Lac Ste. Anne Pilgrimage National Historic Site of Canada
Lac Ste. Anne, Alberta
General View
© Parks Canada | Parcs Canada
Address :
Lac Ste. Anne, Alberta
Recognition Statute:
Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date:
2004-03-05
Dates:
-
1889 to 1889
(Significant)
Event, Person, Organization:
-
Métis
(Person)
-
Cree, First Nation
(Person)
-
Blackfoot, First Nation
(Person)
-
Dene, First Nation
(Person)
-
Missionary Oblates of Grandin Province
(Organization)
Other Name(s):
-
Lac Ste. Anne Pilgrimage
(Designation Name)
-
Manitou Sakahigan
(Other Name)
-
Lake Manitou
(Other Name)
-
Lake of the Spirit
(Other Name)
-
Wakãmne (God’s Lake)
(Other Name)
-
Devil’s Lake
(Other Name)
Research Report Number:
2003-12, 2003-39
Plaque(s)
Existing plaque: Lac Ste. Anne, Alberta
A long-established annual meeting place for Aboriginal peoples, this lake became a Catholic pilgrimage site in the late 19th century. Since 1889, First Nations and Métis have travelled here in late July to celebrate the Feast of Saint Anne. This saint, widely revered as the mother of the Virgin Mary and the grandmother of Jesus, embodies the grandmother figure honoured in many Canadian Aboriginal societies. Lac Ste. Anne is an important place of spiritual, cultural, and social rejuvenation, central aspects of traditional summer gatherings for indigenous peoples.
Description of Historic Place
Lac Ste. Anne Pilgrimage National Historic Site of Canada is located on the shore of Lac Ste. Anne, a broad, shallow lake in north-central Alberta. The pilgrimage site is a flat piece of land that extends down to the shores of the lake. The site consists of a landscape and a portion of a lake. On the site is a small church, a rectory, and a confessional building, Stations of the Cross, a cemetery and pilgrim facilities including a store, food concession stands, and washroom and shower buildings. On the right side, nearer the lake is the large, pentagonal-shaped Saint Anne shrine with roof and open sides, while at the lakes edge stands a gazebo where the blessing of the lake takes place during the pilgrimage. Trees and shrubs border the eastern boundary. Official recognition refers to the shore-site, which includes a contiguous, semi-circular section of lake.
Heritage Value
Lac Ste. Anne Pilgrimage was designated a national historic site of Canada because: as early as 1889, Indigenous people, including Cree, Dene, Blackfoot and Métis, have been coming to Lac Ste. Anne to celebrate the Feast of Saint Anne. Saint Anne embodies, for many Indigenous people, the traditional importance of the grandmother figure; for the Indigenous people of Western and Northwestern Canada, it is an important place of social, cultural and spiritual rejuvenation, which are important aspects of the traditional summer gathering.
Lac Ste. Anne Pilgrimage, used by Indigenous peoples in the pre-contact period, became a pilgrimage site in 1889, managed by the Missionary Oblates of Grandin Province. The pilgrimage continues on an annual basis during the week of July 26th. People making the pilgrimage come from across North America to step into the holy waters and be blessed by a priest in the name of Saint Anne, the mother of the Virgin Mary.
Sources: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, July 1971, July 2003.
Character-Defining Elements
The key elements that contribute to the heritage character of this site include: the location on the shore of the lake in its defined extent including an adjacent 100 metre half circle of Lac Ste. Anne itself; the physical elements which constitute the site and which have spiritual significance including the cleared ground of the site, the lake, and the shoreline fronting the site; the church, the rectory, the confessional building, gazebo, the Stations of the Cross, the cemetery with markers in their found locations, and the pilgrim facilities with respect to their being elements which support the site’s continued use as an aboriginal spiritual gathering place; the unimpeded viewscapes of the lake and the surrounding area; the continued use of the site by the Cree, Blackfoot and Dene First Nations and the Métis peoples, particularly for the annual celebration of Saint Anne; potential archaeological sites associated with pre-contact and post-contact use.