
Odawa,
Ojibwe,
Potawatomi) began to return to the island following the
War of 1812 between Britain and the United States. They ceded the island to the British
Crown in 1836; the government set aside the land as a refuge for Natives. In 1838
Jean-Baptiste Proulx re-established a
Roman Catholic mission. The
Jesuits took over the mission in 1845. In 1862, the government opened up the island to settlement by non-Native people by the Manitoulin Island treaty. As the
Wikwemikong chief did not accept this treaty, his people's reserve was held back from being offered for development. That reserve remains unceded. On August 7, 1975, the Wikwemikong Unceded Indian Reserve reasserted their
claim to sovereignty over the islands off the east end of Manitoulin Island, declaring, "Wikwemikong Band has jurisdiction over its reservation lands and surrounding waters." The province erected an Ontario Historical Plaque on the grounds of the Assiginack Museum to commemorate the Manitoulin Treaties' role in Ontario's history. ==Notable residents==