Freedom Village


Freedom Village was a historic village founded by the former slaves of the, Chawathil First Nation who lived near present-day Hope, British Columbia.

History

Starting in the late 18th century the peoples in what is now the Fraser Valley were undergoing intense social change. Starting in 1782 waves of the smallpox virus started to decimate local First Nation peoples. As they dealt with this and other diseases Europeans started to settle in the area starting with the Hudson's Bay Company establishing trading posts at Fort Langley and Fort Yale.
Greenwood Island, near the town of Hope in British Columbia, was a slave village to the Chawathil First Nation peoples who lived near what is now Hope. For generations, the Chawathil had raided surrounding First Nation communities and taken slaves. The slaves on the island had, in turn, increased their population through natural childbirth. There were so many slaves that the slaveholders, worried of an insurrection, forced them all out of their longhouses and onto the island where they created their own community. This in turn slowly slipped out of the slaveholder's control until a decision by the Chawathil elders was made to abandon the village. Once the slaves became aware that they were "free" they rejected living so close to their former masters and created large catamarans by dismantling their longhouses and using the planks to connect their canoes.
When they were finished they floated down the Fraser River and founded Freedom Village in present-day Agassiz. The area was a former First Nation village of the Steaten people that had been wiped out by the disease years earlier. Over time the former slaves that made up the Chi'ckem village intermarried into the communities that surrounded them and were overtime were absorbed into the local First Nations.