The North-West Rebellion
(or the North-West Resistance, Saskatchewan Rebellion, Northwest
Uprising, or Second Riel Rebellion) of 1885 was a brief and
unsuccessful uprising by the Métis people under Louis Riel and an associated
uprising by First Nations Cree and Assiniboine of the District of Saskatchewan
against the government of Canada. Many Métis felt Canada was not protecting their
rights, their land and their survival as a distinct people. Riel had been
invited to lead the movement of protest. He turned it into a military action
with a heavily religious tone. This alienated Catholic clergy, whites, most
Indians and some Métis. But he had the allegiance of a couple hundred armed
Métis, a smaller number of other Aboriginal people and at least one white man
at Batoche in May 1885, confronting 900 Canadian army soldiers plus some armed
local residents. About 91 people would die in the fighting that occurred that
spring, before the rebellion's collapse.
Despite some notable early victories atDuck
Lake , Fish Creek and Cut
Knife, the rebellion ended when the Métis were defeated at the Siege of Batoche.
The remaining Aboriginal allies scattered. Riel was captured and put on trial.
He was convicted of treason and despite many pleas across Canada for
amnesty, he was hanged. Riel became a heroic martyr to Francophone Canada, and
ethnic tensions escalated into a major national division that was never
resolved. Due to the key role that the Canadian Pacific Railway played in
transporting troops, Conservative political support for it increased and
Parliament authorized funds to complete the country's first transcontinental
railway. Although only a few hundred people were directly affected in Saskatchewan , the long-term result was that the Prairie Provinces would
be controlled by English speakers, not French. A much more important long-term
impact was the bitter alienation French speakers across Canada showed,
and anger against the repression of their countrymen.
After the Red River Rebellion of 1869–1870, many of the Métis moved fromManitoba
to the Fort Carlton
region of the Northwest 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 . In
1882, surveyors began dividing the land of the newly formed District of
Saskatchewan in the square concession system. The Métis lands were laid out in
the seigneurial system of strips reaching back from a river which the Métis
were familiar with in their French-Canadian culture. A year after the survey
the 36 families of the parish of St. Louis found that their land and village
site that included a church and a school (in Township 45, Range 7 west of the
2nd Meridian of the Dominion Land Survey) had been sold by the Government of
Canada to the Prince Albert Colonization Company. Not having clear title the
Métis feared losing their land which, now that the buffalo herds were gone, was
their primary source of sustenance.
In 1884, the Métis (including the Anglo-Métis) asked Louis Riel to return from theUnited States , where he had fled
after the Red River Rebellion, to appeal to the government on their behalf. 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 that they could
influence the federal government in the same way as they had in 1869.
The role of aboriginal peoples prior to—and during—the outbreak of the rebellion is often misunderstood. A number of factors have created the misconception that the Cree and Métis were acting in unison. By the end of the 1870s, the stage was set for discontent among the aboriginal people of the prairies: the bison population was in serious decline (creating enormous economic difficulties) and, in an attempt to assert control over aboriginal settlement, the federal government often violated the terms of the treaties it had signed during the latter part of the decade. Thus, widespread dissatisfaction with the treaties and rampant poverty spurred Big Bear, a Cree chief, to embark on a diplomatic campaign to renegotiate the terms of the treaties (the timing of this campaign happened to coincide with an increased sense of frustration among the Métis). When the 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 Siege of Fort Battleford, small dissident groups of Cree men revolted against the authority of Big Bear and Poundmaker. Although he quietly signalled toOttawa
that these two incidents were the result of desperate and starving people and
were, as such, unrelated to the rebellion, Edgar Dewdney, the
lieutenant-governor of the territories, publicly claimed that the Cree and the
Métis had joined forces.
For Riel and the Métis, several factors had changed since the Red River Rebellion. The railway had been completed across the prairies in 1883, though sections were still under construction north ofLake Superior , making it easier for
the government to get troops into the area. In addition, the North-West Mounted
Police (NWMP) had been created, developing an armed local force. Riel lacked
support from English settlers of the area as well as the great majority of
tribes. Riel's claim that God had sent him back to Canada as a prophet caused Catholic
officials (who saw it as heresy) to try to minimize his support. The Catholic
priest, Albert Lacombe, worked to obtain assurances from Crowfoot that his Blackfoot
warriors would not participate in a rebellion.
Despite some notable early victories at
Background
After the Red River Rebellion of 1869–1870, many of the Métis moved from
In 1884, the Métis (including the Anglo-Métis) asked Louis Riel to return from the
The role of aboriginal peoples prior to—and during—the outbreak of the rebellion is often misunderstood. A number of factors have created the misconception that the Cree and Métis were acting in unison. By the end of the 1870s, the stage was set for discontent among the aboriginal people of the prairies: the bison population was in serious decline (creating enormous economic difficulties) and, in an attempt to assert control over aboriginal settlement, the federal government often violated the terms of the treaties it had signed during the latter part of the decade. Thus, widespread dissatisfaction with the treaties and rampant poverty spurred Big Bear, a Cree chief, to embark on a diplomatic campaign to renegotiate the terms of the treaties (the timing of this campaign happened to coincide with an increased sense of frustration among the Métis). When the 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 Siege of Fort Battleford, small dissident groups of Cree men revolted against the authority of Big Bear and Poundmaker. Although he quietly signalled to
For Riel and the Métis, several factors had changed since the Red River Rebellion. The railway had been completed across the prairies in 1883, though sections were still under construction north of
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