Black ash splint basket, Ho-Chunk people
Woven black ash splint basket. The weave structure and handle attachment are characteristic of northeastern North American splint traditions. Photo: Chazen Museum of Art / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA)

Hardwood splint basketry in Canada is not a single tradition. It represents a number of distinct regional and cultural practices that developed over centuries among Indigenous peoples of the northeastern woodlands, and that were later adapted — with varying degrees of overlap — by settler communities who learned from Indigenous makers or developed parallel techniques using locally available materials.

Indigenous Splint Basketry in Eastern Canada

Among the Mi'kmaq, Maliseet (Wolastoqiyik), Abenaki, and Haudenosaunee peoples, splint basketry using black ash was a well-established practice before European contact. Baskets served functional roles as storage containers, gathering and processing tools, and trade goods. The forms and weave structures used in pre-contact basketry are documented partly through archaeological evidence and partly through the analysis of historic collections held at institutions such as the National Museum of the American Indian (Smithsonian) and the Canadian Museum of History.

In the Mi'kmaq tradition, basketry became a significant part of the trade economy in the 18th and 19th centuries. Markets in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the northeastern United States created demand for both utility baskets and decorative work. Fancy baskets — featuring dyed splints, curlicue embellishments made from shaved wood, and intricate geometric patterns — became a distinct Mi'kmaq and Maliseet style that is still practised today.

Haudenosaunee Basket Traditions

Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) basketmakers in Ontario and Quebec have historically worked with both black ash and corn husks. Black ash splint baskets in the Haudenosaunee tradition often feature a heavier structural gauge than Mi'kmaq work, with plain and twill weave predominating over the decorative overlay styles more common in Maritime traditions. Splint preparation and tool use differ in some documented respects from Maritime traditions, though the fundamental pounding technique is shared.

White oak splint basket, Cherokee
White oak splint basket. Oak splints are split along the grain rather than pounded and produce a different surface texture from black ash. Photo: Chazen Museum of Art / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA)

Settler Basketry with Hardwood Splints

Settler communities in eastern Canada — primarily British and French-Canadian — also produced splint baskets, particularly from the late 18th century onward. In some areas, settler makers learned directly from Indigenous neighbours and adopted black ash pounding techniques. In others, they worked with white oak or other available hardwoods using splitting methods brought from European traditions.

The forms and uses of settler baskets overlapped substantially with Indigenous utility baskets — storage containers, berry-picking baskets, market baskets — but the decorative vocabulary differed. Settler fancy work tended toward simpler geometric patterns or plain surfaces rather than the curlicue and overlay styles developed in Mi'kmaq and Maliseet craft.

Interplay and Documentation Challenges

Distinguishing Indigenous from settler-made baskets in historical collections is not always straightforward. Both traditions used similar materials and some overlapping forms. Attribution in museum collections has been contested in some cases, and scholars of material culture have noted that trade and exchange between communities created hybrid objects that do not fit cleanly into either category. The Canadian Encyclopedia and the Canadian Museum of History both address this complexity in their documentation of basket collections.

Contemporary Practice

Splint basketry continues to be practised in both Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities in Canada. Among Mi'kmaq and Maliseet makers, the tradition has experienced periods of intensified interest related to cultural revitalization efforts. The threat to black ash from the emerald ash borer has prompted collaboration between basketmakers, conservation groups, and government agencies to document techniques, maintain material supplies, and adapt where necessary.

Non-Indigenous craft revivalists and studio makers also work in hardwood splints, often drawing on documentary sources, museum collections, and direct learning from Indigenous practitioners. The Canadian Crafts Federation and provincial craft councils have documented some of this contemporary activity.

References

  1. The Canadian Encyclopedia. "Basketry" and "Mi'kmaq." thecanadianencyclopedia.ca
  2. Canadian Museum of History. Collections — basketry and material culture. historymuseum.ca
  3. National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian. Northeastern basketry collections. nmai.si.edu
  4. Wiseman, Frederick Matthew. The Voice of the Dawn: An Autohistory of the Abenaki Nation. University Press of New England, 2001.