Object Record
Images


Metadata
Object ID # |
1961.027.012 |
Object Name |
Case, Jewelry |
Title |
Small Jewellery Case |
Lexicon category |
3: Personal Artifacts |
Date |
pre-1865 |
Made |
Unknown |
Place of Origin |
Unknown |
Description |
A small dark green, oval-shaped jewellery case. The top side of the case has two hinges on the long sides which allows the front two sides to open. The undersides of the hinged pieces are padded with a white material, and the interior of the case is lined with a brown velvet? The exterior looks like an artificial shagreen-like paper? |
Makers mark |
None |
Provenance |
The precise age of this item is unknown, but it was originally owned by Catharine B. Sutton, who was an Ojibwa (Anishnaabe) woman who married an Englishman, William Sutton, in 1839, at the Credit River Mission (a Wesleyan Methodist mission that was assisting Ojibwa families). The Suttons had moved their family from the Credit River area to what would later be known as Grey County in the mid 1840s, in order to assist the Newash Ojibwa band with missionary work. The Newash Band gave Mrs. Sutton and her heirs a quantity of land in what later became Sarawak Township, Canada West. When an 1857 land treaty with the Crown occurred, Mrs. Sutton was in jeopardy of losing her land, as she could not legally obtain title, as she was an "Indian", and could not even purchase it at auction. This injustice, and others, led her to becoming a spokesperson for her people. She was elected by the Council at Rama to be their envoy to England in order to speak to Queen Victoria about the unfair situation for aboriginal people in Canada West. Mrs. Sutton was of the Eagle Totem and was born circa 1824 and raised at the Credit Indian Mission (near the Credit River near Lake Ontario). Her name "Nahneebahweequay" meant "Upright Woman" or "black squirrel". Mrs. Sutton died in September of 1865, at her log home in Sarawak Township, Grey County. She and Mr. Sutton still had young children to raise when she died. Her mother assisted Mr. Sutton after she passed away, as did Miss Catherine Sutton, the eldest daughter. The item was passed down in the family, eventually belonging to Mrs. Catherine Morgan (née Staves) of Brantford, Ontario, who was a grand-daughter of Catharine and William Sutton. Catherine Staves was married to Reverend Alfred Morgan. Alfred Morgan was the last owner of this item. Catherine Staves and Alfred Morgan were married in Toronto on August 14, 1906. Catherine Staves was the daughter of Joseph Staves (a cooper), and Sophia Staves (née Sutton). Sophia Staves had died of consumption in Sarawak Township on May 17, 1875, and Mr. William Sutton raised his grandchildren, Catherine Staves (b. 18__) and her brother, William Percy Staves (b. April 10, 1875) in Sarawak Township. |
Collection |
First Nations, Sutton Collection |
Material |
Paper/Fabric/Velvet/Metal/imitation Shagreen?/Glue |
Dimensions |
H-2.3 W-5 L-6.1 inches |
Found |
Brantford, Ontario |
People |
Sutton, Catharine Sutton, William Sutton, Catherine Morgan, Catherine Morgan, Alfred |
Subjects |
Jewelry stores Jewelry Containers First Nations of Central Canada |
Search Terms |
Sarawak Township Ojibwa (Anishnaabe, Anishnibeg) |
Function |
This case was used historically by the Sutton family to keep Mrs. Sutton's broken wedding ring safe. |