a syllabary devised by the Reverend James Evans, a Wesleyan missionary, for the Crees (about 1840) and adapted to Eskimo toward the end of the nineteenth century.
1859  (1863)  [The Stoneys are all Christians, and some of them can read and write in their own language, using the Cree syllabic characters, which were invented by Wesleyan missionaries.]
1925  In June, 1841. . . [Evans] had so far perfected his Cree syllabics that he wrote: The men women and children at Norway House write and read it with ease and fluency. . . .
1961  [The Reverend E. J. Peck, an Anglican missionary] had translated the Gospels and some hymns from Cree syllabics into the Eskimo language [1903-4].
1965  . . . with this [fur press] he printed five thousand birchbark pages in Cree syllabics.