The Harvey E. Longboat Graduate Scholarship for First Nation, Inuit, and Métis Students was established in 2009 in honour of Harvey E. Longboat, and in recognition of his extraordinary contributions to McMaster University, the Six Nations of the Grand River and broader communities.
The award is tenable for one academic year, beginning September. Recipients can receive the award more than once, but must re-apply each year.
About McMaster University
McMaster University is a public research university in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The main McMaster campus is on 121 hectares of land near the residential neighbourhoods of Ainslie Wood and Westdale, adjacent to the Royal Botanical Gardens

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McMaster University Harvey E. Longboat Graduate Scholarship
Aim and Benefits of McMaster University Harvey E. Longboat Graduate Scholarship
Several students may receive this award simultaneously. A total value of $30,000 in scholarship is available for the Harvey E. Longboat Award, to be dispersed according to the following division:
- $15,000 awarded to one individual recipient; and
- $15,000 awarded to either one individual OR divided and awarded to several recipients (typically 2-5 awards, at the discretion of the selection committee).
Requirements for McMaster University Harvey E. Longboat Graduate Scholarship Qualification
The Harvey E. Longboat Graduate Scholarship is open to
- incoming or returning graduate students (Master’s or PhD) of First Nation, Inuit, or Métis descent.
- applicants who will be attending McMaster University in the September 2024 to August 2025 academic year. Students must intend to be enrolled for a minimum of two terms.
Note: The Harvey Longboat Award is not exclusive to students from the Six Nations of the Grand River Communities; the application is open to any current graduate student (or applicant to a graduate program at McMaster University) who identifies as First Nation, Inuit, or Métis.
Interview date, Process and Venue for McMaster University Harvey E. Longboat Graduate Scholarship
Award winners demonstrate
- exceptional promise in community leadership
- mentorship to other Indigenous students
- mentorship within First Nation, Inuit, or Métis communities
- leadership to advance Indigenous education, either inside or outside of a university setting
- high academic achievement
Intent
This award is intended as a means to recognize and acknowledge the academic achievement and exceptional promise of an Indigenous graduate student or students at McMaster University. Consideration is also given to Indigenous scholars who have demonstrated mentorship within community settings.
Application Deadline
February 14, 2024
How to Apply
Interested and qualified? Go to
McMaster University on gs.mcmaster.ca to apply
Step One: Student Application and Transcripts
- Student candidate completes the application portion. This includes: Applicant information section and (a maximum one page each) for the statements
- Letter of Introduction,
- Community Involvement Statement
- Plan of Study, plus transcripts (scanned from all postsecondary institutions attended).
- Completed candidate application portion to be combined as one .PDF saved with the file name ‘Student Last Name_Longboat_2024’.
- Candidates upload completed application portion to MacDrive.
Step Two: Referees
- Applicants to contact one academic and one community member for a reference.
- When contacting referees, students should ask their referees to provide their letters on organizational letterhead (where applicable) then upload their reference letters to MacDrive.
- Referees can refer to Selection Criteria to help inform the content of their letters.
- Naming conventions for their reference letters are:
- Student Last Name_Community Reference_2024 or
- Student Last Name_Academic Reference_2024.
- You will be required to provide an upload link to your referees.