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North-West Rebellion

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North-West Rebellion
Rébellion du Nord-Ouest (French)
Part of the American Indian Wars

Top: Battle of Batoche
Bottom: Battle of Cut Knife
DateMarch 26 – June 3, 1885 (2 months, 1 week and 1 day)
Location
Present-day Saskatchewan and Alberta
Result Federal government victory
Belligerents
 Canada
Commanders and leaders
Strength
  • 5,000 volunteers and militia[1]
  • 500 NWMP[1][2]
  • 280 Métis[3]
  • 250 Cree–Assiniboine
Casualties and losses
  • 38 dead[4]
  • 141 wounded[4]
  • 11 civilians killed[5]
  • 33 Métis dead[4][6]
  • 48 Métis wounded[4][6]
  • 10–17 Cree dead
  • 78–103 Cree wounded
  • 1 Nez Perce death (at Cut Knife Hill)
Total (military):
  • 43–50 dead
  • 126–151 wounded

The North-West Rebellion (French: Rébellion du Nord-Ouest), was an armed rebellion by the Métis under Louis Riel and an associated uprising by Cree and Assiniboine of the District of Saskatchewan, North-West Territories, against the Canadian government. Many Métis felt that Canada was not protecting their rights, their land, and their survival as a distinct people. Fighting broke out in late March, and the conflict ended in June. About 91 people were killed in the fighting that occurred that spring before the conflict ended with the capture of Batoche in May 1885.

Louis Riel, the hero of a 1870 uprising at Winnipeg, had been invited to lead the movement of protest; he turned it into a military action with a heavily religious tone. That alienated Catholic clergy, Western Canadian Euro-Canadian settlers who also held grievances against government policies[7] and many Indigenous persons in the western Prairies including even many Métis. Riel had the allegiance of about 250 armed Métis, 250 First Nations fighters and at least one white man (Honoré Jackson). But his small force was up against 900 Canadian Militia (the nascent Canadian army), armed NWMP officers and armed local residents - altogether 5,500 fighters on the side of the government.[8][9]: 3–4 [10]

Despite some notable early victories at Duck Lake, Fish Creek, and Cut Knife, the conflict was quashed when overwhelming government forces and a critical shortage of supplies brought about the Métis' defeat in the four-day Battle of Batoche. The remaining Aboriginal allies scattered. Several chiefs were captured, put on trial and served prison time. Eight men were hanged in Canada's largest mass hanging, for murders performed outside the military conflict.

Riel was captured, put on trial, and convicted of treason. Despite pleas from across Canada for clemency, he was hanged. Riel became a heroic martyr to Francophone Canada. His execution helped cause the growth of ethnic tensions between French Canada and English Canada into a deep division, whose repercussions continue to be felt. It helped cause the alienation of French Canadians, who were embittered by the repression of their countrymen. The suppression of the conflict contributed to the present control by English Canadians of the governments of the Prairie Provinces, which allow only a limited francophone presence. [11][12][13] The key role that the Canadian Pacific Railway played in transporting troops drew favor from the Conservative government, and Parliament authorized funds needed to complete the country's first transcontinental railway.

Nomenclature

[edit]

The conflict is referred to by several names, including the North-West Rebellion,[14][15][16] the North-West Resistance,[17][18][19][20] the 1885 Resistance,[17][21]: 55 [22][19] the Northwest Uprising, the Saskatchewan Rebellion, and the Second Riel Rebellion.[22] The conflict, grouped with the Red River Rebellion, is collectively referred to as the Riel Rebellions.[22]

The terms rebellion and resistance can be used almost synonymously. Academics state the use of one term or the other changes the perspective of how a conflict is understood.[22][23] Indigenous studies scholars and many historians refer to Indigenous uprisings in reaction to European colonization as resistances -- Indigenous nations self-governed the land before the HBC and then the Canadian government exerted their sovereignty over it.[22] Use of the term resistance has spread to several organizations and publications - Canadian Geographic,[24] The Canadian Encyclopedia,[22] and the Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan.[18]

Background

[edit]

After the Red River Rebellion of 1869–1870, many Métis moved from Manitoba to the Fort Carlton region of the North-West Territories, where they founded the Southbranch settlements of Fish Creek, Batoche, St. Laurent, St. Louis, and Duck Lake on or near the South Saskatchewan River.[25][26] In 1882, surveyors began dividing the land in the newly formed District of Saskatchewan according to the Dominion Land Survey's square concession system. The established Métis farms were laid out in the seigneurial system, narrow strips stretching up from a river. The Métis were familiar with this system from their French-Canadian culture.[12] After the survey the 36 families of the parish of St. Louis found that the Crown had sold their farms and village site, which included a church and a school (in Township 45, Range 7 west of the 2nd Meridian of the Dominion Land Survey), to the Prince Albert Colonization Company.[27][28] Not having clear title, the Métis feared losing their homes and farms, which, now that the buffalo herds were gone,[29] was their primary source of sustenance.[30]

In 1884, the Métis there (including many Anglo-Métis) asked Louis Riel to return from the United States, where he had fled after the Red River Rebellion to appeal to the government on their behalf.[12] The government gave a vague response. In March 1885, Riel, Gabriel Dumont, Honoré Jackson (a.k.a. Will Jackson), and others set up the Provisional Government of Saskatchewan, believing they could influence the federal government in the same way as they had in 1869 (but hopefully more successfully).

The federal government's violation of its treaties with the Cree spurred Big Bear, a Cree chief, to embark on a diplomatic campaign to renegotiate the terms of the treaties.

The role of the First Nations prior to — and during — the outbreak of the conflict is often misunderstood. Many hold the misconception that the Cree and Métis acted in unison. By the end of the 1870s, the stage was set for discontent among the Indigenous people of the prairies: fur-animals and bison were scarce (causing enormous economic and food supply difficulties)[31]: 171  and, in an attempt to assert control over Indigenous population, federal government officials sometimes held back rations, violating the terms of the treaties it had signed just prior.[31]: 174 

First Nations' dissatisfaction with the treaties and rampant poverty spurred Cree cheif Big Bear to embark on a diplomatic campaign to renegotiate the terms of the treaties. (The timing of this campaign coincided with widespread frustration among Métis.)[32] When some Cree initiated violence in the spring of 1885, it was almost certainly unrelated to the revolt of Riel and the Métis (which was already underway). In both the Frog Lake Massacre and the Looting of Battleford, small dissident groups of Cree men revolted against white authorities, ignoring the leadership of Big Bear and Poundmaker.[31]: 240–241  Although he quietly signalled to Ottawa that these two incidents were the result of desperate and starving people and were, as such, unrelated to the ongoing Metis rebellion, Edgar Dewdney, the lieutenant-governor of the territories, publicly claimed that the Cree and the Métis had joined forces.[33][31]: 247 

For Riel and the Métis, much had changed since the Red River Rebellion. A railway had been completed across the prairies in 1883, though sections were still under construction north of Lake Superior. This made it easier for government troops to get to the prairie trouble spot. The North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) had been created to serve as an armed force with local detachments at any trouble spot and at least potentially protecting vulnerable settlements. As violence broke out, it became clear that English settlers on the prairies and the great majority of First Nations did not support Riel. Catholic officials saw as heresy Riel's claim that God had sent him back to Canada as a prophet and they tried to minimize his support. Catholic priest Albert Lacombe worked to obtain assurances from Crowfoot that his Blackfoot warriors would not participate in a conflict.[34]

Demographics

[edit]
The District of Saskatchewan in 1885 (within the black diamonds) included the central section of Saskatchewan and extended into present-day Alberta and Manitoba. The area of conflict is circled in black.

The 1885 census of Assiniboia, Saskatchewan and Alberta reported a total population of 48,362. Of this, 20,170 people (about 40 percent) were Status Indians. [35]

The District of Saskatchewan, part of the North-West Territories in 1885, was divided into three sub-districts and had a population of 10,595. To the east, the Carrot River sub-district with 1,770 people remained quiet. The Prince Albert sub-district in the centre of the district had a population of 5,373 which included the Southbranch settlements with about 1,300. The South branch settlement was the centre of Louis Riel's Provisional Government of Saskatchewan during the conflict. To the west, the Battleford sub-district where the Cree uprising of people in bands led by Poundmaker and Big Bear occurred, had 3,603 people.[12][36]

The largest settlement and the capital of the district was Prince Albert with about 800 people[37] followed by Battleford with about 500 people who were "divided about equally between French, Métis and English".[38]

The Métis population in Saskatchewan in 1885 was about 5,400. A majority tried to stay neutral in the dispute with the national government, as the priests recommended. About 350 armed men supported Riel.[39] A smaller number opposed him, led by Charles Nolin. In addition, he had the support of a small number of members of First Nations. Riel's supporters included the older, less assimilated Métis, often with close associations with the First Nations population. Many moved back and forth into First Nations communities and preferred to speak Indigenous languages more than French. Riel's opponents were younger, better educated Métis; they wanted to be more integrated into Canadian society, not to set up a separate domain as Riel promised.[40]

Course of war

[edit]

Riel had been invited in to lead the movement but he turned it into a military action with a heavily religious tone, thereby alienating the Catholic clergy, the whites, nearly all of the First Nations, and most of the Métis. He had a force of a couple hundred Métis and a smaller number of First Nations at Batoche in May 1885, confronting 900 government troops.[8]

Recognizing that an uprising might be imminent, the federal government on March 23 sent Major General Frederick Middleton, the commander of the Canadian Militia, to Winnipeg, where a militia unit, the 90th Winnipeg Rifles, and a militia artillery unit, the Winnipeg Field Battery, already existed. Eventually, over a period of many weeks, Middleton brought 3,000 troops to the West, and incorporated another 2,000, mostly English-Canadian volunteers, and 500 North-West Mounted Police into his force.[1] They were formed into three columns that independently marched north from the line of the CPR.

Outbreak

[edit]
In March 1885, a skirmish broke out between the Canadian Militia, the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP), and Métis and aboriginal warriors.

On March 26, 1885, the 150 to 200 Métis and Aboriginal warriors under the command of Gabriel Dumont defeated a combined group of 90 Prince Albert Volunteers and North-West Mounted Police led by their superintendent Leif Newry Fitzroy Crozier at Battle of Duck Lake, outside Batoche.[41]

On March 30, a group of armed Cree, short of food due to declining bison populations, approached Battleford. The inhabitants fled to the nearby North-West Mounted Police post at Fort Battleford. The Cree then took food and supplies from the abandened stores and houses.[42] As well, Cree insurgents looted Hudson's Bay Company posts at Lac la Biche and Green Lake on April 26.[43]: 234–235 

On April 2, at Frog Lake, District of Saskatchewan (now in Alberta) a Cree raiding party led by Cree war chief Wandering Spirit, attacked local officials in the small settlement. Wandering Spirit's men were angered by what seemed to be unfair treaties and the withholding of vital provisions by the Canadian government, and also by the dwindling buffalo population, their main source of food. The attack was made against the leadership of Big Bear, following the arrival of news of the Métis victory at Duck Lake. Gathering the white settlers in the area into or near the local church, they killed Thomas Quinn, the town's Indian agent, after a disagreement broke out. The Cree then killed eight more and took three hostages.[12][44][45]

The massacre prompted the Canadian government to take notice of the growing unrest in the North-West Territories. When the conflict was over, the government hanged Wandering Spirit and others for the Frog Lake Massacre.

Government mobilization

[edit]

After Duck Lake, the government immediately commenced the mobilization of some of Canada's ill-equipped part-time militia units (the Non-Permanent Active Militia), as well as the units of cavalry, artillery and infantry regulars that made up the tiny Permanent Active Militia, Canada's almost-nonexistent regular army.

The Canadian Militia on the march towards the conflict, near the Qu'Appelle Valley.

By March 30, after hasty mobilization in Toronto, two trains containing the 10th Royal Grenadiers and Queen's Own Rifles militia battalions were ready to leave Toronto. Other militia units, the 9th Voltigeurs from Quebec City, and the 65th Mount Royal Rifles from Montreal, were also quickly mobilized. Soon every major city in the East was the scene of embarkation for inexperienced young militiamen cheered by immense crowds.[citation needed]

The first militia to struggle westward had to contend with the many lengthy breaks in the CPR line in northern Ontario. They marched through snow, or were carried in exposed sleighs. Where there were short stretches of track, the militia rode on hastily-constructed railroad flatcars which did nothing to shelter them from the extreme cold. Many of the soldiers suffered greatly from the winter weather. However, the first troops sent west were, in succeeding weeks, followed by thousands more.[43]: 168–177 

Major General Frederick Middleton assembled a force that detrained from CPR trains at Qu'Appelle and then moved north toward Batoche. His column left from Qu'Appelle on April 6 and arrived at Batoche a month later, fighting the Battle of Fish Creek on the way.[46]

On April 15, 200 Cree fighters descended on Fort Pitt. They intercepted a police scouting party, killing a constable, wounding another, and captured a third. Surrounded and outnumbered, garrison commander Inspector Francis Dickens, son of the famous author, negotiated with the attackers and capitulated. Big Bear allowed the remaining police officers to leave safely but kept the townspeople as hostages and destroyed the fort. Inspector Dickens and his officers reached safety at Battleford six days later.[47]

Meanwhile, William Otter's force detrained at Swift Current and proceeded north to restore order at the Battlefords, fighting the Battle of Cut Knife on the way[48]

The Battle of Fish Creek was a major Métis victory, persuading Major General Frederick Middleton to temporarily halt his advance.

Other forces were formed in the West. The Alberta Field Force led by Thomas Bland Strange, assembled at Calgary, moved north on the Calgary and Edmonton Trail to secure Edmonton from attack, then went down the North Saskatchewan River to recapture Fort Pitt, then moved overland in pursuit of Big Bear's band.[49]

April–May Métis victories

[edit]

On April 24, at Fish Creek, 200 Métis achieved a remarkable victory over units in Middleton's column numbering 900 soldiers. The reversal, though not decisive enough to alter the outcome of the war, temporarily halted the advance of Middleton's column toward Batoche. That was where the Métis made their final stand two weeks later.[50]

On May 2, the Cree war chief Fine-Day successfully held off Lieutenant Colonel William Otter at the Battle of Cut Knife near Battleford. Despite its use of a gatling gun, Otter's flying column of militia was forced to retreat. Fine-Day was affiliated with the chief Poundmaker, who surrendered to government troops later that same month. Big Bear did not fight in the battle and personally prevailed on the Cree fighters not to harass the retreating Canadian troops.[51][52][53]

Ending the Métis uprising

[edit]
Métis prisoners of war after the North-West Rebellion, August, 1885

On May 12, Middleton's force captured Batoche itself. The greatly outnumbered but well-entrenched Métis fighters ran out of ammunition after three days of battle and siege. The Métis resorted to firing sharp objects and small rocks from their guns. They were finally killed or dispersed when Canadian soldiers advanced on their own and overran the Métis fighters in their rifle pits.[54]

Riel surrendered on May 15. Gabriel Dumont and other participants in the uprising escaped across the border to the Montana Territory of the United States.[55] The defeat of the Métis and Riel's capture led to the collapse of the Provisional Government.

Ending the Cree uprising

[edit]
The Battle of Batoche was a decisive victory for the Canadian militia, with the capture of Louis Riel, and the collapse of the Provisional Government of Saskatchewan.

But the capture of Batoche did not end the separate conflict with the Cree.

Poundmaker and several of the chiefs loyal to him marched into Battleford and surrendered on May 26.[56]

By May 28, Major General Thomas Bland Strange brought the Alberta Field Force, a mixed force of militia and a NWMP detachment from Calgary, into contact with Big Bear's band fleeing from its pursuers. Fighters in the band won a battle at Frenchman's Butte at the end of May.[57]

Big Bear's band and the Alberta Field Force then fought in the last armed engagement of the 1885 rebellion, the Battle of Loon Lake on June 3. That day a small detachment of NWMP under the command of Major Sam Steele caught up to Big Bear's force, which was fleeing northward after the battle at Frenchman's Butte. Big Bear's fighters were almost out of ammunition. They released their hostages and fled after a short exchange of fire.[58]

Demoralized, defenceless, and with no hope of relief after Poundmaker's surrender, most of Big Bear's fighters surrendered over the next few weeks. On July 2 Big Bear surrendered to a NWMP detachment near Fort Carlton.

Aftermath

[edit]
The end of the conflict led to the trial of Louis Riel, a trial that sparked national controversy between English and French Canada.


The government addressed the critical food shortage of the Cree and Assiniboine by sending food and other supplies.

Poundmaker and Big Bear were sentenced to prison.

Eight others were hanged in the largest mass hanging in Canadian history.[59] These men, found guilty of killing outside of the military conflict, were Wandering Spirit, (Kapapamahchakwew) a Plains Cree war chief, Little Bear (Apaschiskoos), Walking the Sky (AKA Round the Sky), Bad Arrow, Miserable Man, Iron Body, Ika (AKA Crooked Leg) and Man Without Blood, for murders committed at Frog Lake and at Battleford (the murders of Farm Instructor Payne and Battleford farmer Barney Tremont).

The trial of Louis Riel occurred shortly after the conflict, where he was found guilty of high treason, and hanged. His trial sparked a national controversy between English and French Canada.[13]

The Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) played a key role in the government's response to the conflict, as it was able to transport federal troops to the area quickly. While it had taken three months to get troops to the Red River Rebellion, the government was able to move forces in nine days by train in response to events in the North-West Territories. The successful operation increased political support for the floundering and incomplete railway, which had been close to financial collapse. The government authorized enough funds to finish the line. Thus, Prime Minister John A. Macdonald realized his National Dream of linking Canada across the continent.[citation needed]

After the fighting, new Territorial Council ridings were created, although still only covering specific areas of concentrated settlement. The North-West Territories election of 1885 was held. The Scrip Commission was dispatched to the District of Saskatchewan and to present-day Alberta to address Métis land claims.[60][61]

The obverse and reverse for the North West Canada Medal, awarded to veterans of the conflict from the Canadian Militia, and the NWMP.

The conflict was Canada's first independent military action. It cost about $5 million. Although it lost the Conservative Party most of its support in Quebec, it guaranteed Anglophone control of the Prairies and demonstrated the national government was capable of decisive action.[9]: 4–8 

For reason perhaps outside the context of the rebellion, the Liberal party remained popular on the Prairies at least among Metis and among the wave of immigrants that soon came to the Prairies. (Treaty indians did not get the vote until much later.)[62]

Those who served with the Militia and Police during the conflict received the North West Canada Medal, established in September 1885.[63]

The cause of the rebellion was soon subject of debate. Macdonald's government came in for heavy criticism.

During the 1887 federal election, members of Sir Wilfrid Laurier's Liberal Party told the House of Commons that federal surveyors had "mishandled western settlement" and blamed the "poor administration of Metis land claims" for the 1885 rebellion.[64] The federal Minister of the Interior investigated and had land surveyor William Pearce submit a report explaining the work of the surveyors.[65]

International reaction

[edit]

While the conflict was ongoing, the American and British press took note of the actions of both the Métis and the Canadian Government. Some newspapers, such as the Times and Guardian, wrote approvingly of the actions taken by the Canadian government.[66]

Long-term consequences

[edit]

The Saskatchewan Métis requested land grants; the government granted these to all by the end of 1887. The government resurveyed the official surveys to allow pre-existing Métis riverlots in accordance with their wishes. The Métis did not understand the long term value of their new land, however, and sold much of it to speculators who later resold it to farmers.

The French language and Catholic religion faced increasing marginalisation in both Saskatchewan and Manitoba, as exemplified by the emerging controversy surrounding the Manitoba Schools Question. Many Métis were forced to live on undesirable land, or in temporary locations such as road allowances, or in the shadow of Indian reserves (The Métis did not have treaty status, like Treaty Indians did, so did not have any official right to land).[citation needed]

Riel's trial and Macdonald's refusal to commute his sentence caused lasting upset in Quebec, and led to a fundamental francophone distrust of Anglophone politicians. French Canada felt it had been unfairly targeted.[67]

Memory

[edit]

In the spring of 2008, Tourism, Parks, Culture and Sport Minister Christine Tell proclaimed in Duck Lake, that "the 125th commemoration, in 2010, of the 1885 Northwest Rebellion is an excellent opportunity to tell the story of the prairie Métis and First Nations peoples' struggle with Government forces and how it has shaped Canada today."[68]

BATOCHE. In 1872, Xavier Letendre dit Batoche founded a village at this site where Métis freighters crossed the South Saskatchewan River. About 50 families had claimed the river lots in the area by 1884. Widespread anxiety regarding land claims and a changing economy provoked a resistance against the Canadian Government. Here, 300 Métis and Indians led by Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont fought a force of 800 men commanded by Major-General Middleton between May 9 and 12, 1885. The resistance failed but the battle did not mean the end of the community of Batoche.

Historic Sites and Monuments board of Canada.[69]

Batoche, where the Métis Provisional Government had been formed, has been declared a National Historic Site. Batoche marks the site of Gabriel Dumont's grave site, Albert Caron's House, Batoche school, Batoche cemetery, Letendre store, Dumont's river crossing, Gariépy's crossing, Batoche crossing, St. Antoine de Padoue Church, Métis rifle pits, and RNWMP battle camp.[70][71]

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police training depot at Regina was established in 1874, and still survives. The RCMP chapel, a frame building built in 1885, is still standing. It was used to jail prisoners taken when the rebellion collapsed.

One of three Territorial Government Buildings still stands on Dewdney Avenue in the city of Regina. It was the site of the Trial of Louis Riel, where the drama the Trial of Louis Riel is still performed. Following the May trial, Louis Riel was hanged November 16, 1885 at the North-West Mounted Police barracks in Regina. The RCMP Heritage Centre, in Regina, opened in May 2007.[72][73][74] The Métis brought his body to Saint-Vital, his mother's home, now the Riel House National Historic Site, and then interred it at the Saint-Boniface Basilica in Manitoba, his birthplace, for burial.[75][76] Highway 11, stretching from Regina to just south of Prince Albert, has been named Louis Riel Trail by the province; the roadway passes near locations of the conflict.[77]

Fort Carlton Provincial Historic Site has been rebuilt as it had been ravaged by three separate fires. Big Bear (Mistahimaskwa) used the site in his initial negotiations for Treaty Six in about 1884, and finally, the following year he surrendered here after his engagement at Steele Narrows.[78][79]

The Prince Albert blockhouse was employed by the North-West Mounted Police on evacuating from Fort Carlton after the first fire.[80]

Duck Lake is home to the Duck Lake Historical Museum and the Duck Lake Regional Interpretive Centre, and murals that present the history of the conflict in the area. The Battle of Duck Lake, the Duck Lake Massacre, and a buffalo jump are all located here. The "First Shots Cairn" was erected on Saskatchewan Highway 212 as a landmark commemorating the scene of the first shots in the Battle of Duck Lake. Our Lady of Lourdes Shrine at St. Laurent north of Duck Lake is a local pilgrimage site.[81][82][83][84]

The Battle of Fish Creek National Historic Site, the name has been changed to Tourond's Coulee / Fish Creek National Historic Site to preserve the battlefield of April 24, 1885, at la coulée des Tourond, Madame Tourond's home, early Red River cart Fish Creek Trail and the site of Middleton's camp and graveyard.[85]

A cairn commemoriating the Frog Lake massacre is in the cemetery with the graves of those killed.

The Marr Residence is a municipal heritage property of Saskatoon which served as a field hospital for wounded soldiers during the conflict.[86][87][88]

Fort Otter was constructed at Battleford's government house at the capital of the North-West Territories. Poundmaker was arrested at Fort Battleford and sentenced to a prison term. Eight First Nations men were hanged, five for murders in the Frog Lake Massacre, two for murders in the Battleford area, and one for the killing of a Mountie at Fort Pitt on April 15.[43]: 332  Fort Battleford has been declared a national historic site of Canada to commemorate its role as military base of operations for Cut Knife Hill and Fort Pitt, as a refuge for 500 settlers, and as battlefield itself (the Siege of Battleford).[80][89][90][91]

Fort Pitt, the scene of the Battle of Fort Pitt, is a provincial park and national historic site where a National Historic Sites and Monuments plaque designates where Treaty Six was signed.[92][93][94]

Frog Lake Massacre National Historic Site of Canada, at Frog Lake, Alberta, is the location of a Cree uprising that occurred in the District of Saskatchewan, North-West Territories.[95]

Frenchman Butte, a national historic site of Canada, is the location of the 1885 battle between Cree and Canadian troops of Strange's Alberta Field Force.[96][97]

"Cut Knife Battlefield. Named after Chief Cut Knife of the Sarcee in an historic battle with the Cree. On 2nd May 1885, Lt. Col. W. D. Otter led 325 troops composed of North-West Mounted Police, "B" Battery, "C" Company, Foot Guards, Queen's Own and Battleford Rifles, against Cree and Assiniboine under Poundmaker and Fine Day. After an engagement of six hours, the troops retreated to Battleford."

National Historic Sites and Monuments Board[98]

At Cutknife is the world's largest tomahawk, the Poundmaker Historical Centre and Big Bear monument/cairn erected by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada. There is also now, correctly located, a cairn erected upon Cut Knife Hill, which is the viewing site of the Poundmaker Battle site and Battle River valley.[99][100][101][102]

The Narrows between Makwa Lake and Sanderson Bay, in the Makwa Lake Provincial Park, was the site of the last engagement of the conflict. Steele Narrows Provincial Historic Park conserves the lookout point of a Cree burial ground.[103][104]

Fort Ethier, a two-story log blockhouse built by Strange's Alberta Field Force in its march north to Edmonton, still stands near Wetaskiwin.[1]

The North-West Rebellion Memorial at Queen's Park, Toronto. The monument commemorates militiamen that served in the conflict.

The members of the Canadian Militia are commemorated through a number of memorials in Canada, including the North-West Rebellion Monument in Queen's Park, in Toronto, Ontario, and The Volunteer Monument in Winnipeg, Manitoba. A statue for Wm. B. Osgoode and John Rogers, who fell in action at Cutknife Hill, also stands at the Cartier Square Drill Hall, in Ottawa, Ontario.

Historiography

[edit]

Arthur Silver Morton, who was the University of Saskatchewan's first librarian, compiled many of the original manuscripts, transcripts, and photographs related to the 1885 conflict that were made available in 1995 as part of project funded by Industry Canada in 1995.[105]

Canadian historian George Stanley conducted research on the 1885 conflict and Louis Riel in the 1930s while completing his postgraduate degrees at Oxford University, where he published his 1936 book The Birth of Western Canada: A History of The Riel Rebellion. For more than five decades Stanley's 1936 The Birth of Western Canada was reprinted and used as a textbook.[16] Stanley's 1936 book and the 1972 book published by his student Desmond MortonThe last war drum: the North West campaign of 1885[106] informed North-West Rebellion encyclopedia entries in the Canadian Encyclopedia and Encyclopedia Britannica.[22][14] Stanley focused on the racial aspects of the rebellion. He demonstrated empathy with the plight of the Métis and First Nations, although in hindsight his work would now be described by many as both "racist and close-minded". Until the early 2000s, Stanley's served as the foundational textbook providing the accepted narrative on the events.

The next major academic work to treat the "rebellion as a whole" since Stanley's, was the 1984 publication Prairie Fire: The 1885 North-West Rebellion by historian Bob Beal and journalist Rod Macleod.[43] They downplayed the event as local with "no real legacy of bitterness in the West".[43]: 11  They describe it as an incident during the white settlers' occupation of the North-West Territories and government's imposition of their laws on the indigenous population.

On the centenary of the conflict, a conference entitled "1885 and After: Native Society in Transition" was held in May at the University of Saskatchewan. During the centenary, a number of articles and books were published on the topic including the five-volume The Collected Writings of Louis Riel by Stanley, Raymond Huel, Gilles Martel, and University of Calgary-based political scientist, Thomas Flanagan, and Flanagan's Riel and the Rebellion: 1885 Reconsidered.[9] Flanagan spent much of his academic career focusing on issues related to the Métis and Louis Riel. Since the 1970s Tom Flanagan published numerous scholarly studies "debunking the heroism of Métis icon Louis Riel, arguing against native land claims, and calling for an end to aboriginal rights."[107]

In his 1987 publication Footprints in the Dust, Douglas Light focused on the local history of the region incorporating Métis and First Nation perspectives on events including accounts of everyday life.[108] This was described as a "valuable and distinctive contribution to rebellion historiography".

At the University of Saskatchewan, Alan Anderson prepared a report on French Settlements in Saskatchewan that informed relevant content in the online Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan, published in 2006 by the University of Regina's Canadian Plains Research Center.[109][26]

J.R.Miller's 1989 Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens was described in a 2021 British Journal of Canadian Studies article as the "first overall survey of Aboriginal–newcomer history in Canada". Miller "consistently highlighted the Aboriginal perspective".[31][110] By 2018, when the book was reprinted for the fourth time, the relationships between Indigenous peoples and settlers had evolved further driven by priorities, economic opportunities, collective action on the part of Indigenous communities, and changes in governments at the federal, provincial and territorial levels.[31][110] Miller says that early relations between Indigenous people and Euro-Canadian were characterized by a mutuality and collaboration, with each remaining autonomous, especially in trading relationships and as military allies. Miller says that this mutuality "held good for far longer than white historiography has tended to see.[31][110] The mutuality collapsed through competition for resources particularly as agricultural settlers arrived in increasing numbers.[31][110] In his chapter on the rebellion, Miller says that the way histories about the conflict have been written are based on "a great deal of misunderstanding and myth-making" and that there was no Indian rebellion in 1885.[31]: 170 

Lawrence J. Barkwell's 2005 book Batoche 1885: The Militia of the Metis Liberation Movement was his first publication of biographies of participants in the Métis resistance.[111] Barkwell is also the author of the 2011 305-page book Veterans and Families of the 1885 Northwest Resistance.[17] He updated his "1885 Northwest Resistance Movement Biographies" in 2018 which lists the men and women who participated in the 1885 Northwest Resistance. Barwell's research, which is published by the Gabriel Dumont Institute—an affiliate of the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Regina—"provides a more human face" to the 1885 Resistance."[17]: 1 

In fiction

[edit]
  • Stewart Sterling's Red Trails (1935) depicted the pulp hero Eric Lewis, a Mountie of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police. He tries to keep "peace and order" during the North-West Rebellion, helped by Sergeant Tim Clone.[112]
  • North West Mounted Police, by Cecil B. DeMille (1940). The film is about a Texas Ranger who joins forces with the North-West Mounted Police to put down the rebellion.[citation needed]
  • Buckskin Brigadier: The Story of the Alberta Field Force (1955), by Edward McCourt. A historical novel about the men of the Alberta Field Force and their experiences throughout the rebellion.[113]
  • The Magnificent Failure (1967) by Giles Lutz is a historical novel of the North-West Rebellion.
  • Riel, Canadian made-for-TV film portraying both 1870 and 1885 rebellions, starring Christopher Plummer, William Shatner, Leslie Nielsen
  • Lord of the Plains, by Albert Silver, c 1990, Ballantine Books. Spur Award Finalist. Focuses on Gabriel Dumont and his family.[114][115]
  • The novel for young adults called Battle Cry at Batoche (1998), by B. J. Bayle, portrays the events of the North-West Resistance from a Métis point of view.[116]
  • Song of Batoche, by Maia Caron (Ronsdale Press: 2017), a historical novel centered on the North-West Rebellion through the perspectives of Métis women, Gabriel Dumont, Louis Riel, and others involved.[117]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Panet, Charles Eugène (1886), Report upon the suppression of the rebellion in the North-West Territories and matters in connection therewith, in 1885: Presented to Parliament., Ottawa: Department of Militia and Defence, archived from the original on 2023-01-05, retrieved 2014-04-10
  2. ^ Mulvaney, Charles Pelham (1885), The history of the North-West Rebellion of 1885 (The Troops in the Field), Toronto: A.H. Hovey & Co, p. 422, archived from the original on 2023-01-05, retrieved 2014-04-10
  3. ^ Panet, Charles Eugène (1886), Report upon the suppression of the rebellion in the North-West Territories and matters in connection therewith, in 1885: Presented to Parliament, Ottawa: Department of Militia and Defence, p. 20, archived from the original on 2023-03-05, retrieved 2014-04-10
  4. ^ a b c d Panet, Charles Eugène (1886), Report upon the suppression of the rebellion in the North-West Territories and matters in connection therewith, in 1885: Presented to Parliament., Ottawa: Department of Militia and Defence, archived from the original on 2023-10-09, retrieved 2014-04-10
  5. ^ John Chaput (2007). "Frog Lake Massacre". The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. University of Regina and Canadian Plains Research Center. Archived from the original on 4 September 2009. Retrieved 8 June 2010.
  6. ^ a b Mulvaney, Charles Pelham (1885), The history of the North-West Rebellion of 1885, Toronto: A.H. Hovey & Co, p. 327, archived from the original on 2023-05-16, retrieved 2014-04-10
  7. ^ "Where the Trouble lies". Edmonton Bulletin (March 7, 1885): 2.
  8. ^ a b James Rodger Miller (2004). Reflections on Native-newcomer Relations: Selected Essays. University of Toronto Press. p. 44.
  9. ^ a b c Flanagan, Thomas (2000) [1985]. Riel and the Rebellion: 1885 Reconsidered (2nd ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-4708-4.
  10. ^ Robert MacIntosh, Boilermakers on the Prairies, p. 16
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  13. ^ a b "The Quebec History Encyclopedia (North-West Rebellion)". The Quebec History Encyclopedia. Claude Bélanger, Marianopolis College. 2007. Archived from the original on 2020-08-04. Retrieved 2013-11-19.
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  116. ^ Bayle, B. J. (19 February 2008). Battle Cry at Batoche. Toronto, Ontario: Dundurn Press. ISBN 978-1-55002-717-4.
  117. ^ Caron, Maia (September 2017). Song of Batoche. Vancouver, British Columbia: Ronsdale Press. ISBN 978-1-55380-499-4.

Further reading

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